10,674 research outputs found
Soap films as two-dimensional fluids: Diffusion and flow fields
We observe tracer particles diffusing in soap films to measure the
two-dimensional (2D) viscous properties of the films. We make soap films with a
variety of water-glycerol mixtures and of differing thicknesses. The
single-particle diffusivity relates closely to parameters of the film (such as
thickness ) for thin films, but the relation breaks down for thicker films.
Notably, the diffusivity is faster than expected for thicker films, with the
transition at using the tracer particle diameter . This
indicates a transition from purely 2D diffusion to diffusion that is more
three-dimensional. Additionally, we measure larger length scale flow fields
from correlated particle motions and find good agreement with what is expected
from theory of 2D fluids for all our films, thin and thick. We measure the
effective 2D viscosity of a soap film using single-particle diffusivity
measurements in thin films, and using the two-particle correlation measurements
in all films
A strong coupling critique of spin fluctuation driven charge order in underdoped cuprates
Charge order has emerged as a generic feature of doped cuprates, leading to
important questions about its origin and its relation to superconductivity.
Recent experiments on two classes of hole doped cuprates indicate a novel
d-wave symmetry for the order. These were motivated by earlier spin fluctuation
theoretical studies based on an expansion about hot spots in the Brillouin zone
that indicated such order would be competitive with d-wave superconductivity.
Here, we reexamine this problem by solving strong coupling equations in the
full Brillouin zone. Our results find that bond-oriented order, as seen
experimentally, is strongly suppressed, indicating that the charge order must
have a different origin.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures plus Supplemental material
Malleable Coding with Fixed Reuse
In cloud computing, storage area networks, remote backup storage, and similar
settings, stored data is modified with updates from new versions. Representing
information and modifying the representation are both expensive. Therefore it
is desirable for the data to not only be compressed but to also be easily
modified during updates. A malleable coding scheme considers both compression
efficiency and ease of alteration, promoting codeword reuse. We examine the
trade-off between compression efficiency and malleability cost-the difficulty
of synchronizing compressed versions-measured as the length of a reused prefix
portion. Through a coding theorem, the region of achievable rates and
malleability is expressed as a single-letter optimization. Relationships to
common information problems are also described
Malleable coding for updatable cloud caching
In software-as-a-service applications provisioned through cloud computing, locally cached data are often modified with updates from new versions. In some cases, with each edit, one may want to preserve both the original and new versions. In this paper, we focus on cases in which only the latest version must be preserved. Furthermore, it is desirable for the data to not only be compressed but to also be easily modified during updates, since representing information and modifying the representation both incur cost. We examine whether it is possible to have both compression efficiency and ease of alteration, in order to promote codeword reuse. In other words, we study the feasibility of a malleable and efficient coding scheme. The tradeoff between compression efficiency and malleability cost-the difficulty of synchronizing compressed versions-is measured as the length of a reused prefix portion. The region of achievable rates and malleability is found. Drawing from prior work on common information problems, we show that efficient data compression may not be the best engineering design principle when storing software-as-a-service data. In the general case, goals of efficiency and malleability are fundamentally in conflict.This work was supported in part by an NSF Graduate Research Fellowship (LRV), Grant CCR-0325774, and Grant CCF-0729069. This work was presented at the 2011 IEEE International Symposium on Information Theory [1] and the 2014 IEEE International Conference on Cloud Engineering [2]. The associate editor coordinating the review of this paper and approving it for publication was R. Thobaben. (CCR-0325774 - NSF Graduate Research Fellowship; CCF-0729069 - NSF Graduate Research Fellowship)Accepted manuscrip
Knowledge, Attitude and Practice on Blood Donation among Health Science Students in a University campus, South India
Background: The major part of demand for blood in India has been meeting through voluntary blood donations. The healthy, active and receptive huge student population is potential blood donors to meet safe blood requirements. However, there is a paucity of studies on awareness and attitude among health science students on voluntary blood donation. Objective: The objective of this study was to determine the knowledge and attitude about blood donation among health science students. Methods: A cross-sectional study was conducted among 410 health sciences students from different streams in a University campus of South India through a structured survey questionnaire in the year 2009. Results: The overall knowledge on blood donation was good, but majority (62%) of students never donated blood. Knowledge level was found highest among allied health science (53.1%) and lowest among pharmacy students (20.7%). ‘Feeling of medically unfit’ and ‘never thought of blood donation’ were the major reasons for not donating blood. A significant association was observed between different streams of students and levels of knowledge and attitude about blood donation. Conclusion: This study elicits the importance of adopting effective measures in our campuses to motivate about voluntary blood donation among students
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