896 research outputs found

    Surface acoustic waves for acousto-optic modulation in buried silicon nitride waveguides

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    We theoretically investigate the use of Rayleigh surface acoustic waves (SAWs) for refractive index modulation in optical waveguides consisting of amorphous dielectrics. Considering low-loss Si3_3N4_4 waveguides with a standard core cross section of 4.4×\times0.03 μ\mum2^2 size, buried 8 μ\mum deep in a SiO2_2 cladding we compare surface acoustic wave generation in various different geometries via a piezo-active, lead zirconate titanate film placed on top of the surface and driven via an interdigitized transducer (IDT). Using numerical solutions of the acoustic and optical wave equations, we determine the strain distribution of the SAW under resonant excitation. From the overlap of the acoustic strain field with the optical mode field we calculate and maximize the attainable amplitude of index modulation in the waveguide. For the example of a near-infrared wavelength of 840 nm, a maximum shift in relative effective refractive index of 0.7x103^{-3} was obtained for TE polarized light, using an IDT period of 30 - 35 μ\mum, a film thickness of 2.5 - 3.5 μ\mum, and an IDT voltage of 10 V. For these parameters, the resonant frequency is in the range 70 - 85 MHz. The maximum shift increases to 1.2x103^{-3}, with a corresponding resonant frequency of 87 MHz, when the height of the cladding above the core is reduced to 3 μ\mum. The relative index change is about 300-times higher than in previous work based on non-resonant proximity piezo-actuation, and the modulation frequency is about 200-times higher. Exploiting the maximum relative index change of 1.2×\times103^{-3} in a low-loss balanced Mach-Zehnder modulator should allow full-contrast modulation in devices as short as 120 μ\mum (half-wave voltage length product = 0.24 Vcm).Comment: 19 pages, 8 figure

    Healthy Weight and Obesity Prevention

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    Overweight and obesity have reached epidemic levels in the United States and worldwide, and this has contributed to substantial cardiovascular and other health risks. However, controversy exists concerning the causes of obesity and effective modalities for its prevention and treatment. There is also controversy related to the concept of metabolically healthy obesity phenotype, the “obesity paradox,” and on the importance of fitness to protect individuals who are overweight or obese from cardiovascular diseases. In this state-of-the-art review, the authors focus on “healthy weight” with the emphasis on the pathophysiologic effects of weight gain on the cardiovascular system; mechanistic/triggering factors; and the role of preventive actions through personal, education/environment, and societal/authoritative factors, as well as factors to provide guidance for caregivers of health promotion. Additionally, the authors briefly review metabolically healthy obesity, the obesity paradox, and issues beyond lifestyle consideration for weight loss with medications and bariatric surgery.From the John Ochsner Heart and Vascular Institute, Ochsner Clinical School—The University of Queensland School of Medicine, New Orleans, Louisiana; Department of Physical Therapy, College of Applied Health Science, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, Illinois; PROFITH “PROmoting FITness and Health through Physical Activity” Research Group, Department of Physical Education and Sports, Faculty of Sport Sciences, University of Granada, Granada, Spain; Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, University of Missouri School of Medicine, Columbia, Missouri; and the Northwestern University, Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, Illinois. Dr. Ortega receives support for research activity from the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness and FEDER (DEP2016-79512-R); additional funding from the University of Granada, Plan Propio de Investigación 2016, Excellence actions: Unit of Excellence on Exercise and Health (UCEES); and the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No. 667302. Dr. Kushner has served on the advisory board for Novo Nordisk, Weight Watchers, and Retrofit. All other authors have reported that they have no relationships relevant to the contents of this paper to disclose

    Building an end user focused THz based ultra high bandwidth wireless access network: The TERAPOD approach

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    The TERAPOD project aims to investigate and demonstrate the feasibility of ultra high bandwidth wireless access networks operating in the Terahertz (THz) band. The proposed TERAPOD THz communication system will be developed, driven by end user usage scenario requirements and will be demonstrated within a first adopter operational setting of a Data Centre. In this article, we define the full communications stack approach that will be taken in TERAPOD, highlighting the specific challenges and aimed innovations that are targeted

    Predatory arthropod community composition in apple orchards: Orchard management, landscape structure and sampling method

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    Studies on predatory arthropods in agricultural areas seldom include Diptera other than hoverflies, partly because common sampling methods are less effective for capturing species that easily fly off when disturbed. To study the effect from this bias when describing the predator community, we compared traditional beat sampling of branches and suction sampling for describing the community of predatory arthropods in Swedish apple orchards, both organic orchards and orchards using integrated pest management (IPM). Our results indicate that the proportion of both predatory dipterans and parasitic hymenopterans increase dramatically when using suction sampling (Diptera: 32% vs. 20%, Hymenoptera: 25% vs. 7%). In fact, predatory dipterans were the most abundant predatory group when using suction sampling, in contrast to beat sampling where spiders were the most abundant group. One group of predatory flies that was particularly rich in both species and individuals in the surveyed apple orchards was dance flies in the family Hybotidae. Even though the bias of sampling method was evident, it was encouraging that the method choice did not affect the conclusions concerning management on predatory arthropod communities. With both methods, dipteran and coleopteran predators were more abundant in organic apple orchards whereas opilionids were more abundant in orchards managed according to IPM. The inclusion of landscape variables further indicated effects of landscape diversity and of deciduous forest cover, but the response varied in sign between predatory groups. Whereas both Coleoptera and Heteroptera were more abundant in orchards surrounded by more complex landscapes (high landscape diversity and/or high deciduous forest cover), spiders, opilionids and dipterans were rather less abundant in these orchards. To conclude, our study points to the potential importance of predatory dipterans in apple orchards, and we highly recommend future studies of arthropod predators in apple and other crops to actively include predatory Diptera

    Constraining the Distribution of L- & T-Dwarfs in the Galaxy

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    We estimate the thin disk scale height of the Galactic population of L- & T-dwarfs based on star counts from 15 deep parallel fields from the Hubble Space Telescope. From these observations, we have identified 28 candidate L- & T- dwarfs based on their (i'-z') color and morphology. By comparing these star counts to a simple Galactic model, we estimate the scale height to be 350+-50 pc that is consistent with the increase in vertical scale with decreasing stellar mass and is independent of reddening, color-magnitude limits, and other Galactic parameters. With this refined measure, we predict that less than 10^9 M_{sol} of the Milky Way can be in the form L- & T- dwarfs, and confirm that high-latitude, z~6 galaxy surveys which use the i'-band dropout technique are 97-100% free of L- & T- dwarf interlopers.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, accepted to ApJ

    Community-acquired pneumonia: development of a bedside predictive model and scoring system to identify the aetiology

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    AbstractAlthough initial presentation has been commonly used to select empirical therapy in patients with community-acquired pneumonia (CAP), few studies have provided a quantitative estimation of its value. The objective of this study was to analyse whether a combination of basic clinical and laboratory information performed at bedside can accurately predict the aetiology of pneumonia.A prospective study was developed among patients admitted to the Emergency Department University Hospital Arnau de Vilanova, Lleida, Spain, with CAP. Informed consent was obtained from patients in the study. At entry, basic clinical (age, comorbidity, symptoms and physical findings) and laboratory (white blood cell count) information commonly used by clinicians in the management of respiratory infections, was recorded. According to microbiological results, patients were assigned to the following categories: bacterial (Streptococcus pneumoniae and other pyogenic bacteria), virus-like (Mycoplasma pneumoniae, Chlamydia spp and virus) and unknown pneumonia. A scoring system to identify the aetiology was derived from the odds ratio (OR) assigned to independent variables, adjusted by a logistic regression model. The accuracy of the prediction rule was tested by using receiver operating characteristic curves.One hundred and three consecutive patients were classified as having virus-like (48), bacterial (37) and unknown (18) pneumonia, respectively. Independent predictors related to bacterial pneumonia were an acute onset of symptoms (OR 31; 95% Cl, 6–150), age greater than 65 or comorbidity (OR 6·9; 95% Cl, 2–23), and leukocytosis or leukopenia (OR 2; 95% Cl, 0·6–7). The sensitivity and specificity of the scoring system to identify patients with bacterial pneumonia were 89% and 94%, respectively. The prediction rule developed from these three variables classified the aetiology of pneumonia with a ROC curve area of 0·84.Proper use of basic clinical and laboratory information is useful to identify the aetiology of CAP. The prediction rule may help clinicians to choose initial antibiotic therapy

    Farmers’ management of functional biodiversity goes beyond pest management in organic European apple orchards

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    Supporting functional biodiversity (FB), which provides natural pest regulation, is an environmentally sound and promising approach to reduce pesticide use in perennial cultures such as apple, especially in organic farming. However, little is known about farmers’ practices and motivations to implement techniques that favor FB, especially whether or not they really expect anything from FB in terms of pest regulation. In fact, FB-supporting techniques (FB-techniques) are massively questioned by practitioners due to inadequate information about their effectiveness. An interview survey was performed in eight European countries(i) to describe farmers’ practices and identify promising FB-techniques: (ii) to better understand their perceptions of and values associated with FB; and (iii) to identify potential drivers of (non-)adoption. Fifty-five advisors and 125 orchard managers with various degrees of experience and convictions about FB were interviewed and a total of 24 different FB-techniques which can be assigned to three different categories (ecological infrastructures, farming practices and redesign techniques) were described. Some were well-established measures (e.g., hedges and bird houses), while others were more marginal and more recent (e.g., animal introduction and compost). On average, farmers combined more than four techniques that had been implemented over a period of 13 years, especially during their establishment or conversion period. In general, it was difficult for farmers to evaluate the effectiveness of individual FB-techniques on pest regulation. They considered FB-techniques as a whole, targeting multiple species, and valued multiple ecosystem services in addition to pest regulation. The techniques implemented and their associated values differed among farmers who adopted various approaches towards FB. Three different approaches were defined: passive, active and integrated. Their appraisal of FB is even more complex because it may change with time and experience. These findings provide empirical evidence that the practical implementation of promising techniques remains a challenge, considering the diversity of situations and evaluation criteria. Increased cooperation between researchers, farmers and advisors should more effectively target research, advisory support and communication to meet farmers’ needs and perceptions

    The Milky Way: An Exceptionally Quiet Galaxy; Implications for the formation of spiral galaxies

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    [Abridged]We compare both the Milky Way and M31 galaxies to local external disk galaxies within the same mass range, using their relative locations in the planes formed by V_flat versus M_K, j_disk, and the average Fe abundance of stars in the galaxy outskirts. We find, for all relationships, that the MW is systematically offset by ~ 1 sigma, showing a significant deficiency in stellar mass, in angular momentum, in disk radius and [Fe/H] in the stars in its outskirts at a given V_flat. On the basis of their location in the M_K, V_flat, and R_d volume, the fraction of spirals like the MW is 7+/-1%, while M31 appears to be a "typical'' spiral. Our Galaxy appears to have escaped any significant merger over the last ~10 Gyrs which may explain why it is deficient by a factor 2 to 3 in stellar mass, angular momentum and outskirts metallicity and then, unrepresentative of the typical spiral. As with M31, most local spirals show evidence for a history shaped mainly by relatively recent merging. We conclude that the standard scenario of secular evolution is generally unable to reproduce the properties of most (if not all) spiral galaxies. However, the so-called "spiral rebuilding'' scenario proposed by Hammer et al. 2005 is consistent with the properties of both distant galaxies and of their descendants - the local spirals.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures, to appear in Ap

    Comunicación corta: efecto del trampeo masivo tipo OLIPE sobre los artrópodos no objetivo del olivar

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    Due to the widespread of mass-trapping systems for Bactrocera oleae (Gmelin) (Diptera: Tephritidae) control in organic olive cropping, an assessment of the impact on arthropods of the olive agroecosystem was undertaken for the OLIPE trap type. The sampling was carried out in "Los Pedroches" valley (Cordoba, southern Spain) in three different organic orchard sites. Six OLIPE traps baited with diammonium phosphate were collected from each site (18 in total) from July to November 2002 every 15 days on average. Additionally, in the latest sampling dates, half the traps were reinforced with pheromone to assess its impact on non-target arthropods. From an average of 43.0 catches per trap (cpt) of non-target arthropods during the whole sampling period, the highest number of captures corresponds to the Order Diptera (that represents a 68.5%), followed distantly by the family Formicidae (12.9%) and the Order Lepidoptera (10.4%). Besides the impact on ant populations, other beneficial groups were recorded such as parasitoids (Other Hymenoptera: 2.6%) and predators (Araneae: 1.0%; Neuroptera s.l.: 0.4%). Concerning the temporal distribution of catches, total captures peaked on July and had a slight increase at the beginning of autumn. No significant differences were observed between traps with and without pheromone. The results evidence that a considerable amount of non-specific captures could be prevented by improving the temporal planning of the mass-trapping system.Debido a la extensión del trampeo masivo como método de control para Bactrocera oleae (Gmelin) (Diptera: Tephritidae) en el cultivo ecológico del olivo, se llevó a cabo una evaluación del efecto de la trampa tipo OLIPE sobre los artrópodos del agroecosistema del olivar. El muestreo fue realizado en el valle de "Los Pedroches" (Córdoba, sur de España), en tres olivares ecológicos distintos. De cada olivar se recogieron 6 trampas OLIPE cebadas con fosfato diamónico (18 en total) desde julio a noviembre de 2002 con una periodicidad media de 15 días. Además, en las últimas fechas de muestreo, la mitad de las trampas fueron reforzadas mediante la adición de feromona para evaluar su impacto. De una media de 43,0 capturas por trampa (cpt) de artrópodos no objetivo a lo largo del periodo total de muestreo, la mayor parte de las capturas correspondieron al Orden Diptera (representando el 68,5%) seguidos por la familia Formicidae (12,9%) y el Orden Lepidoptera (10,4%). Aparte del impacto sobre la población de hormigas, se registraron capturas de otros grupos de beneficiosos tales como parasitoides, (Otros Hymenoptera: 2,6%) y depredadores (Araneae: 1,0%; Neuroptera s.l.: 0,4%). En cuanto a la distribución temporal, las capturas totales tuvieron un máximo en julio y un ligero incremento al comienzo de otoño. No se hallaron diferencias significativas entre las capturas de trampas con feromona y sin ella. Los resultados indican que una mejora de la planificación temporal del sistema de trampeo masivo permitiría evitar una importante cantidad de capturas no específicas.This project was funded by the project 92162-1 contract number 85, Junta de Andalucía. Ministry of Education and Science of Spain provided a collaboration grant to O.S
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