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Träfflista för sökning "WFRF:(Hartman Mikael) ;hsvcat:1"

Search: WFRF:(Hartman Mikael) > Natural sciences

  • Result 1-6 of 6
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1.
  • Thomas, Richard D., et al. (author)
  • DESIREE : Physics with cold stored ion beams
  • 2015
  • In: DR2013. - : EDP Sciences. ; 84, s. 01004-01004
  • Conference paper (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Here we will briefly describe the commissioning of the Double ElectroStatic Ion Ring ExpEriment (DESIREE) facility at Stockholm University, Sweden. This device uses purely electrostatic focussing and deflection elements and allows ion beams of opposite charge to be confined under extreme high vacuum and cryogenic conditions in separate rings and then merged over a common straight section. This apparatus allows for studies of interactions between cations and anions at very low and well-defined centre-of-mass energies (down to a few meV) and at very low internal temperatures (down to a few K).
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2.
  • Hartman, Henrik, et al. (author)
  • First storage of ion beams in the Double Electrostatic Ion-Ring Experiment : DESIREE
  • 2013
  • In: Review of Scientific Instruments. - : American Institute of Physics (AIP). - 0034-6748 .- 1089-7623. ; 84:5
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • We report on the first storage of ion beams in the Double ElectroStatic Ion Ring ExpEriment, DESIREE, at Stockholm University. We have produced beams of atomic carbon anions and small carbon anion molecules (Cn-, n = 1, 2, 3, 4) in a sputter ion source. The ion beams were accelerated to 10 keV kinetic energy and stored in an electrostatic ion storage ring enclosed in a vacuum chamber at 13 K. For 10 keV C2- molecular anions we measure the residual-gas limited beam storage lifetime to be 448 s +/- 18 s with two independent detector systems. Using the measured storage lifetimes we estimate that the residual gas pressure is in the 10-14 mbar range. When high current ion beams are injected, the number of stored particles does not follow a single exponential decay law as would be expected for stored particles lost solely due to electron detachment in collision with the residual-gas. Instead, we observe a faster initial decay rate, which we ascribe to the effect of the space charge of the ion beam on the storage capacity.
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3.
  • Gatchell, Michael, et al. (author)
  • Commissioning of the DESIREE storage rings - a new facility for cold ion-ion collisions
  • 2014
  • In: XXVIII International Conference on Photonic, Electronic and Atomic Collisions (ICPEAC 2013). - : Institute of Physics (IOP). ; 488:1
  • Conference paper (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • We report on the ongoing commissioning of the Double ElectroStatic Ion Ring ExpEriment, DESIREE, at Stockholm University. Beams of atomic carbon anions (C-) and smaller carbon anion molecules (C-2(-), C-3(-), C-4(-) etc.) have been produced in a sputter ion source, accelerated to 10 keV or 20 keV, and stored successfully in the two electrostatic rings. The rings are enclosed in a common vacuum chamber cooled to below 13 Kelvin. The DESIREE facility allows for studies of internally relaxed single isolated atomic, molecular and cluster ions and for collision experiments between cat-and anions down to very low center-of-mass collision energies (meV scale). The total thermal load of the vacuum chamber at this temperature is measured to be 32 W. The decay rates of stored ion beams have two components: a non-exponential component caused by the space charge of the beam itself which dominates at early times and an exponential term from the neutralization of the beam in collisions with residual gas at later times. The residual gas limited storage lifetime of carbon anions in the symmetric ring is over seven minutes while the 1/e lifetime in the asymmetric ring is measured to be about 30 seconds. Although we aim to improve the storage in the second ring, the number of stored ions are now sufficient for many merged beams experiments with positive and negative ions requiring milliseconds to seconds ion storage.
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4.
  • Ning, Yilin, et al. (author)
  • Handling ties in continuous outcomes for confounder adjustment with rank-ordered logit and its application to ordinal outcomes
  • 2020
  • In: Statistical Methods in Medical Research. - : SAGE Publications. - 0962-2802 .- 1477-0334. ; 29:2, s. 437-454
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • The rank-ordered logit (rologit) model was recently introduced as a robust approach for analysing continuous outcomes, with the linear exposure effect estimated by scaling the rank-based log-odds estimate. Here we extend the application of the rologit model to continuous outcomes with ties and ordinal outcomes treated as imperfectly-observed continuous outcomes. By identifying the functional relationship between survival times and continuous outcomes, we explicitly establish the equivalence between the rologit and Cox models to justify the use of the Breslow, Efron and perturbation methods in the analysis of continuous outcomes with ties. Using simulation, we found all three methods perform well with few ties. Although an increasing extent of ties increased the bias of the log-odds and linear effect estimates and resulted in reduced power, which was somewhat worse when the model was mis-specified, the perturbation method maintained a type I error around 5%, while the Efron method became conservative with heavy ties but outperformed Breslow. In general, the perturbation method had the highest power, followed by the Efron and then the Breslow method. We applied our approach to three real-life datasets, demonstrating a seamless analytical workflow that uses stratification for confounder adjustment in studies of continuous and ordinal outcomes.
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5.
  • Lytsy, Per, 1968-, et al. (author)
  • Misinterpretations of P-values and statistical tests persist among researchers and professionals working with statistics and epidemiology
  • 2022
  • In: Upsala Journal of Medical Sciences. - : Upsala Medical Society. - 0300-9734 .- 2000-1967. ; 127:1
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Background: The aim was to investigate inferences of statistically significant test results among persons with more or less statistical education and research experience.Methods: A total of 75 doctoral students and 64 statisticians/epidemiologist responded to a web questionnaire about inferences of statistically significant findings. Participants were asked about their education and research experience, and also whether a 'statistically significant' test result (P = 0.024, alpha-level 0.05) could be inferred as proof or probability statements about the truth or falsehood of the null hypothesis (H-0) and the alternative hypothesis (H-1).Results: Almost all participants reported having a university degree, and among statisticians/epidemiologist, most reported having a university degree in statistics and were working professionally with statistics. Overall, 9.4% of statisticians/epidemiologist and 24.0% of doctoral students responded that the statistically significant finding proved that H-0 is not true, and 73.4% of statisticians/epidemiologists and 53.3% of doctoral students responded that the statistically significant finding indicated that H(0 )is improbable. Corresponding numbers about inferences about the alternative hypothesis (H-1) were 12.0% and 6.2% about proving H-1 being true and 62.7 and 62.5% for the conclusion that H-1 is probable. Correct inferences to both questions, which is that a statistically significant finding cannot be inferred as either proof or a measure of a hypothesis' probability, were given by 10.7% of doctoral students and 12.5% of statisticians/epidemiologists.Conclusions: Misinterpretation of P-values and statistically significant test results persists also among persons who have substantial statistical education and who work professionally with statistics.
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6.
  • Uggla, Maria, et al. (author)
  • Future Swedish 3D City Models : Specifications, Test Data, and Evaluation
  • 2023
  • In: ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information. - : MDPI AG. - 2220-9964. ; 12:2
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Three-dimensional city models are increasingly being used for analyses and simulations. To enable such applications, it is necessary to standardise semantically richer city models and, in some cases, to connect the models with external data sources. In this study, we describe the development of a new Swedish specification for 3D city models, denoted as 3CIM, which is a joint effort between the three largest cities in Sweden—Stockholm, Gothenburg, and Malmö. Technically, 3CIM is an extension of the OGC standard CityGML 2.0, implemented as an application domain extension (ADE). The ADE is semantically thin, mainly extending CityGML 2.0 to harmonise with national standards; in contrast, 3CIM is mainly based on linkages to external databases, registers, and operational systems for the semantic part. The current version, 3CIM 1.0, includes various themes, including Bridge, Building, Utility, City Furniture, Transportation, Tunnel, Vegetation, and Water. Three test areas were created with 3CIM data, one in each city. These data were evaluated in several use-cases, including visualisation as well as daylight, noise, and flooding simulations. The conclusion from these use-cases is that the 3CIM data, together with the linked external data sources, allow for the inclusion of the necessary information for the visualisation and simulations, but extract, transform, and load (ETL) processes are required to tailor the input data. The next step is to implement 3CIM within the three cities, which will entail several challenges, as discussed at the end of the paper.
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  • Result 1-6 of 6
Type of publication
journal article (4)
conference paper (2)
Type of content
peer-reviewed (6)
Author/Editor
Hellberg, Fredrik (3)
Hansen, Klavs, 1958 (3)
Larsson, Mats (3)
Hanstorp, Dag, 1960 (3)
Thomas, Richard D. (3)
Alexander, John D. (3)
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Blom, Mikael (3)
Björkhage, Mikael (3)
Löfgren, Patrik (3)
Gatchell, Michael (3)
Zettergren, Henning (3)
Cederquist, Henrik (3)
Schmidt, Henning T. (3)
Geppert, Wolf D. (3)
Chen, Tao (3)
Reinhed, Peter (3)
Bäckström, Erik (3)
Mannervik, Sven (3)
Källberg, Anders (3)
Simonsson, Ansgar (3)
Andler, Guillermo (3)
Brännholm, Lars (3)
Leontein, Sven (3)
Liljeby, Leif (3)
Rensfelt, Karl-Gunna ... (3)
Masuda, Masaharu (3)
Rosén, Stefan (2)
Stockett, Mark H. (2)
Danared, Håkan (2)
Hartman, H. (2)
Paál, Andras (2)
Harrie, Lars (1)
al., et (1)
Wagner, Philippe (1)
Comasco, Erika, 1982 ... (1)
Axelsson, Björn (1)
Persson, Andreas (1)
Pingel, Ronnie, 1978 ... (1)
Paal, A (1)
Lytsy, Per, 1968- (1)
Hodgins, Sheilagh (1)
Kamińska, Magdalena (1)
Nascimento, Rodrigo (1)
Nilsson, Kent W. (1)
Reilly, Marie (1)
Hartman, Henrik (1)
Tai, E. Shyong (1)
Stewart, Paul (1)
Pantazatou, Karolina (1)
Fan, Hongchao (1)
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University
Stockholm University (4)
University of Gothenburg (3)
Lund University (3)
Malmö University (3)
Uppsala University (2)
Mälardalen University (1)
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Karolinska Institutet (1)
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Language
English (6)
Research subject (UKÄ/SCB)
Medical and Health Sciences (2)

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