10,968 research outputs found

    ME 3902: Online Project-Based Engineering Experimentation

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    This course is designed to develop experimental skills in engineering measurement methods, based on electronic instrumentation and microcontrollers such as the Raspberry Pi and Arduino. Lectures are concerned with engineering analysis/design and principles of instrumentation, while the laboratory modules allow for the use of these devices in experiments. Lecture topics include discussions of standards, measurement/sensing devices, experiment planning, data acquisition/analysis, and report writing. Laboratory experiments address mechanical, energy, and materials measurements, and instrumentation. The course culminates with an open-ended project which will illuminate the skills gained by the student to utilize multiple sensors and equipment to monitor and/or control physical situations

    Anesthesia assessment based on ICA permutation entropy analysis of two-channel EEG signals

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    Inaccurate assessment may lead to inaccurate levels of dosage given to the patients that may lead to intraoperative awareness that is caused by under dosage during surgery or prolonged recovery in patients that is caused by over dosage after the surgery is done. Previous research and evidence show that assessing anesthetic levels with the help of electroencephalography (EEG) signals gives an overall better aspect of the patient’s anesthetic state. This paper presents a new method to assess the depth of anesthesia (DoA) using Independent Component Analysis (ICA) and permutation entropy analysis. ICA is performed on two-channel EEG to reduce the noise then Wavelet and permutation entropy are applied on these channels to extract the features. A linear regression model was used to build the new DoA index using the selected features. The new index designed by proposed methods performs well under low signal quality and it was overall consistent in most of the cases where Bispectral index (BIS) may fail to provide any valid value

    Microfluidic impedance biosensors for monitoring a single and multiple cancer cells in anticancer drug treatments

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    In this work, we present a novel microfluidic impedance biosensor chip for trapping both a single and multiple cancer cells and monitoring their response to the anti-cancer drug treatment. By designing different sizes of working microelectrodes together with the V-shaped cell capture structures, a single or multiple cells are trapped on the microelectrodes surfaces. In addition, by utilizing the passive pumping method, cells can be trapped and positioned inside the microchannels without the need of using the outer micro pump or syringe. The impedance change induced by the response of cells to the anticancer drug Cisplatin treatment was successfully recorded. The proposed biosensor chip has a great potential for applications in cancer cell research, drug screening, and quantification of cancer cells from various tumor stages. The results of this study open potential research collaborations about development of cost-effective devices and lab-on-chips for early disease detection, studies of cancerous cells and their response to anti-cancer drugs to optimize cancer treatments, characterisation of mechanical properties of cells, new drug delivery mechanisms, and micro and nano manufacturing

    Yang-Mills instantons and dyons on homogeneous G_2-manifolds

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    We consider Lie G-valued Yang-Mills fields on the space R x G/H, where G/H is a compact nearly K"ahler six-dimensional homogeneous space, and the manifold R x G/H carries a G_2-structure. After imposing a general G-invariance condition, Yang-Mills theory with torsion on R x G/H is reduced to Newtonian mechanics of a particle moving in R^6, R^4 or R^2 under the influence of an inverted double-well-type potential for the cases G/H = SU(3)/U(1)xU(1), Sp(2)/Sp(1)xU(1) or G_2/SU(3), respectively. We analyze all critical points and present analytical and numerical kink- and bounce-type solutions, which yield G-invariant instanton configurations on those cosets. Periodic solutions on S^1 x G/H and dyons on iR x G/H are also given.Comment: 1+26 pages, 14 figures, 6 miniplot

    Gluon fragmentation to ^3D_J quarkonia

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    We present a calculation of the leading order QCD fragmentation functions for gluons to split into spin-triplet D-wave quarkonia. We apply them to evaluate the gluon fragmentation contributions to inclusive ^3D_J quarkonium production at large transverse momentum processes like the Tevatron and find that the D-wave quarkonia, especially the charmonium 2^{--} state, could be observed through color-octet mechanism with present luminosity. Since there are distinctively large gaps between the contributions of two different (i.e, color-singlet and color-octet) quarkonium production mechanisms, our results may stand as a unique test to NRQCD color-octet quarkonium production mechanism.Comment: 15 pages in LaTex (2 figures in PS-file

    Structural and magnetic phase diagram of CeFeAsO1-xFx and its relationship to high-temperature superconductivity

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    We use neutron scattering to study the structural and magnetic phase transitions in the iron pnictides CeFeAsO1-xFx as the system is tuned from a semimetal to a high-transition-temperature (high-Tc) superconductor through Fluorine (F) doping x. In the undoped state, CeFeAsO develops a structural lattice distortion followed by a stripe like commensurate antiferromagnetic order with decreasing temperature. With increasing Fluorine doping, the structural phase transition decreases gradually while the antiferromagnetic order is suppressed before the appearance of superconductivity, resulting an electronic phase diagram remarkably similar to that of the high-Tc copper oxides. Comparison of the structural evolution of CeFeAsO1-xFx with other Fe-based superconductors reveals that the effective electronic band width decreases systematically for materials with higher Tc. The results suggest that electron correlation effects are important for the mechanism of high-Tc superconductivity in these Fe pnictides.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figure

    Superconductivity at the Border of Electron Localization and Itinerancy

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    The superconducting state of iron pnictides and chalcogenides exists at the border of antiferromagnetic order. Consequently, these materials could provide clues about the relationship between magnetism and unconventional superconductivity. One explanation, motivated by the so-called bad-metal behaviour of these materials, proposes that magnetism and superconductivity develop out of quasi-localized magnetic moments which are generated by strong electron-electron correlations. Another suggests that these phenomena are the result of weakly interacting electron states that lie on nested Fermi surfaces. Here we address the issue by comparing the newly discovered alkaline iron selenide superconductors, which exhibit no Fermi-surface nesting, to their iron pnictide counterparts. We show that the strong-coupling approach leads to similar pairing amplitudes in these materials, despite their different Fermi surfaces. We also find that the pairing amplitudes are largest at the boundary between electronic localization and itinerancy, suggesting that new superconductors might be found in materials with similar characteristics.Comment: Version of the published manuscript prior to final journal-editting. Main text (23 pages, 4 figures) + Supplementary Information (14 pages, 7 figures, 3 tables). Calculation on the single-layer FeSe is added. Enhancement of the pairing amplitude in the vicinity of the Mott transition is highlighted. Published version is at http://www.nature.com/ncomms/2013/131115/ncomms3783/full/ncomms3783.htm

    HIV Incidence Remains High in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa: Evidence from Three Districts

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    Background: HIV prevalence and incidence among sexually active women in peri-urban areas of Ladysmith, Edendale, and Pinetown, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, were assessed between October 2007 and February 2010 in preparation for vaginal microbicide trials. Methodology/Principal Findings: Sexually active women 18-35 years, not known to be HIV-positive or pregnant were tested cross-sectionally to determine HIV and pregnancy prevalence (798 in Ladysmith, 1,084 in Edendale, and 891 in Pinetown). Out of these, approximately 300 confirmed non-pregnant, HIV-negative women were subsequently enrolled at each clinical research center (CRC) in a 12-month cohort study with quarterly study visits. Women in the cohort studies were required to use a condom plus a hormonal contraceptive method. HIV prevalence rates in the baseline cross-sectional surveys were high: 42% in Ladysmith, 46% in Edendale and 41% in Pinetown. Around 90% of study participants at each CRC reported one sex partner in the last 3 months, but only 14-30% stated that they were sure that none of their sex partners were HIV-positive. HIV incidence rates based on seroconversions over 12 months were 14.8/100 person-years (PY) (95% CI 9.7, 19.8) in Ladysmith, 6.3/100 PY (95% CI 3.2, 9.4) in Edendale, and 7.2/100 PY (95% CI 3.7, 10.7) in Pinetown. The 12-month pregnancy incidence rates (in the context of high reported contraceptive use) were: 5.7/100 PY (95% CI 2.6, 8.7) in Ladysmith, 3.1/100 PY (95% CI 0.9, 5.2) in Edendale and 6.3/100 PY (95% CI 3.0, 9.6) in Pinetown. Conclusions/Significance: HIV prevalence and incidence remain high in peri-urban areas of KwaZulu-Nata
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