831 research outputs found

    Chemical abundances for Hf 2-2, a planetary nebula with the strongest known heavy element recombination lines

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    We present high quality optical spectroscopic observations of the planetary nebula (PN) Hf 2-2. The spectrum exhibits many prominent optical recombination lines (ORLs) from heavy element ions. Analysis of the H {\sc i} and He {\sc i} recombination spectrum yields an electron temperature of 900\sim 900 K, a factor of ten lower than given by the collisionally excited [O {\sc iii}] forbidden lines. The ionic abundances of heavy elements relative to hydrogen derived from ORLs are about a factor of 70 higher than those deduced from collisionally excited lines (CELs) from the same ions, the largest abundance discrepancy factor (adf) ever measured for a PN. By comparing the observed O {\sc ii} λ\lambda4089/λ\lambda4649 ORL ratio to theoretical value as a function of electron temperature, we show that the O {\sc ii} ORLs arise from ionized regions with an electron temperature of only 630\sim 630 K. The current observations thus provide the strongest evidence that the nebula contains another previously unknown component of cold, high metallicity gas, which is too cool to excite any significant optical or UV CELs and is thus invisible via such lines. The existence of such a plasma component in PNe provides a natural solution to the long-standing dichotomy between nebular plasma diagnostics and abundance determinations using CELs on the one hand and ORLs on the other.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Societ

    Quantum Imaging with Incoherent Photons

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    We propose a technique to obtain sub-wavelength resolution in quantum imaging with potentially 100% contrast using incoherent light. Our method requires neither path-entangled number states nor multi-photon absorption. The scheme makes use of N photons spontaneously emitted by N atoms and registered by N detectors. It is shown that for coincident detection at particular detector positions a resolution of \lambda / N can be achieved.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, improved presentation. Accepted in Physical Review Letter

    Inter-layer Hall effect in double quantum wells subject to in-plane magnetic fields

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    We report on a theoretical study of the transport properties of two coupled two-dimensional electron systems subject to in-plane magnetic fields. The charge redistribution in double wells induced by the Lorenz force in crossed electric and magnetic fields has been studied. We have found that the redistribution of the charge and the related inter-layer Hall effect originate in the chirality of diamagnetic currents and give a substantial contribution to the conductivity.Comment: 7 RevTex pages, 4 figures, appendix added and misprint in Eq. (11) correcte

    HEAVY ION SECONDARY BEAMS

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    The possibility of producing secondary beams of radioactive nuclei is an interesting application of medium and high energy heavy ion beams. After a first attempt at CERN (1) , two experiments have been performed at GANIL, using 44 MeV/u 40Ar (2) and 65 MeV/u 180 projectiles. This paper recalls the results of the Ar experiment, and presents new data obtained with the 180 beam

    Example of bispectral analysis of a transmission line pylon

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    peer reviewedIt is common practice to tackle buffeting analysis by means of spectral analysis, assuming a Gaussian context. However, natural actions, as wind, or wave loading, might sometimes show important non-Gaussian behaviour. This is known to have an important impact on the extreme values of such random processes. In this context, a non-Gaussian bispectral turbulent wind analysis has been conducted on a transmission line pylon model. The non- Gaussian nature of the wind load is the result of the adoption of a nonlinear polynomial wind model applied to the Gaussian wind turbulent velocity components. Results of a stochastic dynamic analysis are compared with respect to their Gaussian counterpart, as well as to the Eurocode approach based on the equivalent static loads, which was also object of comparison of engineers in the original computation with respect to turbulent wind dynamic analysis. Importance of non-Gaussian nature of wind loading is highlighted, and considerations on why and when it should not be underestimated are discussed

    Which Kubo formula gives the exact conductance of a mesoscopic disordered system?

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    In both research and textbook literature one often finds two ``different'' Kubo formulas for the zero-temperature conductance of a non-interacting Fermi system. They contain a trace of the product of velocity operators and single-particle (retarded and advanced) Green operators: Tr(v^xG^rv^xG^a)\text{Tr} (\hat{v}_x \hat{G}^r \hat{v}_x \hat{G}^a) or Tr(v^xImG^v^xImG^)\text{Tr} (\hat{v}_x \text{Im} \hat{G} \hat{v}_x \text{Im} \hat{G}). The study investigates the relationship between these expressions, as well as the requirements of current conservation, through exact evaluation of such quantum-mechanical traces for a nanoscale (containing 1000 atoms) mesoscopic disordered conductor. The traces are computed in the semiclassical regime (where disorder is weak) and, more importantly, in the nonperturbative transport regime (including the region around localization-delocalization transition) where concept of mean free path ceases to exist. Since quantum interference effects for such strong disorder are not amenable to diagrammatic or nonlinear σ\sigma-model techniques, the evolution of different Green function terms with disorder strength provides novel insight into the development of an Anderson localized phase.Comment: 7 pages, 5 embedded EPS figures, final published version (note: PRB article has different title due to editorial censorship

    Prolate-Spherical Shape Coexistence at N=28 in 44^{44}S

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    The structure of 44^{44}S has been studied using delayed γ\gamma and electron spectroscopy at \textsc{ganil}. The decay rates of the 02+^+_2 isomeric state to the 21+^+_1 and 01+^+_1 states have been measured for the first time, leading to a reduced transition probability B(E2~:~21+^{+}_1\rightarrow02+)^{+}_2)= 8.4(26)~e2^2fm4^4 and a monopole strength ρ2\rho^2(E0~:~02+^{+}_2\rightarrow01+)^{+}_1) =~8.7(7)×\times103^{-3}. Comparisons to shell model calculations point towards prolate-spherical shape coexistence and a phenomenological two level mixing model is used to extract a weak mixing between the two configurations.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in Physical Review Letter

    Metabolic design of macroscopic bioreaction models: application to Chinese hamster ovary cells

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    The aim of this paper is to present a systematic methodology to design macroscopic bioreaction models for cell cultures based upon metabolic networks. The cell culture is seen as a succession of phases. During each phase, a metabolic network represents the set of reactions occurring in the cell. Then, through the use of the elementary flux modes, these metabolic networks are used to derive macroscopic bioreactions linking the extracellular substrates and products. On this basis, as many separate models are obtained as there are phases. Then, a complete model is obtained by smoothly switching from model to model. This is illustrated with batch cultures of Chinese hamster ovary cells

    Cognitive reserve in granulin-related frontotemporal dementia: from preclinical to clinical stages

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    OBJECTIVE Consistent with the cognitive reserve hypothesis, higher education and occupation attainments may help persons with neurodegenerative dementias to better withstand neuropathology before developing cognitive impairment. We tested here the cognitive reserve hypothesis in patients with frontotemporal dementia (FTD), with or without pathogenetic granulin mutations (GRN+ and GRN-), and in presymptomatic GRN mutation carriers (aGRN+). METHODS Education and occupation attainments were assessed and combined to define Reserve Index (RI) in 32 FTD patients, i.e. 12 GRN+ and 20 GRN-, and in 17 aGRN+. Changes in functional connectivity were estimated by resting state fMRI, focusing on the salience network (SN), executive network (EN) and bilateral frontoparietal networks (FPNs). Cognitive status was measured by FTD-modified Clinical Dementia Rating Scale. RESULTS In FTD patients higher level of premorbid cognitive reserve was associated with reduced connectivity within the SN and the EN. EN was more involved in FTD patients without GRN mutations, while SN was more affected in GRN pathology. In aGRN+, cognitive reserve was associated with reduced SN. CONCLUSIONS This study suggests that cognitive reserve modulates functional connectivity in patients with FTD, even in monogenic disease. In GRN inherited FTD, cognitive reserve mechanisms operate even in presymptomatic to clinical stages
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