834 research outputs found
Inclusion of Diffraction Effects in the Gutzwiller Trace Formula
The Gutzwiller trace formula is extended to include diffraction effects. The
new trace formula involves periodic rays which have non-geometrical segments as
a result of diffraction on the surfaces and edges of the scatter.Comment: 4 pages, LaTeX, 1 ps figur
Beyond CME: Diabetes Education Field-Interactive Strategies from Sweden
The Diabetes Educational and Training Unit (DETU) at Karolinska Hospital is a permanent, continuing medical education unit working with general practitioners and nurse teams from Stockholm's neigh borhood health centers. It offers a two-week educational program four times a year, teaching a comprehensive approach to diabetes care. Evaluation research found that centers that had implemented the approach taught at the CME course had excellent staff rapport and produced patients who were more knowledgeable about their disease and better able to engage in self-care. As a result of this research, the Stockholm DETU has added innovative field- interactive strategies to stimulate centers that have not implemented the program. These strategies include techniques to enhance staff rapport, increase knowledge and interest in care for people with diabetes, and arrive at staff- determined approaches for organizing diabetes care. Initial evaluation of these strategies indicate encouraging results.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/68369/2/10.1177_014572178801400313.pd
Wave Chaos in Elastodynamic Cavity Scattering
The exact elastodynamic scattering theory is constructed to describe the
spectral properties of two- and more-cylindrical cavity systems, and compared
to an elastodynamic generalization of the semi-classical Gutzwiller unstable
periodic orbits formulas. In contrast to quantum mechanics, complex periodic
orbits associated with the surface Rayleigh waves dominate the low-frequency
spectrum, and already the two-cavity system displays chaotic features.Comment: 7 pages, 5 eps figures, latex (with epl.cls
Small Disks and Semiclassical Resonances
We study the effect on quantum spectra of the existence of small circular
disks in a billiard system. In the limit where the disk radii vanish there is
no effect, however this limit is approached very slowly so that even very small
radii have comparatively large effects. We include diffractive orbits which
scatter off the small disks in the periodic orbit expansion. This situation is
formally similar to edge diffraction except that the disk radii introduce a
length scale in the problem such that for wave lengths smaller than the order
of the disk radius we recover the usual semi-classical approximation; however,
for wave lengths larger than the order of the disk radius there is a
qualitatively different behaviour. We test the theory by successfully
estimating the positions of scattering resonances in geometries consisting of
three and four small disks.Comment: Final published version - some changes in the discussion and the
labels on one figure are correcte
Classical, semiclassical, and quantum investigations of the 4-sphere scattering system
A genuinely three-dimensional system, viz. the hyperbolic 4-sphere scattering
system, is investigated with classical, semiclassical, and quantum mechanical
methods at various center-to-center separations of the spheres. The efficiency
and scaling properties of the computations are discussed by comparisons to the
two-dimensional 3-disk system. While in systems with few degrees of freedom
modern quantum calculations are, in general, numerically more efficient than
semiclassical methods, this situation can be reversed with increasing dimension
of the problem. For the 4-sphere system with large separations between the
spheres, we demonstrate the superiority of semiclassical versus quantum
calculations, i.e., semiclassical resonances can easily be obtained even in
energy regions which are unattainable with the currently available quantum
techniques. The 4-sphere system with touching spheres is a challenging problem
for both quantum and semiclassical techniques. Here, semiclassical resonances
are obtained via harmonic inversion of a cross-correlated periodic orbit
signal.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
On the regional variability of dB/dt and its significance to GIC
Faraday's law of induction is responsible for setting up a geoelectric field due to the variations in the geomagnetic field caused by ionospheric currents. This drives geomagnetically induced currents (GICs) which flow in large groundâbased technological infrastructure such as highâvoltage power lines. The geoelectric field is often a localized phenomenon exhibiting significant variations over spatial scales of only hundreds of kilometers. This is due to the complex spatiotemporal behavior of electrical currents flowing in the ionosphere and/or large gradients in the ground conductivity due to highly structured local geological properties. Over some regions, and during large storms, both of these effects become significant. In this study, we quantify the regional variability of dB/dt using closely placed IMAGE stations in northern Fennoscandia. The dependency between regional variability, solar wind conditions, and geomagnetic indices are also investigated. Finally, we assess the significance of spatial geomagnetic variations to modeling GICs across a transmission line. Key results from this study are as follows: (1) Regional geomagnetic disturbances are important in modeling GIC during strong storms; (2) dB/dt can vary by several times up to a factor of three compared to the spatial average; (3) dB/dt and its regional variation is coupled to the energy deposited into the magnetosphere; and (4) regional variability can be more accurately captured and predicted from a local index as opposed to a global one. These results demonstrate the need for denser magnetometer networks at high latitudes where transmission lines extending hundreds of kilometers are present
Geometrical theory of diffraction and spectral statistics
We investigate the influence of diffraction on the statistics of energy
levels in quantum systems with a chaotic classical limit. By applying the
geometrical theory of diffraction we show that diffraction on singularities of
the potential can lead to modifications in semiclassical approximations for
spectral statistics that persist in the semiclassical limit . This
result is obtained by deriving a classical sum rule for trajectories that
connect two points in coordinate space.Comment: 14 pages, no figure, to appear in J. Phys.
Recommender Thermometer for Measuring the Preparedness for Flood Resilience Management
A range of various thermometers and similar scales are employed in different human and resilience management activities: Distress Thermometer, Panic Thermometer, Fear Thermometer, fire danger rating, hurricane scales, earthquake scales (Richter
Magnitude Scale, Mercalli Scale), Anxiety Thermometer, Help Thermometer, Problem Thermometer, Emotion Thermometer, Depression Thermometer, the Torino scale (assessing asteroid/comet impact prediction), Excessive Heat Watch, etc. Extensive financing of the preparedness for flood resilience management with overheated full-scale resilience management might be compared to someone ill running a fever of 41°C. As the financial crisis hits and resilience management financing cools down it reminds a sick person whose body temperature is too low. The degree indicated by the Recommender Thermometer for Measuring the Preparedness for Flood Resilience Management with a scale between Tmin=34,0° and Tmax=42,0° shows either cool or overheated preparedness for flood resilience management. The formalized presentation of this research shows how
changes in the micro, meso and macro environment of resilience management and the extent to which the goals pursued by various interested parties are met cause corresponding changes in the âtemperatureâ of the preparedness for resilience
management. Global innovative aspects of the Recommender Thermometer developed by the authors of this paper are, primarily, its capacity to measure the âtemperatureâ of the preparedness for flood resilience management automatically, to
compile multiple alternative recommendations (preparedness for floods, including preparing your home for floods, taking precautions against a threat of floods, retrofitting for flood-prone areas, checking your house insurance; preparedness for bushfires, preparedness for cyclones, preparedness for severe storms, preparedness for heat waves, etc.) customised for a specific
user, to perform multiple criteria analysis of the recommendations, and to select the ten most rational ones for that user. Across the world, no other system offers these functions yet. The Recommender Thermometer was developed and fine-tuned in the course of the Android (Academic Network for Disaster Resilience to Optimise educational Development) project
Superiority of semiclassical over quantum mechanical calculations for a three-dimensional system
In systems with few degrees of freedom modern quantum calculations are, in
general, numerically more efficient than semiclassical methods. However, this
situation can be reversed with increasing dimension of the problem. For a
three-dimensional system, viz. the hyperbolic four-sphere scattering system, we
demonstrate the superiority of semiclassical versus quantum calculations.
Semiclassical resonances can easily be obtained even in energy regions which
are unattainable with the currently available quantum techniques.Comment: 10 pages, 1 figure, submitted to Phys. Lett.
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