4,473 research outputs found
The Use of Lanthanum Hexaboride Cathodes in Electron Beam Lithography
Lanthanum Hexaboride (LaB6) is best known as a thermionic electron emitter with high brightness and long lifetime. It is used in a variety of electron optical instruments, including systems for electron beam lithography of integrated circuits.
The major limitation in present-day electron beam lithography systems is throughput, or the ability to process a wafer or mask in a reasonable time. The design of the electron optics is, therefore, governed by a desire to make the writing time as short as possible, together with the other system overhead times. This places inevitable constraints on the electron source.
The simplest systems employ a Gaussian round beam of minimal size, requiring maximum brightness. The fastest systems in use today employ the variable shaped beam concept. For these systems brightness is a minor consideration; however the illumination must be highly uniform. For all systems it is desirable to minimize the energy spread. This minimizes the chromatic aberration, which causes a deterioration of edge acuity of the focussed spot. For minimum energy spread one must use the largest possible fraction of the total emission current to form the writing probe.
Most shaped beam systems employ Koehler illumination, in which typically one percent of the total emission reaches the target. By using a flat, single crystal cathode with critical illumination it is possible to use nearly all of the emission current, thereby reducing the energy spread by roughly an order of magnitude
Fermionic Zero Modes on Domain Walls
We study fermionic zero modes in the domain wall background. The fermions
have Dirac and left- and right-handed Majorana mass terms. The source of the
Dirac mass term is the coupling to a scalar field . The source of the
Majorana mass terms could also be the coupling to a scalar field or a
vacuum expectation value of some other field acquired in a phase transition
well above the phase transition of the field . We derive the fermionic
equations of motion and find the necessary and sufficient conditions for a zero
mode to exist. We also find the solutions numerically. In the absence of the
Majorana mass terms, the equations are solvable analytically. In the case of
massless fermions a zero energy solution exists and we show that although this
mode is not discretely normalizable it is Dirac delta function normalizable and
should be viewed as part of a continuum spectrum rather than as an isolated
zero mode.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, matches version published in PR
Recommended from our members
Bromodomain Inhibitors as Therapeutics for Herpesvirus-Related Disease: All BETs Are Off?
Although the ubiquitous human herpesviruses (HHVs) are rarely associated with serious disease of the healthy host, primary infection and reactivation in immunocompromised individuals can lead to significant morbidity and, in some cases, mortality. Effective drugs are available for clinical treatment, however resistance is on the rise such that new anti-viral targets, as well as novel clinical treatment strategies, are required. A promising area of development and pre-clinical research is that of inhibitors of epigenetic modifying proteins that control both cellular functions and the viral life cycle. Here, we briefly outline the interaction of the host bromo- and extra-terminal domain (BET) proteins during different stages of the HHVs' life cycles while giving a full overview of the published work using BET bromodomain inhibitors (BRDis) during HHV infections. Furthermore, we provide evidence that small molecule inhibitors targeting the host BET proteins, and BRD4 in particular, have the potential for therapeutic intervention of HHV-associated disease
SN1991bg-like supernovae are associated with old stellar populations
SN1991bg-like supernovae are a distinct subclass of thermonuclear supernovae
(SNe Ia). Their spectral and photometric peculiarities indicate their
progenitors and explosion mechanism differ from `normal' SNe Ia. One method of
determining information about supernova progenitors we cannot directly observe
is to observe the stellar population adjacent to the apparent supernova
explosion site to infer the distribution of stellar population ages and
metallicities. We obtain integral field observations and analyse the spectra
extracted from regions of projected radius about the
apparent SN explosion site for 11 91bg-like SNe in both early- and late-type
galaxies. We utilize full-spectrum spectral fitting to determine the ages and
metallicities of the stellar population within the aperture. We find that the
majority of the stellar populations that hosted 91bg-like supernovae have
little recent star formation. The ages of the stellar populations suggest that
that 91bg-like SN progenitors explode after delay times of ,
much longer than the typical delay time of normal SNe Ia, which peaks at .Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, 3 tables, submitted to Publications of the
Astronomical Society of Australi
Haemophilus influenzae type b vaccine formulation and risk of childhood leukaemia
Incidence of childhood leukaemia was studied among subjects of a vaccine trial in Finland comparing the polysaccharide–diptheria toxoid conjugate and oligosaccharide–CRM197 conjugate Haemophilus influenzae type b conjugate vaccine formulations. Eighty cases of childhood leukaemia were detected: 35 among children on the polysaccharide–diptheria toxoid conjugate arm, and 45 among children on the oligosaccharide–CRM197 conjugate arm, which was not statistically significant
Nuclei in motion: movement and positioning of plant nuclei in development, signaling, symbiosis, and disease
While textbook figures imply nuclei as resting spheres at the center of idealized cells, this picture fits few real situations. Plant nuclei come in many shapes and sizes, and can be actively transported within the cell. In several contexts, this nuclear movement is tightly coupled to a developmental program, the response to an abiotic signal, or a cellular reprogramming during either mutualistic or parasitic plant-microbe interactions. While many such phenomena have been observed and carefully described, the underlying molecular mechanism and the functional significance of the nuclear movement are typically unknown. Here, we survey recent as well as older literature to provide a concise starting point for applying contemporary molecular, genetic and biochemical approaches to this fascinating, yet poorly understood phenomenon
Fisher profiles and perceptions of sea turtle-fishery interactions: case study of East Coast Peninsular Malaysia
The paper focuses on coastal fisheries, particularly examining sea turtle-fishery interactions and determining the socioeconomic profile and perception of local fishers about sea turtle issues along the East Coast of Peninsular Malaysia.Turtle fisheries, Nature conservation, Coastal fisheries, Man-induced effects, ISEW, Malaysia, Malaya, Pahang, Malaysia, Malaya, Kelantan, Malaysia, Malaya, Terengganu,
Stress-Energy Tensor for the Massless Spin 1/2 Field in Static Black Hole Spacetimes
The stress-energy tensor for the massless spin 1/2 field is numerically
computed outside and on the event horizons of both charged and uncharged static
non-rotating black holes, corresponding to the Schwarzschild,
Reissner-Nordstrom and extreme Reissner-Nordstr\"om solutions of Einstein's
equations. The field is assumed to be in a thermal state at the black hole
temperature. Comparison is made between the numerical results and previous
analytic approximations for the stress-energy tensor in these spacetimes. For
the Schwarzschild (charge zero) solution, it is shown that the stress-energy
differs even in sign from the analytic approximation. For the
Reissner-Nordstrom and extreme Reissner-Nordstrom solutions, divergences
predicted by the analytic approximations are shown not to exist.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, additional discussio
Sequential pivotal mechanisms for public project problems
It is well-known that for several natural decision problems no budget
balanced Groves mechanisms exist. This has motivated recent research on
designing variants of feasible Groves mechanisms (termed as `redistribution of
VCG (Vickrey-Clarke-Groves) payments') that generate reduced deficit. With this
in mind, we study sequential mechanisms and consider optimal strategies that
could reduce the deficit resulting under the simultaneous mechanism. We show
that such strategies exist for the sequential pivotal mechanism of the
well-known public project problem. We also exhibit an optimal strategy with the
property that a maximal social welfare is generated when each player follows
it. Finally, we show that these strategies can be achieved by an implementation
in Nash equilibrium.Comment: 19 pages. The version without the appendix will appear in the Proc.
2nd International Symposium on Algorithmic Game Theory, 200
Autoantibody detection for diagnosis in direct immunofluorescence negative mucous membrane pemphigoid: ocular and other sites compared
Objective:
To assess whether a panel of serum pemphigoid autoantibody tests could be used to confirm an immunopathological diagnosis of mucous membrane pemphigoid (MMP) in direct immunofluorescent negative (DIF-) MMP patients. /
Design:
Prospective cross-sectional study. /
Subjects and controls:
76 patients with MMP involving ocular and non-ocular sites with 45 matched controls. /
Tests:
Enzyme linked immunosorbent assays (ELISA) for BP180 and BP230 (MBL International®), IgA and IgG indirect immunofluorescence on human salt-split skin (IIF SSS) and the keratinocyte footprint assay for anti-laminin 332 antibodies. /
Main outcome measures:
Sensitivity and specificity of autoantibody detection; significant differences for individual tests and test combinations for MMP involving different sites. /
Results:
All DIF- Cases (24/76, 31.8%) had either ocular only disease or ocular involvement in multi-site disease. Serum pemphigoid autoantibodies were detected in 29/76 (38.2%) of all MMP patients compared to 3/45 (6.7%) of controls. Autoantibody reactivity detected by any one or more of the tests was present in 6/24 (25%) DIF- cases compared to 22/49 (44.9%) in DIF positive (DIF+). Compared to controls ocular only MMP serum reactivity was not significantly different for any test or test combination whereas DIF- multisite ocular MMP differed for one ELISA and 3/7 test combinations. By contrast, for DIF+ non ocular MMP all the individual tests, apart from IgA IIF, and all test combinations were significantly different compared to controls. For the whole MMP cohort the sensitivity of all tests was low having a maximum of 21.05% for BP180 reactivity, increasing to 38.16% for an optimal test combination. Disease activity was strongly associated with positive serology findings. /
Conclusions:
Pemphigoid serum autoantibody tests did not provide alternative immunopathological evidence of MMP in ocular only MMP patients but had limited value in DIF- multisite ocular MMP. The requirement for immunopathological confirmation of MMP by autoantibody detection is inappropriate for DIF- ocular only MMP resulting in missed diagnoses, delayed therapy and poor outcomes. Alternative diagnostic criteria for MMP with ocular involvement are required, to exclude the other causes of scarring conjunctivitis, until more sensitive and specific immunopathology tests become available
- …