574 research outputs found
Excitations of amorphous solid helium
We present neutron scattering measurements of the dynamic structure factor,
, of amorphous solid helium confined in 47 pore diameter
MCM-41 at pressure 48.6 bar. At low temperature, = 0.05 K, we observe
of the confined quantum amorphous solid plus the bulk
polycrystalline solid between the MCM-41 powder grains. No liquid-like
phonon-roton modes, other sharply defined modes at low energy ( 1.0
meV) or modes unique to a quantum amorphous solid that might suggest superflow
are observed. Rather the of confined amorphous and bulk
polycrystalline solid appear to be very similar. At higher temperature ( 1
K), the amorphous solid in the MCM-41 pores melts to a liquid which has a broad
peaked near 0 characteristic of normal liquid
He under pressure. Expressions for the of amorphous and
polycrystalline solid helium are presented and compared. In previous
measurements of liquid He confined in MCM-41 at lower pressure the
intensity in the liquid roton mode decreases with increasing pressure until the
roton vanishes at the solidification pressure (38 bars), consistent with no
roton in the solid observed here
Time domain radiation and absorption by subwavelength sources
Radiation by elementary sources is a basic problem in wave physics. We show
that the time-domain energy flux radiated from electromagnetic and acoustic
subwalength sources exhibits remarkable features. In particular, a subtle
trade-off between source emission and absorption underlies the mechanism of
radiation. This behavior should be observed for any kind of classical waves,
thus having broad potential implications. We discuss the implication for
subwavelength focusing by time reversal with active sources
New excitations in bcc He - an inelastic neutron scattering study
We report neutron scattering measurements on bcc solid % He. We studied
the phonon branches and the recently discovered ''optic-like'' branch along the
main crystalline directions. In addition, we discovered another, dispersionless
"optic-like'' branch at an energy around 1 meV (~11K). The properties of
the two "optic-like" branches seem different. Since one expects only 3 acoustic
phonon branches in a monoatomic cubic crystal, these new branches must
represent different type of excitations. One possible interpretation involves
localized excitations unique to a quantum solid.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, accepted by PRB, Rapid Communication
AGMIAL: implementing an annotation strategy for prokaryote genomes as a distributed system
We have implemented a genome annotation system for prokaryotes called AGMIAL. Our approach embodies a number of key principles. First, expert manual annotators are seen as a critical component of the overall system; user interfaces were cyclically refined to satisfy their needs. Second, the overall process should be orchestrated in terms of a global annotation strategy; this facilitates coordination between a team of annotators and automatic data analysis. Third, the annotation strategy should allow progressive and incremental annotation from a time when only a few draft contigs are available, to when a final finished assembly is produced. The overall architecture employed is modular and extensible, being based on the W3 standard Web services framework. Specialized modules interact with two independent core modules that are used to annotate, respectively, genomic and protein sequences. AGMIAL is currently being used by several INRA laboratories to analyze genomes of bacteria relevant to the food-processing industry, and is distributed under an open source license
In-vivo visualisation of the anatomical structures related to the acupuncture points Dai mai and Shen mai by MRI: A single-case pilot study
BACKGROUND: The concept of acupuncture point localisation in Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) is based on millenary practical experience. Modern imaging methods such as PET, MRI and SPECT have been used primary for the investigation of the mechanisms of action of acupuncture. In this pilot single-case study we have evaluated the technical possibilities for in-vivo imaging of the anatomical relations of acupuncture points using state of the art MRI. METHODS: Preliminary experiments relating to the quality of acupuncture needles under the setting of MRI were done both with stainless steel and gold needles. In a second step, in-vivo imaging was carried out. A licensed acupuncture practitioner (RM) chose two points belonging to the so-called extraordinary vessels. In 2 sequential, separate procedures, he inserted himself gold acupuncture needles using a neutral technique (known as Ping Bu Ping Xie) into the Dai mai and Shen mai points, i.e. gall bladder 26 and bladder 62. Imaging was done on a Siemens Magnetom Avanto MR scanner using a head array and body coil. Mainly T1-weighted imaging sequences, as routinely used for patient exams, were used to obtain multi-slice images. RESULTS: In the preliminary experiments only acupuncture needles made of gold showed enough stability in order to be used for further imaging procedures. Using an onion and a banana as an object, further studies showed that the gold needles produced a void defect that corresponds to the tip of the inserted needle, while at the same time an artefactually increased diameter was observed. The in-vivo experiments showed that the Dai mai point was in relation to the abdominal internal oblique muscle. The Shen mai point artefact showed up close to the longus and brevis peroneal tendons at the fibular malleolus. Side effects related to heating or burning were not observed. Improved anatomical recognition was obtained using 3D-volume rendering techniques. CONCLUSION: Through an adequate choice of acupuncture material (gold needles) as well as of ideal MRI imaging sequences it has been possible to visualize the anatomical characteristics at the acupuncture points Dai mai and Shen mai in-vivo. At the selected sites the needles showed a relation to tendino-fascial and muscular structures. These anatomical structures fit well into the recently described WOMED concept of lateral tension in which these acupuncture points play a regulatory role
Construction d'un graphe de connaissances à partir des annotations d'articles scientifiques et de leur contenu en sciences de la vie
National audienceIn this paper, we present an RDF knowledge graph to describe, structure and integrate annotations of named entities automatically extracted by the Alvis NLP tool from scientific publications on wheat genetics and phenotyping. These named entities refer to the names of genes, traits, phenotypes, markers and varieties involved in wheat breeding. However, once extracted, these annotations are stored ina raw format making it difficult for researchers to exploit?them. Hence, our interest in transforming (lifting) them into?a format compatible with linked data publication standardsin order to build a knowledge graph in which knowledge?coming from both genomic knowledge bases and scientific articles has been semantically described and integrated.Based on a set of competency questions formulated by a?domain expert, we validated the relevance of the proposed?model and consequently the generated knowledge graph.Dans ce papier, nous présentons un graphe de connaissances RDF permettant de décrire, structurer et intégrer des annotations d'entités nommées extraites automatiquement par l'outil Alvis NLP à partir de publications scientifiques portant sur la génétique et le phénotypage de blé. Ces entités nommées se réfèrent à la fois à des noms de gènes, traits, phénotypes, marqueurs et variétés impliqués dans la culture du blé. Cependant, une fois extraites, ces annotations sont stockées dans un format brut rendant difficile leur exploitation par les chercheurs. D'où, notre intérêt de les transformer (lifter) en un format compatible avec les standards de publication de données liées afin de construire un graphe de connaissances dans lequel des entités provenant à la fois de bases de connaissances génomiques et d'articles scientifiques ont été sémantiquement décrites et intégrées. Basé sur un ensemble de questions de compétence formulées par un expert du domaine, nous avons validé la pertinence du modèle proposé et par conséquent le graphe de connaissances généré
AGMIAL: implementing an annotation strategy for prokaryote genomes as a distributed system
We have implemented a genome annotation system for prokaryotes called AGMIAL. Our approach embodies a number of key principles. First, expert manual annotators are seen as a critical component of the overall system; user interfaces were cyclically refined to satisfy their needs. Second, the overall process should be orchestrated in terms of a global annotation strategy; this facilitates coordination between a team of annotators and automatic data analysis. Third, the annotation strategy should allow progressive and incremental annotation from a time when only a few draft contigs are available, to when a final finished assembly is produced. The overall architecture employed is modular and extensible, being based on the W3 standard Web services framework. Specialized modules interact with two independent core modules that are used to annotate, respectively, genomic and protein sequences. AGMIAL is currently being used by several INRA laboratories to analyze genomes of bacteria relevant to the food-processing industry, and is distributed under an open source license
Quantum Impurities and the Neutron Resonance Peak in : Ni versus Zn
The influence of magnetic (S=1) and nonmagnetic (S=0) impurities on the spin
dynamics of an optimally doped high temperature superconductor is compared in
two samples with almost identical superconducting transition temperatures:
YBa(CuNi)O (T=80 K) and
YBa(CuZn)O (T=78 K). In the Ni-substituted
system, the magnetic resonance peak (which is observed at E40 meV in
the pure system) shifts to lower energy with a preserved E/T ratio
while the shift is much smaller upon Zn substitution. By contrast Zn, but not
Ni, restores significant spin fluctuations around 40 meV in the normal state.
These observations are discussed in the light of models proposed for the
magnetic resonance peak.Comment: 3 figures, submitted to PR
Event extraction of bacteria biotopes: a knowledge-intensive NLP-based approach
International audienceBackground: Bacteria biotopes cover a wide range of diverse habitats including animal and plant hosts, natural, medical and industrial environments. The high volume of publications in the microbiology domain provides a rich source of up-to-date information on bacteria biotopes. This information, as found in scientific articles, is expressed in natural language and is rarely available in a structured format, such as a database. This information is of great importance for fundamental research and microbiology applications (e.g., medicine, agronomy, food, bioenergy). The automatic extraction of this information from texts will provide a great benefit to the field
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