2,479 research outputs found
Graphite under uniaxial compression along the c axis: A parameter to relate out-of-plane strain to in-plane phonon frequency
Stacking graphene sheets forms graphite. Two in-plane vibrational modes of
graphite, E1u and E2g(2), are derived from graphene E2g mode, the shifts of
which under compression are all considered as results of in-plane bond
shortening. Values of Gruneisen parameter have been reported to quantify such
relation. However, the reason why the shift rates of these three modes with
pressure differ is unclear. In this work, we introduce a new parameter to
quantify the contribution of out-of-plane strain to the in-plane vibrational
frequencies, suggesting that the compression of \pi-electrons plays a
non-negligible part in both graphite and graphene under high pressure.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, 1 tabl
Pressure coefficients of Raman modes of carbon nanotubes resolved by chirality: Environmental effect on graphene sheet
Studies of the mechanical properties of single-walled carbon nanotubes are
hindered by the availability only of ensembles of tubes with a range of
diameters. Tunable Raman excitation spectroscopy picks out identifiable tubes.
Under high pressure, the radial breathing mode shows a strong environmental
effect shown here to be largely independent of the nature of the environment .
For the G-mode, the pressure coefficient varies with diameter consistent with
the thick-wall tube model. However, results show an unexpectedly strong
environmental effect on the pressure coefficients. Reappraisal of data for
graphene and graphite gives the G-mode Grueuneisen parameter gamma = 1.34 and
the shear deformation parameter beta = 1.34.Comment: Submitted to Physical Review
Total and domain-specific sitting time among employees in desk-based work settings in Australia
Objective: To describe the total and domain-specific daily sitting time among a sample of Australian office-based employees. Methods: In April 2010, paper-based surveys were provided to desk-based employees (n=801) in Victoria, Australia. Total daily and domain-specific (work, leisure-time and transport-related) sitting time (minutes/day) were assessed by validated questionnaires. Differences in sitting time were examined across socio-demographic (age, sex, occupational status) and lifestyle characteristics (physical activity levels, body mass index [BMI]) using multiple linear regression analyses. Results: The median (95% confidence interval [CI]) of total daily sitting time was 540 (531-557) minutes/day. Insufficiently active adults (median=578 minutes/day, [95%CI: 564-602]), younger adults aged 18-29 years (median=561 minutes/day, [95%CI: 540-577]) reported the highest total daily sitting times. Occupational sitting time accounted for almost 60% of total daily sitting time. In multivariate analyses, total daily sitting time was negatively associated with age (unstandardised regression coefficient [B]=-1.58, p<0.001) and overall physical activity (minutes/week) (B=-0.03, p<0.001) and positively associated with BMI (B=1.53, p=0.038). Conclusions: Desk-based employees reported that more than half of their total daily sitting time was accrued in the work setting. Implications: Given the high contribution of occupational sitting to total daily sitting time among desk-based employees, interventions should focus on the work setting
Ultra-Slow Light and Enhanced Nonlinear Optical Effects in a Coherently Driven Hot Atomic Gas
We report the observation of small group velocities of order 90 meters per
second, and large group delays of greater than 0.26 ms, in an optically dense
hot rubidium gas (~360 K). Media of this kind yield strong nonlinear
interactions between very weak optical fields, and very sharp spectral
features. The result is in agreement with previous studies on nonlinear
spectroscopy of dense coherent media
The acute effect of ‘breaking-up’ prolonged sitting on cardiovascular risk factors in overweight/obese adults
Session - Physical activity and cardiovascular disease in adults: paper no. 562This journal suppl. entitled: Be Avtive 2012INTRODUCTION: We have recently shown in a controlled laboratory setting that regularly ‘breaking up’ prolonged sitting with frequent short bouts of light-or moderate-intensity walking activity acutely lowers postprandial blood glucose and insulin concentrations. However, we are yet to report the effect of interrupting sitting time on secondary outcomes relating to cardiovascular disease. Consequently, we compared the effect of a single prolonged (7-hour) bout of sitting with a similar duration of sitting combined with intermittent bouts of light-intensity or moderate-intensity activity on blood pressure, blood lipids and CRP. METHODS: Overweight/obese adults (n=19; age range 45–65 yrs) were recruited for a randomized three-week, three-treatment acute cross-over trial: 1) uninterrupted sitting; 2) seated with 2-minute bouts of light-intensity walking at 3.2 km/hr every 20 minutes; and 3) seated with 2-minute bouts of moderate-intensity walking at between 5.8–6.4 km/hr every 20 minutes. Following the completion of baseline measurements and an initial 2 hour steady-state period, participants consumed a standard test meal (75 g glucose, 50 g fat). Serum triglycerides were assessed hourly to calculate the incremental area under the curve (iAUC) and high sensitivity C-reactive protein (hsCRP) was assessed at baseline and 7 hours. Seated brachial artery blood pressure was also measured every hour as a single measurement, 5 mins prior to each activity bout, with an automated oscillometric blood pressure monitor (Philips SureSigns VS3 Monitor). GEE models were adjusted for sex, age, BMI, fasting blood pressure and treatment order. RESULTS: Systolic blood pressure decreased similarly and significantly during the light and moderate-intensity activity conditions [light: 120±4mmHg (hourly mean±SEM), p=0.002; moderate: 120±3mmHg, p=0.02] compared to uninterrupted sitting (125±4mmHg). Diastolic blood pressure was also significantly reduced with both activity conditions (light: 78±3mmHg, p=0.006; moderate: 78±3mmHg, p=0.03) compared to uninterrupted sitting (79±3mmHg). No significant group differences were observed in triglyceride iAUC, hsCRP and the hourly measurement of heart rate. DISCUSSION: These findings indicate that breaking up prolonged sitting with frequent short breaks of either light or moderate-intensity physical activity may have favourable effects on seated blood pressure. Further studies are needed to evaluate the chronic effects of breaking up sedentary time on cardiovascular disease risk factors and the feasibility of such strategies in the general community
Cardio-metabolic impact of changing sitting, standing, and stepping in the workplace
According to cross-sectional and acute experimental evidence, reducing sitting time should improve cardio-metabolic health risk biomarkers. Furthermore, the improvements obtained may depend on whether sitting is replaced with standing or ambulatory activities. Based on data from the Stand Up Victoria multi-component workplace intervention, we examined this issue using compositional data analysis - a method that can examine and compare all activity changes simultaneously.Participants receiving the intervention (n=136 ≥0.6 full-time equivalent desk-based workers, 65% women, mean±SD age=44.6 ±9.1 years from seven worksites) were asked to improve whole-of-day activity by standing up, sitting less and moving more. Their changes in the composition of daily waking hours (activPAL-assessed sitting, standing, stepping) were quantified, then tested for associations with concurrent changes in cardio-metabolic risk (CMR) scores and 14 biomarkers concerning body composition, glucose, insulin and lipid metabolism. Analyses were by mixed models, accounting for clustering (3 months, n=105-120; 12 months, n=80-97).Sitting reduction was significantly (
Nonlinear Optics and Quantum Entanglement of Ultra-Slow Single Photons
Two light pulses propagating with ultra-slow group velocities in a coherently
prepared atomic gas exhibit dissipation-free nonlinear coupling of an
unprecedented strength. This enables a single-photon pulse to coherently
control or manipulate the quantum state of the other. Processes of this kind
result in generation of entangled states of radiation field and open up new
prospectives for quantum information processing
Effects of national housing quality standards on hospital emergency admissions: a quasi-experiment using data-linkage
Background
National housing quality standards are now being applied throughout the UK. The Welsh Government has introduced the Welsh Housing Quality Standards. A housing improvement programme in Wales has been delivered through one local authority to bring 9500 homes up to standard. Homes received multiple elements, including new kitchens, bathrooms, windows and doors, boilers, insulation, and wiring, through an 8 year rolling work programme. The study aimed to determine the impacts of the different housing improvements on hospital emergency admissions for residents over 60 years of age.
Methods
Intervention homes (council homes that received at least one element of work) were data linked to individual health records of residents. Counts of admissions for respiratory and cardiovascular conditions, and for falls and burns, were obtained retrospectively for each individual in a dynamic housing cohort (Jan 1, 2005, to March 31, 2015). The criterion for the intervention cohort was for someone to have lived in any one of the 9500 intervention homes for at least 3 months within the intervention period. Counts were captured for up to 123 consecutive months for 7054 individuals in the intervention cohort and analysed in a multilevel approach to account for repeated observations for individuals, nested within geographical areas. Negative binomial regression models were constructed to determine the effect on emergency admissions for those living in homes compliant for each element of work compared with those living in homes that were non-compliant at that time. We adjusted for background trends in the regional general population, and for other confounding factors.
Findings
For residents 60 years old and over there was a reduction in admissions for people with compliant boilers (rate ratio 0·71, 95% CI 0·67–0·76), loft insulation (0·87, 0·80–0·95), wall insulation (0·74, 0·69–0·80), and windows and doors (0·56, 0·52–0·61) compared with those living in homes that were non-compliant for those work elements.
Interpretation
Improving housing to national standards reduces the number of emergency admissions to hospital for older residents. Strengths of the data-linkage approach included the retrospective collection of complete baseline and follow-up data using routine data for a long-term intervention, and large scale regional adjustment
Raman excitation spectroscopy of carbon nanotubes: effects of pressure medium and pressure
Raman excitation and emission spectra for the radial breathing mode (RBM) are
reported, together with a preliminary analysis. From the position of the peaks
on the two-dimensional plot of excitation resonance energy against Raman shift,
the chiral indices (m, n) for each peak are identified. Peaks shift from their
positions in air when different pressure media are added - water, hexane,
sulphuric acid - and when the nanotubes are unbundled in water with surfactant
and sonication. The shift is about 2 - 3 cm-1 in RBM frequency, but
unexpectedly large in resonance energy, being spread over up to 100meV for a
given peak. This contrasts with the effect of pressure. The shift of the peaks
of semiconducting nanotubes in water under pressure is orthogonal to the shift
from air to water. This permits the separation of the effects of the pressure
medium and the pressure, and will enable the true pressure coefficients of the
RBM and the other Raman peaks for each (m, n) to be established unambiguously.Comment: 6 pages, 3 Figures, Proceedings of EHPRG 2011 (Paris
Cultural landscapes of tourism in New South Wales and Victoria
The field of cultural landscapes tourism is under-developed in Australia at the level of theory, research and policy development. Yet international research suggests that cultural landscapes tourism has significant potential in attracting new tourists. This research project is a scoping study designed to set out the parameters involved in cultural landscapes tourism research in Australia. It aims to identify how cultural heritage and contemporary cultural diversity impact on visitor experience and on local communities. The objective is to assist the Australian tourism industry particularly those located in regional and rural areas in understanding the growing importance of cultural tourism, by developing a number of case studies of cultural landscapes tourism in two Australia states. These case studies provide examples of existing tourism in a range of different cultural landscape sites, enabling the development of a process by which to identify change in cultural heritage tourism regions, including examining how multicultural precincts can operate as sustainable tourism destinations. Fieldwork with tourists and stakeholders will enable the development of industry strategies to increase tourism in the future. In addition, this fieldwork will facilitate the development of an innovative, multi-disciplinary theory of cultural landscapes tourism. This will set the stage for future research and policy development
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