2,342 research outputs found
The Amplitude of Non-Equilibrium Quantum Interference in Metallic Mesoscopic Systems
We study the influence of a DC bias voltage V on quantum interference
corrections to the measured differential conductance in metallic mesoscopic
wires and rings. The amplitude of both universal conductance fluctuations (UCF)
and Aharonov-Bohm effect (ABE) is enhanced several times for voltages larger
than the Thouless energy. The enhancement persists even in the presence of
inelastic electron-electron scattering up to V ~ 1 mV. For larger voltages
electron-phonon collisions lead to the amplitude decaying as a power law for
the UCF and exponentially for the ABE. We obtain good agreement of the
experimental data with a model which takes into account the decrease of the
electron phase-coherence length due to electron-electron and electron-phonon
scattering.Comment: New title, refined analysis. 7 pages, 3 figures, to be published in
Europhysics Letter
Amplitude of Aharonov-Bohm oscillations in mesoscopic metallic rings as a function of the DC bias voltage
We report measurements of the amplitude of the Aharonov-Bohm oscillations in a mesoscopic diffusive gold ring as a function of the DC bias voltage VDC. The amplitude of the h/e oscillations increases with VDC once the Thouless energy Ec and thermal energy are exceeded, and decreases at higher values of VDC. The increase of the amplitude is interpreted in terms of a superposition of the statistically independent contributions of eVDC/Ec energy intervals, whereas its decrease at high VDC could be attributed to enhanced inelastic scattering processes
Periodic Modulations in an X-ray Flare from Sagittarius A*
We present the highly significant detection of a quasi-periodic flux
modulation with a period of 22.2 min seen in the X-ray data of the Sgr A* flare
of 2004 August 31. This flaring event, which lasted a total of about three
hours, was detected simultaneously by EPIC on XMM-Newton and the NICMOS
near-infrared camera on the HST. Given the inherent difficulty in, and the lack
of readily available methods for quantifying the probability of a periodic
signal detected over only several cycles in a data set where red noise can be
important, we developed a general method for quantifying the likelihood that
such a modulation is indeed intrinsic to the source and does not arise from
background fluctuations. We here describe this Monte Carlo based method, and
discuss the results obtained by its application to a other XMM-Newton data
sets. Under the simplest hypothesis that we witnessed a transient event that
evolved, peaked and decayed near the marginally stable orbit of the
supermassive black hole, this result implies that for a mass of 3.5 x 10^{6}
Msun, the central object must have an angular momentum corresponding to a spin
parameter of a=0.22.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figures, submitted to ApJ
Current-induced two-level fluctuations in pseudo spin-valves (Co/Cu/Co) nanostructures
Two-level fluctuations of the magnetization state of pseudo spin-valve
pillars Co(10 nm)/Cu(10 nm)/Co(30 nm) embedded in electrodeposited nanowires
(~40 nm in diameter, 6000 nm in length) are triggered by spin-polarized
currents of 10^7 A/cm^2 at room temperature. The statistical properties of the
residence times in the parallel and antiparallel magnetization states reveal
two effects with qualitatively different dependences on current intensity. The
current appears to have the effect of a field determined as the bias field
required to equalize these times. The bias field changes sign when the current
polarity is reversed. At this field, the effect of a current density of 10^7
A/cm^2 is to lower the mean time for switching down to the microsecond range.
This effect is independent of the sign of the current and is interpreted in
terms of an effective temperature for the magnetization.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, revised version, to be published in Phys. Rev.
Let
Detection of very-high-energy gamma-ray emission from the vicinity of PSR B1706-44 with H.E.S.S
The energetic pulsar PSR B1706-44 and the adjacent supernova remnant (SNR)
candidate G 343.1-2.3 were observed by H.E.S.S. during a dedicated
observational campaign in 2007. A new source of very-high-energy (VHE; E > 100
GeV) gamma-ray emission, HESS J1708-443, was discovered with its centroid at
RA(J2000) = 17h08m10s and Dec(J2000) = -44d21', with a statistical error of 3
arcmin on each axis. The VHE gamma-ray source is significantly more extended
than the H.E.S.S. point-spread function, with an intrinsic Gaussian width of
0.29 +/- 0.04 deg. Its energy spectrum can be described by a power law with a
photon index Gamma = 2.0 +/- 0.1 (stat) +/- 0.2 (sys). The integral flux
measured between 1-10 TeV is ~17% of the Crab Nebula flux in the same energy
range. The possible associations with PSR B1706-44 and SNR G343.1-2.3 are
discussed.Comment: 4+ pages, 2 figures; v1 submitted to ICRC Proceedings on 15 May 2009;
v2 has additional references and minor change
The signature of 44Ti in Cassiopeia A revealed by IBIS/ISGRI on INTEGRAL
We report the detection of both the 67.9 and 78.4 keV 44Sc gamma-ray lines in
Cassiopeia A with the INTEGRAL IBIS/ISGRI instrument. Besides the robustness
provided by spectro-imaging observations, the main improvements compared to
previous measurements are a clear separation of the two 44Sc lines together
with an improved significance of the detection of the hard X-ray continuum up
to 100 keV. These allow us to refine the determination of the 44Ti yield and to
constrain the nature of the nonthermal continuum emission. By combining
COMPTEL, BeppoSAX/PDS and ISGRI measurements, we find a line flux of (2.5 +/-
0.3)*10(-5) cm(-2) s(-1) leading to a synthesized 44Ti mass of 1.6
(+0.6-0.3)*10(-4) solar mass. This high value suggests that Cas A is peculiar
in comparison to other young supernova remnants, from which so far no line
emission from 44Ti decay has been unambiguously detected.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, Accepted for publication in ApJ
Influenza A viruses alter the stability and antiviral contribution of host E3-ubiquitin ligase Mdm2 during the time-course of infection
International audienceThe interplay between influenza A viruses (IAV) and the p53 pathway has been reported in several studies, highlighting the antiviral contribution of p53. Here, we investigated the impact of IAV on the E3-ubiquitin ligase Mdm2, a major regulator of p53, and observed that IAV targets Mdm2, notably via its non-structural protein (NS1), therefore altering Mdm2 stability, p53/Mdm2 interaction and regulatory loop during the time-course of infection. This study also highlights a new antiviral facet of Mdm2 possibly increasing the list of its many p53-independent functions. Altogether, our work contributes to better understand the mechanisms underlining the complex interactions between IAV and the p53 pathway, for which both NS1 and Mdm2 arise as key players
INTEGRAL detection of hard X-rays from NGC 6334: Nonthermal emission from colliding winds or an AGN?
We report the detection of hard X-ray emission from the field of the
star-forming region NGC 6334 with the the International Gamma-Ray Astrophysics
Laboratory INTEGRAL. The JEM-X monitor and ISGRI imager aboard INTEGRAL and
Chandra ACIS imager were used to construct 3-80 keV images and spectra of NGC
6334. The 3-10 keV and 10-35 keV images made with JEM-X show a complex
structure of extended emission from NGC 6334. The ISGRI source detected in the
energy ranges 20-40 keV and 40-80 keV coincides with the NGC 6334 ridge. The
20-60 keV flux from the source is (1.8+-0.37)*10(-11) erg cm(-2) s(-1).
Spectral analysis of the source revealed a hard power-law component with a
photon index about 1. The observed X-ray fluxes are in agreement with
extrapolations of X-ray imaging observations of NGC 6334 by Chandra ACIS and
ASCA GIS. The X-ray data are consistent with two very different physical
models. A probable scenario is emission from a heavily absorbed, compact and
hard Chandra source that is associated with the AGN candidate radio source NGC
6334B. Another possible model is the extended Chandra source of nonthermal
emission from NGC 6334 that can also account for the hard X-ray emission
observed by INTEGRAL. The origin of the emission in this scenario is due to
electron acceleration in energetic outflows from massive early type stars. The
possibility of emission from a young supernova remnant, as suggested by earlier
infrared observations of NGC 6334, is constrained by the non-detection of 44Ti
lines.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures, Astronomy and Astrophysics (in press
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