9,893 research outputs found
An annotated bibliography of materials suitable for use in teaching French in the elementary school
Thesis (Ed.M.)--Boston Universit
Conductance of a single molecule anchored by an isocyanide substituent to gold electrodes
The effect of anchoring group on the electrical conductance of a single
molecule bridging two Au electrodes was studied using di-substituted
(isocyanide (CN-), thiol (S-) or cyanide (NC-)) benzene. The conductance of a
single Au/1,4-diisocyanobenzene/Au junction anchored by isocyanide via a C atom
(junction with the Au-CN bond) was (). The
value was comparable to of a single
Au/1,4-benzenedithiol/Au junction with the Au-S bond. The
Au/1,4-dicyanobenzene/Au molecular junction with the Au-NC bond did not show
well-defined conductance values. The metal-molecule bond strength was estimated
by the distance over which the molecular junction was stretched before
breakdown. The stretched length of the molecular junction with the Au-CN bond
was comparable to that of the Au junction, indicating that the Au-CN bond was
stronger than the Au-Au bond.Comment: 3 figures, to be appear in Appl. Phys. Let
The Magnetohydrodynamic Kelvin-Helmholtz Instability: A Three-Dimensional Study of Nonlinear Evolution
We investigate through high resolution 3D simulations the nonlinear evolution
of compressible magnetohydrodynamic flows subject to the Kelvin-Helmholtz
instability. We confirm in 3D flows the conclusion from our 2D work that even
apparently weak magnetic fields embedded in Kelvin-Helmholtz unstable plasma
flows can be fundamentally important to nonlinear evolution of the instability.
In fact, that statement is strengthened in 3D by this work, because it shows
how field line bundles can be stretched and twisted in 3D as the quasi-2D Cat's
Eye vortex forms out of the hydrodynamical motions. In our simulations twisting
of the field may increase the maximum field strength by more than a factor of
two over the 2D effect. If, by these developments, the Alfv\'en Mach number of
flows around the Cat's Eye drops to unity or less, our simulations suggest
magnetic stresses will eventually destroy the Cat's Eye and cause the plasma
flow to self-organize into a relatively smooth and apparently stable flow that
retains memory of the original shear. For our flow configurations the regime in
3D for such reorganization is , expressed in
terms of the Alfv\'en Mach number of the original velocity transition and the
initial Alfv\'en speed projected to the flow plan. For weaker fields the
instability remains essentially hydrodynamic in early stages, and the Cat's Eye
is destroyed by the hydrodynamic secondary instabilities of a 3D nature. Then,
the flows evolve into chaotic structures that approach decaying isotropic
turbulence. In this stage, there is considerable enhancement to the magnetic
energy due to stretching, twisting, and turbulent amplification, which is
retained long afterwards. The magnetic energy eventually catches up to the
kinetic energy, and the nature of flows become magnetohydrodynamic.Comment: 11 pages, 12 figures in degraded jpg format (2 in color), paper with
original quality figures available via ftp at
ftp://ftp.msi.umn.edu/pub/users/twj/mhdkh3dd.ps.gz or
ftp://canopus.chungnam.ac.kr/ryu/mhdkh3dd.ps.gz, to appear in The
Astrophysical Journa
Mediators of mechanotransduction between bone cells
Mechanical forces are known to regulate the function of tissues in the body, including bone. Bone adapts to its mechanical environment by altering its shape and increasing its size in response to increases in mechanical load associated with exercise, and by decreasing its size in response to decreases in mechanical load associated with microgravity or prolonged bed rest. Changes in bone size and shape are produced by a cooperative action of two main types of the bone cells - osteoclasts that destroy bone and osteoblasts that build bone. These cell types come from different developmental origins, and vary greatly in their characteristics, such as size, shape, and expression of receptor subtypes, which potentially may affect their responses to mechanical stimuli. The objective of this study is to compare the responses of osteoclasts and osteoblasts to mechanical stimulation.
This study has allowed us to conclude the following:
1. A mediator is released from a single source cell.
2. The response to the mediator changes with distance.
3. The value of the apparent diffusion coeficient increases with distance.
4. A plausible proposed mechanism is that ATP is released and degrades to ADP.
5. Future experiments are required to confim that ATP is the mediator as suggested
Structural Transition of Li2RuO3 Induced by Molecular-Orbit Formation
A pseudo honeycomb system Li2RuO3 exhibits a second-order-like transition at
temperature T=Tc=540 K to a low-T nonmagnetic phase with a significant lattice
distortion forming Ru-Ru pairs. For this system, we have calculated the band
structure, using the generalized gradient approximation (GGA) in both the high-
and low- T phases, and found that the results of the calculation can naturally
explain the insulating behavior observed in the low-T phase. The detailed
characters of the Ru 4d t2g bands obtained by the tight-binding fit to the
calculated dispersion curves show clear evidence that the structural transition
is driven by the formation of the Ru-Ru molecular-orbits, as proposed in our
previous experimental studies.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, 4 tables, submitted to J. Phys. Soc. Jp
Synthesis and Properties of Dipyridylcyclopentenes
A short and general route to the substituted dipyridylcyclopentenes was explored and several new compounds belonging to this new group of diarylethenes were synthesized. The study of their photochromic and thermochromic properties shows that the rate of the thermal ring opening is strongly dependent on the polarity of the solvent.
Endoscopic and clinical evaluation of treatment and prognosis of Cronkhite-Canada syndrome: a Japanese nationwide survey.
BackgroundFirst reported in 1955, Cronkhite-Canada syndrome (CCS), a rare syndrome characterized by ectodermal abnormalities and inflammatory changes of the gastrointestinal tract mucosa, has been associated with a poor prognosis and life-threatening malignant complications. In a large population survey, we endeavored to characterize the course and treatment outcome of CCS through clinical and endoscopic assessment, and to explore its optimal treatment and surveillance strategy.MethodsA retrospective analysis of 210 patients with CCS was conducted via a questionnaire-based nationwide survey of 983 teaching hospitals located throughout Japan. We assessed clinical features, endoscopic findings, treatments used, and short- and long-term outcomes.ResultsThe average age at diagnosis was 63.5 years. In all cases, upper or lower gastrointestinal tract polyposis was confirmed, accompanied by characteristic ectodermal abnormalities. Of the treatments used, oral corticosteroids (30-49 mg/day) were the most effective treatment for active disease, with adjunctive nutritional support considered beneficial. With corticosteroid treatment, abdominal symptoms were relieved within a few months, whereas polyp regression often required more than 6 months. Maintenance of endoscopic remission with or without steroids for 3 years significantly lowered the development of CCS-related cancer, compared with relapsers or nonresponders, underscoring the importance of sustained endoscopic remission for cancer prevention.ConclusionsThe prognosis of CCS has greatly improved through the use of improved medical treatment. Although CCS continues to be relentlessly progressive, carrying a high cancer risk, a sufficient dose and duration of corticosteroid therapy accompanied by nutritional support and periodic endoscopic surveillance appears to improve its natural history
Electronic structure and effects of dynamical electron correlation in ferromagnetic bcc-Fe, fcc-Ni and antiferromagnetic NiO
LDA+DMFT method in the framework of the iterative perturbation theory (IPT)
with full LDA Hamiltonian without mapping onto the effective Wannier orbitals.
We then apply this LDA+DMFT method to ferromagnetic bcc-Fe and fcc-Ni as a test
of transition metal, and to antiferromagnetic NiO as an example of transition
metal oxide. In Fe and Ni, the width of occupied 3d bands is narrower than
those in LDA and Ni 6eV satellite appears. In NiO, the resultant electronic
structure is of charge-transfer insulator type and the band gap is 4.3eV. These
results are in good agreement with the experimental XPS. The configuration
mixing and dynamical correlation effects play a crucial role in these results
Pronounced - Log T Divergence in Specific Heat of Nonmetallic CeOBiS: A Mother Phase of BiS-Based Superconductor
The low-temperature properties of CeOBiS single crystals are studied by
electrical resistivity, magnetization, and specific heat measurements. Ce 4f
-electrons are found to be in a well-localized state split by
crystalline-electric-field (CEF) effects. The CEF ground state is a pure
= 1/2 doublet, and excited doublets are located far above. At low
temperatures in zero field, we observe pronounced divergence in the
specific heat, revealing the presence of quantum critical fluctuations of 4f
magnetic moments near a quantum critical point (QCP). Considering that
CeOBiS is a nonmetal, this phenomenon cannot be attributed to the
competition between Kondo and the Ruderman-Kittel-Kasuya-Yosida (RKKY)
interactions as in numerous f-electron-based strongly correlated metals,
indicating an unconventional mechanism. We suggest that CeOBiS is the first
material found to be located at a QCP among geometrically frustrated
nonmetallic magnets.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figure
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