9 research outputs found
Guidelines for developing optical clocks with fractional frequency uncertainty
There has been tremendous progress in the performance of optical frequency
standards since the first proposals to carry out precision spectroscopy on
trapped, single ions in the 1970s. The estimated fractional frequency
uncertainty of today's leading optical standards is currently in the
range, approximately two orders of magnitude better than that of the best
caesium primary frequency standards. This exceptional accuracy and stability is
resulting in a growing number of research groups developing optical clocks.
While good review papers covering the topic already exist, more practical
guidelines are needed as a complement. The purpose of this document is
therefore to provide technical guidance for researchers starting in the field
of optical clocks. The target audience includes national metrology institutes
(NMIs) wanting to set up optical clocks (or subsystems thereof) and PhD
students and postdocs entering the field. Another potential audience is
academic groups with experience in atomic physics and atom or ion trapping, but
with less experience of time and frequency metrology and optical clock
requirements. These guidelines have arisen from the scope of the EMPIR project
"Optical clocks with uncertainty" (OC18). Therefore, the
examples are from European laboratories even though similar work is carried out
all over the world. The goal of OC18 was to push the development of optical
clocks by improving each of the necessary subsystems: ultrastable lasers,
neutral-atom and single-ion traps, and interrogation techniques. This document
shares the knowledge acquired by the OC18 project consortium and gives
practical guidance on each of these aspects
Guidelines for developing optical clocks with 10-18 fractional frequency uncertainty
There has been tremendous progress in the performance of optical frequency standards since the first proposals to carry out precision spectroscopy on trapped, single ions in the 1970s. The estimated fractional frequency uncertainty of today's leading optical standards is currently in the 10â18 range, approximately two orders of magnitude better than that of the best caesium primary frequency standards. This exceptional accuracy and stability is resulting in a growing number of research groups developing optical clocks. While good review papers covering the topic already exist, more practical guidelines are needed as a complement. The purpose of this document is therefore to provide technical guidance for researchers starting in the field of optical clocks. The target audience includes national metrology institutes (NMIs) wanting to set up optical clocks (or subsystems thereof) and PhD students and postdocs entering the field. Another potential audience is academic groups with experience in atomic physics and atom or ion trapping, but with less experience of time and frequency metrology and optical clock requirements. These guidelines have arisen from the scope of the EMPIR project "Optical clocks with 1Ă10â18 uncertainty" (OC18). Therefore, the examples are from European laboratories even though similar work is carried out all over the world. The goal of OC18 was to push the development of optical clocks by improving each of the necessary subsystems: ultrastable lasers, neutral-atom and single-ion traps, and interrogation techniques. This document shares the knowledge acquired by the OC18 project consortium and gives practical guidance on each of these aspects.EU/Horizon2020/EMPIR/E
Compass: Optimised co-modal passenger transport fro reducing carbon emissions: Handbook of ICT solutions for improving co-modality in passenger transport.
The COMPASS Handbook of ICT Solutions puts together a set of 96 solutions applying to urban andmetropolitan mobility, long distance passenger transport and also innovative ICT solutions aimed atincreasing the quality of transport services in areas where demand levels are low, like rural or sparselypopulated regions.The COMPASS Handbook of ICT Solutions is available in a paper edition and in an online internetversion accessible at http://www.fp7-compass.eu/.The ICT solutions presented in the COMPASS Handbook are classified in the next five broadcategories:1. Transportation management systems, solutions aimed at helping to plan and runningefficiently the transport system.This section includes solutions for urban transport management (e.g. smart signalmanagement or signal priority for public transport), for road management (e.g. ramp meteringor congestion monitoring based on smart phones), for improving air operation (e.g. air trafficcontrol applications allowing planes to fly in direct paths point to point), rail operation (e.g.ETCS or GMS-R) and maritime operation (e.g. quicker and more complete vesselidentification protocols via AIS).2. Traveller information systems, in which the key characteristic is to assist the traveller withseveral parts of information (travel time, routes, traffic conditions, etc);This section includes solutions aimed at better guiding passengers through the transportnetwork (e.g. airport interactive maps on tablets assisting passengers around large transportterminals, or augmented reality applications easily guiding public transport users to the closestbus station), travel planners (e.g. door-to-door multimodal travel planners consideringcongestion and transport service schedules), solutions aimed at delivering transportinformation to travellers on real-time (e.g. cooperative P2P applications based e.g. on twitterto monitor transport networksâ status and alert on eventual service disruptions) and othersmart phone apps designed to make journey planning easier for travellers (e.g. smart phonebased travel assistants grouping travel tickets, hotel bookings, boarding passes⊠or smartseat allocation algorithms based on the traveller social network profile (e.g. facebook, linkdin)).Smart ticketing and tolling applications, addressing new ways to get tickets and to pay forusing transport services;This section includes upcoming solutions for road toll payment with low affectation on trafficflow (e.g. free-flow transponder-based toll payment compatible in multiple countries),automated access management (e.g. high occupancy vehicle identification at toll plazasbased on automatic camera occupation detection), and on innovative formats for paying publictransport tickets or parking charges (e.g. via SMS or smart cards).4. Smart vehicles and infrastructure, including ICTs aimed at improving vehicle efficiency perse and vehicle intelligence as a result of increased vehicle to infrastructure (V2I) and vehicleto vehicle (V2V) communications;This section includes upcoming solutions enhancing vehicle safety and driving comfort andaccuracy (e.g. traffic jam assistants or self-parking cars), and for increasing vehicleintelligence via communications between vehicles (e.g. vanet V2V networks, automaticallydriven car trains), and via vehicle to infrastructure communications (e.g. informationtransmission on weather and road surface condition from road infrastructure to rollingvehicles).5. Demand responsive transport (DRT) and shared mobility systems, which includestransport solutions enabled by ICT solutions to set up innovative transport services adjusted todemand and allowing users to share vehicles.This section includes upcoming solutions aimed at addressing the more and more popularconcept of shared mobility (e.g. car sharing, car pooling, sharing car parks), and otherinnovative solutions based on demand responsive systems, specially suited for deliveringefficient transport solutions when transport demand is too low for conventional public transportservices.The handbook can be used in a number of different ways, but two main entry points are provided foreasy navigation.A. All ICT solutions have been synthesised in section 0.5.2 in abstracts of less than 10 lineseach. This is intended for quick understanding of each of the solutionâs concept and problemsthat it addresses.B. If the user has candidate solutions in mind, the synthesis of solutions by performance insection 0.5.1 allows to quickly compare solutions and identify which one applies better.Each of the Handbookâs solutions is identified with a unique numerical ID,Ă Indicating the family and subfamiliy it belongs to;Ă Indicating the chapter in the Handbook where the solution might be expected to be found in;Ă Indicating the ID of the solution in the online Handbook accessible at http://www.fp7-compass.eu/For each solution in the handbook, the following information may be expected in the systematicallyestablished factsheet structure:Ă A synthesis of the fundamental characteristics of each solution: name, family, subfamily, domainof application (urban, rural, long-distance transport), technology behind, implementation status(existing, pilot, concept)Ă Links to all reference documents behind the reporting of each solution, and any other relevantreference or interesting link.Ă A brief description of the solution;Ă A short description of the problems it seeks to address;Ă A summary of its applicability described in terms of pre-requisites and barriers to implementation;Ă The circumstances in which it would be particularly appropriate and the circumstances in which itwould be inappropriate or difficult to implement;Ă A commentary on the scores recorded in the matrix for this solution;Ă Comments on any other impacts that are particularly relevant for this particular solution; andĂ Multimedia contents better illustrating the nature of the solution.The online handbook allows, in addition, visualising multimedia materials illustrating the insights ofdifferent ICT solutions. Users in the online handbook can also post comments to each of thefactsheets providing additional insights or questions to a particular solution, and rate them in relation to its interest.All solutions are documented in the COMPASS Handbook based on existing examples of theirapplication.Text in the reporting body of each solution factsheet may literally cite original sources. All referencesto original sources are included at the beginning of each solution factsheet.In chapter 6 of the Handbook, four business models are discussed for the applications listed below.Business models are discussed on the basis of product, customer interface, infrastructuremanagement and financial aspects.Ă Shared Bike SystemsĂ Share TaxisĂ Mobile Traveller Information SystemsĂ Car Park Management SystemsEach model is presented in a schematic and easily readable format, in four sections defined on thebasis of the pillars mentioned above where the nine major elements of he business model aredescribed. Each model has been discussed with industry and academic experts, after the investigationand design works.A strategy overview is given by the SWOT analysis elaborated for each business domain, in order toprovide a full view of both the money earning and the strategic logic
Compass: Optimised co-modal passenger transport fro reducing carbon emissions: Handbook of ICT solutions for improving co-modality in passenger transport.
The COMPASS Handbook of ICT Solutions puts together a set of 96 solutions applying to urban andmetropolitan mobility, long distance passenger transport and also innovative ICT solutions aimed atincreasing the quality of transport services in areas where demand levels are low, like rural or sparselypopulated regions.The COMPASS Handbook of ICT Solutions is available in a paper edition and in an online internetversion accessible at http://www.fp7-compass.eu/.The ICT solutions presented in the COMPASS Handbook are classified in the next five broadcategories:1. Transportation management systems, solutions aimed at helping to plan and runningefficiently the transport system.This section includes solutions for urban transport management (e.g. smart signalmanagement or signal priority for public transport), for road management (e.g. ramp meteringor congestion monitoring based on smart phones), for improving air operation (e.g. air trafficcontrol applications allowing planes to fly in direct paths point to point), rail operation (e.g.ETCS or GMS-R) and maritime operation (e.g. quicker and more complete vesselidentification protocols via AIS).2. Traveller information systems, in which the key characteristic is to assist the traveller withseveral parts of information (travel time, routes, traffic conditions, etc);This section includes solutions aimed at better guiding passengers through the transportnetwork (e.g. airport interactive maps on tablets assisting passengers around large transportterminals, or augmented reality applications easily guiding public transport users to the closestbus station), travel planners (e.g. door-to-door multimodal travel planners consideringcongestion and transport service schedules), solutions aimed at delivering transportinformation to travellers on real-time (e.g. cooperative P2P applications based e.g. on twitterto monitor transport networksâ status and alert on eventual service disruptions) and othersmart phone apps designed to make journey planning easier for travellers (e.g. smart phonebased travel assistants grouping travel tickets, hotel bookings, boarding passes⊠or smartseat allocation algorithms based on the traveller social network profile (e.g. facebook, linkdin)).Smart ticketing and tolling applications, addressing new ways to get tickets and to pay forusing transport services;This section includes upcoming solutions for road toll payment with low affectation on trafficflow (e.g. free-flow transponder-based toll payment compatible in multiple countries),automated access management (e.g. high occupancy vehicle identification at toll plazasbased on automatic camera occupation detection), and on innovative formats for paying publictransport tickets or parking charges (e.g. via SMS or smart cards).4. Smart vehicles and infrastructure, including ICTs aimed at improving vehicle efficiency perse and vehicle intelligence as a result of increased vehicle to infrastructure (V2I) and vehicleto vehicle (V2V) communications;This section includes upcoming solutions enhancing vehicle safety and driving comfort andaccuracy (e.g. traffic jam assistants or self-parking cars), and for increasing vehicleintelligence via communications between vehicles (e.g. vanet V2V networks, automaticallydriven car trains), and via vehicle to infrastructure communications (e.g. informationtransmission on weather and road surface condition from road infrastructure to rollingvehicles).5. Demand responsive transport (DRT) and shared mobility systems, which includestransport solutions enabled by ICT solutions to set up innovative transport services adjusted todemand and allowing users to share vehicles.This section includes upcoming solutions aimed at addressing the more and more popularconcept of shared mobility (e.g. car sharing, car pooling, sharing car parks), and otherinnovative solutions based on demand responsive systems, specially suited for deliveringefficient transport solutions when transport demand is too low for conventional public transportservices.The handbook can be used in a number of different ways, but two main entry points are provided foreasy navigation.A. All ICT solutions have been synthesised in section 0.5.2 in abstracts of less than 10 lineseach. This is intended for quick understanding of each of the solutionâs concept and problemsthat it addresses.B. If the user has candidate solutions in mind, the synthesis of solutions by performance insection 0.5.1 allows to quickly compare solutions and identify which one applies better.Each of the Handbookâs solutions is identified with a unique numerical ID,Ă Indicating the family and subfamiliy it belongs to;Ă Indicating the chapter in the Handbook where the solution might be expected to be found in;Ă Indicating the ID of the solution in the online Handbook accessible at http://www.fp7-compass.eu/For each solution in the handbook, the following information may be expected in the systematicallyestablished factsheet structure:Ă A synthesis of the fundamental characteristics of each solution: name, family, subfamily, domainof application (urban, rural, long-distance transport), technology behind, implementation status(existing, pilot, concept)Ă Links to all reference documents behind the reporting of each solution, and any other relevantreference or interesting link.Ă A brief description of the solution;Ă A short description of the problems it seeks to address;Ă A summary of its applicability described in terms of pre-requisites and barriers to implementation;Ă The circumstances in which it would be particularly appropriate and the circumstances in which itwould be inappropriate or difficult to implement;Ă A commentary on the scores recorded in the matrix for this solution;Ă Comments on any other impacts that are particularly relevant for this particular solution; andĂ Multimedia contents better illustrating the nature of the solution.The online handbook allows, in addition, visualising multimedia materials illustrating the insights ofdifferent ICT solutions. Users in the online handbook can also post comments to each of thefactsheets providing additional insights or questions to a particular solution, and rate them in relation to its interest.All solutions are documented in the COMPASS Handbook based on existing examples of theirapplication.Text in the reporting body of each solution factsheet may literally cite original sources. All referencesto original sources are included at the beginning of each solution factsheet.In chapter 6 of the Handbook, four business models are discussed for the applications listed below.Business models are discussed on the basis of product, customer interface, infrastructuremanagement and financial aspects.Ă Shared Bike SystemsĂ Share TaxisĂ Mobile Traveller Information SystemsĂ Car Park Management SystemsEach model is presented in a schematic and easily readable format, in four sections defined on thebasis of the pillars mentioned above where the nine major elements of he business model aredescribed. Each model has been discussed with industry and academic experts, after the investigationand design works.A strategy overview is given by the SWOT analysis elaborated for each business domain, in order toprovide a full view of both the money earning and the strategic logic
Cheating During the College Years: How do Business School Students Compare?
When it comes to cheating in higher education, business school students have often been accused of being the worst offenders; if true, this may be a contributing factor in the kinds of fraud that have plagued the business community in recent years. We examined the issue of cheating in the business school by surveying 268 students in business and other professional schools on their attitudes about, and experiences with, cheating. We found that while business school students actually cheated no more or less than students in other professional schools, their attitudes on what constitutes cheating are more lax than those of other professional school students. Additionally, we found that serious cheaters across all professional schools were more likely to be younger and have a lower grade point average. Copyright Springer Science+Business Media B.V. 2007academic dishonesty, cheating, cheating attitudes, cheating behaviors, cheating in business schools, cheating in professional schools, ethics,
Timing of Intubation in Coronavirus Disease 2019: A Study of Ventilator Mechanics, Imaging, Findings, and Outcomes
Objectives:. Determine the variation in outcomes and respiratory mechanics between the subjects who are intubated earlier versus later in their coronavirus disease 2019 course.
Design:. Retrospective cohort study.
Setting:. Northwestern Memorial Hospital ICUs.
Patients:. All patients intubated for coronavirus disease 2019 between March 2020 and June 2020.
Interventions:. Patients were stratified by time to intubation: 30 subjects were intubated 4â24 hours after presentation and 24 subjects were intubated 5â10 days after presentation. Baseline characteristics, hospitalization, ventilator mechanics, and outcomes were extracted and analyzed. Ten clinically available CT scans were manually reviewed to identify evidence of pulmonary vascular thrombosis and intussusceptive angiogenesis.
Measurements and Main Results:. Median time from symptom onset to intubation was significantly different between the early and late intubation cohorts, with the latter being intubated later in the course of their illness (7.9 vs 11.8 d; p = 0.04). The early intubation cohort had a lower mortality rate than the late intubation cohort (6% vs 30%, p < 0.001) without significantly different respiratory mechanics at the time of intubation. The late intubation cohort was noted to have higher dead space ratio (0.40 vs 0.52; p = 0.03). On review of CT scans, the late intubation cohort also had more dilated peripheral segments on imaging (two segments vs five segments).
Conclusions:. The question as to whether delaying intubation is beneficial or harmful for patients with coronavirus disease 2019-induced hypoxemic respiratory failure has yet to be answered. As our approaches to coronavirus disease 2019 continue to evolve, the decision of timing of intubation remains paramount. Although noninvasive ventilation may allow for delaying intubation, it is possible that there are downstream effects of delayed intubation that should be considered, including the potential for pulmonary vascular thrombosis and intussusceptive angiogenesis with delayed intubation