33 research outputs found

    A robust, high-flux source of laser-cooled ytterbium atoms

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    We present a high-flux source of cold ytterbium atoms that is robust, lightweight and low-maintenance. Our apparatus delivers 1 × 109 atoms s−1 into a 3D magneto-optical trap without requiring water cooling or high current power supplies. We achieve this by employing a Zeeman slower and a 2D magneto-optical trap fully based on permanent magnets in Halbach configurations. This strategy minimizes mechanical complexity, stray magnetic fields, and heat production while requiring little to no maintenance, making it applicable to both embedded systems that seek to minimize electrical power consumption, and large scale experiments to reduce the complexity of their subsystems

    A scalable high-performance magnetic shield for very long baseline atom interferometry

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    We report on the design, construction, and characterization of a 10 m-long high-performance magnetic shield for very long baseline atom interferometry. We achieve residual fields below 4 nT and longitudinal inhomogeneities below 2.5 nT/m over 8 m along the longitudinal direction. Our modular design can be extended to longer baselines without compromising the shielding performance. Such a setup constrains biases associated with magnetic field gradients to the sub-pm/s2 level in atomic matterwave accelerometry with rubidium atoms and paves the way toward tests of the universality of free fall with atomic test masses beyond the 10-13 level. © 2020 Author(s)

    Predictors and outcome impact of perioperative serum sodium changes in a high-risk population.

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    BACKGROUND: The perioperative period may be associated with a marked neurohumoral stress response, significant fluid losses, and varied fluid replacement regimes. Acute changes in serum sodium concentration are therefore common, but predictors and outcomes of these changes have not been investigated in a large surgical population. METHODS: We carried out a retrospective cohort analysis of 27 068 in-patient non-cardiac surgical procedures in a tertiary teaching hospital setting. Data on preoperative conditions, perioperative events, hospital length of stay, and mortality were collected, along with preoperative and postoperative serum sodium measurements up to 7 days after surgery. Logistic regression was used to investigate the association between sodium changes and mortality, and to identify clinical characteristics associated with a deviation from baseline sodium >5 mmol litre(-1). RESULTS: Changes in sodium concentration >5 mmol litre(-1) were associated with increased mortality risk (adjusted odds ratio 1.49 for a decrease, 3.02 for an increase). Factors independently associated with a perioperative decrease in serum sodium concentration >5 mmol litre(-1) included age >60, diabetes mellitus, and the use of patient-controlled opioid analgesia. Factors associated with a similar increase were preoperative oxygen dependency, mechanical ventilation, central nervous system depression, non-elective surgery, and major operative haemorrhage. CONCLUSIONS: Maximum deviation from preoperative serum sodium value is associated with increased hospital mortality in patients undergoing in-patient non-cardiac surgery. Specific preoperative and perioperative factors are associated with significant serum sodium changes.This work was supported by the Cambridge University Division of Anaesthesia.This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Oxford University Press via http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/bja/aeu40

    Haematocrit and red blood cell transport in preterm infants: an observational study

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    AIMS—To test whether cardiac output acts as a compensatory response to changes in haematocrit.
METHODS—A cohort of 38 preterm infants (27-31 weeks' gestation) was studied with repeated Doppler measurements of left ventricular output during the 1st month of life. Red blood cell transport was calculated when the duct was closed.
RESULTS—Multiple regression analysis showed that left ventricular output correlated negatively with haematocrit when the duct was closed (n = 84) and when it was open (n = 59). The influence of an increase of 10% in haematocrit absolute value on mean (SD) left ventricular output was estimated at −55 (11) ml/kg/min. Mean (SD) red blood cell transport was 132 (30) ml/kg/min with a mean (SD) intra-individual variability of 20% (8.8%). Red blood cell transport was increased more frequently by left ventricular output than by haematocrit. Haematocrit and left ventricular output but not red blood cell transport were dependent on postnatal age.
CONCLUSION—These results suggest that in preterm infants cardiac output adaptation is effective in attenuating the effects of red blood cell mass variations on systemic oxygen carrying capacity.

    Effect of Pure Dephasing and Phonon Scattering on the Coupling of Semiconductor Quantum Dots to Optical Cavities

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    Using site-controlled semiconductor quantum dots (QDs) free of multiexcitonic continuum states, integrated with photonic crystal membrane cavities, we clarify the effects of pure dephasing and phonon scattering on exciton-cavity coupling in the weak-coupling regime. In particular, the observed QD-cavity copolarization and cavity mode feeding versus QD-cavity detuning are explained quantitatively by a model of a two-level system embedded in a solid-state environment
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