1,714 research outputs found
Heating-compensated constant-temperature tunneling measurements on stacks of BiSrCaCuO intrinsic junctions
In highly anisotropic layered cuprates such as BiSrCaCuO
tunneling measurements on a stack of intrinsic junctions in a high-bias range
are often susceptible to self-heating. In this study we monitored the
temperature variation of a stack ("sample stack") of intrinsic junctions by
measuring the resistance change of a nearby stack ("thermometer stack") of
intrinsic junctions, which was strongly thermal-coupled to the sample stack
through a common Au electrode. We then adopted a
proportional-integral-derivative scheme incorporated with a substrate-holder
heater to compensate the temperature variation. This in-situ temperature
monitoring and controlling technique allows one to get rid of spurious
tunneling effects arising from the self-heating in a high bias range.Comment: 3 pages, 3 figure
Collective Josephson vortex dynamics in a finite number of intrinsic Josephson junctions
We report the experimental confirmation of the collective transverse plasma
modes excited by the Josephson vortex lattice in stacks of intrinsic Josephson
junctions in BiSrCaCuO single crystals. The
excitation was confirmed by analyzing the temperature () and magnetic field
() dependencies of the multiple sub-branches in the Josephson-vortex-flow
region of the current-voltage characteristics of the system. In the near-static
Josephson vortex state for a low tunneling bias current, pronounced
magnetoresistance oscillations were observed, which represented a
triangular-lattice vortex configuration along the c axis. In the dynamic vortex
state in a sufficiently high magnetic field and for a high bias current,
splitting of a single Josephson vortex-flow branch into multiple sub-branches
was observed. Detailed examination of the sub-branches for varying field
reveals that sub-branches represent the different modes of the Josephson-vortex
lattice along the c axis, with varied configuration from a triangular to a
rectangular lattices. These multiple sub-branches merge to a single curve at a
characteristic temperature, above which no dynamical structural transitions of
the Josephson vortex lattice is expected
Green growth and green new deal policies in Korea
노트 : A Paper for the GURN/ITUC workshop on "A Green Economy that Works for Social Progress
Josephson-vortex-flow terahertz emission in layered high- superconducting single crystals
We report on the successful terahertz emission (0.61 THz) that is
continuous and tunable in its frequency and power, by driving Josephson
vortices in resonance with the collective standing Josephson plasma modes
excited in stacked BiSrCaCuO intrinsic Josephson junctions.
Shapiro-step detection was employed to confirm the terahertz-wave emission. Our
results provide a strong feasibility of developing long-sought solid-state
terahertz-wave emission devices
Pseudogap Behavior Revealed in Interlayer Tunneling in Overdoped BiSrCaCuO
We report heating-compensated interlayer tunneling spectroscopy (ITS)
performed on stacks of overdoped BiSrCaCuO intrinsic
junctions, where most of bias-induced heating in the ITS was eliminated. The
onset temperature of the pseudogap (PG), revealed in the hump structure of the
electronic excitation spectra, reached nearly room temperature for our
overdoped intrinsic junctions, which represented the genuine PG onset. At a
temperature below but close to , both the superconducting coherence peak
and the pseudogap hump coexisted, implying that the two gaps are of separate
origins. The hump voltage increased below , following the superconducting
gap voltage, which led to a conclusion that the hump structure below in
our ITS arose from the combined contribution of the quasiparticle spectral
weights of two different characters; one of the superconducting state and
another of the PG state near the antinodal region.Comment: accepted in Phys. Rev.
Obesity and epithelial ovarian cancer survival: a systematic review and meta-analysis
BACKGROUND: Studies on the association between obesity and ovarian cancer survival have had conflicting results. We reviewed and quantitatively summarized the existing evidence, exploring potentially important sources of variability, such as the timing of body mass index (BMI) assessment, BMI cut points, references used in multivariate analysis, and ovarian cancer stage. METHODS: Eligible studies were searched using MEDLINE (PubMed), EMBASE, and Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, relevant bibliographies were manually reviewed for additional studies. Adjusted hazard ratios (HRs) from individual studies were pooled using a random effects model. RESULTS: 17 cohort studies of 929 screened articles were included in the final analysis. Obesity in early adulthood and obesity 5 years before ovarian cancer diagnosis were associated with poor patient survival (early adulthood: pooled HR 1.67; 95% CI 1.29-2.16; 5 years prediagnosis: pooled HR 1.35; 95% CI 1.03-1.76). However, the results for obesity at diagnosis depended on whether BMI was analyzed as a categorical or continuous variable. Analysis of obesity with BMI as a categorical variable did not affect ovarian cancer prognosis (pooled HR 1.07; 95% CI 0.95-1.21); obesity with BMI as a continuous variable showed slightly poorer survival with each incremental increase in BMI (pooled HR 1.02; 95% CI 1.01-1.04). CONCLUSIONS: Obesity 5 years before ovarian cancer diagnosis and obesity at a young age were associated with poor prognosis. The association between obesity at diagnosis and survival of ovarian cancer patients still remains equivocal. BMI at diagnosis cannot be a prognostic factor for the survival of ovarian cancer patients. Further well-designed studies are needed to elucidate the variety effect of obesity on the survival of ovarian cancer patients
Voiding Dysfunction after Total Mesorectal Excision in Rectal Cancer
Purpose The aim of this study was to assess the voiding dysfunction after rectal cancer surgery with total mesorectal excision (TME). Methods This was part of a prospective study done in the rectal cancer patients who underwent surgery with TME between November 2006 and June 2008. Consecutive uroflowmetry, post-voided residual volume, and a voiding questionnaire were performed at preoperatively and postoperatively. Results A total of 50 patients were recruited in this study, including 28 male and 22 female. In the comparison of the preoperative data with the postoperative 3-month data, a significant decrease in mean maximal flow rate, voided volume, and post-voided residual volume were found. In the comparison with the postoperative 6-month data, however only the maximal flow rate was decreased with statistical significance (P=0.02). In the comparison between surgical methods, abdominoperineal resection patients showed delayed recovery of maximal flow rate, voided volume, and post-voided residual volume. There was no significant difference in uroflowmetry parameters with advances in rectal cancer stage. Conclusions Voiding dysfunction is common after rectal cancer surgery but can be recovered in 6 months after surgery or earlier. Abdominoperineal resection was shown to be an unfavorable factor for postoperative voiding. Larger prospective study is needed to determine the long-term effect of rectal cancer surgery in relation to male and female baseline voiding condition
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