2,769 research outputs found

    Picosecond soliton transmission by use of concatenated gain-distributed nonlinear amplifying fiber loop mirrors

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    Author name used in this publication: Ping Kong A. Wai2005-2006 > Academic research: refereed > Publication in refereed journalVersion of RecordPublishe

    Ultrashort soliton generation through higher-order soliton compression in a nonlinear optical loop mirror constructed from dispersion-decreasing fiber

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    Author name used in this publication: P. K. A. Wai2002-2003 > Academic research: refereed > Publication in refereed journalVersion of RecordPublishe

    Amplification and compression of ultrashort fundamental solitons in an erbium-doped nonlinear amplifying fiber loop mirror

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    Author name used in this publication: P. K. A. Wai2002-2003 > Academic research: refereed > Publication in refereed journalVersion of RecordPublishe

    Hydrogen peroxide augments the injury effect of iron on the isolated rat heart and cardiomyocytes

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    2000-2001 > Academic research: refereed > Publication in refereed journalVersion of RecordPublishe

    Dynamics of one-dimensional tight-binding models with arbitrary time-dependent external homogeneous fields

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    The exact propagators of two one-dimensional systems with time-dependent external fields are presented by following the path-integral method. It is shown that the Bloch acceleration theorem can be generalized to the impulse-momentum theorem in quantum version. We demonstrate that an evolved Gaussian wave packet always keeps its shape in an arbitrary time-dependent homogeneous driven field. Moreover, that stopping and accelerating of a wave packet can be achieved by the pulsed field in a diabatic way.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure

    Measurement of Scintillation and Ionization Yield and Scintillation Pulse Shape from Nuclear Recoils in Liquid Argon

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    We have measured the scintillation and ionization yield of recoiling nuclei in liquid argon as a function of applied electric field by exposing a dual-phase liquid argon time projection chamber (LAr-TPC) to a low energy pulsed narrow band neutron beam produced at the Notre Dame Institute for Structure and Nuclear Astrophysics. Liquid scintillation counters were arranged to detect and identify neutrons scattered in the TPC and to select the energy of the recoiling nuclei. We report measurements of the scintillation yields for nuclear recoils with energies from 10.3 to 57.3 keV and for median applied electric fields from 0 to 970 V/cm. For the ionization yields, we report measurements from 16.9 to 57.3 keV and for electric fields from 96.4 to 486 V/cm. We also report the observation of an anticorrelation between scintillation and ionization from nuclear recoils, which is similar to the anticorrelation between scintillation and ionization from electron recoils. Assuming that the energy loss partitions into excitons and ion pairs from 83m^{83m}Kr internal conversion electrons is comparable to that from 207^{207}Bi conversion electrons, we obtained the numbers of excitons (NexN_{ex}) and ion pairs (NiN_i) and their ratio (Nex/NiN_{ex}/N_i) produced by nuclear recoils from 16.9 to 57.3 keV. Motivated by arguments suggesting direction sensitivity in LAr-TPC signals due to columnar recombination, a comparison of the light and charge yield of recoils parallel and perpendicular to the applied electric field is presented for the first time.Comment: v2 to reflect published versio

    Adequacy of therapy for people with both COPD and heart failure in the UK : historical cohort study

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    Acknowledgments We thank Derek Skinner for his contributions to the data acquisition and handling and Carole Nicholls and Priyanka Raju Konduru for statistical support. Writing and editorial support was provided by Elizabeth V. Hillyer, DVM, supported by Novartis Pharma AG, Basel, Switzerland. Funding This work was supported by Novartis. Employees of the sponsor (listed as authors) participated in the study design, interpretation of the results, writing of the report, and the decision to submit the paper for publication.Peer reviewedPublisher PD

    Speckle-free laser imaging

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    Many imaging applications require increasingly bright illumination sources, motivating the replacement of conventional thermal light sources with light emitting diodes (LEDs), superluminescent diodes (SLDs) and lasers. Despite their brightness, lasers and SLDs are poorly suited for full-field imaging applications because their high spatial coherence leads to coherent artifacts known as speckle that corrupt image formation. We recently demonstrated that random lasers can be engineered to provide low spatial coherence. Here, we exploit the low spatial coherence of specifically-designed random lasers to perform speckle-free full-field imaging in the setting of significant optical scattering. We quantitatively demonstrate that images generated with random laser illumination exhibit higher resolution than images generated with spatially coherent illumination. By providing intense laser illumination without the drawback of coherent artifacts, random lasers are well suited for a host of full-field imaging applications from full-field microscopy to digital light projector systems.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure

    Human Decision-Making in Multi-Agent Systems

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    In order to avoid suboptimal collective behaviors and resolve social dilemmas, researchers have tried to understand how humans make decisions when interacting with other humans or smart machines and carried out theoretical and experimental studies aimed at influencing decision-making dynamics in large populations. We identify the key challenges and open issues in the related research, list a few popular models with the corresponding results, and point out future research directions

    Sporadic renal cell carcinoma in young and elderly patients: are there different clinicopathological features and disease specific survival rates?

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    BACKGROUND: Sporadic renal cell carcinoma (RCC) is rare in young adults. In the present retrospective study we reviewed clinicopathological features and disease specific survival rates in young patients (≤45 years) with RCC and compared them to old patients (≥75 years) with RCC. METHODS: Between 1992 and 2005 a total of 1042 patients were treated for RCC at our institution. We found 70 patients 45 years or younger (YP) and 150 patients 75 years or older (OP) at time of diagnosis. There were no differences in therapeutical approaches between both groups. Clinical and biologic parameters at diagnosis were compared and subjected to uni- and multivariate analysis to study cancer specific survival and progression rate. Mean postoperative follow-up in both groups was 50.1 months. RESULTS: Mean age was 39 years in YP and 80 years in OP, respectively. YP demonstrated significantly lower stage (pT1-pT2 N0 M0, p = 0.03), lower tumor grade (p = 0.01) and higher male-to-female ratio (p < 0.001). The rate of lymph node metastases or distant metastatic disease at presentation did not differ significantly between both groups. In multivariate analysis young age was independently associated with a higher 5-year cancer specific survival (95.2% vs. 72.3%, p = 0.009) and a lower 5-year progression rate (11.3% vs. 42.5%, p = 0.002). CONCLUSION: Sporadic RCC in young patients have lower tumor stages and grades and a better outcome compared to elderly. Age≤45 years was an independent prognostic factor for survival and progression
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