169 research outputs found
Viscosity of Silica and Doped Silica Melts: Evidence for a Crossover Temperature
Silica is known as the archetypal strong liquid, exhibiting an Arrhenius
viscosity curve with a high glass transition temperature and constant
activation energy. However, given the ideally isostatic nature of the silica
network, the presence of even a small concentration of defects can lead to a
significant decrease in both the glass transition temperature and activation
energy for viscous flow. To understand the impact of trace level dopants on the
viscosity of silica, we measure the viscosity-temperature curves for seven
silica glass samples having different impurities, including four natural and
three synthetic samples. Depending on the type of dopant, the glass transition
temperature can vary by nearly 300 K. A common crossover is found for all
viscosity curves around ~2200-2500 K, which we attribute to a change of the
transport mechanism in the melt from being dominated by intrinsic defects at
high temperature to dopant-induced defects at low temperatures
Down syndrome with microgranular variant of acute promyelocytic leukemia in a child: a case report
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL) accounts for less than 10% of pediatric AML. Cases of APL in Down syndrome (DS) have been described in the literature rarely and it is rarer still to find the microgranular variant (M3v) of APL in trisomy 21 patients.</p> <p>Case presentation</p> <p>We present a case of a five-year-old female with Down syndrome diagnosed with acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL). She came to our hospital with bleeding manifestations. Blood and bone marrow examination revealed promyelocytes showing a few fine granules and occasional Auer rods. Based on this morphology and cytochemistry, a diagnosis of APL microgranular variant (M3v) was made.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>This case report emphasizes the importance of a high index of suspicion in the diagnosis of acute promyelocytic leukemia microgranular variant in Down syndrome.</p
In-beam internal conversion electron spectroscopy with the SPICE detector
The SPectrometer for Internal Conversion Electrons (SPICE) has been
commissioned for use in conjunction with the TIGRESS -ray spectrometer
at TRIUMF's ISAC-II facility. SPICE features a permanent rare-earth magnetic
lens to collect and direct internal conversion electrons emitted from nuclear
reactions to a thick, highly segmented, lithium-drifted silicon detector. This
arrangement, combined with TIGRESS, enables in-beam -ray and internal
conversion electron spectroscopy to be performed with stable and radioactive
ion beams. Technical aspects of the device, capabilities, and initial
performance are presented
Higgs oscillations in a unitary Fermi superfluid
Symmetry-breaking phase transitions are central to our understanding of
states of matter. When a continuous symmetry is spontaneously broken, new
excitations appear that are tied to fluctuations of the order parameter. In
superconductors and fermionic superfluids, the phase and amplitude can
fluctuate independently, giving rise to two distinct collective branches.
However, amplitude fluctuations are difficult to both generate and measure, as
they do not couple directly to the density of fermions and have only been
observed indirectly to date. Here, we excite amplitude oscillations in an
atomic Fermi gas with resonant interactions by an interaction quench.
Exploiting the sensitivity of Bragg spectroscopy to the amplitude of the order
parameter, we measure the time-resolved response of the atom cloud, directly
revealing amplitude oscillations at twice the frequency of the gap. The
magnitude of the oscillatory response shows a strong temperature dependence,
and the oscillations appear to decay faster than predicted by time-dependent
BCS theory applied to our experimental setup
Waveguide-integrated silicon T centres
The performance of modular, networked quantum technologies will be strongly
dependent upon the quality of their quantum light-matter interconnects.
Solid-state colour centres, and in particular T centres in silicon, offer
competitive technological and commercial advantages as the basis for quantum
networking technologies and distributed quantum computing. These newly
rediscovered silicon defects offer direct telecommunications-band photonic
emission, long-lived electron and nuclear spin qubits, and proven native
integration into industry-standard, CMOS-compatible, silicon-on-insulator (SOI)
photonic chips at scale. Here we demonstrate further levels of integration by
characterizing T centre spin ensembles in single-mode waveguides in SOI. In
addition to measuring long spin T_1 times, we report on the integrated centres'
optical properties. We find that the narrow homogeneous linewidth of these
waveguide-integrated emitters is already sufficiently low to predict the future
success of remote spin-entangling protocols with only modest cavity Purcell
enhancements. We show that further improvements may still be possible by
measuring nearly lifetime-limited homogeneous linewidths in isotopically pure
bulk crystals. In each case the measured linewidths are more than an order of
magnitude lower than previously reported and further support the view that
high-performance, large-scale distributed quantum technologies based upon T
centres in silicon may be attainable in the near term
Neurology
Contains reports on eleven research projects.U.S. Air Force (AF49(638)-1130)Army Chemical Corps (DA-18-108-405-Cml-942)U.S. Public Health Service (B-3055)National Science Foundation (Grant G-16526)U.S. Public Health Service (B-3090)U.S. Air Force (AF33(616)-7588)Office of Naval Research (Nonr-1841(70)
Neurology
Contains research objectives and reports on six research projects.U.S. Public Health Service (B-3055)U.S. Public Health Service (B-3090)Office of Naval Research (Nonr-1841 (70))Air Force (AF33(616)-7588)Air Force (AFAFOSR-155-63)Air Force (AFAFOSR-155-63)Army Chemical Corps (DA-18-108-405-Cml-942)National Science Foundation (Grant G-16526
Digital Signal Processing
Contains a research summary and reports on fifteen research projects.National Science Foundation FellowshipJoint Services Electronics Program (Contract DAAG29-78-C-0020)National Science Foundation (Grant ENG76-24117)U.S. Navy - Office of Naval Research (Contract N00014-75-C-0951)National Science Foundation (Grant ENG76-24117)Schlumberger-Doll Research Center FellowshipHertz Foundation FellowshipNational Aeronautics and Space Administration (Grant NSG-5157)U.S. Navy - Office of Naval Research (Contract N00014-77-C-0196
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