386 research outputs found
Ultracold Atoms as a Target: Absolute Scattering Cross-Section Measurements
We report on a new experimental platform for the measurement of absolute
scattering cross-sections. The target atoms are trapped in an optical dipole
trap and are exposed to an incident particle beam. The exponential decay of the
atom number directly yields the absolute total scattering cross-section. The
technique can be applied to any atomic or molecular species that can be
prepared in an optical dipole trap and provides a large variety of possible
scattering scenarios
Fast image processing with constraints by solving linear PDEs
We present a general framework that allows image filtering by minimization of a functional using a linear and positive definite partial differential equation (PDE) while also permitting to control the weight of each pixel individually. Linearity and positive definiteness allow to use fast algorithms to calculate the solution. Pixel weighting allows to enforce the preservation of edge information without the need for nonlinear diffusion by making use of information coming from an external source. The proof of existence and uniqueness of the solution is outlined and based on that a numerical scheme for finding the solution is introduced. Using this framework we developed two applications. The first is simple and fast denoising, which incorporates an edge detection algorithm. In this case the functional is designed to enhance the weight of the approximation term over the smoothing term at those places where an edge is detected. The second application is a background suppression algorithm that is robust against noise, shadows thrown by the object, and on the background and varying illumination. The results are qualitatively not quite as good as the ones obtained with nonlinear PDEs, but this disadvantage is compensated by the processing speed, which allows analysis of a 320×240 color frame in about 0.3s on a standard PC
Diabetes risk and amino acid profiles: cross-sectional and prospective analyses of ethnicity, amino acids and diabetes in a South Asian and European cohort from the SABRE (Southall And Brent REvisited) Study.
Aims/hypothesis: South Asian individuals have an increased risk of diabetes compared with Europeans that is unexplained by obesity and traditional or established metabolic measures. Circulating amino acids (AAs) may provide additional explanatory insights. In a unique cohort of European and South Asian men, we compared cross-sectional associations between AAs, metabolic and obesity traits, and longitudinal associations with incident diabetes. / Methods: Nuclear magnetic spectroscopy was used to measure the baseline (1988–1991) levels of nine AAs in serum samples from a British population-based cohort of 1,279 European and 1,007 South Asian non-diabetic men aged 40–69 years. Follow-up was complete for 19 years in 801 European and 643 South Asian participants. / Results: The serum concentrations of isoleucine, phenylalanine, tyrosine and alanine were significantly higher in South Asian men, while cross-sectional correlations of AAs with glycaemia and insulin resistance were similar in the two ethnic groups. However, most AAs were less strongly correlated with measures of obesity in the South Asian participants. Diabetes developed in 227 (35%) South Asian and 113 (14%) European men. Stronger adverse associations were observed between branched chain and aromatic AAs and incident diabetes in South Asian men. Tyrosine was a particularly strong predictor of incident diabetes in South Asian individuals, even after adjustment for metabolic risk factors, including obesity and insulin resistance (adjusted OR for a 1 SD increment, 1.47, 95% CI 1.17,1.85, p = 0.001) compared with Europeans (OR 1.10, 0.87, 1.39, p = 0.4; p = 0.045 for ethnicity × tyrosine interaction). / Conclusions/interpretation: Branched chain and aromatic AAs, particularly tyrosine, may be a focus for identifying novel aetiological mechanisms and potential treatment targets for diabetes in South Asian populations and may contribute to their excess risk of diabetes
Performance Limitations of Flat Histogram Methods and Optimality of Wang-Landau Sampling
We determine the optimal scaling of local-update flat-histogram methods with
system size by using a perfect flat-histogram scheme based on the exact density
of states of 2D Ising models.The typical tunneling time needed to sample the
entire bandwidth does not scale with the number of spins N as the minimal N^2
of an unbiased random walk in energy space. While the scaling is power law for
the ferromagnetic and fully frustrated Ising model, for the +/- J
nearest-neighbor spin glass the distribution of tunneling times is governed by
a fat-tailed Frechet extremal value distribution that obeys exponential
scaling. We find that the Wang-Landau algorithm shows the same scaling as the
perfect scheme and is thus optimal.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figure
Quantum Phases of Cold Polar Molecules in 2D Optical Lattices
We discuss the quantum phases of hard-core bosons on a two-dimensional square
lattice interacting via repulsive dipole-dipole interactions, as realizable
with polar molecules trapped in optical lattices. In the limit of small
tunneling, we find evidence for a devil's staircase, where solid phases appear
at all rational fillings of the underlying lattice. For finite tunneling, we
establish the existence of extended regions of parameters where the groundstate
is a supersolid, obtained by doping the solids either with particles or
vacancies. Here the solid-superfluid quantum melting transition consists of two
consecutive second-order transitions, with a supersolid as the intermediate
phase. The effects of finite temperature and confining potentials relevant to
experiments are discussed.Comment: replaced with published versio
Reconstruction of Images from Gabor Graphs with Applications in Facial Image Processing
Graphs labeled with complex-valued Gabor jets are one of the important data formats for face recognition and the classification of facial images into medically relevant classes like genetic syndromes. We here present an interpolation rule and an iterative algorithm for the reconstruction of images from these graphs. This is especially important if graphs have been manipulated for information processing. One such manipulation is averaging the graphs of a single syndrome, another one building a composite face from the features of various individuals. In reconstructions of averaged graphs of genetic syndromes, the patients' identities are suppressed, while the properties of the syndromes are emphasized. These reconstructions from average graphs have a much better quality than averaged images
All-optical formation of a Bose-Einstein condensate for applications in scanning electron microscopy
We report on the production of a F=1 spinor condensate of 87Rb atoms in a
single beam optical dipole trap formed by a focused CO2 laser. The condensate
is produced 13mm below the tip of a scanning electron microscope employing
standard all-optical techniques. The condensate fraction contains up to 100,000
atoms and we achieve a duty cycle of less than 10s.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Survival and residence times in disordered chains with bias
We present a unified framework for first-passage time and residence time of
random walks in finite one-dimensional disordered biased systems. The
derivation is based on exact expansion of the backward master equation in
cumulants. The dependence on initial condition, system size, and bias strength
is explicitly studied for models with weak and strong disorder. Application to
thermally activated processes is also developed.Comment: 13 pages with 2 figures, RevTeX4; v2:minor grammatical changes, typos
correcte
Elevated serum alpha-1 antitrypsin is a major component of GlycA-associated risk for future morbidity and mortality
Background GlycA is a nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy biomarker that predicts risk of disease from myriad causes. It is heterogeneous; arising from five circulating glycoproteins with dynamic concentrations: alpha-1 antitrypsin (AAT), alpha-1-acid glycoprotein (AGP), haptoglobin (HP), transferrin (TF), and alpha-1-antichymotrypsin (AACT). The contributions of each glycoprotein to the disease and mortality risks predicted by GlycA remain unknown. Methods We trained imputation models for AAT, AGP, HP, and TF from NMR metabolite measurements in 626 adults from a population cohort with matched NMR and immunoassay data. Levels of AAT, AGP, and HP were estimated in 11,861 adults from two population cohorts with eight years of follow-up, then each biomarker was tested for association with all common endpoints. Whole blood gene expression data was used to identify cellular processes associated with elevated AAT. Results Accurate imputation models were obtained for AAT, AGP, and HP but not for TF. While AGP had the strongest correlation with GlycA, our analysis revealed variation in imputed AAT levels was the most predictive of morbidity and mortality for the widest range of diseases over the eight year follow-up period, including heart failure (meta-analysis hazard ratio = 1.60 per standard deviation increase of AAT, P-value = 1×10−10), influenza and pneumonia (HR = 1.37, P = 6×10−10), and liver diseases (HR = 1.81, P = 1×10−6). Transcriptional analyses revealed association of elevated AAT with diverse inflammatory immune pathways. Conclusions This study clarifies the molecular underpinnings of the GlycA biomarker’s associated disease risk, and indicates a previously unrecognised association between elevated AAT and severe disease onset and mortality.Peer reviewe
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