355 research outputs found
Redistribution of phase fluctuations in a periodically driven cuprate superconductor
We study the thermally fluctuating state of a bi-layer cuprate superconductor
under the periodic action of a staggered field oscillating at optical
frequencies. This analysis distills essential elements of the recently
discovered phenomenon of light enhanced coherence in YBaCuO,
which was achieved by periodically driving infrared active apical oxygen
distortions. The effect of a staggered periodic perturbation is studied using a
Langevin and Fokker-Planck description of driven, coupled Josephson junctions,
which represent two neighboring pairs of layers and their two plasmons. In a
toy model including only two junctions, we demonstrate that the external
driving leads to a suppression of phase fluctuations of the low-energy plasmon,
an effect which is amplified via the resonance of the high energy plasmon. When
extending the modeling to the full layers, we find that this reduction becomes
far more pronounced, with a striking suppression of the low-energy
fluctuations, as visible in the power spectrum. We also find that this effect
acts onto the in-plane fluctuations, which are reduced on long length scales.
All these findings provide a physical framework to describe light control in
cuprates
Isolated familial pheochromocytoma as a variant of von Hippel-Lindau disease.
Inherited pheochromocytomas are often part of familial syndromes, especially multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2 (MEN 2), retinal cerebellar hemangioblastomatosis [von Hippel-Lindau (vHL) disease] or neurofibromatosis type 1. It is not clear whether isolated familial pheochromocytoma exists as a separate clinical entity. In a family with pheochromocytomas in three generations and with at least seven affected members, we investigated by clinical and genetic analyses the presence or absence of associated conditions. The clinical investigations included ophthalmological and radiological studies for von Hippel-Lindau disease (magnetic resonance imaging of the brain, computed tomography of the abdomen, and direct ophthalmoscopy after mydriasis) and annual calcitonin stimulation tests for C cell disease in five members who agreed to regular follow-up. Besides the pheochromocytomas (so far, these have been multiple in five of seven individuals) no definite second associated condition was found. Genetic analysis did not identify any MEN 2-specific RET protooncogene point mutations (which are present in 97% of MEN 2a families). However, despite the complete absence of other clinical manifestations of the vHL disease (besides pheochromocytomas), a previously undescribed germline missense mutation in the vHL tumor suppressor gene was found (C775G transversion with a predicted substitution of a leucine by a valine at codon 259 in the putative vHL protein). We conclude that in this family the sole occurrence of pheochromocytoma is a variant of vHL disease
Energy spectra of primary and secondary cosmic-ray nuclei measured with TRACER
The TRACER cosmic-ray detector, first flown on long-duration balloon (LDB) in
2003 for observations of the major primary cosmic-ray nuclei from oxygen (Z=8)
to iron (Z=26), has been upgraded to also measure the energies of the lighter
nuclei, including the secondary species boron (Z=5). The instrument was used in
another LDB flight in 2006. The properties and performance of the modified
detector system are described, and the analysis of the data from the 2006
flight is discussed. The energy spectra of the primary nuclei carbon (Z=6),
oxygen, and iron over the range from 1 GeV amu to 2 TeV amu are
reported. The data for oxygen and iron are found to be in good agreement with
the results of the previous TRACER flight. The measurement of the energy
spectrum of boron also extends into the TeV amu region. The relative
abundances of the primary nuclei, such as carbon, oxygen, and iron, above
GeV amu are independent of energy, while the boron abundance,
i.e. the B/C abundance ratio, decreases with energy as expected. However, there
is an indication that the previously reported dependence of the B/C
ratio does not continue to the highest energies.Comment: 16 pages, 18 figures. Accepted for publication in Ap
Mutations of the ret protooncogene in German multiple endocrine neoplasia families: Relation between genotype and phenotype.
It has been suggested that not only the position but also the nature of the mutations of the ret protooncogene strongly correlate with the clinical manifestation of the multiple endocrine neoplasm type 2 (MEN 2) syndrome. In particular, individuals with a Cys634-Arg substitution should have a greater risk of developing parathyroid disease. We, therefore, analyzed 94 unrelated families from Germany with inherited medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC) for mutation of the ret protooncogene. In all but 1 of 59 families with MEN 2A, germline mutations in the extracellular domain of the ret protein were found. Some 81% of the MEN 2A mutations affected codon 634. Phenotype-genotype correlations suggested that the prevalence of pheochromocytoma and hyperparathyroidism is significantly higher in families with codon 634 mutations, but there was no correlation with the nature of the mutation. In all but 1 of 27 familial MTC (FMTC) families, mutations were detected in 1 of 4 cysteines in the extracellular domain of the ret protooncogene. Half of the FMTC mutations affected codon 634. Mutations outside of codon 634 occurred more often in FMTC families than in MEN 2A families. In all but 1 of 8 MEN 2B patients, de novo mutations in codon 918 were found. These data confirm the preferential localization of MEN 2-associated mutations and the correlation between disease phenotype and the position of the ret mutation, but there was no correlation between the occurrence of hyperparathyroidism or pheochromocytoma and the nature of the mutation
Autonomous clustering using rough set theory
This paper proposes a clustering technique that minimises the need for subjective
human intervention and is based on elements of rough set theory. The proposed algorithm is
unified in its approach to clustering and makes use of both local and global data properties to
obtain clustering solutions. It handles single-type and mixed attribute data sets with ease and
results from three data sets of single and mixed attribute types are used to illustrate the
technique and establish its efficiency
Cosmic Ray Energy Spectra of Primary Nuclei from Oxygen to Iron: Results from the TRACER 2003 LDB Flight
Abstract: The first long-duration balloon flight of TRACER in 2003 provided high-quality measurements of the primary cosmic-ray nuclei over the range oxygen (Z = 8) to iron (Z = 26). The analysis of these measurements is now complete, and we will present the individual energy spectra and absolute intensities of the nuclei O, Ne, Mg, Si, S, Ca, Ar, and Fe. The spectra cover the energy range from 1 GeV/nucleon to more than 10 TeV/nucleon, or in terms of total energy, to several 10 14 eV per particle. We compare our results with those of other recent observations in space and on balloons and notice, in general, good agreement with these data for those regions where overlap exists. We also compare our data with information that has recently been inferred from air shower observations
The PANDA GEM-based TPC Prototype
We report on the development of a GEM-based TPC prototype for the PANDA
experiment. The design and requirements of this device will be illustrated,
with particular emphasis on the properties of the recently tested GEM-detector,
the characterization of the read-out electronics and the development of the
tracking software that allows to evaluate the GEM-TPC data.Comment: submitted to NIMA 4 pages, 6 picture
Cosmic Ray Energy Spectra of Primary Nuclei from Oxygen to Iron: Results from the TRACER 2003 LDB Flight
Abstract: The first long-duration balloon flight of TRACER in 2003 provided high-quality measurements of the primary cosmic-ray nuclei over the range oxygen (Z = 8) to iron (Z = 26). The analysis of these measurements is now complete, and we will present the individual energy spectra and absolute intensities of the nuclei O, Ne, Mg, Si, S, Ca, Ar, and Fe. The spectra cover the energy range from 1 GeV/nucleon to more than 10 TeV/nucleon, or in terms of total energy, to several 10 14 eV per particle. We compare our results with those of other recent observations in space and on balloons and notice, in general, good agreement with these data for those regions where overlap exists. We also compare our data with information that has recently been inferred from air shower observations
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