419 research outputs found

    Simple method for temporal study of subpicosecond distributed feedback dye lasers.

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    The spectral and temporal behaviour of subpicosecond DFDLs are studied. A simple and sensitive spectral diagnostic method is proposed to exhibit the presence and determine the temporal separation and relative amplitude of any following pulse. The measurements were performed in a hybrid excimer-dye laser system generating less than 100 fs pulses at 248 nm

    Intensity-dependent loss properties of window materials at 248 nm.

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    Transmission of fused silica, CaF2, LiF, and MgF2 is measured using 450-fsec, 248-nm pulses in the range 10–120 GW/cm2. Different loss mechanisms such as scattering of transmitted radiation, color-center formation, and multiphoton absorption were studied separately. For fused silica a two-photon absorption mechanism is found, while for CaF2, LiF, and MgF2 three-photon absorption and absorption due to color-center formation are found as dominant absorption mechanisms

    The metabolism of Brucellae: The nature of the effects of pH and concentration on the rate of oxidation of succinate

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    The sharp rise in the rate of oxidation of succinate by Brucella abortus that occurs with gross increases in hydrogen ion or the substrate concentration was accompanied by an even greater degree of increase in the rate of substrate uptake. The degree of change in these rates and of pyruvate formation with glutamate, a reported precursor of succinate, was minimal in comparison to that with succinate. The optimal pH for oxidation of succinate became strikingly higher with increased concentration of substrate; similarly, concentration optima were observed and they rose with increased pH. An analysis of these data indicated that the activity was largely but not exclusively dependent on the concentration of undissociated molecules. Contrary to these findings with intact cells, crude succinoxidase preparations exhibited a constant pH optimum at neutrality with changes in substrate concentration. The results favored a conclusion that permeability is rate limiting in the oxidation of succinate by the organism.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/32510/1/0000600.pd

    Optomechanical tuning of the polarization properties of micropillar cavity systems with embedded quantum dots

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    funding by the DFG within the project SCHN1376-5.1 and PR1749/1-1. Further, we acknowledge financial support by the State of Bavaria and the German Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) within the project Q.Link.X (FKZ 16KIS0871). Project HYPER-U-P-S has received funding from the QuantERA ERA-NET Cofund in Quantum Technologies implemented within the European Union's Horizon 2020 Programme. AP would like to thank the Swedish Research Council and Carl Tryggers Stiftelse. J. M.-S. acknowledges financial support from the Ramon y Cajal Program from the Government of Spain (RYC2018-026196-I) and the ClarinProgramme from the Government of the Principality of Asturias and a Marie Curie-COFUND grant (PA-18-ACB17-29).Strain tuning emerged as an appealing tool for tuning of fundamental optical properties of solid state quantum emitters. In particular, the wavelength and fine structure of quantum dot states can be tuned using hybrid semiconductor-piezoelectric devices. Here, we show how an applied external stress can directly impact the polarization properties of coupled InAs quantum dot-micropillar cavity systems. In our experiment, we find that we can reversibly tune the anisotropic polarization splitting of the fundamental microcavity mode by approximately 60 μeV. We discuss the origin of this tuning mechanism, which arises from an interplay between elastic deformation and the photoelastic effect in our micropillar. Finally, we exploit this effect to tune the quantum dot polarization opto-mechanically via the polarization-anisotropic Purcell effect. Our work paves the way for optomechanical and reversible tuning of the polarization and spin properties of light-matter coupled solid state systems.PostprintPeer reviewe

    The prescribed mean curvature equation in weakly regular domains

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    We show that the characterization of existence and uniqueness up to vertical translations of solutions to the prescribed mean curvature equation, originally proved by Giusti in the smooth case, holds true for domains satisfying very mild regularity assumptions. Our results apply in particular to the non-parametric solutions of the capillary problem for perfectly wetting fluids in zero gravity. Among the essential tools used in the proofs, we mention a \textit{generalized Gauss-Green theorem} based on the construction of the weak normal trace of a vector field with bounded divergence, in the spirit of classical results due to Anzellotti, and a \textit{weak Young's law} for (Λ,r0)(\Lambda,r_{0})-minimizers of the perimeter.Comment: 23 pages, 1 figure --- The results on the weak normal trace of vector fields have been now extended and moved in a self-contained paper available at: arXiv:1708.0139

    Targeting the live market: recovery of Norway lobsters Nephrops norvegicus (L.) from trawl-capture as assessed by stress-related parameters and nucleotide breakdown

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    The recovery potential of Norway lobsters (Nephrops norvegicus) held in on-board seawater tanks after trawl-capture was assessed at two different times of the year (winter and summer). Survival recorded 24 h after trawl-capture was 84.83 ± 0.93% in the winter compared to 75.35 ± 2.92% in the summer. Stress-related parameters in the muscle (arginine phosphate, glycogen and L-lactate) and in the haemolymph (L-lactate) were measured, together with nucleotide breakdown products in the muscle (yielding the “Adenylate Energy Charge” or AEC ratio). All parameters analysed were responsive to the stress of the trawl-capture and subsequently recovered towards resting values, but did so at different rates. The fact that some measures recovered at a faster rate than others should be taken into account when trying to develop an index of metabolic stress for this species. Animals trawled in the winter recovered to AEC values above 0.8 within 4 h of placing them in on-board seawater tanks, whereas animals trawled in the summer took 24 h to reach these values. Furthermore, at the end of the trials animals trawled in the summer presented significantly higher haemolymph L-lactate and lower muscle glycogen reserves than the animals trawled in the winter, suggesting a faster recovery in the winter compared to the summer. Finally, animals in the winter were better able to endure further stresses (an emersion of 1 h while animals were transported to the commercial handling facilities). Therefore, as a code of practice it is advised that trawled N. norvegicus directed to the live trade should be allowed to recover for at least 4–6 h in on-board tanks, and extra care should be taken especially in the summer, if further stresses such as additional emersion are to be applied within the first 24 h after capture

    Healthcare-associated infections in pediatric cancer patients: results of a prospective surveillance study from university hospitals in Germany and Switzerland

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Pediatric cancer patients face an increased risk of healthcare-associated infection (HAI). To date, no prospective multicenter studies have been published on this topic.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Prospective multicenter surveillance for HAI and nosocomial fever of unknown origin (nFUO) with specific case definitions and standardized surveillance methods.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>7 pediatric oncology centers (university facilities) participated from April 01, 2001 to August 31, 2005. During 54,824 days of inpatient surveillance, 727 HAIs and nFUOs were registered in 411 patients. Of these, 263 (36%) were HAIs in 181 patients, for an incidence density (ID) (number of events per 1,000 inpatient days) of 4.8 (95% CI 4.2 to 5.4; range 2.4 to 11.7; P < 0.001), and 464 (64%) were nFUO in 230 patients. Neutropenia at diagnosis correlated significantly with clinical severity of HAI. Of the 263 HAIs, 153 (58%) were bloodstream infections (BSI). Of the 138 laboratory-confirmed BSIs, 123 (89%) were associated with use of a long-term central venous catheter (CVAD), resulting in an overall ID of 2.8 per 1,000 utilization days (95% CI 2.3 to 3.3). The ID was significantly lower in Port-type than in Hickman-type CVADs. The death of 8 children was related to HAI, including six cases of aspergillosis. The attributable mortality was 3.0% without a significant association to neutropenia at time of NI diagnosis.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Our study confirmed that pediatric cancer patients are at an increased risk for specific HAIs. The prospective surveillance of HAI and comparison with cumulative multicenter results are indispensable for targeted prevention of these adverse events of anticancer treatment.</p

    Almost uniform sampling via quantum walks

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    Many classical randomized algorithms (e.g., approximation algorithms for #P-complete problems) utilize the following random walk algorithm for {\em almost uniform sampling} from a state space SS of cardinality NN: run a symmetric ergodic Markov chain PP on SS for long enough to obtain a random state from within ϵ\epsilon total variation distance of the uniform distribution over SS. The running time of this algorithm, the so-called {\em mixing time} of PP, is O(δ1(logN+logϵ1))O(\delta^{-1} (\log N + \log \epsilon^{-1})), where δ\delta is the spectral gap of PP. We present a natural quantum version of this algorithm based on repeated measurements of the {\em quantum walk} Ut=eiPtU_t = e^{-iPt}. We show that it samples almost uniformly from SS with logarithmic dependence on ϵ1\epsilon^{-1} just as the classical walk PP does; previously, no such quantum walk algorithm was known. We then outline a framework for analyzing its running time and formulate two plausible conjectures which together would imply that it runs in time O(δ1/2logNlogϵ1)O(\delta^{-1/2} \log N \log \epsilon^{-1}) when PP is the standard transition matrix of a constant-degree graph. We prove each conjecture for a subclass of Cayley graphs.Comment: 13 pages; v2 added NSF grant info; v3 incorporated feedbac

    Impact of Provider Incentives on Quality and Value of Health Care

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    The use of financial incentives to improve quality in health care has become widespread. Yet evidence on the effectiveness of incentives suggests that they have generally had limited impact on the value of care and have not led to better patient outcomes. Lessons from social psychology and behavioral economics indicate that incentive programs in health care have not been effectively designed to achieve their intended impact. In the United States, Medicare's Hospital Readmission Reduction Program and Hospital Value- Based Purchasing Program, created under the Affordable Care Act (ACA), provide evidence on how variations in the design of incentive programs correspond with differences in effect. As financial incentives continue to be used as a tool to increase the value and quality of health care, improving the design of programs will be crucial to ensure their success. Expected final online publication date for the Annual Review of Public Health Volume 38 is March 20, 2017. Please see http://www.annualreviews.org/page/journal/pubdates for revised estimates
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