1,457 research outputs found

    PC-Reg: A pyramidal prediction–correction approach for large deformation image registration

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    Deformable image registration plays an important role in medical image analysis. Deep neural networks such as VoxelMorph and TransMorph are fast, but limited to small deformations and face challenges in the presence of large deformations. To tackle large deformations in medical image registration, we propose PC-Reg, a pyramidal Prediction and Correction method for deformable registration, which treats multi-scale registration akin to solving an ordinary differential equation (ODE) across scales. Starting with a zero-initialized deformation at the coarse level, PC-Reg follows the predictor–corrector regime and progressively predicts a residual flow and a correction flow to update the deformation vector field through different scales. The prediction in each scale can be regarded as a single step of ODE integration. PC-Reg can be easily extended to diffeomorphic registration and is able to alleviate the multiscale accumulated upsampling and diffeomorphic integration error. Further, to transfer details from full resolution to low scale, we introduce a distillation loss, where the output is used as the target label for intermediate outputs. Experiments on inter-patient deformable registration show that the proposed method significantly improves registration not only for large but also for small deformations

    Occurrence and risk assessment of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in soil from the Tiefa coal mine district, Liaoning, China.

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    &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In order to evaluate soil-associated polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) pollution from coal mine activities in Tiefa coal mine, Northeast China, 16 PAHs identified as priority pollutants by US Environmental Pollution Agency were determined in mining zone soil (MZS), agricultural soil (AS), local lake bank soil (LBS), a vertical soil profile and three coal gangue samples. The total concentration of 16 PAHs (defined as &Sigma;(16)PAH, dry weight) in surface soil ranged from 5.1 to 5642.3 ng g(-1), with an arithmetic mean of 1118.3 ng g(-1). &Sigma;(16)PAH values at the sites from MZS are significantly higher than those found in AS and LBS. The vertical distribution of PAHs indicated that these compounds can penetrate the deeper layers of the soil, especially the low-rings compounds. A complex of petrogenic origin and pyrolytic sources was found within the study area, as suggested by the isomeric ratios of PAHs. According to principal component analysis (PCA), four factors were identified in the source contribution, including coal combustion, unburned coal particulates, coal gangue and vehicular emissions. The degree of contamination and the PAH toxicity assessment suggested that the soils of the study area have been seriously polluted and pose a high potential health risk.</span

    Thermodynamics of the superconducting state in Calcium at 200 GPa

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    The thermodynamic parameters of the superconducting state in Calcium under the pressure at 200 GPa were calculated. The Coulomb pseudopotential values (Ό⋆\mu^{\star}) from 0.1 to 0.3 were taken into consideration. It has been shown, that the specific heat's jump at the critical temperature and the thermodynamic critical field near zero Kelvin strongly decrease with Ό⋆\mu^{\star}. The dimensionless ratios r1≡ΔC(TC)/CN(TC)r_{1}\equiv \Delta C(T_{C})/C^{N}(T_{C}) and r2≡TCCN(TC)/HC2(0)r_{2}\equiv T_{C}C^{N}(T_{C})/H^{2}_{C}(0) significantly differ from the predictions based on the BCS model. In particular, r1r_{1} decreases from 2.64 to 1.97 with the Coulomb pseudopotential; whereas r2r_{2} increases from 0.140 to 0.157. The numerical results have been supplemented by the analytical approach.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure

    The rare top quark decays t→cVt\to cV in the topcolor-assisted technicolor model

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    We consider the rare top quark decays in the framework of topcolor-assisted technicolor (TC2) model. We find that the contributions of top-pions and top-Higgs predicted by the TC2 model can enhance the SM branching ratios by as much as 6-9 orders of magnitude. i.e., in the most case, the orders of magnitude of branching ratios are Br(t→cg)∌10−5Br(t\to c g)\sim 10^{-5}, Br(t→cZ)∌10−5Br(t\to c Z)\sim 10^{-5}, Br(t→cÎł)∌10−7Br(t\to c \gamma)\sim 10^{-7}. With the reasonable values of the parameters in TC2 model, such rare top quark decays may be testable in the future experiments. So, rare top quark decays provide us a unique way to test TC2 model.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figure

    Dynamics of Dark-Bright Solitons in Cigar-Shaped Bose-Einstein Condensates

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    We explore the stability and dynamics of dark-bright solitons in two-component elongated Bose-Einstein condensates by developing effective 1D vector equations as well as solving the corresponding 3D Gross-Pitaevskii equations. A strong dependence of the oscillation frequency and of the stability of the dark-bright (DB) soliton on the atom number of its components is found. Spontaneous symmetry breaking leads to oscillatory dynamics in the transverse degrees of freedom for a large occupation of the component supporting the dark soliton. Moreover, the interactions of two DB solitons are investigated with special emphasis on the importance of their relative phases. Experimental results showcasing dark-bright soliton dynamics and collisions in a BEC consisting of two hyperfine states of 87^{87}Rb confined in an elongated optical dipole trap are presented.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure

    Ginzburg-Landau Expansion in Non-Fermi Liquid Superconductors: Effect of the Mass Renormalization Factor

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    We reconsider the Ginzburg-Landau expansion for the case of a non-Fermi liquid superconductor. We obtain analytical results for the Ginzburg-Landau functional in the critical region around the superconducting phase transition, T <= T_c, in two special limits of the model, i.e., the spin-charge separation case and the anomalous Fermi liquid case. For both cases, in the presence of a mass renormalization factor, we derived the form and the specific dependence of the coherence length, penetration depth, specific heat jump at the critical point, and the magnetic upper critical field. For both limits the obtained results reduce to the usual BCS results for a two dimensional s-wave superconductor. We compare our results with recent and relevant theoretical work. The results for a d--wave symmetry order parameter do not change qualitatively the results presented in this paper. Only numerical factors appear additionally in our expressions.Comment: accepted for publication in Physical Review

    Olympic legacy and cultural tourism: Exploring the facets of Athens' Olympic heritage

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    This study examines the effects of the Olympic Games on Athens’ cultural tourism and the city’s potential to leverage the Olympic legacy in synergy with its rich heritage in order to enhance its tourism product during the post-Games period. In doing so, a qualitative and interpretive approach was employed. This includes a literature review on Athens’ 2004 Olympics to identify the sport facilities and regeneration projects, which constitute the Olympic legacy and heritage. Based on that, an empirical analysis was undertaken, by collecting official documents about the 2004 Olympics, and conducting five semi-structured interviews with tourism/administrative officials. The findings indicate that the Olympiad contributed significantly to Athens’ built and human heritage, revealing the dimensions of new venues/facilities, infrastructure, transportation and aesthetic image of the city, and human capital enhancement. Hence, the Games affected to the multifaceted representation and reconstruction of the city’s identity and cultural heritage. However, the potential afforded from the post-Olympic Athens remains unrealised due to lack of strategic planning/management. The study concludes that there is a need to develop cross-leveraging synergies between the Olympic legacy and cultural tourism for the host city. Finally, a strategic planning framework for leveraging post-Games Olympic tourism is suggested in order to maximise the benefits of Olympic legacy and heritage in a host city’s tourism development

    Templates for Convex Cone Problems with Applications to Sparse Signal Recovery

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    This paper develops a general framework for solving a variety of convex cone problems that frequently arise in signal processing, machine learning, statistics, and other fields. The approach works as follows: first, determine a conic formulation of the problem; second, determine its dual; third, apply smoothing; and fourth, solve using an optimal first-order method. A merit of this approach is its flexibility: for example, all compressed sensing problems can be solved via this approach. These include models with objective functionals such as the total-variation norm, ||Wx||_1 where W is arbitrary, or a combination thereof. In addition, the paper also introduces a number of technical contributions such as a novel continuation scheme, a novel approach for controlling the step size, and some new results showing that the smooth and unsmoothed problems are sometimes formally equivalent. Combined with our framework, these lead to novel, stable and computationally efficient algorithms. For instance, our general implementation is competitive with state-of-the-art methods for solving intensively studied problems such as the LASSO. Further, numerical experiments show that one can solve the Dantzig selector problem, for which no efficient large-scale solvers exist, in a few hundred iterations. Finally, the paper is accompanied with a software release. This software is not a single, monolithic solver; rather, it is a suite of programs and routines designed to serve as building blocks for constructing complete algorithms.Comment: The TFOCS software is available at http://tfocs.stanford.edu This version has updated reference
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