573 research outputs found
Near-field coupling of gold plasmonic antennas for sub-100 nm magneto-thermal microscopy
The development of spintronic technology with increasingly dense, high-speed,
and complex devices will be accelerated by accessible microscopy techniques
capable of probing magnetic phenomena on picosecond time scales and at deeply
sub-micron length scales. A recently developed time-resolved magneto-thermal
microscope provides a path towards this goal if it is augmented with a
picosecond, nanoscale heat source. We theoretically study adiabatic
nanofocusing and near-field heat induction using conical gold plasmonic
antennas to generate sub-100 nm thermal gradients for time-resolved
magneto-thermal imaging. Finite element calculations of antenna-sample
interactions reveal focused electromagnetic loss profiles that are either
peaked directly under the antenna or are annular, depending on the sample's
conductivity, the antenna's apex radius, and the tip-sample separation. We find
that the thermal gradient is confined to 40 nm to 60 nm full width at half
maximum for realistic ranges of sample conductivity and apex radius. To
mitigate this variation, which is undesirable for microscopy, we investigate
the use of a platinum capping layer on top of the sample as a thermal
transduction layer to produce heat uniformly across different sample materials.
After determining the optimal capping layer thickness, we simulate the
evolution of the thermal gradient in the underlying sample layer, and find that
the temporal width is below 10 ps. These results lay a theoretical foundation
for nanoscale, time-resolved magneto-thermal imaging.Comment: 24 pages including Supporting Information, 6 figures in the main
text, 4 supporting figure
Nanoscale magnetization and current imaging using scanning-probe magneto-thermal microscopy
Magnetic microscopy that combines nanoscale spatial resolution with
picosecond scale temporal resolution uniquely enables direct observation of the
spatiotemporal magnetic phenomena that are relevant to future high-speed,
high-density magnetic storage and logic technologies. Magnetic microscopes that
combine these metrics has been limited to facility-level instruments. To
address this gap in lab-accessible spatiotemporal imaging, we develop a
time-resolved near-field magnetic microscope based on magneto-thermal
interactions. We demonstrate both magnetization and current density imaging
modalities, each with spatial resolution that far surpasses the optical
diffraction limit. In addition, we study the near-field and time-resolved
characteristics of our signal and find that our instrument possesses a spatial
resolution on the scale of 100 nm and a temporal resolution below 100 ps. Our
results demonstrate an accessible and comparatively low-cost approach to
nanoscale spatiotemporal magnetic microscopy in a table-top form to aid the
science and technology of dynamic magnetic devices with complex spin textures
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Can Male Circumcision Have an Impact on the HIV Epidemic in Men Who Have Sex with Men?
Background: Three trials have demonstrated the prophylactic effect of male circumcision (MC) for HIV acquisition among heterosexuals, and MC interventions are underway throughout sub-Saharan Africa. Similar efforts for men who have sex with men (MSM) are stymied by the potential for circumcised MSM to acquire HIV easily through receptive sex and transmit easily through insertive sex. Existing work suggests that MC for MSM should reach its maximum potential in settings where sexual role segregation is historically high and relatively stable across the lifecourse; HIV incidence among MSM is high; reported willingness for prophylactic circumcision is high; and pre-existing circumcision rates are low. We aim to identify the likely public health impact that MC interventions among MSM would have in one setting that fulfills these conditions—Peru—as a theoretical upper bound for their effectiveness among MSM generally. Methods and Findings: We use a dynamic, stochastic sexual network model based in exponential-family random graph modeling and parameterized from multiple behavioral surveys of Peruvian MSM. We consider three enrollment criteria (insertive during 100%, >80% or >60% of UAI) and two levels of uptake (25% and 50% of eligible men); we explore sexual role proportions from two studies and different frequencies of switching among role categories. Each scenario is simulated 10 times. We estimate that efficiency could reach one case averted per 6 circumcisions. However, the population-level impact of an optimistic MSM-MC intervention in this setting would likely be at most ∼5–10% incidence and prevalence reductions over 25 years. Conclusions: Roll-out of MC for MSM in Peru would not result in a substantial reduction in new HIV infections, despite characteristics in this population that could maximize such effects. Additional studies are needed to confirm these results for other MSM populations, and providers may consider the individual health benefits of offering MC to their MSM patients
Satellite-Dominated Sulfur L X-ray Emission of Alkaline Earth Metal Sulfides
The sulfur L2,3 X-ray emission spectra of the alkaline earth metal sulfides BeS, MgS, CaS, SrS, and BaS are investigated and compared with spectra calculations based on density functional theory. Very distinct spectral shapes are found for the different compounds. With decreasing electronegativity of the cation, that is, increasing ionic bonding character, the upper valence band width and its relative spectral intensity decrease. These general trends are qualitatively reproduced by the spectra calculations, which give quite an accurate description of the spectral shapes in the upper valence band region. On the low energy side of the sulfur 3s → 2p transition dominating the spectra, we find strong satellites caused by “semi-Auger” decays involving configuration interaction. These satellites, previously believed to be energetically forbidden for sulfur L2,3 emission and only observed for the L2,3 emission of Cl to Cr, increase in intensity as the bonding character becomes more ionic and dominate the spectra for SrS and BaS. The intensities, energies, and widths of the satellites vary strongly between the investigated compounds, giving a very specific spectral fingerprint that can be used for speciation analysis
Effects of black tea on body composition and metabolic outcomes related to cardiovascular disease risk: a randomized controlled trial
This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported Licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/)There is increasing evidence that tea and its non-caffeine components (primarily flavonoids) contribute to
cardiovascular health. Randomized controlled trials have shown that tea can improve cardiovascular
disease risk factors. We have previously reported a non-caffeine associated beneficial effect of regular
black tea consumption on blood pressure and its variation. Objective: To explore the non-caffeine
associated effects of black tea on body weight and body fat distribution, and cardiovascular disease related
metabolic outcomes. Design: regular tea-drinking men and women (n ¼ 111; BMI 20–35 kg m 2) were
recruited to a randomized controlled double-blind 6 month parallel-designed trial. Participants consumed
3 cups per day of either powdered black tea solids (tea) or a flavonoid-free flavour- and caffeine-matched
placebo (control). Body weight, waist- and hip-circumference, endothelial function and plasma biomarkers
were assessed at baseline, 3 months and 6 months. Results: Compared to control, regular ingestion of
black tea over 3 months inhibited weight gain ( 0.64 kg, p ¼ 0.047) and reduced waist circumference
( 1.88 cm, P ¼ 0.035) and waist-to-hip ratio ( 0.03, P ¼ 0.005). These effects were no longer significant
at 6 months. There were no significant effects observed on fasting glucose, insulin, plasma lipids or
endothelial function. Conclusion: Our study suggests that short-term regular ingestion of black tea over 3
months can improve body weight and body fat distribution, compared to a caffeine-matched control
beverage. However, there was no evidence that these effects were sustained beyond 3 months
Dietary Patterns and Risk of Colorectal Cancer Subtypes Classified by Fusobacterium nucleatum in Tumor Tissue
Importance—Fusobacterium nucleatum appears to play a role in colorectal carcinogenesis through suppression of host immune response to tumor. Evidence also suggests that diet influences intestinal F. nucleatum. However, the role of F. nucleatum in mediating the relationship between diet and the risk of colorectal cancer is unknown.
Objective—To test the hypothesis that the associations of prudent diets (rich in whole grains and dietary fiber) and Western diets (rich in red and processed meat, refined grains, and desserts) with colorectal cancer risk may differ according to the presence of F. nucleatum in tumor tissue.
Design—Prospective cohort study.
Setting—The Nurses’ Health Study (1980–2012) and the Health Professionals Follow-up Study (1986–2012).
Participants—121,700 US female nurses and 51,529 US male health professionals aged 30 to 55 years and 40 to 75 years, respectively, at enrollment.
Exposures—Prudent and Western dietary patterns.
Main Outcomes and Measures—Incidence of colorectal carcinoma subclassified by F. nucleatum status in tumor tissue, determined by quantitative polymerase chain reaction.
Results—We documented 1,019 incident colon and rectal cancer cases with available F. nucleatum data among predominantly white 137,217 individuals over 26–32 years of follow-up encompassing 3,643,562 person-years. The association of prudent diet with colorectal cancer significantly differed by tissue F. nucleatum status (Pheterogeneity = .01). Prudent diet score was associated with a lower risk of F. nucleatum-positive cancers [Ptrend = .003; multivariable hazard ratio of 0.43 (95% confidence interval 0.25–0.72) for the highest vs. the lowest prudent score quartile], but not with F. nucleatum-negative cancers (Ptrend = .47). Dietary component analyses suggested possible differential associations for the cancer subgroups according to intakes of dietary fiber (Pheterogeneity = .02). There was no significant heterogeneity between the subgroups according to Western dietary pattern scores (Pheterogeneity = .23).
Conclusions and Relevance—Prudent diets rich in whole grains and dietary fiber are associated with a lower risk for F. nucleatum-positive colorectal cancer but not F. nucleatum-negative cancer, supporting a potential role for intestinal microbiota in mediating the association between diet and colorectal neoplasms
Quantum state merging and negative information
We consider a quantum state shared between many distant locations, and define
a quantum information processing primitive, state merging, that optimally
merges the state into one location. As announced in [Horodecki, Oppenheim,
Winter, Nature 436, 673 (2005)], the optimal entanglement cost of this task is
the conditional entropy if classical communication is free. Since this quantity
can be negative, and the state merging rate measures partial quantum
information, we find that quantum information can be negative. The classical
communication rate also has a minimum rate: a certain quantum mutual
information. State merging enabled one to solve a number of open problems:
distributed quantum data compression, quantum coding with side information at
the decoder and sender, multi-party entanglement of assistance, and the
capacity of the quantum multiple access channel. It also provides an
operational proof of strong subadditivity. Here, we give precise definitions
and prove these results rigorously.Comment: 23 pages, 3 figure
Characterizing mixing and measurement in quantum mechanics
What fundamental constraints characterize the relationship between a mixture
of quantum states, the states being mixed,
and the probabilities ? What fundamental constraints characterize the
relationship between prior and posterior states in a quantum measurement? In
this paper we show that there are many surprisingly strong constraints on these
mixing and measurement processes that can be expressed simply in terms of the
eigenvalues of the quantum states involved. These constraints capture in a
succinct fashion what it means to say that a quantum measurement acquires
information about the system being measured, and considerably simplify the
proofs of many results about entanglement transformation.Comment: 12 page
On Quantum Advantage in Information Theoretic Single-Server PIR
In (single-server) Private Information Retrieval (PIR), a server holds a
large database of size , and a client holds an index and
wishes to retrieve without revealing to the server. It is well
known that information theoretic privacy even against an `honest but curious'
server requires communication complexity. This is true even if
quantum communication is allowed and is due to the ability of such an
adversarial server to execute the protocol on a superposition of databases
instead of on a specific database (`input purification attack'). Nevertheless,
there have been some proposals of protocols that achieve sub-linear
communication and appear to provide some notion of privacy. Most notably, a
protocol due to Le Gall (ToC 2012) with communication complexity ,
and a protocol by Kerenidis et al. (QIC 2016) with communication complexity
, and shared entanglement.
We show that, in a sense, input purification is the only potent adversarial
strategy, and protocols such as the two protocols above are secure in a
restricted variant of the quantum honest but curious (a.k.a specious) model.
More explicitly, we propose a restricted privacy notion called \emph{anchored
privacy}, where the adversary is forced to execute on a classical database
(i.e. the execution is anchored to a classical database). We show that for
measurement-free protocols, anchored security against honest adversarial
servers implies anchored privacy even against specious adversaries.
Finally, we prove that even with (unlimited) pre-shared entanglement it is
impossible to achieve security in the standard specious model with sub-linear
communication, thus further substantiating the necessity of our relaxation.
This lower bound may be of independent interest (in particular recalling that
PIR is a special case of Fully Homomorphic Encryption)
Loss of memory CD4+ T-cells in semi-wild mandrills (Mandrillus sphinx) naturally infected with species-specific simian immunodeficiency virus SIVmnd-1
Simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) infection is found in a number of African primate species and is thought to be generally non-pathogenic. However, studies of wild primates are limited to two species, with SIV infection appearing to have a considerably different outcome in each. Further examination of SIV-infected primates exposed to their natural environment is therefore warranted. We performed a large cross-sectional study of a cohort of semi-wild mandrills with naturally occurring SIV infection, including 39 SIV-negative and 33 species-specific SIVmnd-1-infected animals. This study was distinguished from previous reports by considerably greater sample size, examination of exclusively naturally infected animals in semi-wild conditions and consideration of simian T-lymphotropic virus (STLV) status in addition to SIVmnd-1 infection. We found that SIVmnd-1 infection was associated with a significant and progressive loss of memory CD4(+) T-cells. Limited but significant increases in markers of immune activation in the T-cell populations, significant increases in plasma neopterin and changes to B-cell subsets were also observed in SIV-infected animals. However, no increase in plasma soluble CD14 was observed. Histological examination of peripheral lymph nodes suggested that SIVmnd-1 infection was not associated with a significant disruption of the lymph node architecture. Whilst this species has evolved numerous strategies to resist the development of AIDS, significant effects of SIV infection could be observed when examined in a natural environment. STLVmnd-1 infection also had significant effects on some markers relevant to understanding SIV infection and thus should be considered in studies of SIV infection of African primates where present.The International Centre for Medical Research, Franceville, Gabon is funded by the Gabonese Government, Total-Gabon and the French Foreign Ministry. E. J. D. G. was funded by a PhD studentship provided by the Wellcome Trust and F. S. by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council. Additional travel funds for E. J. D. G. and F. S. were provided by Hughes Hall, Cambridge and the Charles Slater Fund, respectively
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