40,034 research outputs found

    A venous occlusion plethysmography using a load cell as the sensing element

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    An application of the load cell as a sensor in venous occlusion plethysmography is presented. In this method the limb volume changes that follow venous occlusion are converted into water volume changes using a water tank for volume change detection. The hydrostatic pressure, as well as the water surface level, is measured and used for the calculation of the volume change. By using this method the influence of water pressure on limb blood flow, as well as drift and leakage of the sensing element, is avoided. The load cell has the advantage of measuring the weight of the displaced water volume, which simplifies the design principles of the plethysmography. The plethysmography is found to be sensitive, highly linear, and easy to handle. It has been evaluated in several subjects, and the results of these studies are in agreement with earlier results </p

    Signal Reconstruction via H-infinity Sampled-Data Control Theory: Beyond the Shannon Paradigm

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    This paper presents a new method for signal reconstruction by leveraging sampled-data control theory. We formulate the signal reconstruction problem in terms of an analog performance optimization problem using a stable discrete-time filter. The proposed H-infinity performance criterion naturally takes intersample behavior into account, reflecting the energy distributions of the signal. We present methods for computing optimal solutions which are guaranteed to be stable and causal. Detailed comparisons to alternative methods are provided. We discuss some applications in sound and image reconstruction

    Dynamical heterogeneity in a highly supercooled liquid: Consistent calculations of correlation length, intensity, and lifetime

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    We have investigated dynamical heterogeneity in a highly supercooled liquid using molecular-dynamics simulations in three dimensions. Dynamical heterogeneity can be characterized by three quantities: correlation length ξ4\xi_4, intensity χ4\chi_4, and lifetime τhetero\tau_{\text{hetero}}. We evaluated all three quantities consistently from a single order parameter. In a previous study (H. Mizuno and R. Yamamoto, Phys. Rev. E {\bf 82}, 030501(R) (2010)), we examined the lifetime τhetero(t)\tau_{\text{hetero}}(t) in two time intervals t=ταt=\tau_\alpha and τngp\tau_{\text{ngp}}, where τα\tau_\alpha is the α\alpha-relaxation time and τngp\tau_{\text{ngp}} is the time at which the non-Gaussian parameter of the Van Hove self-correlation function is maximized. In the present study, in addition to the lifetime τhetero(t)\tau_{\text{hetero}}(t), we evaluated the correlation length ξ4(t)\xi_4(t) and the intensity χ4(t)\chi_4(t) from the same order parameter used for the lifetime τhetero(t)\tau_{\text{hetero}}(t). We found that as the temperature decreases, the lifetime τhetero(t)\tau_{\text{hetero}}(t) grows dramatically, whereas the correlation length ξ4(t)\xi_4(t) and the intensity χ4(t)\chi_4(t) increase slowly compared to τhetero(t)\tau_{\text{hetero}}(t) or plateaus. Furthermore, we investigated the lifetime τhetero(t)\tau_{\text{hetero}}(t) in more detail. We examined the time-interval dependence of the lifetime τhetero(t)\tau_{\text{hetero}}(t) and found that as the time interval tt increases, τhetero(t)\tau_{\text{hetero}}(t) monotonically becomes longer and plateaus at the relaxation time of the two-point density correlation function. At the large time intervals for which τhetero(t)\tau_{\text{hetero}}(t) plateaus, the heterogeneous dynamics migrate in space with a diffusion mechanism, such as the particle density.Comment: 12pages, 13figures, to appear in Physical Review

    Intrinsic double-peak structure of the specific heat in low-dimensional quantum ferrimagnets

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    Motivated by recent magnetic measurements on A3Cu3(PO4)4 (A=Ca,Sr) and Cu(3-Clpy)2(N3)2 (3-Clpy=3-Chloropyridine), both of which behave like one-dimensional ferrimagnets, we extensively investigate the ferrimagnetic specific heat with particular emphasis on its double-peak structure. Developing a modified spin-wave theory, we reveal that ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic dual features of ferrimagnets may potentially induce an extra low-temperature peak as well as a Schottky-type peak at mid temperatures in the specific heat.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figures embedded, Phys. Rev. B 65, 214418 (2002

    Simulating lattice gauge theories on a quantum computer

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    We examine the problem of simulating lattice gauge theories on a universal quantum computer. The basic strategy of our approach is to transcribe lattice gauge theories in the Hamiltonian formulation into a Hamiltonian involving only Pauli spin operators such that the simulation can be performed on a quantum computer using only one and two qubit manipulations. We examine three models, the U(1), SU(2), and SU(3) lattice gauge theories which are transcribed into a spin Hamiltonian up to a cutoff in the Hilbert space of the gauge fields on the lattice. The number of qubits required for storing a particular state is found to have a linear dependence with the total number of lattice sites. The number of qubit operations required for performing the time evolution corresponding to the Hamiltonian is found to be between a linear to quadratic function of the number of lattice sites, depending on the arrangement of qubits in the quantum computer. We remark that our results may also be easily generalized to higher SU(N) gauge theories.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures, 3 table
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