462 research outputs found
The relationship between upper mantle anisotropic structures beneath California, transpression, and absolute plate motions
We calculated SKS splitting parameters for the California Integrated Seismic Network. In southern California, we also estimated splitting in the upper 100 km using azimuthal anisotropy determined from surface waves. The inferred splitting from surface waves in the mantle lithosphere is small (on average < 0.2 s) compared with SKS splitting (1.5 s) and obtains a maximum value (0.5 s) in the transpressive region of the Big Bend, south of, and aligned with, the San Andreas Fault (SAF). In contrast, the SKS splitting is approximately E-W and is relatively uniform spatially either side of the Big Bend of the SAF. These differences suggest that most of the SKS splitting is generated much deeper (down to 300â400 km) than previously thought, probably in the asthenosphere. Fast directions align with absolute plate motions (APM) in northern and southeastern California but not in southwestern California. We interpret the parallelism with APM as indicating the SKS anisotropy is caused by cumulative drag of the asthenosphere by the overlying plates. The discrepancy in southwestern California arises from the diffuse boundary there compared to the north, where relative plate motion has concentrated near the SAF system. In southern California the relative motion originated offshore in the Borderlands and gradually transitioned onshore to the SAF system. This has given rise to smaller displacement across the SAF (160â180 km) compared with central and northern California (400â500 km). Thus, in southwestern California the inherited anisotropy, from prior North American APM, has not yet been overprinted by Pacific APM
Target Flow-Pressure Operating Range for Designing a Failing Fontan Cavopulmonary Support Device
Fontan operation as the current standard of care for the palliation of single ventricle defects results in significant late complications. Using a mechanical circulatory device for the right circulation to serve the function of the missing subpulmonary ventricle could potentially stabilize the failing Fontan circulation. This study aims to elucidate the hydraulic operating regions that should be targeted for designing cavopulmonary blood pumps. By integrating numerical analysis and available clinical information, the interaction of the cavopulmonary support via the IVC and full assist configurations with a wide range of simulated adult failing scenarios was investigated; with IVC and full assist corresponding to the inferior venous return or the entire venous return, respectively, being routed through the device. We identified the desired hydraulic operating regions for a cavopulmonary assist device by clustering all head pressures and corresponding pump flows that result in hemodynamic improvement for each simulated failing Fontan physiology. Results show that IVC support can produce beneficial hemodynamics in only a small fraction of failing Fontan scenarios. Cavopulmonary assist device could increase cardiac index by 35% and decrease the inferior vena cava pressure by 45% depending on the patient\u27s pre-support hemodynamic state and surgical configuration of the cavopulmonary assist device (IVC or full support). The desired flow-pressure operating regions we identified can serve as the performance criteria for designing cavopulmonary assist devices as well as evaluating off-label use of commercially available left-side blood pumps for failing Fontan cavopulmonary support
Nonlinear response of electrons to a positive ion
Electric field dynamics at a positive ion imbedded in an electron gas is
considered using a semiclassical description. The dependence of the field
autocorrelation function on charge number is studied for strong ion-electron
coupling via MD simulation. The qualitative features for larger charge numbers
are a decreasing correlation time followed by an increasing anticorrelation.
Stopping power and related transport coefficients determined by the time
integral of this correlation function result from the competing effects of
increasing initial correlations and decreasing dynamical correlations. An
interpretation of the MD results is obtained from an effective single particle
model showing good agreement with the simulation results.Comment: To be published in the proceedings of the International Workshop on
Strongly Coupled Coulomb Systems, Journal of Physics
Spin-dependent correlation in two-dimensional electron liquids at arbitrary degeneracy and spin-polarization: CHNC approach
We apply the classical mapping technique developed recently by Dharma-wardana
and Perrot for a study of the uniform two-dimensional electron system at
arbitrary degeneracy and spin-polarization. Pair distribution functions,
structure factors, the Helmhotz free energy, and the compressibility are
calculated for a wide range of parameters. It is shown that at low temperatures
T/ T_F <0.1, T_F being the Fermi temperature, our results almost reduce to
those of zero-temperature analyses. In the region T/ T_F >= 1, the finite
temperature effects become considerable at high densities for all
spin-polarizations. We find that, in our approximation without bridge
functions, the finite temperature electron system in two dimensions remains to
be paramagnetic fluid until the Wigner crystallization density. Our results are
compared with those of three-dimensional system and indicated are the
similarities in temperature, spin-polarization, and density dependencies of
many physical properties.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figure
The 2-D electron gas at arbitrary spin polarizations and arbitrary coupling strengths: Exchange-correlation energies, distribution functions and spin-polarized phases
We use a recent approach [Phys. Rev. Letters, {\bf 84}, 959 (2000)] for
including Coulomb interactions in quantum systems via a classical mapping of
the pair-distribution functions (PDFs) for a study of the 2-D electron gas. As
in the 3-D case, the ``quantum temperature'' T_q of a classical 2-D Coulomb
fluid which has the same correlation energy as the quantum fluid is determined
as a function of the density parameter r_s. Spin-dependent exchange-correlation
energies are reported. Comparisons of the spin-dependent pair-distributions and
other calculated properties with any available 2-D quantum Monte Carlo (QMC)
results show excellent agreement, strongly favouring more recent QMC data. The
interesting novel physics brought to light by this study are: (a) the
independently determined quantum-temperatures for 3-D and 2-D are found to be
approximately the same, (i.e, universal) function of the classical coupling
constant Gamma. (b) the coupling constant Gamma increases rapidly with r_s in
2-D, making it comparatively more coupled than in 3-D; the stronger coupling in
2-D requires bridge corrections to the hyper- netted-chain method which is
adequate in 3-D; (c) the Helmholtz free energy of spin-polarized and
unpolarized phases have been calculated. The existence of a spin-polarized 2-D
liquid near r_s = 30, is found to be a marginal possibility. These results
pertain to clean uniform 2-D electron systems.Comment: This paper replaces the cond-mat/0109228 submision; the new version
include s more accurate numerical evaluation of the Helmholtz energies of the
para- and ferromagentic 2D fluides at finite temperatures. (Paper accepted
for publication in Phys. Rev. Lett.
The Equation of State and the Hugoniot of Laser Shock-Compressed Deuterium
The equation of state and the shock Hugoniot of deuterium are calculated
using a first-principles approach, for the conditions of the recent shock
experiments. We use density functional theory within a classical mapping of the
quantum fluids [ Phys. Rev. Letters, {\bf 84}, 959 (2000) ]. The calculated
Hugoniot is close to the Path-Integral Monte Carlo (PIMC) result. We also
consider the {\it quasi-equilibrium} two-temperature case where the Deuterons
are hotter than the electrons; the resulting quasi-equilibrium Hugoniot mimics
the laser-shock data. The increased compressibility arises from hot
pairs occuring close to the zero of the electron chemical potential.Comment: Four pages; One Revtex manuscript, two postscipt figures; submitted
to PR
Evolution of Ultracold, Neutral Plasmas
We present the first large-scale simulations of an ultracold, neutral plasma,
produced by photoionization of laser-cooled xenon atoms, from creation to
initial expansion, using classical molecular dynamics methods with open
boundary conditions. We reproduce many of the experimental findings such as the
trapping efficiency of electrons with increased ion number, a minimum electron
temperature achieved on approach to the photoionization threshold, and
recombination into Rydberg states of anomalously-low principal quantum number.
In addition, many of these effects establish themselves very early in the
plasma evolution ( ns) before present experimental observations begin.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, submitted to PR
Acceptability of HIV Rapid Testing in Diverse Clinical Settings in Iran
Introduction: Rapid HIV testing in clinical settings can identify previously undiagnosed persons and link them to care, as well provide patients with knowledge of their serostatus and risk reduction counseling. We conducted a survey to characterize factors affecting the acceptance or declining of rapid HIV testing among Iranian patients.Methods: This cross-sectional survey was conducted from October 2014 to December 2014 with patients in three different health care centers (an emergency department in an urban hospital, a rural health centre, a voluntary counseling and testing centre (VCT) within Imam Khomeini Hospital, Tehran, Iran and a rural health centre). Participants completed a semi-structured face-to-face questionnaire and were tested by an HIV rapid test (Chembio Sure Check).Results: Of 222 participants, 25 participants were from the urban emergency department, 40 from the urban VCT program, and 157 from the rural health care centre. All did the rapid HIV test; all were HIV negative. HIV-related risk profiles found the urban emergency department patients more likely to have multiple partners (26%, P<0.01) and history of sexually transmitted diseases (27%, P<0.001) compared to VCT patients (9% and 3%, respectively) and rural clinic patients (4% and 1%, respectively). Emergency department patients were also more willing to pay for a HIV rapid test (44%, P<0.01), doing a rapid self-test at home (84%,P=0.01), preferring pharmacies as a place for providing rapid tests (80%, P=0.001). Also level of participantsĂąâŹâą awareness was considerably different between mentioned centres (median=11, 12, 10 for emergency department, VCT and rural Health care centre respectively; P=0.012).Conclusions: Increasing knowledge about HIV rapid testing, its availability, and keeping costs low can expand the desire to use the test and ultimately prevent the spread of HIV through lack of knowing oneĂąâŹâąs serostatus and lack of treatment. Emergency departments in urban Iran may be an opportunity to test persons at high risk for HIV infection
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