1,761 research outputs found
Whiskers, cones and pyramids created in sputtering by ion bombardment
A thorough study of the role which foreign atoms play in cone formation during sputtering of metals revealed many experimental facts. Two types of cone formation were distinquished, deposit cones and seed cones. Twenty-six combinations of metals for seed cone formation were tested. The sputtering yield variations with composition for combinations which form seed cones were measured. It was demonstrated that whisker growth becomes a common occurrence when low melting point material is sputter deposited on a hot nonsputtered high melting point electrode
Investigation of sputtering effects on the moon's surface Eleventh quarterly status report, 25 Oct. 1965 - 24 Jan. 1966
Implications of Lunar 9 moon probe, sputtering yield reduction due to surface roughness, water formation by solar wind bombardment, photometric function of moon, and chemical sputterin
Performance metrics for the continuous distribution of entanglement in multi-user quantum networks
Entangled states shared among distant nodes are frequently used in quantum
network applications. When quantum resources are abundant, entangled states can
be continuously distributed across the network, allowing nodes to consume them
whenever necessary. This continuous distribution of entanglement enables
quantum network applications to operate continuously while being regularly
supplied with entangled states. Here, we focus on the steady-state performance
analysis of protocols for continuous distribution of entanglement. We propose
the virtual neighborhood size and the virtual node degree as performance
metrics. We utilize the concept of Pareto optimality to formulate a
multi-objective optimization problem to maximize the performance. As an
example, we solve the problem for a quantum network with a tree topology. One
of the main conclusions from our analysis is that the entanglement consumption
rate has a greater impact on the protocol performance than the fidelity
requirements. The metrics that we establish in this manuscript can be utilized
to assess the feasibility of entanglement distribution protocols for
large-scale quantum networks.Comment: 9 pages with 7 figures (main text); 13 pages appendix with 7 figure
A model of ant route navigation driven by scene familiarity
In this paper we propose a model of visually guided route navigation in ants that captures the known properties of real behaviour whilst retaining mechanistic simplicity and thus biological plausibility. For an ant, the coupling of movement and viewing direction means that a familiar view specifies a familiar direction of movement. Since the views experienced along a habitual route will be more familiar, route navigation can be re-cast as a search for familiar views. This search can be performed with a simple scanning routine, a behaviour that ants have been observed to perform. We test this proposed route navigation strategy in simulation, by learning a series of routes through visually cluttered environments consisting of objects that are only distinguishable as silhouettes against the sky. In the first instance we determine view familiarity by exhaustive comparison with the set of views experienced during training. In further experiments we train an artificial neural network to perform familiarity discrimination using the training views. Our results indicate that, not only is the approach successful, but also that the routes that are learnt show many of the characteristics of the routes of desert ants. As such, we believe the model represents the only detailed and complete model of insect route guidance to date. What is more, the model provides a general demonstration that visually guided routes can be produced with parsimonious mechanisms that do not specify when or what to learn, nor separate routes into sequences of waypoints
Analyzing the Settlement Pattern of the Burnt Hill Study Area
This article examines the strategies used by communities of farmers when faced wih economic decline. This is accomplished by analyzing historic map data from 1850-1940 to recreate and interpret settlement changes
Hypertonicity-induced cation channels rescue cells from staurosporine-elicited apoptosis
Cell shrinkage is one of the earliest events during apoptosis. Cell shrinkage also occurs upon hypertonic stress, and previous work has shown that hypertonicity-induced cation channels (HICCs) underlie a highly efficient mechanism of recovery from cell shrinkage, called the regulatory volume increase (RVI), in many cell types. Here, the effects of HICC activation on staurosporine-induced apoptotic volume decrease (AVD) and apoptosis were studied in HeLa cells by means of electronic cell sizing and whole-cell patch-clamp recording. It was found that hypertonic stress reduces staurosporine-induced AVD and cell death (associated with caspase-3/7 activation and DNA fragmentation), and that this effect was actually due to activation of the HICC. On the other hand, staurosporine was found to significantly reduce osmotic HICC activation. It is concluded that AVD and RVI reflect two fundamentally distinct functional modes in terms of the activity and role of the HICC, in a shrunken cell. Our results also demonstrate, for the first time, the ability of the HICC to rescue cells from the process of programmed cell death
Multipartite entanglement verification resistant against dishonest parties
Future quantum information networks will likely consist of quantum and
classical agents, who have the ability to communicate in a variety of ways with
trusted and untrusted parties and securely delegate computational tasks to
untrusted large-scale quantum computing servers. Multipartite quantum
entanglement is a fundamental resource for such a network and hence it is
imperative to study the possibility of verifying a multipartite entanglement
source in a way that is efficient and provides strong guarantees even in the
presence of multiple dishonest parties. In this work, we show how an agent of a
quantum network can perform a distributed verification of a multipartite
entangled source with minimal resources, which is, nevertheless, resistant
against any number of dishonest parties. Moreover, we provide a tight tradeoff
between the level of security and the distance between the state produced by
the source and the ideal maximally entangled state. Last, by adding the
resource of a trusted common random source, we can further provide security
guarantees for all honest parties in the quantum network simultaneously.Comment: The statement of Theorem 2 has been revised and a new proof is given.
Other results unchange
Ciba Protek vs. Vistakon One-Day Acuvue: A comparison of antibiotic reservoir and delivery effects
Since the Food and Drug Administration approved the use of hydrophilic lenses as ocular bandages in 1973, they have become the treatment of choice for many corneal problems, not the least being superficial corneal abrasions. Practitioners are opting for the more readily available disposable soft contact lenses because of the limited number of expensive therapeutically approved bandage soft contact lenses. In this study we set out to determine if there is a significant difference in the antibiotic reservoir and delivery effect of these two groups of soft contact lenses. The eyes in this study were divided into three groups: Protek® group, Acuvue® group and control group. Two drops of Tobramycin 0.3% solution were instilled into each eye followed by subsequent isolation of tear samples using diffusion disks. The relative amount of antibiotic in the tears at certain time intervals was inferred using kill zone ring width (KZRW) measures around the diffusion disks. The data were then analyzed using an ANOVA statistical test. From this analysis we found that while there was a significant difference in KZRW between both Protek® versus control and Acuvue® versus control, there was no significant difference between Protek® versus Acuvue®. This study shows that, when used as an antibiotic reservoir and delivery system, the Ciba Protek® therapeutic contact lens and One-day Acuvue® disposable contact lens behave very similarly
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