82 research outputs found
Evidence for Dirac Fermions in a honeycomb lattice based on silicon
Silicene, a sheet of silicon atoms in a honeycomb lattice, was proposed to be
a new Dirac-type electron system similar as graphene. We performed scanning
tunneling microscopy and spectroscopy studies on the atomic and electronic
properties of silicene on Ag(111). An unexpected
reconstruction was found, which is explained by an extra-buckling model.
Pronounced quasi-particle interferences (QPI) patterns, originating from both
the intervalley and intravalley scattering, were observed. From the QPI
patterns we derived a linear energy-momentum dispersion and a large Fermi
velocity, which prove the existence of Dirac Fermions in silicene.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Race to Net Zero Carbon: A Climate Emergency Guide for New and Existing Buildings in Australia
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Gut stem cell aging is driven by mTORC1 via a p38 MAPK-p53 pathway.
Nutrients are absorbed solely by the intestinal villi. Aging of this organ causes malabsorption and associated illnesses, yet its aging mechanisms remain unclear. Here, we show that aging-caused intestinal villus structural and functional decline is regulated by mTORC1, a sensor of nutrients and growth factors, which is highly activated in intestinal stem and progenitor cells in geriatric mice. These aging phenotypes are recapitulated in intestinal stem cell-specific Tsc1 knockout mice. Mechanistically, mTORC1 activation increases protein synthesis of MKK6 and augments activation of the p38 MAPK-p53 pathway, leading to decreases in the number and activity of intestinal stem cells as well as villus size and density. Targeting p38 MAPK or p53 prevents or rescues ISC and villus aging and nutrient absorption defects. These findings reveal that mTORC1 drives aging by augmenting a prominent stress response pathway in gut stem cells and identify p38 MAPK as an anti-aging target downstream of mTORC1
Evidence of silicene in honeycomb structures of silicon on Ag(111)
In the search for evidence of silicene, a two-dimensional honeycomb lattice
of silicon, it is important to obtain a complete picture for the evolution of
Si structures on Ag(111), which is believed to be the most suitable substrate
for growth of silicene so far. In this work we report the finding and evolution
of several monolayer superstructures of silicon on Ag(111) depending on the
coverage and temperature. Combined with first-principles calculations, the
detailed structures of these phases have been illuminated. These structure were
found to share common building blocks of silicon rings, and they evolve from a
fragment of silicene to a complete monolayer silicene and multilayer silicene.
Our results elucidate how silicene formes on Ag(111) surface and provide
methods to synthesize high-quality and large-scale silicene.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Genome-wide association analysis identifies 30 new susceptibility loci for schizophrenia
We conducted a genome-wide association study (GWAS) with replication in 36,180 Chinese individuals and performed further transancestry meta-analyses with data from the Psychiatry Genomics Consortium (PGC2). Approximately 95% of the genome-wide significant (GWS) index alleles (or their proxies) from the PGC2 study were overrepresented in Chinese schizophrenia cases, including ∼50% that achieved nominal significance and ∼75% that continued to be GWS in the transancestry analysis. The Chinese-only analysis identified seven GWS loci; three of these also were GWS in the transancestry analyses, which identified 109 GWS loci, thus yielding a total of 113 GWS loci (30 novel) in at least one of these analyses. We observed improvements in the fine-mapping resolution at many susceptibility loci. Our results provide several lines of evidence supporting candidate genes at many loci and highlight some pathways for further research. Together, our findings provide novel insight into the genetic architecture and biological etiology of schizophrenia
Multi-Scale Features of Regional Poverty and the Impact of Geographic Capital: A Case Study of Yanbian Korean Autonomous Prefecture in Jilin Province, China
Poverty is a challenge worldwide. Policy and regulations guiding anti-poverty measures for governments, NGOs, and multilateral institutions have not considered the spatial scale effect of regional poverty, resulting in low-efficiency poverty alleviation actions. This study addressed research gaps by analyzing the multi-scale (county, township, and village) features of regional poverty in Yanbian Korean Autonomous Prefecture in Jilin province, China. It examined the impact of geographic capital and associated spatial heterogeneity from four dimensions: natural environment, transport location, facilities accessibility, and socioeconomic development. The results identified that regional poverty varied at different scales: lower-scale poverty had higher levels of spatial differences, agglomeration, and spatial autocorrelation than higher-scale poverty, and the “island effect” was prominent. The factors potentially impacting regional poverty varied at different scales for geographical capital. At the township scale, only transport location and socioeconomic development dimensions could make significant differences. Factors in all four dimensions could affect village-scale poverty significantly, and the natural environment dimension was more effective than the other three dimensions. The impact of geographic capital and its spatial heterogeneity at the village scale varied, implying that local and diverse anti-poverty measures should increase. This study improves understanding of the multi-scale features of regional poverty and supports the formulation of effective anti-poverty measures
Removal of Nitrogen and Phosphorus in Synthetic Stormwater Runoff by a Porous Asphalt Pavement System with Modified Zeolite Powder Porous Microsphere as a Filter Column
Porous asphalt pavement (PAP) system is a widely used treatment measure in sustainable stormwater management and groundwater recharge, but their variable performance in nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) removal requires further reinforcement prior to widespread uptake. Two laboratory-scale PAP systems were developed by comparing limestone bedding and zeolite incorporated into modified zeolite powder porous microsphere (MZP-PM) as a filter column under a typical rainfall. The PAP system of zeolite bedding incorporated into MZP-PM (a weight less than 5% of zeolite) removed 74.5% to 90.6% of ammonium (NH4+-N) and 72.9% to 92.4% of total phosphate (TP) from the influent, as compared with 25.7% to 62.7% of NH4+-N and 32.6% to 56.4% of TP by that of the limestone as bed material. This improvement was presumably due to MZP-PM’s high adsorption capacity and surface complexation. The formation of ≡(La)(OH)PO2 was verified to be the dominant pathway for selective phosphate adsorption by MZP-PM and ion-exchange was proved to be the main removal process for ammonium. This study provides promising results for improving N and P removal by modifying a porous asphalt pavement system to include an MZP-PM adsorbent column as a post-treatment
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