66 research outputs found
Mindful Opportunity to Reflect on Experience: Interdisciplinary MindâBody Medicine Skills Training for Health-care Professionals
Interventions that support employee wellness and resilience hold potential to improve patient care, increase staff engagement, and decrease burnout. This repeat-measures study evaluated whether an abbreviated version of mindâbody medicine skills training could decrease stress and improve mindfulness among an interdisciplinary cohort of health-care professionals. The study also assessed whether participants incorporated the mindâbody medicine skills into their personal and professional lives. Aggregate results from this unpaired cohort showed decreased stress and increased mindfulness. Postcourse surveys demonstrated increased personal and professional use of mindâbody medicine skills. There was high favorability among participants. These preliminary results suggest that a modest investment of time and resources to learn mindâbody medicine skills may positively affect employee wellness among health-care professionals. In addition, skills learned could translate into improved patient care and increased staff engagement. Further study with larger cohorts and a paired design is needed
Non-negative Wigner functions in prime dimensions
According to a classical result due to Hudson, the Wigner function of a pure,
continuous variable quantum state is non-negative if and only if the state is
Gaussian. We have proven an analogous statement for finite-dimensional quantum
systems. In this context, the role of Gaussian states is taken on by stabilizer
states. The general results have been published in [D. Gross, J. Math. Phys.
47, 122107 (2006)]. For the case of systems of odd prime dimension, a greatly
simplified proof can be employed which still exhibits the main ideas. The
present paper gives a self-contained account of these methods.Comment: 5 pages. Special case of a result proved in quant-ph/0602001. The
proof is greatly simplified, making the general case more accessible. To
appear in Appl. Phys. B as part of the proceedings of the 2006 DPG Spring
Meeting (Quantum Optics and Photonics section
Macdonald Polynomials from Sklyanin Algebras: A Conceptual Basis for the -Adics-Quantum Group Connection
We establish a previously conjectured connection between -adics and
quantum groups. We find in Sklyanin's two parameter elliptic quantum algebra
and its generalizations, the conceptual basis for the Macdonald polynomials,
which ``interpolate'' between the zonal spherical functions of related real and
\--adic symmetric spaces. The elliptic quantum algebras underlie the
\--Baxter models. We show that in the n \air \infty limit, the Jost
function for the scattering of {\em first} level excitations in the
\--Baxter model coincides with the Harish\--Chandra\--like \--function
constructed from the Macdonald polynomials associated to the root system .
The partition function of the \--Baxter model itself is also expressed in
terms of this Macdonald\--Harish\--Chandra\ \--function, albeit in a less
simple way. We relate the two parameters and of the Macdonald
polynomials to the anisotropy and modular parameters of the Baxter model. In
particular the \--adic ``regimes'' in the Macdonald polynomials correspond
to a discrete sequence of XXZ models. We also discuss the possibility of
``\--deforming'' Euler products.Comment: 25 page
Non Linear Current Response of a Many-Level Tunneling System: Higher Harmonics Generation
The fully nonlinear response of a many-level tunneling system to a strong
alternating field of high frequency is studied in terms of the
Schwinger-Keldysh nonequilibrium Green functions. The nonlinear time dependent
tunneling current is calculated exactly and its resonance structure is
elucidated. In particular, it is shown that under certain reasonable conditions
on the physical parameters, the Fourier component is sharply peaked at
, where is the spacing between
two levels. This frequency multiplication results from the highly nonlinear
process of photon absorption (or emission) by the tunneling system. It is
also conjectured that this effect (which so far is studied mainly in the
context of nonlinear optics) might be experimentally feasible.Comment: 28 pages, LaTex, 7 figures are available upon request from
[email protected], submitted to Phys.Rev.
On Classification of N=2 Supersymmetric Theories, (e-mail uncorrupted version)
We find a relation between the spectrum of solitons of massive quantum
field theories in and the scaling dimensions of chiral fields at the
conformal point. The condition that the scaling dimensions be real imposes
restrictions on the soliton numbers and leads to a classification program for
symmetric conformal theories and their massive deformations in terms of a
suitable generalization of Dynkin diagrams (which coincides with the A--D--E
Dynkin diagrams for minimal models). The Landau-Ginzburg theories are a proper
subset of this classification. In the particular case of LG theories we relate
the soliton numbers with intersection of vanishing cycles of the corresponding
singularity; the relation between soliton numbers and the scaling dimensions in
this particular case is a well known application of Picard-Lefschetz theory.Comment: 116 pages, HUTP-92/A064 and SISSA-203/92/E
Staffing and Training Aspects of Hospital Management: Some Issues for Research
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/68624/2/10.1177_107755878904600205.pd
Transport-theoretical Description of Nuclear Reactions
In this review we first outline the basics of transport theory and its recent
generalization to off-shell transport. We then present in some detail the main
ingredients of any transport method using in particular the Giessen
Boltzmann-Uehling-Uhlenbeck (GiBUU) implementation of this theory as an
example. We discuss the potentials used, the ground state initialization and
the collision term, including the in-medium modifications of the latter. The
central part of this review covers applications of GiBUU to a wide class of
reactions, starting from pion-induced reactions over proton and antiproton
reactions on nuclei to heavy-ion collisions (up to about 30 AGeV). A major part
concerns also the description of photon-, electron- and neutrino-induced
reactions (in the energy range from a few 100 MeV to a few 100 GeV). For this
wide class of reactions GiBUU gives an excellent description with the same
physics input and the same code being used. We argue that GiBUU is an
indispensable tool for any investigation of nuclear reactions in which
final-state interactions play a role. Studies of pion-nucleus interactions,
nuclear fragmentation, heavy ion reactions, hyper nucleus formation,
hadronization, color transparency, electron-nucleus collisions and
neutrino-nucleus interactions are all possible applications of GiBUU and are
discussed in this article.Comment: 173 pages, review article. v2: Text-rearrangements in sects. 2 and 3
(as accepted for publication in Physics Reports
Exploring emerging battery technology for grid-connected energy storage with Constructive Technology Assessment
International audienc
On the age of the hominid fossils at the Sima de los Huesos, Sierra de Atapuerca, Spain: paleomagnetic evidence
We report new paleomagnetic data for the Middle Pleistocene hominid-bearing strata in the Sima de los Huesos, North Spain. Sediments (brown muds with human and bear fossils and the underlying sterile clayey and sandy unit) preserve both normal and reversed magnetic components. The sterile unit has exclusively reversed magnetization, dating back to the Matuyama Chron, and thus is Lower Pleistocene in age. The overlying fossiliferous muds have a dominant normal magnetization that overprints a partially resolved reversed magnetization. These data are compatible with one of the reversal events that occurred during the Brunhes Chron. Combined with the existing U-series dates and evidence from the macro- and microfauna, these paleomagnetic results suggest an age of the hominid fossils between 325 to 205 ka, whereas the underlying sand and silts are older than 780 ka.DGESUnidad Asociada CSIC-UCMDepto. de GeodinĂĄmica, EstratigrafĂa y PaleontologĂaFac. de Ciencias GeolĂłgicasTRUEpu
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