3,279 research outputs found
Voyager 1 and 2 measurements of radial and latitudinal cosmic ray gradients during 1981 - 1984
The cosmic ray radial gradient was determined during 1981-84 using data from very similar detectors onboard spacecraft Voyagers 1 and 2 (radial separation approx. 6 AU, heliolatitude separation approx. 25 deg.) and from the Earth-orbiting satellite IMP 8. The principal result is that the radial gradient over this period decreased at the rate approx. 2.0%/AU between 1 and 16 AU and approx. 0.6%/AU between approx. 16 and 22 AU
Investigation of laser ablated ZnO thin films grown with Zn metal target: a structural study
High quality ZnO thin films were gown using the pulsed laser deposition
technique on (0001) AlO substrates in an oxidizing atmosphere, using a
Zn metallic target. We varied the growth conditions such as the deposition
temperature and the oxygen pressure. First, using a battery of techniques such
as x-rays diffraction, Rutherford Backscattering spectroscopy and atomic force
microscopy, we evaluated the structural quality, the stress and the degree of
epitaxy of the films. Second, the relations between the deposition conditions
and the structural properties, that are directly related to the nature of the
thin films, are discussed qualitatively. Finally, a number of issues on how to
get good-quality ZnO films are addressed.Comment: To be published in Jour. Appl. Phys. (15 August 2004
Effect of haemoglobin on the growth of mycobacteria and production of siderophores
Hemoglobin is known to support the growth of several bacterial
species. The growth and the production of siderophores by 4 strains
of mycobacteria in the presence of hemoglobin was studied in
vitro. The findings were compared with those obtained in the
presence of equivalent concentrations of iron in the medium.
Increase in the concentrations of hemoglobin caused an appreciable
increase in the growth of all 4 strains. This was however,
accompanied by a significant decrease in the production of both
exochelins and mycobactins. It was also observed that hemoglobin
supported the growth of all strains as well as that with free iron
and the concentrations of both siderophores was significantly higher
in the presence of hemoglobin than in that of free iron
Polarization retention loss in PbTiO3 ferroelectric films due to leakage currents
The relationship between retention loss in single crystal PbTiO3 ferroelectric thin films and leakage currents is demonstrated by piezoresponse and conductive atomic force microscopy measurements. It was found that the polarization reversal in the absence of an electric field followed a stretched exponential behavior 1−exp[−(t/k)^d] with exponent d>1, which is distinct from a dispersive random walk process with d<1. The latter has been observed in polycrystalline films for which retention loss was associated with grain boundaries. The leakage current indicates power law scaling at short length scales, which strongly depends on the applied electric field. Additional information of the microstructure, which contributes to an explanation of the presence of leakage currents, is presented with high resolution transmission electron microscopy analysis.
Siderophore-mediated iron uptake in mycobacteria
Iron is vital for the survival and proliferation of
microorganisms, while mycobacteria also require this element
for their survival within the host. To meet the demand for
iron, mycobacteria synthesise and utilise specific high-affinity
iron-binding compounds (siderophores) which help them
grow in the’ iron-restricted conditions of the host [1, 2] and
also participate in the uptake of iron across the thick lipid cell
wall [3].
Two types of siderophores are produced by mycobacteria
[3]. Exochelin occurs extracellularly to act as a scavenger, and
mycobactin occurs on the cell wall to act as a transporter.
Specific membrane proteins are also produced by several
mycobacteria for the transport of siderophore-ferric iron
complexes [4].
Recent work [5] demonstrated that the growth of
Mycobacterium tuberculosis strains was increased with increasing
concentrations of iron in the medium and that the
concentrations of exochelins and mycobactins, which are
highest under iron-deficient conditions, registered marked
decreases. It does not follow, however, that exochelins are
involved in the uptake of iron by mycobacteria.
We have therefore studied the uptake of iron by four
strains of mycobacteria in the absence and in the presence of
exochelins released by these strains
Impulsive noise removal from color images with morphological filtering
This paper deals with impulse noise removal from color images. The proposed
noise removal algorithm employs a novel approach with morphological filtering
for color image denoising; that is, detection of corrupted pixels and removal
of the detected noise by means of morphological filtering. With the help of
computer simulation we show that the proposed algorithm can effectively remove
impulse noise. The performance of the proposed algorithm is compared in terms
of image restoration metrics and processing speed with that of common
successful algorithms.Comment: The 6th international conference on analysis of images, social
networks, and texts (AIST 2017), 27-29 July, 2017, Moscow, Russi
Nonlinear modal coupling in a high-stress doubly-clamped nanomechanical resonator
We present results from a study of the nonlinear intermodal coupling between
different flexural vibrational modes of a single high-stress, doubly-clamped
silicon nitride nanomechanical beam. The measurements were carried out at 100
mK and the beam was actuated using the magnetomotive technique. We observed the
nonlinear behavior of the modes individually and also measured the coupling
between them by driving the beam at multiple frequencies. We demonstrate that
the different modes of the resonator are coupled to each other by the
displacement induced tension in the beam, which also leads to the well known
Duffing nonlinearity in doubly-clamped beams.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figure
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