1,074 research outputs found
An audit into the efficacy of single use bacterial/viral filters for the prevention of equipment contamination during lung function assessment
SummaryLung function testing has been suggested to provide a potential risk regarding cross-infection between patients. About 155 patients (86 infectious, 69 non-infectious) used a single use bacterial/viral filter when performing routine lung function tests. Swabs from the patient side of the filter (Proximal) and the equipment side (Distal), and two sections of the filter itself were cultured. About 33/155 samples showed bacterial growth on the Proximal compared with 2/155 on the Distal side (P<0.01). Growth was obtained from the filter in 125/155 (80.6%) of cases. Pathogenic micro-organisms such as Pseudomonas aeruginosa (4 cases) and Staphylococcus aureus (5 cases) were isolated. Appropriate infection control measures should be used when performing lung function tests
Lax pairs, Painlev\'e properties and exact solutions of the alogero Korteweg-de Vries equation and a new (2+1)-dimensional equation
We prove the existence of a Lax pair for the Calogero Korteweg-de Vries
(CKdV) equation. Moreover, we modify the T operator in the the Lax pair of the
CKdV equation, in the search of a (2+1)-dimensional case and thereby propose a
new equation in (2+1) dimensions. We named this the (2+1)-dimensional CKdV
equation. We show that the CKdV equation as well as the (2+1)-dimensional CKdV
equation are integrable in the sense that they possess the Painlev\'e property.
Some exact solutions are also constructed
Pseudogap phase of high-Tc compounds described within the LDA+DMFT+Sigma approach
LDA+DMFT+Sigma_k approach was applied to describe pseudogap phase of several
prototype high-Tc compounds e.g. hole doped Bi2212 and LSCO systems and
electron doped NCCO and PCCO, demonstrating qualitative difference of the Fermi
surfaces (FS) for these systems. Namely for Bi2212 and LSCO the so called
"hot-spots" (intersection of a bare FS and AFM Brillouin zone (BZ) boundary),
where scattering on pseudogap fluctuations is most intensive were not observed.
Instead here we have Fermi arcs with smeared FS close to the BZ boundary.
However for NCCO and PCCO "hot-spots" are clearly visible. This qualitative
difference is shown to have material specific origin. Good agreement with known
ARPES data was demon strated not only for FS maps but also for spectral
function maps (quasiparticle bands in cluding lifetime and interaction
broadening).Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, 1 table, SNS2010 proceedings (24-28 May 2010,
Shanghai, China
Decoherence of electron spin qubits in Si-based quantum computers
Direct phonon spin-lattice relaxation of an electron qubit bound by a donor
impurity or quantum dot in SiGe heterostructures is investigated. The aim is to
evaluate the importance of decoherence from this mechanism in several important
solid-state quantum computer designs operating at low temperatures. We
calculate the relaxation rate as a function of [100] uniaxial strain,
temperature, magnetic field, and silicon/germanium content for Si:P bound
electrons. The quantum dot potential is much smoother, leading to smaller
splittings of the valley degeneracies. We have estimated these splittings in
order to obtain upper bounds for the relaxation rate. In general, we find that
the relaxation rate is strongly decreased by uniaxial compressive strain in a
SiGe-Si-SiGe quantum well, making this strain an important positive design
feature. Ge in high concentrations (particularly over 85%) increases the rate,
making Si-rich materials preferable. We conclude that SiGe bound electron
qubits must meet certain conditions to minimize decoherence but that
spin-phonon relaxation does not rule out the solid-state implementation of
error-tolerant quantum computing.Comment: 8 figures. To appear in PRB-July 2002. Revisions include: some
references added/corrected, several typos fixed, a few things clarified.
Nothing dramati
A Gravitational Aharonov-Bohm Effect, and its Connection to Parametric Oscillators and Gravitational Radiation
A thought experiment is proposed to demonstrate the existence of a
gravitational, vector Aharonov-Bohm effect. A connection is made between the
gravitational, vector Aharonov-Bohm effect and the principle of local gauge
invariance for nonrelativistic quantum matter interacting with weak
gravitational fields. The compensating vector fields that are necessitated by
this local gauge principle are shown to be incorporated by the DeWitt minimal
coupling rule. The nonrelativistic Hamiltonian for weak, time-independent
fields interacting with quantum matter is then extended to time-dependent
fields, and applied to problem of the interaction of radiation with
macroscopically coherent quantum systems, including the problem of
gravitational radiation interacting with superconductors. But first we examine
the interaction of EM radiation with superconductors in a parametric oscillator
consisting of a superconducting wire placed at the center of a high Q
superconducting cavity driven by pump microwaves. We find that the threshold
for parametric oscillation for EM microwave generation is much lower for the
separated configuration than the unseparated one, which then leads to an
observable dynamical Casimir effect. We speculate that a separated parametric
oscillator for generating coherent GR microwaves could also be built.Comment: 25 pages, 5 figures, YA80 conference (Chapman University, 2012
Individual chitin synthase enzymes synthesize microfibrils of differing structure at specific locations in the Candida albicans cell wall
The shape and integrity of fungal cells is dependent on the skeletal polysaccharides in their cell walls of which β(1,3)-glucan and chitin are of principle importance. The human pathogenic fungus Candida albicans has four genes, CHS1, CHS2, CHS3 and CHS8, which encode chitin synthase isoenzymes with different biochemical properties and physiological functions. Analysis of the morphology of chitin in cell wall ghosts revealed two distinct forms of chitin microfibrils: short microcrystalline rodlets that comprised the bulk of the cell wall; and a network of longer interlaced microfibrils in the bud scars and primary septa. Analysis of chitin ghosts of chs mutant strains by shadow-cast transmission electron microscopy showed that the long-chitin microfibrils were absent in chs8 mutants and the short-chitin rodlets were absent in chs3 mutants. The inferred site of chitin microfibril synthesis of these Chs enzymes was corroborated by their localization determined in Chsp–YFP-expressing strains. These results suggest that Chs8p synthesizes the long-chitin microfibrils, and Chs3p synthesizes the short-chitin rodlets at the same cellular location. Therefore the architecture of the chitin skeleton of C. albicans is shaped by the action of more than one chitin synthase at the site of cell wall synthesis
Low-Energy Universality in Atomic and Nuclear Physics
An effective field theory developed for systems interacting through
short-range interactions can be applied to systems of cold atoms with a large
scattering length and to nucleons at low energies. It is therefore the ideal
tool to analyze the universal properties associated with the Efimov effect in
three- and four-body systems. In this "progress report", we will discuss recent
results obtained within this framework and report on progress regarding the
inclusion of higher order corrections associated with the finite range of the
underlying interaction.Comment: Commissioned article for Few-Body Systems, 47 pp, 16 fig
BOUT++: a framework for parallel plasma fluid simulations
A new modular code called BOUT++ is presented, which simulates 3D fluid
equations in curvilinear coordinates. Although aimed at simulating Edge
Localised Modes (ELMs) in tokamak X-point geometry, the code is able to
simulate a wide range of fluid models (magnetised and unmagnetised) involving
an arbitrary number of scalar and vector fields, in a wide range of geometries.
Time evolution is fully implicit, and 3rd-order WENO schemes are implemented.
Benchmarks are presented for linear and non-linear problems (the Orszag-Tang
vortex) showing good agreement. Performance of the code is tested by scaling
with problem size and processor number, showing efficient scaling to thousands
of processors.
Linear initial-value simulations of ELMs using reduced ideal MHD are
presented, and the results compared to the ELITE linear MHD eigenvalue code.
The resulting mode-structures and growth-rate are found to be in good agreement
(BOUT++ = 0.245, ELITE = 0.239). To our knowledge, this is the first time
dissipationless, initial-value simulations of ELMs have been successfully
demonstrated.Comment: Submitted to Computer Physics Communications. Revised to reduce page
count. 18 pages, 16 figure
Dynamic Evolution Model of Isothermal Voids and Shocks
We explore self-similar hydrodynamic evolution of central voids embedded in
an isothermal gas of spherical symmetry under the self-gravity. More
specifically, we study voids expanding at constant radial speeds in an
isothermal gas and construct all types of possible void solutions without or
with shocks in surrounding envelopes. We examine properties of void boundaries
and outer envelopes. Voids without shocks are all bounded by overdense shells
and either inflows or outflows in the outer envelope may occur. These
solutions, referred to as type void solutions, are further
divided into subtypes and
according to their characteristic behaviours across the sonic critical line
(SCL). Void solutions with shocks in envelopes are referred to as type
voids and can have both dense and quasi-smooth edges.
Asymptotically, outflows, breezes, inflows, accretions and static outer
envelopes may all surround such type voids. Both cases of
constant and varying temperatures across isothermal shock fronts are analyzed;
they are referred to as types and
void shock solutions. We apply the `phase net matching procedure' to construct
various self-similar void solutions. We also present analysis on void
generation mechanisms and describe several astrophysical applications. By
including self-gravity, gas pressure and shocks, our isothermal self-similar
void (ISSV) model is adaptable to various astrophysical systems such as
planetary nebulae, hot bubbles and superbubbles in the interstellar medium as
well as supernova remnants.Comment: 24 pages, 13 figuers, accepted by ApS
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Forging strategic partnerships with industry: The Industrial Fellows Program
Science, technology, and industrial policy are at an important nexus due to long developing trends in the national and international economy and recent events in national security affairs. The research and development assets built by the American taxpayer in response to the Cold War face a quest for relevance in the new era. National competitiveness in international markets has emerged as an important new priority. To better understand the perspective of US industry the management of the Los Alamos National Laboratory has initiated an Industrial Fellows Program which has placed six individuals at US corporations. Their goal is to create strategic partnerships through increased understanding of technical needs of industry and the technical capabilities of the Laboratory
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