465 research outputs found
Raising awareness for water polution based on game activities using internet of things
Awareness among young people regarding the environment and its resources and comprehension of the various factors that interplay, is key to changing human behaviour towards achieving a sustainable planet. In this paper IoT equipment, utilizing sensors for measuring various parameters of water quality, is used in an educational context targeting at a deeper understanding of the use of natural resources towards the adoption of environmentally friendly behaviours. We here note that the use of water sensors in STEM gameful learning is an area which has not received a lot of attention in the previous years. The IoT water sensing and related scenaria and practices, addressing children via discovery, gamification, and educational activities, are discussed in detail
Electron-phonon coupling and its evidence in the photoemission spectra of lead
We present a detailed study on the influence of strong electron-phonon
coupling to the photoemission spectra of lead. Representing the strong-coupling
regime of superconductivity, the spectra of lead show characteristic features
that demonstrate the correspondence of physical properties in the normal and
the superconducting state, as predicted by the Eliashberg theory. These
features appear on an energy scale of a few meV and are accessible for
photoemission only by using modern spectrometers with high resolution in energy
and angle.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. Let
High Resolution Photoemission Study on Low-T_K Ce Systems: Kondo Resonance, Crystal Field Structures, and their Temperature Dependence
We present a high-resolution photoemission study on the strongly correlated
Ce-compounds CeCu_6, CeCu_2Si_2, CeRu_2Si_2, CeNi_2Ge_2, and CeSi_2. Using a
normalization procedure based on a division by the Fermi-Dirac distribution we
get access to the spectral density of states up to an energy of 5 k_BT above
the Fermi energy E_F. Thus we can resolve the Kondo resonance and the crystal
field (CF) fine-structure for different temperatures above and around the Kondo
temperature T_K. The CF peaks are identified with multiple Kondo resonances
within the multiorbital Anderson impurity model. Our theoretical 4f spectra,
calculated from an extended non-crossing approximation (NCA), describe
consistently the observed photoemission features and their temperature
dependence. By fitting the NCA spectra to the experimental data and
extrapolating the former to low temperatures, T_K can be extracted
quantitatively. The resulting values for T_K and the crystal field energies are
in excellent agreement with the results from bulk sensitive measurements, e.g.
inelastic neutron scattering.Comment: 16 two-column pages, 10 figure
Criblage in vitro des graines d’accessions locales de ricin (Ricinus communis L.) en conditions de stress salin
Le ricin (Ricinus communis L.) est une plante peu exigeante dont la culture offre d’énormes potentialités économiques pour les exploitants agricoles sénégalais. L’identification de génotypes performants avec des rendements acceptables en conditions de stress salin constitue une des solutions pour promouvoir cette culture sur des sols inaffectés aux cultures vivrières. Quatre accessions locales de ricin ont été cultivées durant un mois sur le milieu de Murashige et Skoog (MS) modifié et additionné de 0 ; 25 ; 50 ; 100 et 150 mM de chlorure de sodium (NaCl). Les réponses des accessions ont été évaluées en conditions in vitro sur la base de paramètres morphologiques, biochimiques et de survie des vitroplants. L’effet de la salinité sur ces paramètres mesurés a permis de classer les accessions en groupe tolérant (acc1), moyennement tolérant (acc7) et sensible (acc3 et acc4). La concentration 50 mM de NaCl a été identifiée comme un seuil de tolérance critique et discriminant permettant une classification des accessions de ricin selon leur sensibilité au NaCl. La biomasse aérienne est apparue comme un critère pertinent pour classer les accessions de ricin. Les mesures des teneurs en chlorophylle des feuilles des vitroplants ont permis d’aboutir à la même classification des groupes.Mots clés: criblage, Ricinus communis, salinité, SénégalEnglish Title: In vitro screening of local accessions of castor bean seeds (Ricinus communis l.) Under conditions of salinity stressEnglish AbstractCastor bean (Ricinus communis L.) is an undemanding plant whose cultivation has enormous economic potential for Seneg alese farmers. The identification of efficient genotypes tolerant to salt stress condition could constitute a significant result to promote ricin culture specifically in margin soils. Four local accessions of castor were cultivated, using in vitro conditions for four weeks on MS modified medium supplemented with 0, 25, 50, 100, 150 mM NaCl. In vitro plants responses to salinity were recorded in terms of morphological and biochemical parameters and the rate of plant survival. The effect of different levels of salinity on these parameters was used to classify the accessions in tolerant group (acc1), moderately tolerant (acc7) and sensitive (acc3 and acc4). The concentration 50 mM of NaCl was identified as a discriminant level for castor accessions classification and a critical level of tolerance. The in vitro plants shoot biomass, appeared a relevant parameter to be used for classification of castor accessions under in vitro conditions. The content of leaf chlorophyll for in vitro plants confirmed the classification of Castor bean accessions obtained with morphological parameters according to their sensitivity to the salinity.Keywords: screening, Ricinus communis, salinity, Senega
Structure and transport in multi-orbital Kondo systems
We consider Kondo impurity systems with multiple local orbitals, such as rare
earth ions in a metallic host or multi--level quantum dots coupled to metallic
leads. It is shown that the multiplet structure of the local orbitals leads to
multiple Kondo peaks above the Fermi energy , and to ``shadow'' peaks
below . We use a slave boson mean field theory, which recovers the strong
coupling Fermi liquid fixed point, to calculate the Kondo peak positions,
widths, and heights analytically at T=0, and NCA calculations to fit the
temperature dependence of high--resolution photoemission spectra of Ce
compounds. In addition, an approximate conductance quantization for transport
through multi--level quantum dots or single--atom transistors in the Kondo
regime due to a generalized Friedel sum rule is demonstrated.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. Invited article, 23rd International Conference on
Low Temperature Physics LT23, Hiroshima, Japan 200
Signature of quantum criticality in photoemission spectroscopy at elevated temperature
A quantum phase transition (QPT) in a heavy-fermion (HF) compound may destroy
the Fermi liquid groundstate. However, the conditions for this breakdown have
remained obscure. We report the first direct investigation of heavy
quasiparticle formation and breakdown in the canonical system
CeCuAu by ultraviolet photoemission spectroscopy at elevated
temperatures without the complications of lattice coherence. Surprisingly, the
single-ion Kondo energy scale exhibits an abrupt step near the quantum
critical Au concentration of . We show theoretically that this step is
expected from a highly non-linear renormalization of the local spin coupling at
each Ce site, induced by spin fluctuations on neighboring sites. It provides a
general high-temperature indicator for HF quasiparticle breakdown at a QPT.Comment: Published version, PRL, minor changes in wordin
Atomic correlations in itinerant ferromagnets: quasi-particle bands of nickel
We measure the band structure of nickel along various high-symmetry lines of
the bulk Brillouin zone with angle-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy. The
Gutzwiller theory for a nine-band Hubbard model whose tight-binding parameters
are obtained from non-magnetic density-functional theory resolves most of the
long-standing discrepancies between experiment and theory on nickel. Thereby we
support the view of itinerant ferromagnetism as induced by atomic correlations.Comment: 4 page REVTeX 4.0, one figure, one tabl
Temperature dependence of the Kondo resonance and its satellites in CeCu_2Si_2
We present high-resolution photoemission spectroscopy studies on the Kondo
resonance of the strongly-correlated Ce system CeCuSi. Exploiting the
thermal broadening of the Fermi edge we analyze position, spectral weight, and
temperature dependence of the low-energy 4f spectral features, whose major
weight lies above the Fermi level . We also present theoretical
predictions based on the single-impurity Anderson model using an extended
non-crossing approximation (NCA), including all spin-orbit and crystal field
splittings of the 4f states. The excellent agreement between theory and
experiment provides strong evidence that the spectral properties of
CeCuSi can be described by single-impurity Kondo physics down to K.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Long-range Kondo signature of a single magnetic impurity
The Kondo effect, one of the oldest correlation phenomena known in condensed
matter physics, has regained attention due to scanning tunneling spectroscopy
(STS) experiments performed on single magnetic impurities. Despite the
sub-nanometer resolution capability of local probe techniques one of the
fundamental aspects of Kondo physics, its spatial extension, is still subject
to discussion. Up to now all STS studies on single adsorbed atoms have shown
that observable Kondo features rapidly vanish with increasing distance from the
impurity. Here we report on a hitherto unobserved long range Kondo signature
for single magnetic atoms of Fe and Co buried under a Cu(100) surface. We
present a theoretical interpretation of the measured signatures using a
combined approach of band structure and many-body numerical renormalization
group (NRG) calculations. These are in excellent agreement with the rich
spatially and spectroscopically resolved experimental data.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures + 8 pages supplementary material; Nature Physics
(Jan 2011 - advanced online publication
Intramolecular Structural Heterogeneity altered by Long-range Contacts in an Intrinsically Disordered Protein
Short-range interactions and long-range contacts drive the 3D folding of
structured proteins. The proteins' structure has a direct impact on their
biological function. However, nearly 40% of the eukaryotes proteome is composed
of intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs) and protein regions that fluctuate
between ensembles of numerous conformations. Therefore, to understand their
biological function, it is critical to depict how the structural ensemble
statistics correlate to the IDPs' amino acid sequence. Here, using small-angle
x-ray scattering (SAXS) and time-resolved F\"orster resonance energy transfer
(trFRET), we study the intra-molecular structural heterogeneity of the
neurofilament low intrinsically disordered tail domain (NFLt). Using
theoretical results of polymer physics, we find that the Flory scaling exponent
of NFLt sub-segments correlates linearly with their net charge, ranging from
statistics of ideal to self-avoiding chains. Surprisingly, measuring the same
segments in the context of the whole NFLt protein, we find that regardless of
the peptide sequence, the segments' structural statistics are more expanded
than when measured independently. Our findings show that while polymer physics
can, to some level, relate the IDP's sequence to its ensemble conformations,
long-range contacts between distant amino acids play a crucial role in
determining intra-molecular structures. This emphasizes the necessity of
advanced polymer theories to fully describe IDPs ensembles with the hope it
will allow us to model their biological function
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