14 research outputs found
Strangeness in Astrophysics and Cosmology
Some recent developments concerning the role of strange quark matter for
astrophysical systems and the QCD phase transition in the early universe are
addressed. Causality constraints of the soft nuclear equation of state as
extracted from subthreshold kaon production in heavy-ion collisions are used to
derive an upper mass limit for compact stars. The interplay between the
viscosity of strange quark matter and the gravitational wave emission from
rotation-powered pulsars are outlined. The flux of strange quark matter nuggets
in cosmic rays is put in perspective with a detailed numerical investigation of
the merger of two strange stars. Finally, we discuss a novel scenario for the
QCD phase transition in the early universe, which allows for a small
inflationary period due to a pronounced first order phase transition at large
baryochemical potential.Comment: 8 pages, invited talk given at the International Conference on
Strangeness in Quark Matter (SQM2009), Buzios, Brasil, September 28 - October
2, 200
Bulk viscosity in 2SC quark matter
The bulk viscosity of three-flavor color-superconducting quark matter
originating from the nonleptonic process u+s u+d is computed. It is assumed
that up and down quarks form Cooper pairs while the strange quark remains
unpaired (2SC phase). A general derivation of the rate of strangeness
production is presented, involving contributions from a multitude of different
subprocesses, including subprocesses that involve different numbers of gapped
quarks as well as creation and annihilation of particles in the condensate. The
rate is then used to compute the bulk viscosity as a function of the
temperature, for an external oscillation frequency typical of a compact star
r-mode. We find that, for temperatures far below the critical temperature T_c
for 2SC pairing, the bulk viscosity of color-superconducting quark matter is
suppressed relative to that of unpaired quark matter, but for T >~ 10^(-3) T_c
the color-superconducting quark matter has a higher bulk viscosity. This is
potentially relevant for the suppression of r-mode instabilities early in the
life of a compact star.Comment: 18 pages + appendices (28 pages total), 8 figures; v3: corrected
numerical error in the plots; 2SC bulk viscosity is now larger than unpaired
bulk viscosity in a wider temperature rang
163: Syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone (SIADH) secretion in small cell lung cancer: 12 months experience from a cancer unit
63: Comparative toxicity profiles of two platinum doublets: real life experience from a cancer unit
Integrating the OHIF Viewer into XNAT: Achievements, Challenges and Prospects for Quantitative Imaging Studies.
Purpose: XNAT is an informatics software platform to support imaging research, particularly in the context of large, multicentre studies of the type that are essential to validate quantitative imaging biomarkers. XNAT provides import, archiving, processing and secure distribution facilities for image and related study data. Until recently, however, modern data visualisation and annotation tools were lacking on the XNAT platform. We describe the background to, and implementation of, an integration of the Open Health Imaging Foundation (OHIF) Viewer into the XNAT environment. We explain the challenges overcome and discuss future prospects for quantitative imaging studies. Materials and methods: The OHIF Viewer adopts an approach based on the DICOM web protocol. To allow operation in an XNAT environment, a data-routing methodology was developed to overcome the mismatch between the DICOM and XNAT information models and a custom viewer panel created to allow navigation within the viewer between different XNAT projects, subjects and imaging sessions. Modifications to the development environment were made to allow developers to test new code more easily against a live XNAT instance. Major new developments focused on the creation and storage of regions-of-interest (ROIs) and included: ROI creation and editing tools for both contour- and mask-based regions; a "smart CT" paintbrush tool; the integration of NVIDIA's Artificial Intelligence Assisted Annotation (AIAA); the ability to view surface meshes, fractional segmentation maps and image overlays; and a rapid image reader tool aimed at radiologists. We have incorporated the OHIF microscopy extension and, in parallel, introduced support for microscopy session types within XNAT for the first time. Results: Integration of the OHIF Viewer within XNAT has been highly successful and numerous additional and enhanced tools have been created in a programme started in 2017 that is still ongoing. The software has been downloaded more than 3700 times during the course of the development work reported here, demonstrating the impact of the work. Conclusions: The OHIF open-source, zero-footprint web viewer has been incorporated into the XNAT platform and is now used at many institutions worldwide. Further innovations are envisaged in the near future
Integrating Artificial Intelligence Tools in the Clinical Research Setting: The Ovarian Cancer Use Case.
Artificial intelligence (AI) methods applied to healthcare problems have shown enormous potential to alleviate the burden of health services worldwide and to improve the accuracy and reproducibility of predictions. In particular, developments in computer vision are creating a paradigm shift in the analysis of radiological images, where AI tools are already capable of automatically detecting and precisely delineating tumours. However, such tools are generally developed in technical departments that continue to be siloed from where the real benefit would be achieved with their usage. Significant effort still needs to be made to make these advancements available, first in academic clinical research and ultimately in the clinical setting. In this paper, we demonstrate a prototype pipeline based entirely on open-source software and free of cost to bridge this gap, simplifying the integration of tools and models developed within the AI community into the clinical research setting, ensuring an accessible platform with visualisation applications that allow end-users such as radiologists to view and interact with the outcome of these AI tools
Drought response and minimal water requirements of diploid and interploid St. Augustinegrass under progressive drought stress
Bulk viscosity in nuclear and quark matter: A short review
Dong H, Su N, Wang Q. Bulk viscosity in nuclear and quark matter: A short review. J.Phys.G. 2007;34(8):S643-S646.The history and recent progresses in the study of bulk viscosity in nuclearand quark matter are reviewed. The constraints from baryon number conservationand electric neutrality in quark matter on particle densities and fluidvelocity divergences are discussed
