26,706 research outputs found
Miniature vibration isolator Patent
Miniature vibration isolator utilizing elastic tubing materia
Platform-basin transitions and their role in Alpine-style collision systems : a comparative approach
CB acknowledges financial support from Optimus (Aberdeen) ltd. Petroceltic International plc are thanked for providing access to the subsurface data used in this study and for permission to publish images used here. Schlumberger are thanked for providing use of Petrel software under their academic agreement with the University of Aberdeen. RWHB thanks the organisers of the 12th Emile Argand Conference on Alpine Geological Studies for the invitation and financial support to participate in the Montgenevre workshop. Reviewers Enrico Tavarnelli, Thierry Dumont and editors Christian Sue and Stefan Schmid are all thanked for their comments that have significantly improved this contribution.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Spin Dependent Tunneling in FM|semiconductor|FM structures
Here we show that ordinary band structure codes can be used to understand the
mechanisms of coherent spin-injection at interfaces between ferromagnets and
semiconductors. This approach allows the screening of different material
combinations for properties useful for obtaining high tunneling
magnetoresistance (TMR). We used the Vienna Ab-initio Simulation Code (VASP) to
calculate the wave function character of each band in periodic epitaxial
Fe(100)|GaAs(100) and Fe(100)|ZnSe(100) structures. It is shown that Fe wave
functions of different symmetry near Fermi energy decay differently in the GaAs
and ZnSe.Comment: Accepted for publication in MMM'05 Proceedings. 7 pages, 5 figure
Analysis of the trajectory, loads and heating experienced by a body passing through a supersonic flow field
Analytical methods for determination of trajectories, loads, and heating experienced by spacecraft passing through rocket exhaust fiel
Thermal Control Characteristics of a Diffuse Bladed, Specular Base Louver System Status Report, Jul. - Dec. 1967
Heat transfer, and thermal control characteristics of diffuse bladed louver system for spacecraf
A quasi-analytical model for energy-delay-reliability tradeoff studies during write operations in perpendicular STT-RAM cell
One of the biggest challenges the current STT-RAM industry faces is
maintaining a high thermal stability while trying to switch within a given
voltage pulse and energy cost. In this paper, we present a physics based
analytical model that uses a modified Simmons' tunneling expression to capture
the spin dependent tunneling in a magnetic tunnel junction(MTJ). Coupled with
an analytical derivation of the critical switching current based on the
Landau-Lifshitz-Gilbert equation, and the write error rate derived from a
solution to the Fokker-Planck equation, this model provides us a quick estimate
of the energydelay- reliability tradeoffs in perpendicular STTRAMs due to
thermal fluctuations. In other words, the model provides a simple way to
calculate the energy consumed during a write operation that ensures a certain
error rate and delay time, while being numerically far less intensive than a
full-fledged stochastic calculation. We calculate the worst case energy
consumption during anti-parallel (AP) to parallel (P) and P to AP switchings
and quantify how increasing the anisotropy field HK and lowering the saturation
magnetization MS, can significantly reduce the energy consumption. A case study
on how manufacturing variations of the MTJ cell can affect the energy
consumption and delay is also reported.Comment: 6 pages, 9 figure
Domain wall switching: optimizing the energy landscape
It has recently been suggested that exchange spring media offer a way to
increase media density without causing thermal instability
(superparamagnetism), by using a hard and a soft layer coupled by exchange.
Victora has suggested a figure of merit xi = 2 E_b/mu_0 m_s H_sw, the ratio of
the energy barrier to that of a Stoner-Wohlfarth system with the same switching
field, which is 1 for a Stoner-Wohlfarth (coherently switching) particle and 2
for an optimal two-layer composite medium. A number of theoretical approaches
have been used for this problem (e.g., various numbers of coupled
Stoner-Wohlfarth layers and continuum micromagnetics). In this paper we show
that many of these approaches can be regarded as special cases or
approximations to a variational formulation of the problem, in which the energy
is minimized for fixed magnetization. The results can be easily visualized in
terms of a plot of the energy as a function of magnetic moment m_z, in which
both the switching field [the maximum slope of E(m_z)] and the stability
(determined by the energy barrier E_b) are geometrically visible. In this
formulation we can prove a rigorous limit on the figure of merit xi, which can
be no higher than 4. We also show that a quadratic anistropy suggested by Suess
et al comes very close to this limit.Comment: Acccepted for proceedings of Jan. 2007 MMM Meeting, paper BE-0
Identifying multiple detachment horizons and an evolving thrust history through cross-section restoration and appraisal in the Moine Thrust Belt, NW Scotland
Peer reviewedPublisher PD
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Phosphorylation and protonation of neighboring MiRP2 sites: function and pathophysiology of MiRP2-Kv3.4 potassium channels in periodic paralysis.
MinK-related peptide 2 (MiRP2) and Kv3.4 subunits assemble in skeletal muscle to create subthreshold, voltage-gated potassium channels. MiRP2 acts on Kv3.4 to shift the voltage dependence of activation, speed recovery from inactivation, suppress cumulative inactivation and increase unitary conductance. We previously found an R83H missense mutation in MiRP2 that segregated with periodic paralysis in two families and diminished the effects of MiRP2 on Kv3.4. Here we show that MiRP2 has a single, functional PKC phosphorylation site at serine 82 and that normal MiRP2-Kv3.4 function requires phosphorylation of the site. The R83H variant does not prevent PKC phosphorylation of neighboring S82; rather, the change shifts the voltage dependence of activation and endows MiRP2-Kv3.4 channels with sensitivity to changes in intracellular pH across the physiological range. Thus, current passed by single R83H channels decreases as internal pH is lowered (pK(a) approximately 7.3, consistent with histidine protonation) whereas wild-type channels are largely insensitive. These findings identify a key regulatory domain in MiRP2 and suggest a mechanistic link between acidosis and episodes of periodic paralysis
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