10 results on '"Backus, S."'
Search Results
2. Differences between sexes in lower extremity alignment and muscle activation during soccer kick.
- Author
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Brophy RH, Backus S, Kraszewski AP, Steele BC, Ma Y, Osei D, Williams RJ, Brophy, Robert H, Backus, Sherry, Kraszewski, Andrew P, Steele, Barbara C, Ma, Yan, Osei, Daniel, and Williams, Riley J
- Abstract
Background: Injury risk in soccer varies by sex. Female soccer players face a greater risk of anterior cruciate ligament injury and patellofemoral problems, while male players are more likely to experience sports hernia symptoms. The purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis that females have different lower-extremity alignment and muscle activation patterns than males during the soccer kick.Methods: Thirteen male and twelve female college soccer players underwent three-dimensional motion analysis and electromyography of seven muscles (iliacus, gluteus maximus, gluteus medius, vastus lateralis, vastus medialis, hamstrings, and gastrocnemius) in both the kicking and the supporting lower extremity and two additional muscles (hip adductors and tibialis anterior) in the kicking limb only. Five instep and five side-foot kicks were recorded for each player. Muscle activation was recorded as a percentage of maximum voluntary isometric contraction.Results: The male soccer players had significantly higher mean muscle activation than their female counterparts with respect to the iliacus in the kicking limb (123% compared with 34% of maximal voluntary isometric contraction; p = 0.0007) and the gluteus medius (124% compared with 55%; p = 0.005) and vastus medialis muscles (139% compared with 69%; p = 0.002) in the supporting limb. The supporting limb reached significantly greater mean hip adduction during the stance phase of the kick in the females compared with that in the males (15 degrees and 10 degrees, respectively; p = 0.006).Conclusions: Differences between the sexes in lower extremity alignment and muscle activation occur during the soccer instep and side-foot kicks. Decreased activation of the hip abductors and greater hip adduction in the supporting limb during the soccer kick in female athletes may be associated with their increased risk for anterior cruciate ligament injury. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Impulsive stimulated Raman scattering of molecular vibrations using nonlinear pulse shaping
- Author
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Bartels, R.A., Backus, S., Murnane, M.M., and Kapteyn, H.C.
- Subjects
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VIBRATION (Mechanics) , *SCATTERING (Physics) - Abstract
We demonstrate the excitation of a molecular vibrational coherence via impulsive stimulated Raman scattering (ISRS) by using a pump pulse longer than the vibrational period of the excited mode. By making use of the reshaping of the pump pulse during nonlinear propagation, a Raman vibrational coherence can be excited via ISRS with a pump pulse incapable of such excitation at the input of the medium. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Sources and Significance of Alkane and PAH Hydrocarbons in Canadian Arctic Rivers
- Author
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Yunker, M. B., Backus, S. M., Graf Pannatier, E., Jeffries, D. S., and Macdonald, R. W.
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POLYCYCLIC aromatic hydrocarbons , *ALKANES - Abstract
Hydrocarbon measurements have been made on dissolved, suspended particulate and sediment samples collected in 1987, 1993 and 1994 from the Mackenzie River delta and shelf and in 1993 from 10 smaller Northwest Territories and Nunavut rivers that drain into the Canadian Archipelago or Hudson''s Bay. Suspended particulate samples from all rivers have a resolved higher alkane pattern with a well-defined odd–even predominance consistent with a major source in terrestrial, vascular plant material. Particulate samples from the 10 smaller rivers have alkane concentrations that are similar to the Mackenzie River during summer, but PAH (polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon) concentrations are approximately 10 times lower for the parent PAHs and 100 times lower for alkyl PAHs. PAHs on suspended particulate from the Mackenzie River exhibit a uniform composition typical of mature petrogenic sources, while PAHs in the smaller rivers are typical of combustion. The virtual absence of petrogenic PAHs in the smaller rivers is the single most important difference between these and the Mackenzie River. During summer the alkane and PAH composition of suspended particulate in the Mackenzie River is sufficiently homogenous to estimate directly the hydrocarbon load from the particulate load. Mackenzie River particulates and sediments have the hopane and sterane ratios characteristic of immature bitumens, shales or coals from the Devonian Canol formation that outcrops in the lower Mackenzie River valley. The erosion of organic-rich rocks from this formation is likely the source of the refractory petrogenic material found in the Mackenzie River delta and shelf. Data are insufficient to determine whether the petrogenic lower alkanes and PAHs have the same source or whether more mature petroleum also contributes. Because sediment samples (suspended and bed) from the Mackenzie delta have natural PAH concentrations that exceed the level where adverse biological effects are expected to occur, there is an urgent need to establish whether these petroleum-derived PAHs are bioavailable and if they are inducing effects in bottom fish and other biota. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2002
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5. Shaped-pulse optimization of coherent emission of high-harmonic soft X-rays.
- Author
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Bartels, R., Backus, S., Zeek, E., Misoguti, L., Vdovin, G., Christov, I.P., Murnane, M.M., and Kapteyn, H.C.
- Subjects
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OPTICS , *IONIZATION (Atomic physics) , *ULTRASHORT laser pulses , *X-rays - Abstract
Presents a study of the control of the interaction of light with an atom during ionization. Improvement of the efficiency of X-ray generation by an order of magnitude; How the shape of ultrashort light pulses may be tailored to this end; Control of the interaction between different orders of nonlinear processes by tuning the spectral characteristics of emitted radiation.
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- 2000
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6. A multi-task, multi-center motion analysis protocol: Reliability assessment in healthy individuals.
- Author
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Tulchin-Francis, K., Anderson, A., Backus, S., Catelli, D., Harris Hayes, M., Lamontagne, M., Lewis, C., and Podeszwa, D.
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MOTION capture (Human mechanics) , *HUMAN multitasking , *ACQUISITION of data , *GAIT in humans , *FOLLOW-up studies (Medicine) , *HUMAN kinematics - Published
- 2020
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7. Guided-Wave Phase-Matching of Ultrashort-Pulse Light.
- Author
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Durfee III, C. G., Rundquiist, A., Backus, S., Chang, Z., Herne, C., Kapteyn, H. C., and Murnane, M. M.
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LASER beams , *WAVEGUIDES - Abstract
We review the use of hollow waveguides for frequency conversion of ultrafast laser pulses the ultraviolet and extreme ultraviolet. Phase-matching of these processes is reached through a balance of gas and waveguide dispersion. By mixing 400 nm with 800 nm light, ultrashort (8 fs) pulses are generated near 270 nm with high efficiency > 20%. Tuning of the longer-wavelength component in the mixing process allows tuning of the output from 215–308 nm. In the XUV, this guided-wave phase-matching has allowed an increase of conversion efficiency of high-order harmonic generation of 100–1000x over that obtained with a gas jet, in an experimentally-convenient geometry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1999
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8. High average power Yb:CaF femtosecond amplifier with integrated simultaneous spatial and temporal focusing for laser material processing.
- Author
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Squier, J., Thomas, J., Block, E., Durfee, C., and Backus, S.
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OPTICAL materials , *LASERS , *CHIRPED pulse amplification , *NUMERICAL analysis , *LASER beams , *TRANSPARENT solids - Abstract
A watt level, 10-kz repetition rate chirped pulse amplification system that has an integrated simultaneous spatial and temporal focusing (SSTF) processing system is demonstrated for the first time. SSTF significantly reduces nonlinear effects normally detrimental to beam control enabling the use of a low numerical aperture focus to quickly treat optically transparent materials over a large area. The integrated SSTF system has improved efficiency compared to previously reported SSTF designs, which combined with the high-repetition rate of the laser, further optimizes its capability to provide rapid, large volume processing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Quasi-phase-matched generation of coherent extreme-ultraviolet light.
- Author
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Paul, A., Bartels, R. A., Tobey, R., Green, H., Weiman, S., Christov, I. P., Murnane, M. M., Kapteyn, H. C., and Backus, S.
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ULTRAVIOLET radiation , *PHOTONS , *LASERS - Abstract
High-harmonic generation is a well-known method of producing coherent extreme-ultraviolet (EUV) light, with photon energies up to about 0.5 keV (refs 1, 2). This is achieved by focusing a femtosecond laser into a gas, and high harmonics of the fundamental laser frequency are radiated in the forward direction(3,4). However, although this process can generate high-energy photons, efficient high-harmonic generation has been demonstrated only for photon energies of the order 50-100 eV (ref. 5). Ionization of the gas prevents the laser and the EUV light from propagating at the same speed, which severely limits the conversion efficiency. Here we report a technique to overcome this problem, and demonstrate quasi-phase-matched frequency conversion of laser light into EUV. Using a modulated hollow-core waveguide to periodically vary the intensity of the laser light driving the conversion, we efficiently generate EUV light even in the presence of substantial ionization. The use of a modulated fibre shifts the energy spectrum of the high-harmonic light to significantly higher photon energies than would otherwise be possible. We expect that this technique could form the basis of coherent EUV sources for advanced lithography and high-resolution imaging applications. In future work, it might also be possible to generate isolated attosecond pulses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
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10. Ultrafast laser and amplifier sources.
- Author
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Rundquist, A., Durfee, C., Chang, Z., Taft, G., Zeek, E., Backus, S., Murnane, M.M., Kapteyn, H.C., Christov, I., and Stoev, V.
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HIGH power lasers , *ULTRASHORT laser pulses , *LASERS - Abstract
There has been remarkable progress in the development of high peak-power ultrafast lasers in recent years. Lasers capable of generating terawatt peak powers with unprecedented short pulse durations can now be built on a single optical table in a small laboratory. The rapid technological progress has made possible a host of new scientific advances in high-field science, such as the generation of coherent femtosecond X-ray pulses, and the generation of MeV-energy electron beams and high-energy ions. In this paper, we review progress in the development and design of ultrafast high-power lasers based on Ti:sapphire, including the ultrafast laser oscillators that are a very important enabling technology for high-power ultrafast systems, and ultrafast amplified laser systems that generate 20 fs duration pulses with several watts average power at kilohertz repetition-rates. Ultrafast waveform measurements of these pulses demonstrate that such short pulses can be generated with high fidelity. Finally, we discuss applications of ultrafast high-power pulses, including the generation of femtosecond to attosecond X-ray pulses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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