17,240 research outputs found
Relation between Kitaev magnetism and structure in -RuCl
Raman scattering has been employed to investigate lattice and magnetic
excitations of the honeycomb Kitaev material -RuCl and its
Heisenberg counterpart CrCl. Our phonon Raman spectra give evidence for a
first-order structural transition from a monoclinic to a rhombohedral structure
for both compounds. Significantly, only -RuCl features a large
thermal hysteresis, consistent with the formation of a wide phase of
coexistence. In the related temperature interval of K, we observe a
hysteretic behavior of magnetic excitations as well. The stronger magnetic
response in the rhombohedral compared to the monoclinic phase evidences a
coupling between the crystallographic structure and low-energy magnetic
response. Our results demonstrate that the Kitaev magnetism concomitant with
fractionalized excitations is susceptible to small variations of bonding
geometry.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures, To appear in PR
Electronic and phonon excitations in {\alpha}-RuCl
We report on THz, infrared reflectivity and transmission experiments for wave
numbers from 10 to 8000 cm ( 1 meV - 1 eV) and for temperatures
from 5 to 295 K on the Kitaev candidate material {\alpha}-RuCl. As reported
earlier, the compound under investigation passes through a first-order
structural phase transition, from a monoclinic high-temperature to a
rhombohedral low-temperature phase. The phase transition shows an extreme and
unusual hysteretic behavior, which extends from 60 to 166 K. In passing this
phase transition, in the complete frequency range investigated we found a
significant reflectance change, which amounts almost a factor of two. We
provide a broadband spectrum of dielectric constant, dielectric loss and
optical conductivity from the THz to the mid infrared regime and study in
detail the phonon response and the low-lying electronic density of states. We
provide evidence for the onset of an optical energy gap, which is of order 200
meV, in good agreement with the gap derived from measurements of the DC
electrical resistivity. Remarkably, the onset of the gap exhibits a strong blue
shift on increasing temperatures.Comment: 18 pages, 7 figure
Genome-wide analysis points to roles for extracellular matrix remodeling, the visual cycle, and neuronal development in myopia
Myopia, or nearsightedness, is the most common eye disorder, resulting
primarily from excess elongation of the eye. The etiology of myopia, although
known to be complex, is poorly understood. Here we report the largest ever
genome-wide association study (43,360 participants) on myopia in Europeans. We
performed a survival analysis on age of myopia onset and identified 19
significant associations (p < 5e-8), two of which are replications of earlier
associations with refractive error. These 19 associations in total explain 2.7%
of the variance in myopia age of onset, and point towards a number of different
mechanisms behind the development of myopia. One association is in the gene
PRSS56, which has previously been linked to abnormally small eyes; one is in a
gene that forms part of the extracellular matrix (LAMA2); two are in or near
genes involved in the regeneration of 11-cis-retinal (RGR and RDH5); two are
near genes known to be involved in the growth and guidance of retinal ganglion
cells (ZIC2, SFRP1); and five are in or near genes involved in neuronal
signaling or development. These novel findings point towards multiple genetic
factors involved in the development of myopia and suggest that complex
interactions between extracellular matrix remodeling, neuronal development, and
visual signals from the retina may underlie the development of myopia in
humans
Subthreshold characteristics of pentacene field-effect transistors influenced by grain boundaries.
Grain boundaries in polycrystalline pentacene films significantly affect the electrical characteristics of pentacene field-effect transistors (FETs). Upon reversal of the gate voltage sweep direction, pentacene FETs exhibited hysteretic behaviours in the subthreshold region, which was more pronounced for the FET having smaller pentacene grains. No shift in the flat-band voltage of the metal-insulator-semiconductor capacitor elucidates that the observed hysteresis was mainly caused by the influence of localized trap states existing at pentacene grain boundaries. From the results of continuous on/off switching operation of the pentacene FETs, hole depletion during the off period is found to be limited by pentacene grain boundaries. It is suggested that the polycrystalline nature of a pentacene film plays an important role on the dynamic characteristics of pentacene FETs
Magnetic Excitations and Continuum of a Field-Induced Quantum Spin Liquid in -RuCl
We report on terahertz spectroscopy of quantum spin dynamics in
-RuCl, a system proximate to the Kitaev honeycomb model, as a
function of temperature and magnetic field. An extended magnetic continuum
develops below the structural phase transition at K. With the onset
of a long-range magnetic order at K, spectral weight is transferred to
a well-defined magnetic excitation at meV, which is
accompanied by a higher-energy band at meV. Both
excitations soften in magnetic field, signaling a quantum phase transition at
T where we find a broad continuum dominating the dynamical response.
Above , the long-range order is suppressed, and on top of the continuum,
various emergent magnetic excitations evolve. These excitations follow clear
selection rules and exhibit distinct field dependencies, characterizing the
dynamical properties of the field-induced quantum spin liquid
Estimating Shared Copy Number Aberrations for Array CGH Data: The Linear-Median Method
Motivation: Existing methods for estimating copy number variations in array comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH) data are limited to estimations of the gain/loss of chromosome regions for single sample analysis. We propose the linear-median method for estimating shared copy numbers in DNA sequences across multiple samples, demonstrate its operating characteristics through simulations and applications to real cancer data, and compare it to two existing methods. Results: Our proposed linear-median method has the power to estimate common changes that appear at isolated single probe positions or very short regions. Such changes are hard to detect by current methods. This new method shows a higher rate of true positives and a lower rate of false positives. The linear-median method is non-parametric and hence is more robust in estimating copy number. Additionally, the linear-median method is easily computable for practical aCGH data sets compared to other copy number estimation methods. Supplementary Information: Supporting materials are available at Cancer Informatics online
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