2,499 research outputs found
Site symmetry and crystal symmetry: a spherical tensor analysis
The relation between the properties of a specific crystallographic site and
the properties of the full crystal is discussed by using spherical tensors. The
concept of spherical tensors is introduced and the way it transforms under the
symmetry operations of the site and from site to site is described in detail.
The law of spherical tensor coupling is given and illustrated with the example
of the electric dipole and quadrupole transitions in x-ray absorption
spectroscopy. The main application of the formalism is the reduction of
computation time in the calculation of the properties of crystals by band
structure methods. The general approach is illustrated by the examples of
substitutional chromium in spinel and substitutional vanadium in garnet.Comment: 27 pages, 3 figure
Inelastic x-ray scattering investigations of lattice dynamics in SmFeAsOF superconductors
We report measurements of the phonon density of states as measured with
inelastic x-ray scattering in SmFeAsOF powders. An unexpected
strong renormalization of phonon branches around 23 meV is observed as fluorine
is substituted for oxygen. Phonon dispersion measurements on
SmFeAsOF single crystals allow us to identify the 21 meV A
in-phase (Sm,As) and the 26 meV B (Fe,O) modes to be responsible for
this renormalization, and may reveal unusual electron-phonon coupling through
the spin channel in iron-based superconductors.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, submitted for SNS2010 conference proceeding
Magnetoelectric Coupling in epsilon-Fe2O3
Nanoparticles of the ferrimagnetic epsilon-Fe2O3 oxide have been synthesized
by sol-gel method. Here, we report on the measurements of the dielectric
permittivity as a function of temperature, frequency and magnetic field. It is
found that, coinciding with the transition from collinear ferrimagnetic
ordering to an incommensurate magnetic state occurring at about 100 K, there is
an abrupt change (about 30 %) of permittivity suggesting the existence of a
magnetoelectric coupling in this material. Indeed, magnetic field dependent
measurements at 100 K have revealed an increase of the permittivity by about
0.3 % in 6 T. Prospective advantages of epsilon-Fe2O3 as multiferroic material
are discussed.Comment: 17 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Nanotechnolog
Optically induced coherent intra-band dynamics in disordered semiconductors
On the basis of a tight-binding model for a strongly disordered semiconductor
with correlated conduction- and valence band disorder a new coherent dynamical
intra-band effect is analyzed. For systems that are excited by two, specially
designed ultrashort light-pulse sequences delayed by tau relatively to each
other echo-like phenomena are predicted to occur. In addition to the inter-band
photon echo which shows up at exactly t=2*tau relative to the first pulse, the
system responds with two spontaneous intra-band current pulses preceding and
following the appearance of the photon echo. The temporal splitting depends on
the electron-hole mass ratio. Calculating the population relaxation rate due to
Coulomb scattering, it is concluded that the predicted new dynamical effect
should be experimentally observable in an interacting and strongly disordered
system, such as the Quantum-Coulomb-Glass.Comment: to be published in Physical Review B15 February 200
Lamb wave ultrasonic evaluation of welded AA2024 specimens at tensile static and fatigue testing
The paper deals with the investigation of Lamb waves ultrasonic testing technique applied for evaluation of different stress-strain and damaged state of aluminum specimens at static and fatigue loading in order to develop a Structural Health Monitoring (SHM) approach. The experimental results of tensile testing of AA2024T3 specimens with welded joints are presented. Piezoelectric transducers used as actuators and sensors were adhesively bonded to the specimen's surface using two component epoxy. The set of static and cyclic tensile tests with two frequencies of acoustic testing (50 kHz and 335 kHz) were performed. The recorded signals were processed to calculate the maximum envelope in order to evaluate the changes of the stress-strain state of the specimen and its microstructure during static tension. The registered data are analyzed and discussed in terms of signal attenuation due to the formation of fatigue defects during cyclic loading. Understanding the relations between acoustic signal features and fatigue damages will provide us the ability to determine the damage state of the structure and its residual lifetime in order to design a robust SHM system
Elevated expression of artemis in human fibroblast cells is associated with cellular radiosensitivity and increased apoptosis
Copyright @ 2012 Nature Publishing GroupThis article has been made available through the Brunel Open Access Publishing Fund.Background: The objective of this study was to determine the molecular mechanism(s) responsible for cellular radiosensitivity in two human fibroblast cell lines 84BR and 175BR derived from two cancer patients. Methods: Clonogenic assays were performed following exposure to increasing doses of gamma radiation to confirm radiosensitivity. γ-H2AX foci assays were used to determine the efficiency of DNA double strand break (DSB) repair in cells. Quantitative-PCR (Q-PCR) established the expression levels of key DNA DSB repair proteins. Imaging flow cytometry using Annexin V-FITC was used to compare artemis expression and apoptosis in cells. Results: Clonogenic cellular hypersensitivity in the 84BR and 175BR cell lines was associated with a defect in DNA DSB repair measured by the γ-H2AX foci assay. Q-PCR analysis and imaging flow cytometry revealed a two-fold overexpression of the artemis DNA repair gene which was associated with an increased level of apoptosis in the cells before and after radiation exposure. Over-expression of normal artemis protein in a normal immortalised fibroblast cell line NB1-Tert resulted in increased radiosensitivity and apoptosis. Conclusion: We conclude elevated expression of artemis is associated with higher levels of DNA DSB, radiosensitivity and elevated apoptosis in two radio-hypersensitive cell lines. These data reveal a potentially novel mechanism responsible for radiosensitivity and show that increased artemis expression in cells can result in either radiation resistance or enhanced sensitivity.This work was supported in part by The Vidal Sassoon Foundation USA. This article is made available through the Brunel Open Access Publishing Fund
Integration of maXs-type microcalorimeter detectors for high-resolution x-ray spectroscopy into the experimental environment at the CRYRING@ESR electron cooler
We report on the first integration of novel magnetic microcalorimeter detectors (MMCs), developed within SPARC (Stored Particles Atomic Physics Research Collaboration), into the experimental environment of storage rings at GSI, Darmstadt, namely at the electron cooler of CRYRING@ESR. Two of these detector systems were positioned at the 0° and 180° view ports of the cooler section to obtain high-resolution x-ray spectra originating from a stored beam of hydrogen-like uranium interacting with the cooler electrons. While previous test measurements with microcalorimeters at the accelerator facility of GSI were conducted in the mode of well-established stand-alone operation, for the present experiment we implemented several notable modifications to exploit the full potential of this type of detector for precision x-ray spectroscopy of stored heavy ions. Among these are a new readout system compatible with the multi branch system data acquisition platform of GSI, the synchronization of a quasi-continuous energy calibration with the operation cycle of the accelerator facility, as well as the first exploitation of the maXs detectors\u27 time resolution to apply coincidence conditions for the detection of photons and charge-changed ions
Integration of maXs-type microcalorimeter detectors for high-resolution x-ray spectroscopy into the experimental environment at the CRYRING@ESR electron cooler
We report on the first integration of novel magnetic microcalorimeter detectors (MMCs), developed within SPARC (Stored Particles Atomic Physics Research Collaboration), into the experimental environment of storage rings at GSI, Darmstadt, namely at the electron cooler of CRYRING@ESR. Two of these detector systems were positioned at the 0∘ and 180∘ view ports of the cooler section to obtain high-resolution x-ray spectra originating from a stored beam of hydrogen-like uranium interacting with the cooler electrons. While previous test measurements with microcalorimeters at the accelerator facility of GSI were conducted in the mode of well-established stand-alone operation, for the present experiment we implemented several notable modifications to exploit the full potential of this type of detector for precision x-ray spectroscopy of stored heavy ions. Among these are a new readout system compatible with the multi branch system data acquisition platform of GSI, the synchronization of a quasi-continuous energy calibration with the operation cycle of the accelerator facility, as well as the first exploitation of the maXs detectors\u27 time resolution to apply coincidence conditions for the detection of photons and charge-changed ions
Towards Quantum Repeaters with Solid-State Qubits: Spin-Photon Entanglement Generation using Self-Assembled Quantum Dots
In this chapter we review the use of spins in optically-active InAs quantum
dots as the key physical building block for constructing a quantum repeater,
with a particular focus on recent results demonstrating entanglement between a
quantum memory (electron spin qubit) and a flying qubit (polarization- or
frequency-encoded photonic qubit). This is a first step towards demonstrating
entanglement between distant quantum memories (realized with quantum dots),
which in turn is a milestone in the roadmap for building a functional quantum
repeater. We also place this experimental work in context by providing an
overview of quantum repeaters, their potential uses, and the challenges in
implementing them.Comment: 51 pages. Expanded version of a chapter to appear in "Engineering the
Atom-Photon Interaction" (Springer-Verlag, 2015; eds. A. Predojevic and M. W.
Mitchell
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