410 research outputs found

    Generalized Green-Kubo formulas for fluids with impulsive, dissipative, stochastic and conservative interactions

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    We present a generalization of the Green-Kubo expressions for thermal transport coefficients ÎŒ\mu in complex fluids of the generic form, ÎŒ=Ό∞+∫0∞dtV0−1\mu= \mu_\infty +\int^\infty_0 dt V^{-1} _0, i.e. a sum of an instantaneous transport coefficient Ό∞\mu_\infty, and a time integral over a time correlation function in a state of thermal equilibrium between a current JJ and a transformed current JÏ”J_\epsilon. The streaming operator exp⁥(tL)\exp(t{\cal L}) generates the trajectory of a dynamical variable J(t)=exp⁥(tL)JJ(t) =\exp(t{\cal L}) J when used inside the thermal average 0_0. These formulas are valid for conservative, impulsive (hard spheres), stochastic and dissipative forces (Langevin fluids), provided the system approaches a thermal equilibrium state. In general Ό∞≠0\mu_\infty \neq 0 and Jϔ≠JJ_\epsilon \neq J, except for the case of conservative forces, where the equality signs apply. The most important application in the present paper is the hard sphere fluid.Comment: 14 pages, no figures. Version 2: expanded Introduction and section II specifying the classes of fluids covered by this theory. Some references added and typos correcte

    Argumentation in Decision Support for Medical Care Planning for Patients and Clinicians.

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    Developing a care plan for a patient requires an understanding of interactions and dependencies between procedures, and of their possible outcomes for an individual patient, and it requires the planner to keep track of this information as the proposed plan evolves. This is difficult even for experienced clinicians, but increasingly patients are expected (and expect) to participate. We describe an argumentation-based planning support system designed to ameliorate the cognitive load imposed by the planning and communication elements of such tasks. An initial evaluation study in the field of genetic counseling produced promising results. The approach may provide a general aid for clinicians and patients in visualizing, customizing, evaluating and communicating about care plans

    K–Te photocathodes: A new electron source for photoinjectors

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    K–Te photocathodes deposited on a Mo substrate have been successfully used as an electron source in the free electron laser of University of Twente. Long lifetimes have been measured: after more than 20 h of operation in the accelerator a K–Te cathode with 4.75% initial quantum efficiency still displays a 1.1% quantum efficiency at 259 nm. Moreover, the quantum efficiency of this cathode versus operation time can be fitted by an exponential decay curve, which saturates asymptotically to a 1.03% value, suggesting that a quantum efficiency close to 1% could be sustained for very long operation times. Films degraded by use can be recovered to a quantum efficiency which is close to the initial value, by heating the substrate at temperatures between 100 and 330 °C. A new procedure to obtain K–Te cathodes with high (up to 11%) quantum efficiencies is described

    Swelling-collapse transition of self-attracting walks

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    We study the structural properties of self-attracting walks in d dimensions using scaling arguments and Monte Carlo simulations. We find evidence for a transition analogous to the \Theta transition of polymers. Above a critical attractive interaction u_c, the walk collapses and the exponents \nu and k, characterising the scaling with time t of the mean square end-to-end distance ~ t^{2 \nu} and the average number of visited sites ~ t^k, are universal and given by \nu=1/(d+1) and k=d/(d+1). Below u_c, the walk swells and the exponents are as with no interaction, i.e. \nu=1/2 for all d, k=1/2 for d=1 and k=1 for d >= 2. At u_c, the exponents are found to be in a different universality class.Comment: 6 pages, 5 postscript figure

    BMQ

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    BMQ: Boston Medical Quarterly was published from 1950-1966 by the Boston University School of Medicine and the Massachusetts Memorial Hospitals. Pages 49-52, v17n2, provided courtesy of Howard Gotlieb Archival Research Center

    Structural Properties of Self-Attracting Walks

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    Self-attracting walks (SATW) with attractive interaction u > 0 display a swelling-collapse transition at a critical u_{\mathrm{c}} for dimensions d >= 2, analogous to the \Theta transition of polymers. We are interested in the structure of the clusters generated by SATW below u_{\mathrm{c}} (swollen walk), above u_{\mathrm{c}} (collapsed walk), and at u_{\mathrm{c}}, which can be characterized by the fractal dimensions of the clusters d_{\mathrm{f}} and their interface d_{\mathrm{I}}. Using scaling arguments and Monte Carlo simulations, we find that for u<u_{\mathrm{c}}, the structures are in the universality class of clusters generated by simple random walks. For u>u_{\mathrm{c}}, the clusters are compact, i.e. d_{\mathrm{f}}=d and d_{\mathrm{I}}=d-1. At u_{\mathrm{c}}, the SATW is in a new universality class. The clusters are compact in both d=2 and d=3, but their interface is fractal: d_{\mathrm{I}}=1.50\pm0.01 and 2.73\pm0.03 in d=2 and d=3, respectively. In d=1, where the walk is collapsed for all u and no swelling-collapse transition exists, we derive analytical expressions for the average number of visited sites and the mean time to visit S sites.Comment: 15 pages, 8 postscript figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.

    Interactive Decision Support for Risk Management: a Qualitative Evaluation in Cancer Genetic Counselling Sessions

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    Genetic counselling for inherited susceptibility to cancer involves communication of a significant amount of information about possible consequences of different interventions. This study explores counsellors' attitudes to computer software designed to aid this process. Eight genetic counsellors used the software with actors playing patients. Clinicians' rating of expected patient satisfaction, content, accuracy, timeliness, format, overall value, ease of use, effect on the patient–provider relationship and effect on clinician's performance were evaluated via qualitative and quantitative analysis of interviews, training tasks and questionnaires. Most counsellors found the software effective. Concerns related to possible impact on consultation dynamics and content. Participants suggested countering these through appropriate new counselling skills and selective use of the computer. The REACT software could provide effective support for genetic risk management counselling
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