587 research outputs found
Large 2D Coulomb crystals in a radio frequency surface ion trap
We designed and operated a surface ion trap, with an ion-substrate distance
of 500\mum, realized with standard printed-circuit-board techniques. The trap
has been loaded with up to a few thousand Sr+ ions in the Coulomb-crystal
regime. An analytical model of the pseudo-potential allowed us to determine the
parameters that drive the trap into anisotropic regimes in which we obtain
large (N>150) purely 2D ion Coulomb crystals. These crystals may open a simple
and reliable way to experiments on quantum simulations of large 2D systems.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Scanning Tunneling Spectroscopy on the novel superconductor CaC6
We present scanning tunneling microscopy and spectroscopy of the newly
discovered superconductor CaC. The tunneling conductance spectra, measured
between 3 K and 15 K, show a clear superconducting gap in the quasiparticle
density of states. The gap function extracted from the spectra is in good
agreement with the conventional BCS theory with = 1.6 0.2
meV. The possibility of gap anisotropy and two-gap superconductivity is also
discussed. In a magnetic field, direct imaging of the vortices allows to deduce
a coherence length in the ab plane 33 nm
IL-6 gene amplification and expression in human glioblastomas
The aggressiveness of human gliomas appears to be correlated with the upregulation of interleukin 6 (IL-6) gene. Using quantitative PCR methods, we detected amplification and expression of the IL-6 gene in 5 of 5 primary glioblastoma samples and in 4 of 5 glioblastoma cell lines. This finding suggests that the amplification of IL-6 gene may be a common feature in glioblastomas and may contribute to the IL-6 over-expression. © 2001 Cancer Research Campaign http://www.bjcancer.co
Certified quantum non-demolition measurement of material systems
An extensive debate on quantum non-demolition (QND) measurement, reviewed in
Grangier et al. [Nature, {\bf 396}, 537 (1998)], finds that true QND
measurements must have both non-classical state-preparation capability and
non-classical information-damage tradeoff. Existing figures of merit for these
non-classicality criteria require direct measurement of the signal variable and
are thus difficult to apply to optically-probed material systems. Here we
describe a method to demonstrate both criteria without need for to direct
signal measurements. Using a covariance matrix formalism and a general noise
model, we compute meter observables for QND measurement triples, which suffice
to compute all QND figures of merit. The result will allow certified QND
measurement of atomic spin ensembles using existing techniques.Comment: 11 pages, zero figure
The Leiodolide B Puzzle
Out of options? Even though a systematic approach was chosen, which led to a set of four diastereomeric macrolides modeled around the proposed structure of leiodolide B (see picture), the puzzle concerning the stereostructure of this cytotoxic metabolite derived from a deep-sea sponge still remains unsolved
Proteomic analysis of the organic matrix of the abalone Haliotis asinina calcified shell
Background: The formation of the molluscan shell is regulated to a large extent by a matrix of extracellular macromolecules that are secreted by the shell forming tissue, the mantle. This so called "calcifying matrix" is a complex mixture of proteins and glycoproteins that is assembled and occluded within the mineral phase during the calcification process. While the importance of the calcifying matrix to shell formation has long been appreciated, most of its protein components remain uncharacterised.Results: Recent expressed sequence tag (EST) investigations of the mantle tissue from the tropical abalone (Haliotis asinina) provide an opportunity to further characterise the proteins in the shell by a proteomic approach. In this study, we have identified a total of 14 proteins from distinct calcified layers of the shell. Only two of these proteins have been previously characterised from abalone shells. Among the novel proteins are several glutamine- and methionine-rich motifs and hydrophobic glycine-, alanine- and acidic aspartate-rich domains. In addition, two of the new proteins contained Kunitz-like and WAP (whey acidic protein) protease inhibitor domains.Conclusion: This is one of the first comprehensive proteomic study of a molluscan shell, and should provide a platform for further characterization of matrix protein functions and interactions
A doubly responsive probe for the detection of Cys4-tagged proteins
International audienceRecombinant proteins bearing a tag are crucial tools for assessing protein location or function. Small tags such as Cys4 tag (tetracysteine; Cys–Cys–X–X–Cys–Cys) are less likely disrupt protein function in the living cell than green fluorescent protein. Herein we report the first example of the design and synthesis of a dual fluorescence and hyperpolarized 129Xe NMR-based sensor of Cys4-tagged proteins. This sensor becomes fluorescent when bound to such Cys4-tagged peptides, and the 129Xe NMR spectrum exhibits a specific signal, characteristic of the biosensor-peptide association
Interaction-based quantum metrology showing scaling beyond the Heisenberg limit
Quantum metrology studies the use of entanglement and other quantum resources
to improve precision measurement. An interferometer using N independent
particles to measure a parameter X can achieve at best the "standard quantum
limit" (SQL) of sensitivity {\delta}X \propto N^{-1/2}. The same interferometer
using N entangled particles can achieve in principle the "Heisenberg limit"
{\delta}X \propto N^{-1}, using exotic states. Recent theoretical work argues
that interactions among particles may be a valuable resource for quantum
metrology, allowing scaling beyond the Heisenberg limit. Specifically, a
k-particle interaction will produce sensitivity {\delta}X \propto N^{-k} with
appropriate entangled states and {\delta}X \propto N^{-(k-1/2)} even without
entanglement. Here we demonstrate this "super-Heisenberg" scaling in a
nonlinear, non-destructive measurement of the magnetisation of an atomic
ensemble. We use fast optical nonlinearities to generate a pairwise
photon-photon interaction (k = 2) while preserving quantum-noise-limited
performance, to produce {\delta}X \propto N^{-3/2}. We observe super-Heisenberg
scaling over two orders of magnitude in N, limited at large N by higher-order
nonlinear effects, in good agreement with theory. For a measurement of limited
duration, super-Heisenberg scaling allows the nonlinear measurement to overtake
in sensitivity a comparable linear measurement with the same number of photons.
In other scenarios, however, higher-order nonlinearities prevent this crossover
from occurring, reflecting the subtle relationship of scaling to sensitivity in
nonlinear systems. This work shows that inter-particle interactions can improve
sensitivity in a quantum-limited measurement, and introduces a fundamentally
new resource for quantum metrology
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