774 research outputs found
Quantum Critical Environment Assisted Quantum Magnetometer
A central qubit coupled to an Ising ring of qubits, operating close to a
critical point is investigated as a potential precision quantum magnetometer
for estimating an applied transverse magnetic field. We compute the Quantum
Fisher information for the central, probe qubit with the Ising chain
initialized in its ground state or in a thermal state. The non-unitary
evolution of the central qubit due to its interaction with the surrounding
Ising ring enhances the accuracy of the magnetic field measurement. Near the
critical point of the ring, Heisenberg-like scaling of the precision in
estimating the magnetic field is obtained when the ring is initialized in its
ground state. However, for finite temperatures, the Heisenberg scaling is
limited to lower ranges of values.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figure
Quasi-chemical theory with a soft cutoff
In view of the wide success of molecular quasi-chemical theory of liquids,
this paper develops the soft-cutoff version of that theory. This development
has important practical consequences in the common cases that the packing
contribution dominates the solvation free energy of realistically-modeled
molecules because treatment of hard-core interactions usually requires special
purpose simulation methods. In contrast, treatment of smooth repulsive
interactions is typically straightforward on the basis of widely available
software. This development also shows how fluids composed of molecules with
smooth repulsive interactions can be treated analogously to the molecular-field
theory of the hard-sphere fluid. In the treatment of liquid water,
quasi-chemical theory with soft-cutoff conditioning doesn't change the
fundamental convergence characteristics of the theory using hard-cutoff
conditioning. In fact, hard cutoffs are found here to work better than softer
ones.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
A Community Based Study on Menstrual Hygiene among Reproductive Age Group Women in a Rural Area, Tamil Nadu
Background: Women suffer due to their ignorance on hygienic requirement during menstruation. Hygiene‑related practices of women during menstruation are of considerable importance, as it has a health impact in terms of increased vulnerability to reproductive tract infections (RTI). Aims: This study aims to assess the hygienic practices during menstruation and influence of socio-demographic factors on menstrual hygienic practices among women of reproductive age-group. Subjects and Methods: It is a cross‑sectional community‑based study conducted among 200 women of reproductive age group (15-45 years) in a rural field practice area, VMKV Medical college, Salem in Oct–Dec 2013 by using simple random sampling technique. Using structured pretested questionnaire, women were interviewed regarding their sociodemographic history and menstrual hygiene practices. Result: Majority of study population, 36% (72/200) belonged to the 21-30 year age group. About 75% (150/200) were married. Majority of women were unskilled workers 35% (70/200), had primary education 43.3% (86/200), and 54.3% (108/200) belonged to lower middle class. The mean age of menarche among the reproductive age‑group women was 13.15 years. Majority of women 51.8% (104/200) used cloth during menstruation; about 45.7% (91/200) used the same cloth by washing and reusing every month. There was a significant influence of sociodemographic factors and hygienic practices during menstruation (P < 0.001). Conclusion: Most women were found to follow unhygienic practices. Hence, efforts such as improving female literacy and health education regarding the various risk factors should be made by the policy makers to increase menstrual hygiene among rural population. Keywords: Menstrual hygiene, reproductive age‑group women, rural are
The identity of the serotonin-sensitive aryl acylamidase with acetylcholinesterase from human erythrocytes, sheep basal ganglia and electric eel
The identity of the serotonin-sensitive aryl acylamidase with acetylcholinesterase from three diverse sources, namely sheep basal ganglia, human erythrocyte membrane: and electric eel, was examined. Both the enzymes co-purified with constant ratios of specific activity from all the three sources by different affinity chromatographic techniques. The ratio of acetylcholinesterase to aryl acylarnidase activity was highest for basal ganglia, less for erythrocyte and lowest for eel enzymes. Both the purified enzymes co-migrated on polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis either as a single species or multiple species under different conditions. Gel density gradient electrophoresis indicated identical migration rates of both the enzymes. Extraction of the enzymes from the three sources by different techniques of membrane disruption and subsequent gel filtration on Sepharose 6B showed multiple peaks of enzyme activity. Both the enzymes had identical elution profiles on Sepharose 6B gel filtration. All the enzyme peaks from Sepharose 6B on gel electrophoresis showed co-migration of the enzyme activities. Apart from inhibition by serotonin and acetylcholine the purified aryl acylamidases from all the three sources were potently inhibited by neostygmine, eserine and BW284C51, all strong inhibitors of acetylcholinesterase. It is suggested that the serotonin-sensitive aryl acylamidase is identical with acetylcholinesterase
The aryl acylamidases and their relationship to cholinesterases in human serum, erythrocyte and liver
Human serum aryl acylamidase associated with serum cholinesterase was purified to homogeneity. Evidence for the identity of the two enzymes was based on co-elution profiles, co-purification in the different steps including affinity chromatography with constant ratios of specific activity and percentage recoveries, co-migration on gel electrophoresis, parallel inhibition by typical cholinesterase inhibitors and co-precipitation by antibody raised against the purified enzyme. Human liver aryl acylamidase was partially purified. Based on the elution profiles, purification data, inhibitory characteristics and gel electrophoresis it was concluded that aryl acrylamidase of liver was not associated with liver cholinesterase. More conclusive evidence for the non-association of the liver aryl acylamidase and cholinesterase came from their clear-cut separation on procainamide-Sepharose affinity chromatography. Both the serum and liver aryl acylamidase were compared with the purified erythrocyte aryl acylamidase associated with acetylcholinesterase. While the erythrocyte and serum aryl acylamidases showed some similarities in their sensitivities to amines like serotonin or tryptamine and choline derivatives, the liver enzyme was unaffected by any of these compounds. A notable observation was the activation by tyramine of the serum aryl acylamidase but not the erythrocyte and liver aryl acylamidases. The liver aryl acylamidase also differed from the other two in its relative insensitivity to inhibition by eserine, neostygmine and other cholinesterase inhibitors. Immunodiffusion and immunoprecipitation studies showed that the aryl acylamidases from the liver and erythrocytes were immunologically non-identical with the serum enzyme
Hotspot analysis: a first prototype Python plugin enabling exploratory spatial data analysis into QGIS
The growing popularity of Free and Open Source (FOSS) GIS software is without doubts due
to the possibility to build and customize geospatial applications to meet specific
requirements for any users. From this point of view, QGIS is one of the most flexible as well
as fashionable GIS software environment which enables users to develop powerful
geospatial applications using Python. Exploiting this feature, we present here a first
prototype plugin for QGIS dedicated to Hotspot analysis, one of the techniques included in
the Exploratory Spatial Data Analysis (ESDA). These statistics aim to perform analysis of
geospatial data when spatial autocorrelation is not neglectable and they are available inside
different Python libraries, but still not integrated within the QGIS core functionalities. The
main plugin features, including installation requirements and computational procedures, are
described together with an example of the possible applications of the Hotspot analysis
Quantum Discord and Quantum Computing - An Appraisal
We discuss models of computing that are beyond classical. The primary
motivation is to unearth the cause of nonclassical advantages in computation.
Completeness results from computational complexity theory lead to the
identification of very disparate problems, and offer a kaleidoscopic view into
the realm of quantum enhancements in computation. Emphasis is placed on the
`power of one qubit' model, and the boundary between quantum and classical
correlations as delineated by quantum discord. A recent result by Eastin on the
role of this boundary in the efficient classical simulation of quantum
computation is discussed. Perceived drawbacks in the interpretation of quantum
discord as a relevant certificate of quantum enhancements are addressed.Comment: To be published in the Special Issue of the International Journal of
Quantum Information on "Quantum Correlations: entanglement and beyond." 11
pages, 4 figure
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