5,251 research outputs found
Transfer of ultra-low phase noise microwave references over the JANET Aurora fibre network using a femtosecond optical frequency comb
An ultra-low phase noise microwave frequency is transferred over 82 km of installed fibre by propagation of a 30 nm bandwidth optical frequency comb (104 modes). The phase noise induced along the fibre by vibrations and thermal effects is suppressed by implementing a noise cancellation scheme where a portion of the light is sent back to the transmitter through the same fibre. The 6th harmonic of the repetition rate detected before and after the pulse train has travelled a round trip are phase compared and used to generate an error signal that controls a fibre stretcher to compensate for the fibre-induced phase fluctuations. Optical amplifiers are used to compensate for the fibre attenuation and dispersion compensation modules are also employed
Phantom Maps and Homology Theories
We study phantom maps and homology theories in a stable homotopy category S
via a certain Abelian category A. We express the group P(X,Y) of phantom maps X
-> Y as an Ext group in A, and give conditions on X or Y which guarantee that
it vanishes. We also determine P(X,HB). We show that any composite of two
phantom maps is zero, and use this to reduce Margolis's axiomatisation
conjecture to an extension problem. We show that a certain functor S -> A is
the universal example of a homology theory with values in an AB 5 category and
compare this with some results of Freyd.Comment: 25 pages, AMSLaTeX, to appear in Topolog
Generalised Moore spectra in a triangulated category
In this paper we consider a construction in an arbitrary triangulated
category T which resembles the notion of a Moore spectrum in algebraic
topology. Namely, given a compact object C of T satisfying some finite tilting
assumptions, we obtain a functor which "approximates" objects of the module
category of the endomorphism algebra of C in T. This generalises and extends a
construction of Jorgensen in connection with lifts of certain homological
functors of derived categories. We show that this new functor is well-behaved
with respect to short exact sequences and distinguished triangles, and as a
consequence we obtain a new way of embedding the module category in a
triangulated category. As an example of the theory, we recover Keller's
canonical embedding of the module category of a path algebra of a quiver with
no oriented cycles into its u-cluster category for u>1.Comment: 26 pages, improvement to exposition of the proof of Theorem 3.
Gorenstein duality for real spectra
Following Hu and Kriz, we study the C 2 -spectra BPℝ⟨n⟩hni and Eℝ(n) that refine the usual truncated Brown-Peterson and the Johnson-Wilson spectra. In particular, we show that they satisfy Gorenstein duality with a representation grading shift and identify their Anderson duals. We also compute the associated local cohomology spectral sequence in the cases n = 1 and 2
High prevalence of anelloviruses in vitreous fluid of children with seasonal hyperacute panuveitis.
Seasonal hyperacute panuveitis (SHAPU) is a potentially blinding ocular disease occurring in Nepal that principally affects young children. Random amplification of partially purified vitreous fluid (VF)-derived nucleic acid revealed the presence of human anelloviruses in VF of SHAPU patients. In a comparative study of patients with different ocular pathologies, SHAPU patients were at highest risk of harboring anelloviruses in their eyes. The majority of SHAPU patients had multiple anelloviruses in their VF. The ocular anellovirus load in SHAPU and non-SHAPU patients did not differ and no SHAPU-specific anellovirus variant was detected. Analysis of paired serum and VF samples from SHAPU and non-SHAPU patients showed that the anellovirus detected in VF samples most likely originated from the systemic viral pool during viremia, potentially through breakdown of the blood-ocular barrier. The detection of anelloviruses in VF samples of uveitis patients, profoundly so in SHAPU patients, is imperative and warrants elucidation of its clinical significance
MODIFICATION BY FRAILTY STATUS OF AMBIENT AIR POLLUTION EFFECTS ON LUNG FUNCTION IN OLDER ADULTS IN THE CARDIOVASCULAR HEALTH STUDY
Older adult susceptibility to air pollution health effects is well-recognized. Advanced age may act as a partial surrogate for conditions associated with aging. The authors investigated whether gerontologic frailty (a clinical health status metric) modified the effects of ambient ozone or particulate matter (PM10) air pollution on lung function in 3382 older adults using 7 years of followup data from the Cardiovascular Health Study (CHS) and the CHS Environmental Factors Ancillary Study. Monthly average pollution and annual frailty assessments were related to up to 3 repeated measurements of lung function using novel cumulative summaries of pollution and frailty histories that account for duration as well as concentration. Frailty history was found to modify long-term pollution effects on Forced Vital Capacity (FVC). For example, the decrease in FVC associated with a 70 ppb-month increase in the cumulative sum of monthly average O3 exposure was 8.8 mL (95% confidence interval (CI): 7.4, 10.1) for a woman who had spent the prior 7 years prefrail or frail compared to 3.3 mL (95% CI: 2.7, 4.0) for a similar not frail woman (interaction P\u3c0.001)
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Regional Per Capita Solar Electric Footprint for the United States
In this report, we quantify the state-by-state per-capita 'solar electric footprint' for the United States. We use state-level data on population, electricity consumption, economic activity and solar insolation, along with solar photovoltaic (PV) array packing density data to develop a range of estimates of the solar electric footprint. We find that the solar electric footprint, defined as the land area required to supply all end-use electricity from solar photovoltaics, is about 181 m2 per person in the United States. Two key factors that influence the magnitude of the state-level solar electric footprint include how industrial energy is allocated (based on location of use vs. where goods are consumed) and the assumed distribution of PV configurations (flat rooftop vs. fixed tilt vs. tracking). The solar electric footprint is about 0.6% of the total land area of the United States with state-level estimates ranging from less than 0.1% for Wyoming to about 9% for New Jersey. We also compare the solar electric footprint to a number of other land uses. For example, we find that the solar electric footprint is equal to less than 2% of the land dedicated to cropland and grazing in the United States
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