Objectives: In Québec, Canada, we evaluated the risk of severe acute respiratory coronavirus virus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection associated with (1) the demographic and employment characteristics among healthcare workers (HCWs) and (2) the workplace and household exposures and the infection prevention and control (IPC) measures among patient-facing HCWs.
Design: Test-negative case-control study.
Setting: Provincial health system.
We consider a compact three-mirror cavity consisting of a flat output coupler, a curved folding mirror, and an active medium with one facet cut at the Brewster angle and the other facet coated for unit reflectivity. We examine the sensitivity to thermal lensing and to self-focusing in the active medium of the Gaussian beam that is circulating in that cavity. We use a simple thin-lens model; the astigmatism of the beam that is circulating in the cavity and the nonlinear coupling between the field distributions along the two orthogonal axes are taken into account.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe first present the fabrication technique of apodizing holographic gratings. Gratings with a spatially variable reflectivity profile were obtained by the interference of two Gaussian beams on a glass plate covered with a photoresist. When the exposure time was short enough to avoid saturation of the photoresist, gratings with a quasi-Gaussian reflectivity profile for the beam reflected in the -1 order were produced; the reflectivity at the center could be as high as 71%, and the half-width of the reflectivity profile at the e(-1) position could be as small as 180 mum.
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