942 resultados para mean-square error
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Máster en Oceanografía
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Human reactions to vibration have been extensively investigated in the past. Vibration, as well as whole-body vibration (WBV), has been commonly considered as an occupational hazard for its detrimental effects on human condition and comfort. Although long term exposure to vibrations may produce undesirable side-effects, a great part of the literature is dedicated to the positive effects of WBV when used as method for muscular stimulation and as an exercise intervention. Whole body vibration training (WBVT) aims to mechanically activate muscles by eliciting neuromuscular activity (muscle reflexes) via the use of vibrations delivered to the whole body. The most mentioned mechanism to explain the neuromuscular outcomes of vibration is the elicited neuromuscular activation. Local tendon vibrations induce activity of the muscle spindle Ia fibers, mediated by monosynaptic and polysynaptic pathways: a reflex muscle contraction known as the Tonic Vibration Reflex (TVR) arises in response to such vibratory stimulus. In WBVT mechanical vibrations, in a range from 10 to 80 Hz and peak to peak displacements from 1 to 10 mm, are usually transmitted to the patient body by the use of oscillating platforms. Vibrations are then transferred from the platform to a specific muscle group through the subject body. To customize WBV treatments, surface electromyography (SEMG) signals are often used to reveal the best stimulation frequency for each subject. Use of SEMG concise parameters, such as root mean square values of the recordings, is also a common practice; frequently a preliminary session can take place in order to discover the more appropriate stimulation frequency. Soft tissues act as wobbling masses vibrating in a damped manner in response to mechanical excitation; Muscle Tuning hypothesis suggest that neuromuscular system works to damp the soft tissue oscillation that occurs in response to vibrations; muscles alters their activity to dampen the vibrations, preventing any resonance phenomenon. Muscle response to vibration is however a complex phenomenon as it depends on different parameters, like muscle-tension, muscle or segment-stiffness, amplitude and frequency of the mechanical vibration. Additionally, while in the TVR study the applied vibratory stimulus and the muscle conditions are completely characterised (a known vibration source is applied directly to a stretched/shortened muscle or tendon), in WBV study only the stimulus applied to a distal part of the body is known. Moreover, mechanical response changes in relation to the posture. The transmissibility of vibratory stimulus along the body segment strongly depends on the position held by the subject. The aim of this work was the investigation on the effects that the use of vibrations, in particular the effects of whole body vibrations, may have on muscular activity. A new approach to discover the more appropriate stimulus frequency, by the use of accelerometers, was also explored. Different subjects, not affected by any known neurological or musculoskeletal disorders, were voluntarily involved in the study and gave their informed, written consent to participate. The device used to deliver vibration to the subjects was a vibrating platform. Vibrations impressed by the platform were exclusively vertical; platform displacement was sinusoidal with an intensity (peak-to-peak displacement) set to 1.2 mm and with a frequency ranging from 10 to 80 Hz. All the subjects familiarized with the device and the proper positioning. Two different posture were explored in this study: position 1 - hack squat; position 2 - subject standing on toes with heels raised. SEMG signals from the Rectus Femoris (RF), Vastus Lateralis (VL) and Vastus medialis (VM) were recorded. SEMG signals were amplified using a multi-channel, isolated biomedical signal amplifier The gain was set to 1000 V/V and a band pass filter (-3dB frequency 10 - 500 Hz) was applied; no notch filters were used to suppress line interference. Tiny and lightweight (less than 10 g) three-axial MEMS accelerometers (Freescale semiconductors) were used to measure accelerations of onto patient’s skin, at EMG electrodes level. Accelerations signals provided information related to individuals’ RF, Biceps Femoris (BF) and Gastrocnemius Lateralis (GL) muscle belly oscillation; they were pre-processed in order to exclude influence of gravity. As demonstrated by our results, vibrations generate peculiar, not negligible motion artifact on skin electrodes. Artifact amplitude is generally unpredictable; it appeared in all the quadriceps muscles analysed, but in different amounts. Artifact harmonics extend throughout the EMG spectrum, making classic high-pass filters ineffective; however, their contribution was easy to filter out from the raw EMG signal with a series of sharp notch filters centred at the vibration frequency and its superior harmonics (1.5 Hz wide). However, use of these simple filters prevents the revelation of EMG power potential variation in the mentioned filtered bands. Moreover our experience suggests that the possibility of reducing motion artefact, by using particular electrodes and by accurately preparing the subject’s skin, is not easily viable; even though some small improvements were obtained, it was not possible to substantially decrease the artifact. Anyway, getting rid of those artifacts lead to some true EMG signal loss. Nevertheless, our preliminary results suggest that the use of notch filters at vibration frequency and its harmonics is suitable for motion artifacts filtering. In RF SEMG recordings during vibratory stimulation only a little EMG power increment should be contained in the mentioned filtered bands due to synchronous electromyographic activity of the muscle. Moreover, it is better to remove the artifact that, in our experience, was found to be more than 40% of the total signal power. In summary, many variables have to be taken into account: in addition to amplitude, frequency and duration of vibration treatment, other fundamental variables were found to be subject anatomy, individual physiological condition and subject’s positioning on the platform. Studies on WBV treatments that include surface EMG analysis to asses muscular activity during vibratory stimulation should take into account the presence of motion artifacts. Appropriate filtering of artifacts, to reveal the actual effect on muscle contraction elicited by vibration stimulus, is mandatory. However as a result of our preliminary study, a simple multi-band notch filtering may help to reduce randomness of the results. Muscle tuning hypothesis seemed to be confirmed. Our results suggested that the effects of WBV are linked to the actual muscle motion (displacement). The greater was the muscle belly displacement the higher was found the muscle activity. The maximum muscle activity has been found in correspondence with the local mechanical resonance, suggesting a more effective stimulation at the specific system resonance frequency. Holding the hypothesis that muscle activation is proportional to muscle displacement, treatment optimization could be obtained by simply monitoring local acceleration (resonance). However, our study revealed some short term effects of vibratory stimulus; prolonged studies should be assembled in order to consider the long term effectiveness of these results. Since local stimulus depends on the kinematic chain involved, WBV muscle stimulation has to take into account the transmissibility of the stimulus along the body segment in order to ensure that vibratory stimulation effectively reaches the target muscle. Combination of local resonance and muscle response should also be further investigated to prevent hazards to individuals undergoing WBV treatments.
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The fundamental aim in our investigation of the interaction of a polymer film with a nanoparticle is the extraction of information on the dynamics of the liquid using a single tracking particle. In this work two theoretical methods were used: one passive, where the motion of the particle measures the dynamics of the liquid, one active, where perturbations in the system are introduced through the particle. In the first part of this investigation a thin polymeric film on a substrate is studied using molecular dynamics simulations. The polymer is modeled via a 'bead spring' model. The particle is spheric and non structured and is able to interact with the monomers via a Lennard Jones potential. The system is micro-canonical and simulations were performed for average temperatures between the glass transition temperature of the film and its dewetting temperature. It is shown that the stability of the nanoparticle on the polymer film in the absence of gravity depends strongly on the form of the chosen interaction potential between nanoparticle and polymer. The relative position of the tracking particle to the liquid vapor interface of the polymer film shows the glass transition of the latter. The velocity correlation function and the mean square displacement of the particle has shown that it is caged when the temperature is close to the glass transition temperature. The analysis of the dynamics at long times shows the coupling of the nanoparticle to the center of mass of the polymer chains. The use of the Stokes-Einstein formula, which relates the diffusion coefficient to the viscosity, permits to use the nanoparticle as a probe for the determination of the bulk viscosity of the melt, the so called 'microrheology'. It is shown that for low frequencies the result obtained using microrheology coincides with the results of the Rouse model applied to the polymer dynamics. In the second part of this investigation the equations of Linear Hydrodynamics are solved for a nanoparticle oscillating above the film. It is shown that compressible liquids have mechanical response to external perturbations induced with the nanoparticle. These solutions show strong velocity and pressure profiles of the liquid near the interface, as well as a mechanical response of the liquid-vapor interface. The results obtained with this calculations can be employed for the interpretation of experimental results of non contact AFM microscopy
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Coupled-Cluster-Theorie (CC) ist in der heutigen Quantenchemie eine der erfolgreichsten Methoden zur genauen Beschreibung von Molekülen. Die in dieser Arbeit vorgestellten Ergebnisse zeigen, daß neben den Berechnungen von Energien eine Reihe von Eigenschaften wie Strukturparameter, Schwingungsfrequenzen und Rotations-Schwingungs-Parameter kleiner und mittelgrofler Moleküle zuverlässig und präzise vorhergesagt werden können. Im ersten Teil der Arbeit wird mit dem Spin-adaptierten Coupled-Cluster-Ansatz (SA-CC) ein neuer Weg zur Verbesserung der Beschreibung von offenschaligen Systemen vorgestellt. Dabei werden zur Bestimmung der unbekannten Wellenfunktionsparameter zusätzlich die CC-Spingleichungen gelöst. Durch dieses Vorgehen wird gewährleistet, daß die erhaltene Wellenfunktion eine Spineigenfunktion ist. Die durchgeführte Implementierung des Spin-adaptierten CC-Ansatzes unter Berücksichtigung von Einfach- und Zweifachanregungen (CCSD) für high-spin Triplett-Systeme wird ausführlich erläutert. Im zweiten Teil werden CC-Additionsschemata vorgestellt, die auf der Annahme der Additivität von Elektronenkorrelations- und Basissatzeffekten basieren. Die etablierte Vorgehensweise, verschiedene Beiträge zur Energie mit an den Rechenaufwand angepassten Basissätzen separat zu berechnen und aufzusummieren, wird hier auf Gradienten und Kraftkonstanten übertragen. Für eine Beschreibung von Bindungslängen und harmonischen Schwingungsfrequenzen mit experimenteller Genauigkeit ist die Berücksichtigung von Innerschalenkorrelationseffekten sowie Dreifach- und Vierfachanregungen im Clusteroperator der Wellenfunktion nötig. Die Basissatzkonvergenz wird dabei zusätzlich mit Extrapolationsmethoden beschleunigt. Die quantitative Vorhersage der Bindungslängen von 17 kleinen Molekülen, aufgebaut aus Atomen der ersten Langperiode, ist so mit einer Genauigkeit von wenigen Hundertstel Pikometern möglich. Für die Schwingungsfrequenzen dieser Moleküle weist das CC-Additionsschema basierend auf den berechneten Kraftkonstanten im Vergleich zu experimentellen Ergebnissen einen mittleren absoluten Fehler von 3.5 cm-1 und eine Standardabweichung von 2.2 cm-1 auf. Darüber hinaus werden zur Unterstützung von experimentellen Untersuchungen berechnete spektroskopische Daten einiger größerer Moleküle vorgelegt. Die in dieser Arbeit vorgestellten Untersuchungen zur Isomerisierung von Dihalogensulfanen XSSX (X= F, Cl) oder die Berechnung von Struktur- und Rotations-Schwingungs-Parametern für die Moleküle CHCl2F und CHClF2 zeigen, daß bereits störungstheoretische CCSD(T)-Näherungsmethoden qualitativ gute Vorhersagen experimenteller Resultate liefern. Desweiteren werden Diskrepanzen von experimentellen und berechneten Bindungsabständen bei den Molekülen Borhydrid- und Carbenylium durch die Berücksichtigung des elektronischen Beitrages zum Trägheitsmoment beseitigt.
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Nuclear charge radii of short-lived isotopes can be probed in a nuclear-model independent way via isotope shift measurements. For this purpose a novel technique was developed at GSI, Darmstadt. It combines two-photon laser spectroscopy in the 2s-3s electronic transition of lithium, resonance ionization, and detection via quadrupole mass spectrometry. In this way an accuracy of 5e-5 which is necessary for the extraction of nuclear charge radii, and an overall detection efficiency of 1e-4 is reached. This allowed an isotope shift measurement of Li-11 for the first time at the TRIUMF facility in Vancouver. Additionally, uncertainties in the isotope shift for all other lithium isotopes were reduced by about a factor of four compared to previous measurements at GSI. Results were combined with recent theoretical mass shift calculations in three-electron systems and root-mean-square nuclear charge radii of all lithium isotopes, particulary of the two-neutron halo nucleus Li-11, were determined. Obtained charge radii decrease continuously from Li-6 to Li-9, while a strong increase between Li-9 and Li-11 is observed. This is compared to predictions of various nuclear models and it is found that a multicluster model gives the best overall agreement. Within this model, the increase in charge radius between Li-9 and Li-11is to a large extend caused by intrinsic excitation of the Li-9-like core while the neutron-halo correlation contributes only to a small extend.
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Monte Carlo simulations are used to study the effect of confinement on a crystal of point particles interacting with an inverse power law potential in d=2 dimensions. This system can describe colloidal particles at the air-water interface, a model system for experimental study of two-dimensional melting. It is shown that the state of the system (a strip of width D) depends very sensitively on the precise boundary conditions at the two ``walls'' providing the confinement. If one uses a corrugated boundary commensurate with the order of the bulk triangular crystalline structure, both orientational order and positional order is enhanced, and such surface-induced order persists near the boundaries also at temperatures where the system in the bulk is in its fluid state. However, using smooth repulsive boundaries as walls providing the confinement, only the orientational order is enhanced, but positional (quasi-) long range order is destroyed: The mean-square displacement of two particles n lattice parameters apart in the y-direction along the walls then crosses over from the logarithmic increase (characteristic for $d=2$) to a linear increase (characteristic for d=1). The strip then exhibits a vanishing shear modulus. These results are interpreted in terms of a phenomenological harmonic theory. Also the effect of incommensurability of the strip width D with the triangular lattice structure is discussed, and a comparison with surface effects on phase transitions in simple Ising- and XY-models is made
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Optical frequency comb technology has been used in this work for the first time to investigate the nuclear structure of light radioactive isotopes. Therefore, three laser systems were stabilized with different techniques to accurately known optical frequencies and used in two specialized experiments. Absolute transition frequency measurements of lithium and beryllium isotopes were performed with accuracy on the order of 10^(−10). Such a high accuracy is required for the light elements since the nuclear volume effect has only a 10^(−9) contribution to the total transition frequency. For beryllium, the isotope shift was determined with an accuracy that is sufficient to extract information about the proton distribution inside the nucleus. A Doppler-free two-photon spectroscopy on the stable lithium isotopes (6,7)^Li was performed in order to determine the absolute frequency of the 2S → 3S transition. The achieved relative accuracy of 2×10^(−10) is improved by one order of magnitude compared to previous measurements. The results provide an opportunity to determine the nuclear charge radius of the stable and short-lived isotopes in a pure optical way but this requires an improvement of the theoretical calculations by two orders of magnitude. The second experiment presented here was performed at ISOLDE/CERN, where the absolute transition frequencies of the D1 and D2 lines in beryllium ions for the isotopes (7,9,10,11)^Be were measured with an accuracy of about 1 MHz. Therefore, an advanced collinear laser spectroscopy technique involving two counter-propagating frequency-stabilized laser beams with a known absolute frequency was developed. The extracted isotope shifts were combined with recent accurate mass shift calculations and the root-mean square nuclear charge radii of (7,10)^Be and the one-neutron halo nucleus 11^Be were determined. Obtained charge radii are decreasing from 7^Be to 10^Be and increasing again for 11^Be. While the monotone decrease can be explained by a nucleon clustering inside the nucleus, the pronounced increase between 10^Be and 11^Be can be interpreted as a combination of two contributions: the center-of-mass motion of the 10^Be core and a change of intrinsic structure of the core. To disentangle these two contributions, the results from nuclear reaction measurements were used and indicate that the center-of-mass motion is the dominant effect. Additionally, the splitting isotope shift, i.e. the difference in the isotope shifts between the D1 and D2 fine structure transitions, was determined. This shows a good consistency with the theoretical calculations and provides a valuable check of the beryllium experiment.
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Nel primo capitolo viene introdotto lo studio eff�ettuato e descritto un metodo di misure successivo alla caratterizzazione della super�ficie. Nel secondo capitolo vengono descritti i campioni analizzati e, nello speci�fico, la crescita attraverso MaCE dei nanofi�li di silicio. Nel terzo capitolo viene descritto lo strumento AFM utilizzato e la teoria della caratterizzazione alla base dello studio condotto. Nella quarta sezione vengono descritti i risultati ottenuti mentre nelle conclusioni viene tratto il risultato dei valori ottenuti di RMS roughness e roughness exponent.
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Wearable inertial and magnetic measurements units (IMMU) are an important tool for underwater motion analysis because they are swimmer-centric, they require only simple measurement set-up and they provide the performance results very quickly. In order to estimate 3D joint kinematics during motion, protocols were developed to transpose the IMMU orientation estimation to a biomechanical model. The aim of the thesis was to validate a protocol originally propositioned to estimate the joint angles of the upper limbs during one-degree-of-freedom movements in dry settings and herein modified to perform 3D kinematics analysis of shoulders, elbows and wrists during swimming. Eight high-level swimmers were assessed in the laboratory by means of an IMMU while simulating the front crawl and breaststroke movements. A stereo-photogrammetric system (SPS) was used as reference. The joint angles (in degrees) of the shoulders (flexion-extension, abduction-adduction and internal-external rotation), the elbows (flexion-extension and pronation-supination), and the wrists (flexion-extension and radial-ulnar deviation) were estimated with the two systems and compared by means of root mean square errors (RMSE), relative RMSE, Pearson’s product-moment coefficient correlation (R) and coefficient of multiple correlation (CMC). Subsequently, the athletes were assessed during pool swimming trials through the IMMU. Considering both swim styles and all joint degrees of freedom modeled, the comparison between the IMMU and the SPS showed median values of RMSE lower than 8°, representing 10% of overall joint range of motion, high median values of CMC (0.97) and R (0.96). These findings suggest that the protocol accurately estimated the 3D orientation of the shoulders, elbows and wrists joint during swimming with accuracy adequate for the purposes of research. In conclusion, the proposed method to evaluate the 3D joint kinematics through IMMU was revealed to be a useful tool for both sport and clinical contexts.
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Topologische Beschränkungen beeinflussen die Eigenschaften von Polymeren. Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit wird mit Hilfe von Computersimulationen im Detail untersucht, inwieweit sich die statischen Eigenschaften von kollabierten Polymerringen, Polymerringen in konzentrierten Lösungen und aus Polymerringen aufgebauten Bürsten mit topologischen Beschränkungen von solchen ohne topologische Beschränkungen unterscheiden. Des Weiteren wird analysiert, welchen Einfluss geometrische Beschränkungen auf die topologischen Eigenschaften von einzelnen Polymerketten besitzen. Im ersten Teil der Arbeit geht es um den Einfluss der Topologie auf die Eigenschaften einzelner Polymerketten in verschiedenen Situationen. Da allerdings gerade die effiziente Durchführung von Monte-Carlo-Simulationen von kollabierten Polymerketten eine große Herausforderung darstellt, werden zunächst drei Bridging-Monte-Carlo-Schritte für Gitter- auf Kontinuumsmodelle übertragen. Eine Messung der Effizienz dieser Schritte ergibt einen Beschleunigungsfaktor von bis zu 100 im Vergleich zum herkömmlichen Slithering-Snake-Algorithmus. Darauf folgt die Analyse einer einzelnen, vergröberten Polystyrolkette in sphärischer Geometrie hinsichtlich Verschlaufungen und Knoten. Es wird gezeigt, dass eine signifikante Verknotung der Polystrolkette erst eintritt, wenn der Radius des umgebenden Kapsids kleiner als der Gyrationsradius der Kette ist. Des Weiteren werden sowohl Monte-Carlo- als auch Molekulardynamiksimulationen sehr großer Ringe mit bis zu einer Million Monomeren im kollabierten Zustand durchgeführt. Während die Konfigurationen aus den Monte-Carlo-Simulationen aufgrund der Verwendung der Bridging-Schritte sehr stark verknotet sind, bleiben die Konfigurationen aus den Molekulardynamiksimulationen unverknotet. Hierbei zeigen sich signifikante Unterschiede sowohl in der lokalen als auch in der globalen Struktur der Ringpolymere. Im zweiten Teil der Arbeit wird das Skalierungsverhalten des Gyrationsradius der einzelnen Polymerringe in einer konzentrierten Lösung aus völlig flexiblen Polymerringen im Kontinuum untersucht. Dabei wird der Anfang des asymptotischen Skalierungsverhaltens, welches mit dem Modell des “fractal globules“ konsistent ist, erreicht. Im abschließenden, dritten Teil dieser Arbeit wird das Verhalten von Bürsten aus linearen Polymeren mit dem von Ringpolymerbürsten verglichen. Dabei zeigt sich, dass die Struktur und das Skalierungsverhalten beider Systeme mit identischem Dichteprofil parallel zum Substrat deutlich voneinander abweichen, obwohl die Eigenschaften beider Systeme in Richtung senkrecht zum Substrat übereinstimmen. Der Vergleich des Relaxationsverhaltens einzelner Ketten in herkömmlichen Polymerbürsten und Ringbürsten liefert keine gravierenden Unterschiede. Es stellt sich aber auch heraus, dass die bisher verwendeten Erklärungen zur Relaxationsverhalten von herkömmlichen Bürsten nicht ausreichen, da diese lediglich den anfänglichen Zerfall der Korrelationsfunktion berücksichtigen. Bei der Untersuchung der Dynamik einzelner Monomere in einer herkömmlichen Bürste aus offenen Ketten vom Substrat hin zum offenen Ende zeigt sich, dass die Monomere in der Mitte der Kette die langsamste Relaxation besitzen, obwohl ihre mittlere Verrückung deutlich kleiner als die der freien Endmonomere ist.
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Die Analyse optischer Spektren liefert einen kernmodellunabhängigen Zugang zur Bestimmung der Kernspins, Ladungsradien und elektromagnetischen Momente von Atomkernen im Grundzustand und von langlebigen Isomeren. Eine der vielseitigsten Methoden zur optischen Spektroskopie an kurzlebigen Isotopen ist die kollineare Laserspektroskopie. Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit wurde zum einen die TRIGA-LASER Strahlstrecke am Institut für Kernchemie der Universität Mainz durch die Implementierung einer neuen offline Oberflächenionenquelle für hohe Verdampfungstemperaturen und eines Strahlanalysesystems weiterentwickelt. Zum anderen wurde kollineare Laserspektroskopie an kurzlebigen Praseodym- und Cadmiumisotopen an ISOLDE/CERN durchgeführt. Die neue Ionenquelle ermöglichte dabei den Test der kollinearen Laserspektroskopie an Praseodymionen am TRIGA-LASER Experiment. Die Spektroskopie der Prasdeodymionen motivierte sich aus der Beobachtung einer zeitlichen Modulation der EC-Zerfallsrate von wasserstoffähnlichem 140Pr58+. Für die Erklärung dieser sogenannten GSI Oszillationen wird unter anderem das magnetische Moment des Kerns benötigt, welches bislang noch nicht experimentell bestimmt wurde. Zudem wurde für wasserstoffähnliches 140Pr58+ überraschenderweise eine kleinere EC-Zerfallskonstante gemessen als für heliumähnliches 140Pr57+. Die Erklärung dieses Phänomens setzt ein positives magnetisches Moment voraus. Bei der Spektroskopie am COLLAPS Experiment wurden erstmals die magnetischen Momente von 135Pr, 136Pr und 137Pr vermessen. Aufgrund zu geringer Produktionsraten war die Spektroskopie des gewünschten Isotops 140Pr jedoch nicht erfolgreich. Die Untersuchung der Cadmiumisotope ist kernphysikalisch motiviert. In der Zinnregion erstrecken sich die Isotope über die beiden magischen Zahlen N=50 und N=82 bei gleichzeitiger Nähe des Z=50 Schalenabschlusses. Hier können verschiedene Kernmodelle getestet werden, die sich beispielsweise hinsichtlich der Stärke des N=82 Schalenabschlusses widersprechen. Diese Arbeit berichtet über erste Ergebnisse der Spektroskopie an Cadmiumatomen, die sich über die Isotope 106−124,126Cd sowie die zugehörigen langlebigen I=11/2− Isomere erstreckt. Die zuvor experimentell bekannten oder aus dem erweiterten Schalenmodell abgeleiteten Kernspins konnten für alle Isotope bis auf 119Cd bestätigt werden. Der Kernspin von 119Cd wurde eindeutig zu I=1/2 bestimmt. Die elektrischen Quadrupolmomente der Isomere zeigen ein bemerkenswert lineares Verhalten in Abhängigkeit von der Neutronenzahl und dies über die eigentliche Kapazität der 1h11/2 Unterschale hinaus. Die Änderungen der mittleren quadratischen Ladungsradien zeigen den auch an Indium- und Zinnisotopen beobachteten stetigen Verlauf. Der lineare Anteil passt sehr gut zu den Berechnung des Tröpfchenmodells in der Parametrisierung nach Berchidevsky und Tondeur. Die Differenzen der mittleren quadratischen Ladungsradien zwischen Grund- und isomeren Zustand der ungeraden Cadmiumisotope zeigen einen interessanten parabolischen Verlauf mit einem Minimum zwischen A=117 und A=119.
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The complex nature of the nucleon-nucleon interaction and the wide range of systems covered by the roughly 3000 known nuclides leads to a multitude of effects observed in nuclear structure. Among the most prominent ones is the occurence of shell closures at so-called ”magic numbers”, which are explained by the nuclear shell model. Although the shell model already is on duty for several decades, it is still constantly extended and improved. For this process of extension, fine adjustment and verification, it is important to have experimental data of nuclear properties, especially at crucial points like in the vicinity of shell closures. This is the motivation for the work performed in this thesis: the measurement and analysis of nuclear ground state properties of the isotopic chain of 100−130Cd by collinear laser spectroscopy.rnrnThe experiment was conducted at ISOLDE/CERN using the collinear laser spectroscopy apparatus COLLAPS. This experiment is the continuation of a run on neutral atomic cadmium from A = 106 to A = 126 and extends the measured isotopes to even more exotic species. The required gain in sensitivity is mainly achieved by using a radiofrequency cooler and buncher for background reduction and by using the strong 5s 2S1/2 → 5p 2P3/2 transition in singly ionized Cd. The latter requires a continuous wave laser system with a wavelength of 214.6 nm, which has been developed during this thesis. Fourth harmonic generation of an infrared titanium sapphire laser is achieved by two subsequent cavity-enhanced second harmonic generations, leading to the production of deep-UV laser light up to about 100 mW.rnrnThe acquired data of the Z = 48 Cd isotopes, having one proton pair less than the Z = 50 shell closure at tin, covers the isotopes from N = 52 up to N = 82 and therefore almost the complete region between the neutron shell closures N = 50 and N = 82. The isotope shifts and the hyperfine structures of these isotopes have been recorded and the magnetic dipole moments, the electric quadrupole moments, spins and changes in mean square charge radii are extracted. The obtained data reveal among other features an extremely linear behaviour of the quadrupole moments of the I = 11/2− isomeric states and a parabolic development in differences in mean square nuclear charge radii between ground and isomeric state. The development of charge radii between the shell closures is smooth, exposes a regular odd-even staggering and can be described and interpreted in the model of Zamick and Thalmi.
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Oceans are key sources and sinks in the global budgets of significant atmospheric trace gases, termed Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs). Despite their low concentrations, these species have an important role in the atmosphere, influencing ozone photochemistry and aerosol physics. Surprisingly, little work has been done on assessing their emissions or transport mechanisms and rates between ocean and atmosphere, all of which are important when modelling the atmosphere accurately.rnA new Needle Trap Device (NTD) - GC-MS method was developed for the effective sampling and analysis of VOCs in seawater. Good repeatability (RSDs <16 %), linearity (R2 = 0.96 - 0.99) and limits of detection in the range of pM were obtained for DMS, isoprene, benzene, toluene, p-xylene, (+)-α-pinene and (-)-α-pinene. Laboratory evaluation and subsequent field application indicated that the proposed method can be used successfully in place of the more usually applied extraction techniques (P&T, SPME) to extend the suite of species typically measured in the ocean and improve detection limits. rnDuring a mesocosm CO2 enrichment study, DMS, isoprene and α-pinene were identified and quantified in seawater samples, using the above mentioned method. Based on correlations with available biological datasets, the effects of ocean acidification as well as possible ocean biological sources were investigated for all examined compounds. Future ocean's acidity was shown to decrease oceanic DMS production, possibly impact isoprene emissions but not affect the production of α-pinene. rnIn a separate activity, ocean - atmosphere interactions were simulated in a large scale wind-wave canal facility, in order to investigate the gas exchange process and its controlling mechanisms. Air-water exchange rates of 14 chemical species (of which 11 VOCs) spanning a wide range of solubility (dimensionless solubility, α = 0:4 to 5470) and diffusivity (Schmidt number in water, Scw = 594 to 1194) were obtained under various turbulent (wind speed at ten meters height, u10 = 0:8 to 15ms-1) and surfactant modulated (two different sized Triton X-100 layers) surface conditions. Reliable and reproducible total gas transfer velocities were obtained and the derived values and trends were comparable to previous investigations. Through this study, a much better and more comprehensive understanding of the gas exchange process was accomplished. The role of friction velocity, uw* and mean square slope, σs2 in defining phenomena such as waves and wave breaking, near surface turbulence, bubbles and surface films was recognized as very significant. uw* was determined as the ideal turbulent parameter while σs2 described best the related surface conditions. A combination of both uw* and σs2 variables, was found to reproduce faithfully the air-water gas exchange process. rnA Total Transfer Velocity (TTV) model provided by a compilation of 14 tracers and a combination of both uw* and σs2 parameters, is proposed for the first time. Through the proposed TTV parameterization, a new physical perspective is presented which provides an accurate TTV for any tracer within the examined solubility range. rnThe development of such a comprehensive air-sea gas exchange parameterization represents a highly useful tool for regional and global models, providing accurate total transfer velocity estimations for any tracer and any sea-surface status, simplifying the calculation process and eliminating inevitable calculation uncertainty connected with the selection or combination of different parameterizations.rnrn
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Die Funktionsweise der Laserionenquellenfalle LIST, sowie deren Implementierung bei der Forschungseinrichtung ISOLDE am CERN als neue Standard-Ionenquelle und die ermittelten Spezifikationen Effizienz und Selektivität werden vorgestellt.rnrnDurch die Implementierung der LIST bei ISOLDE konnte on-line mit Hilfe von Radionukliden ein Minimalwert zur Unterdrückung von Kontaminationen durch die LIST bestimmt werden. Die erfolgreiche Unterdrückung von Francium-Kontamination ermöglichte es, neue Messdaten für den mittleren Ladungsradius und die Hyperfeinstruktur für Po-217 zu erzeugen.rnrnUm die Funktionalität der LIST bei ISOLDE hinsichtlich der Ionisationseffizienz gegenüber anderen Ionenquellen einzuordnen, wurden in Mainz am RISIKO-Massenseparator mit der bereits existierenden Standard-Ionenquelle RILIS und der LIST die Effizienzen bestimmt und miteinander verglichen. Es konnte gezeigt werden, dass die LIST im Modus hoher Ionisationseffizienz eine vergleichbare Effizienz aufweist wie die RILIS. Im Modus zur Produktion eines hochreinen Ionenstrahls ist die Ionisationseffizienz gegenüber der RILIS reduziert.rnrnDa die Bestimmung der Selektivität im On-line-Betrieb aufwendig und zeitintensiv ist, wurde die Reinheit des Ionenstrahls am RISIKO-Massenseparator mittels Laufzeitmessungen der Ionen off-line bestimmt und analysiert. Die Zeitstrukturen der RILIS ermöglichen einerseits Rückschlüsse auf die Reinheit des Ionenstrahls zu ziehen, andererseits konnte auch die Ionisation außerhalb des Atomisators, in dem überwiegend die resonante Ionisation stattfindet, nachgewiesen werden. Durch diesen Nachweis kann der Effizienzverlust während der Produktion eines hochreinen Ionenstrahls erklärt werden. Zudem bietet er einen Ansatz für weitere Entwicklungsarbeiten der LIST zur Steigerung der Effizienz.rnrnEine Übertragung der Messergebnisse zur Zeitstruktur der RILIS auf die LIST eröffnet neue Möglichkeiten zur Steigerung deren Selektivität im massenselektiven Mode. Dieser wurde anhand von Simulationen überprüft und mit Messungen an Kalium experimentell quantifiziert.
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Purpose Accurate three-dimensional (3D) models of lumbar vertebrae can enable image-based 3D kinematic analysis. The common approach to derive 3D models is by direct segmentation of CT or MRI datasets. However, these have the disadvantages that they are expensive, timeconsuming and/or induce high-radiation doses to the patient. In this study, we present a technique to automatically reconstruct a scaled 3D lumbar vertebral model from a single two-dimensional (2D) lateral fluoroscopic image. Methods Our technique is based on a hybrid 2D/3D deformable registration strategy combining a landmark-to-ray registration with a statistical shape model-based 2D/3D reconstruction scheme. Fig. 1 shows different stages of the reconstruction process. Four cadaveric lumbar spine segments (total twelve lumbar vertebrae) were used to validate the technique. To evaluate the reconstruction accuracy, the surface models reconstructed from the lateral fluoroscopic images were compared to the associated ground truth data derived from a 3D CT-scan reconstruction technique. For each case, a surface-based matching was first used to recover the scale and the rigid transformation between the reconstructed surface model Results Our technique could successfully reconstruct 3D surface models of all twelve vertebrae. After recovering the scale and the rigid transformation between the reconstructed surface models and the ground truth models, the average error of the 2D/3D surface model reconstruction over the twelve lumbar vertebrae was found to be 1.0 mm. The errors of reconstructing surface models of all twelve vertebrae are shown in Fig. 2. It was found that the mean errors of the reconstructed surface models in comparison to their associated ground truths after iterative scaled rigid registrations ranged from 0.7 mm to 1.3 mm and the rootmean squared (RMS) errors ranged from 1.0 mm to 1.7 mm. The average mean reconstruction error was found to be 1.0 mm. Conclusion An accurate, scaled 3D reconstruction of the lumbar vertebra can be obtained from a single lateral fluoroscopic image using a statistical shape model based 2D/3D reconstruction technique. Future work will focus on applying the reconstructed model for 3D kinematic analysis of lumbar vertebrae, an extension of our previously-reported imagebased kinematic analysis. The developed method also has potential applications in surgical planning and navigation.