6,072 research outputs found
Conjunction study of plasmapause location using ground‐based magnetometers, IMAGE‐EUV, and Kaguya‐TEX data
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/94992/1/jgra20214.pd
Vacuum ultraviolet photoabsorption spectra of nitrile ices for their identification on Pluto
Icy bodies, such as Pluto, are known to harbor simple and complex molecules. The recent New Horizons flyby of Pluto has revealed a complex surface composed of bright and dark ice surfaces, indicating a rich chemistry based on nitrogen (N2), methane (CH4), and carbon monoxide (CO). Nitrile (CN) containing molecules such as acetonitrile (CH3CN), propionitrile (CH3CH2CN), butyronitrile (CH3CH2CH2CN), and isobutyronitrile ((CH3)2CHCN) are some of the nitrile molecules that are known to be synthesized by radiative processing of such simple ices. Through the provision of a spectral atlas for such compounds we propose that such nitriles may be identified from the ALICE payload on board New Horizons</i
A Forward-Design Approach to Increase the Production of Poly-3-Hydroxybutyrate in Genetically Engineered Escherichia coli
Biopolymers, such as poly-3-hydroxybutyrate (P(3HB)) are produced as a carbon store in an array of organisms and exhibit characteristics which are similar to oil-derived plastics, yet have the added advantages of biodegradability and biocompatibility. Despite these advantages, P(3HB) production is currently more expensive than the production of oil-derived plastics, and therefore, more efficient P(3HB) production processes would be desirable. In this study, we describe the model-guided design and experimental validation of several engineered P(3HB) producing operons. In particular, we describe the characterization of a hybrid phaCAB operon that consists of a dual promoter (native and J23104) and RBS (native and B0034) design. P(3HB) production at 24 h was around six-fold higher in hybrid phaCAB engineered Escherichia coli in comparison to E. coli engineered with the native phaCAB operon from Ralstonia eutropha H16. Additionally, we describe the utilization of non-recyclable waste as a low-cost carbon source for the production of P(3HB)
A balanced homodyne detector for high-rate Gaussian-modulated coherent-state quantum key distribution
We discuss excess noise contributions of a practical balanced homodyne
detector in Gaussian-modulated coherent-state (GMCS) quantum key distribution
(QKD). We point out the key generated from the original realistic model of GMCS
QKD may not be secure. In our refined realistic model, we take into account
excess noise due to the finite bandwidth of the homodyne detector and the
fluctuation of the local oscillator. A high speed balanced homodyne detector
suitable for GMCS QKD in the telecommunication wavelength region is built and
experimentally tested. The 3dB bandwidth of the balanced homodyne detector is
found to be 104MHz and its electronic noise level is 13dB below the shot noise
at a local oscillator level of 8.5*10^8 photon per pulse. The secure key rate
of a GMCS QKD experiment with this homodyne detector is expected to reach
Mbits/s over a few kilometers.Comment: 22 pages, 11 figure
Azimuthally polarized spatial dark solitons: exact solutions of Maxwell's equations in a Kerr medium
Spatial Kerr solitons, typically associated with the standard paraxial
nonlinear Schroedinger equation, are shown to exist to all nonparaxial orders,
as exact solutions of Maxwell's equations in the presence of vectorial Kerr
effect. More precisely, we prove the existence of azimuthally polarized,
spatial, dark soliton solutions of Maxwell's equations, while exact linearly
polarized (2+1)-D solitons do not exist. Our ab initio approach predicts the
existence of dark solitons up to an upper value of the maximum field amplitude,
corresponding to a minimum soliton width of about one fourth of the wavelength.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Influence of Spin Orbit Coupling in the Iron-Based Superconductors
We report on the influence of spin-orbit coupling (SOC) in the Fe-based
superconductors (FeSCs) via application of circularly-polarized spin and
angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy. We combine this technique in
representative members of both the Fe-pnictides and Fe-chalcogenides with ab
initio density functional theory and tight-binding calculations to establish an
ubiquitous modification of the electronic structure in these materials imbued
by SOC. The influence of SOC is found to be concentrated on the hole pockets
where the superconducting gap is generally found to be largest. This result
contests descriptions of superconductivity in these materials in terms of pure
spin-singlet eigenstates, raising questions regarding the possible pairing
mechanisms and role of SOC therein.Comment: For supplementary information, see
http://qmlab.ubc.ca/ARPES/PUBLICATIONS/articles.htm
Analytic Study for the String Theory Landscapes via Matrix Models
We demonstrate a first-principle analysis of the string theory landscapes in
the framework of non-critical string/matrix models. In particular, we discuss
non-perturbative instability, decay rate and the true vacuum of perturbative
string theories. As a simple example, we argue that the perturbative string
vacuum of pure gravity is stable; but that of Yang-Lee edge singularity is
inescapably a false vacuum. Surprisingly, most of perturbative minimal string
vacua are unstable, and their true vacuum mostly does not suffer from
non-perturbative ambiguity. Importantly, we observe that the instability of
these tachyon-less closed string theories is caused by ghost D-instantons (or
ghost ZZ-branes), the existence of which is determined only by non-perturbative
completion of string theory.Comment: v1: 5 pages, 2 figures; v2: references and footnote added; v3: 7
pages, 4 figures, organization changed, explanations expanded, references
added, reconstruction program from arbitrary spectral curves shown explicitl
Construction and Expected Performance of the Hadron Blind Detector for the PHENIX Experiment at RHIC
A new Hadron Blind Detector (HBD) for electron identification in high density
hadron environment has been installed in the PHENIX detector at RHIC in the
fall of 2006. The HBD will identify low momentum electron-positron pairs to
reduce the combinatorial background in the mass spectrum, mainly
in the low-mass region below 1 GeV/c. The HBD is a windowless
proximity-focusing Cherenkov detector with a radiator length of 50 cm, a CsI
photocathode and three layers of Gas Electron Multipliers (GEM). The HBD uses
pure CF as a radiator and a detector gas. Construction details and the
expected performance of the detector are described.Comment: QM2006 proceedings, 4 pages 3 figure
Higher order Jordan Osserman Pseudo-Riemannian manifolds
We study the higher order Jacobi operator in pseudo-Riemannian geometry. We
exhibit a family of manifolds so that this operator has constant Jordan normal
form on the Grassmannian of subspaces of signature (r,s) for certain values of
(r,s). These pseudo-Riemannian manifolds are new and non-trivial examples of
higher order Osserman manifolds
Structure of marginally jammed polydisperse packings of frictionless spheres
We model the packing structure of a marginally jammed bulk ensemble of polydisperse spheres. To this end we expand on the granocentric model [Clusel et al., Nature (London) 460, 611 (2009)], explicitly taking into account rattlers. This leads to a relationship between the characteristic parameters of the packing, such as the mean number of neighbors and the fraction of rattlers, and the radial distribution function g(r). We find excellent agreement between the model predictions for g(r) and packing simulations, as well as experiments on jammed emulsion droplets. The observed quantitative agreement opens the path towards a full structural characterization of jammed particle systems for imaging and scattering experiments
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