20 research outputs found

    Imaging Spatial Correlations of Rydberg Excitations in Cold Atom Clouds.

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    When cold atoms are laser-excited to Rydberg states, the strong interactions between Rydberg excitations can lead to complex many-body entanglement in the system. The excitation process results in spatial correlations between excitations in the system. In most cases, Rydberg excitation positions are anticorrelated such that no two excitations are within a "blockade radius" of each other. Such systems are well-suited for studying basic many-body physics, as well as for future technological applications such as quantum computation. This thesis describes an experimental apparatus we constructed to perform spatially-sensitive detection of Rydberg atoms. We use the apparatus to perform measurements of the Rydberg-Rydberg pair-correlation function. This results in the first direct spatial images of the Rydberg blockade effect. We measure the blockade radius for a variety of S and D Rydberg states in rubidium. We investigate the dependence of the blockade radius on laser detunings and energy level shifts induced by optical potentials due to trapping lasers. Our results have some implications for atom traps used for neutral atom quantum computation. We also present simulations results used to characterize the performance of the imaging system.PhDPhysicsUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/99943/1/adschw_1.pd

    One- and two-stage surgical revision of peri-prosthetic joint infection of the hip: a pooled individual participant data analysis of 44 cohort studies.

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    One-stage and two-stage revision strategies are the two main options for treating established chronic peri-prosthetic joint infection (PJI) of the hip; however, there is uncertainty regarding which is the best treatment option. We aimed to compare the risk of re-infection between the two revision strategies using pooled individual participant data (IPD). Observational cohort studies with PJI of the hip treated exclusively by one- or two-stage revision and reporting re-infection outcomes were retrieved by searching MEDLINE, EMBASE, Web of Science, The Cochrane Library, and the WHO International Clinical Trials Registry Platform; as well as email contact with investigators. We analysed IPD of 1856 participants with PJI of the hip from 44 cohorts across four continents. The primary outcome was re-infection (recurrence of infection by the same organism(s) and/or re-infection with a new organism(s)). Hazard ratios (HRs) for re-infection were calculated using Cox proportional frailty hazards models. After a median follow-up of 3.7 years, 222 re-infections were recorded. Re-infection rates per 1000 person-years of follow-up were 16.8 (95% CI 13.6-20.7) and 32.3 (95% CI 27.3-38.3) for one-stage and two-stage strategies respectively. The age- and sex-adjusted HR of re-infection for two-stage revision was 1.70 (0.58-5.00) when compared with one-stage revision. The association remained consistently absent after further adjustment for potential confounders. The HRs did not vary importantly in clinically relevant subgroups. Analysis of pooled individual patient data suggest that a one-stage revision strategy may be as effective as a two-stage revision strategy in treating PJI of the hip

    Island of opportunity:can New Guinea protect amphibians from a globally emerging pathogen?

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    The amphibian chytrid fungus Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (chytrid) has caused the most widespread, disease-induced declines and extinctions in vertebrates recorded to date. The largest climatically suitable landmass that may still be free of this fungus is New Guinea. The island is home to a sizeable proportion of the world's known frog species (an estimated 6%), as well as many additional, yet-to-be-described species. Two decades of research on the chytrid fungus have provided a foundation for improved management of amphibian populations. We call for urgent, unified, international, multidisciplinary action to prepare for the arrival of B dendrobatidis in New Guinea, to prevent or slow its spread within the island after it arrives, and to limit its impact upon the island's frog populations. The apparent absence of the fungus in New Guinea offers an opportunity to build capacity in advance for science, disease surveillance, and diagnosis that will have broad relevance both for non-human animal health and for public health
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