14,165 research outputs found
Predicted band structures of III-V semiconductors in wurtzite phase
While non-nitride III-V semiconductors typically have a zincblende structure,
they may also form wurtzite crystals under pressure or when grown as
nanowhiskers. This makes electronic structure calculation difficult since the
band structures of wurtzite III-V semiconductors are poorly characterized. We
have calculated the electronic band structure for nine III-V semiconductors in
the wurtzite phase using transferable empirical pseudopotentials including
spin-orbit coupling. We find that all the materials have direct gaps. Our
results differ significantly from earlier {\it ab initio} calculations, and
where experimental results are available (InP, InAs and GaAs) our calculated
band gaps are in good agreement. We tabulate energies, effective masses, and
linear and cubic Dresselhaus zero-field spin-splitting coefficients for the
zone-center states. The large zero-field spin-splitting coefficients we find
may lead to new functionalities for designing devices that manipulate spin
degrees of freedom
Towards an optical potential for rare-earths through coupled channels
The coupled-channel theory is a natural way of treating nonelastic channels,
in particular those arising from collective excitations, defined by nuclear
deformations. Proper treatment of such excitations is often essential to the
accurate description of reaction experimental data. Previous works have applied
different models to specific nuclei with the purpose of determining
angular-integrated cross sections. In this work, we present an extensive study
of the effects of collective couplings and nuclear deformations on integrated
cross sections as well as on angular distributions in a consistent manner for
neutron-induced reactions on nuclei in the rare-earth region. This specific
subset of the nuclide chart was chosen precisely because of a clear static
deformation pattern. We analyze the convergence of the coupled-channel
calculations regarding the number of states being explicitly coupled. Inspired
by the work done by Dietrich \emph{et al.}, a model for deforming the spherical
Koning-Delaroche optical potential as function of quadrupole and hexadecupole
deformations is also proposed. We demonstrate that the obtained results of
calculations for total, elastic and inelastic cross sections, as well as
elastic and inelastic angular distributions correspond to a remarkably good
agreement with experimental data for scattering energies above around a few
MeV.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures. Submitted to the proceedings of the XXXVI
Reuni\~ao de Trabalho de F\'{\i}sica Nuclear no Brasil (XXXVI Brazilian
Workshop on Nuclear Physics), held in Maresias, S\~ao Paulo, Brazil in
September 2013, which should be published on AIP Conference Proceeding
Series. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1311.1115,
arXiv:1311.042
Fractional Lindstedt series
The parametric equations of the surfaces on which highly resonant
quasi-periodic motions develop (lower-dimensional tori) cannot be analytically
continued, in general, in the perturbation parameter, i.e. they are not
analytic functions of the perturbation parameter. However rather generally
quasi-periodic motions whose frequencies satisfy only one rational relation
("resonances of order 1") admit formal perturbation expansions in terms of a
fractional power of the perturbation parameter, depending on the degeneration
of the resonance. We find conditions for this to happen, and in such a case we
prove that the formal expansion is convergent after suitable resummation.Comment: 40 pages, 6 figure
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Sign language development in deaf children with additional needs
This chapter focuses on atypical patterns of sign language development in deaf children. The issue is complicated by the need to differentiate between delays that are due to limited exposure to language, and delays due to health, educational or social difficulties. Sign language acquisition is often delayed in deaf children due to a variety of factors. Between 90-95% of deaf children are from hearing families (Mitchell and Karchmer, 2004). Although many such children eventually become proficient users of a sign language, they frequently experience delayed and impoverished sign language exposure at the crucial early stages of language development and throughout their school years, since hearing parents and professionals are often unable to provide fluent sign language, models (Lu, Jones & Morgan, 2016). Children raised in these environments can acquire some signing skills, and in extreme cases where no signs are used by parents, may even develop systematic, rule-governed gestural systems (Goldin Meadow, Mylander & Franklin, 2007). However, full mastery of the grammar, vocabulary and pragmatics of sign language is a challenge. By contrast, children raised in environments where sign is the first language (i.e., where one or both parents are deaf) typically follow the expected trajectory of development, unless they have an additional learning need
Diluted maximum-likelihood algorithm for quantum tomography
We propose a refined iterative likelihood-maximization algorithm for
reconstructing a quantum state from a set of tomographic measurements. The
algorithm is characterized by a very high convergence rate and features a
simple adaptive procedure that ensures likelihood increase in every iteration
and convergence to the maximum-likelihood state.
We apply the algorithm to homodyne tomography of optical states and quantum
tomography of entangled spin states of trapped ions and investigate its
convergence properties.Comment: v2: Convergence proof adde
Xenon Acquisition Strategies for High-Power Electric Propulsion NASA Missions
The benefits of high-power solar electric propulsion (SEP) for both NASA's human and science exploration missions combined with the technology investment from the Space Technology Mission Directorate have enabled the development of a 50kW-class SEP mission. NASA mission concepts developed, including the Asteroid Redirect Robotic Mission, and those proposed by contracted efforts for the 30kW-class demonstration have a range of xenon propellant loads from 100's of kg up to 10,000 kg. A xenon propellant load of 10 metric tons represents greater than 10% of the global annual production rate of xenon. A single procurement of this size with short-term delivery can disrupt the xenon market, driving up pricing, making the propellant costs for the mission prohibitive. This paper examines the status of the xenon industry worldwide, including historical xenon supply and pricing. The paper discusses approaches for acquiring on the order of 10 MT of xenon propellant considering realistic programmatic constraints to support potential near-term NASA missions. Finally, the paper will discuss acquisitions strategies for mission campaigns utilizing multiple high-power solar electric propulsion vehicles requiring 100's of metric tons of xenon over an extended period of time where a longer term acquisition approach could be implemented
Avian blood parasites in an endangered columbid: Leucocytozoon marchouxi in the Mauritian Pink Pigeon Columba mayeri
There is increasing evidence that pathogens can play a significant role in species decline. This study of a complete free-living species reveals a cost of blood parasitism to an endangered host, the Pink Pigeon Columba mayeri, endemic to Mauritius. We investigated the prevalence and effect of infection of the blood parasite, Leucocytozoon marchouxi, in the free-living Pink Pigeon population. Overall, L. marchouxi infection prevalence detected was 18·3%. Juveniles were more likely to be infected than older birds and there was geographical variation in infection prevalence. Survival of birds infected with L. marchouxi was lower than that of uninfected birds to 90 days post-sampling. This study suggests that while common haematozoa are well tolerated in healthy adults, these parasites may have greater pathogenic potential in susceptible juveniles. The study is unusual given its completeness of species sampling (96%) within a short time-period, the accurate host age data, and its focus on blood parasites in a threatened bird species. Species for which long-term life-history data are available for every individual serve as valuable models for dissecting the contribution of particular pathogens to species decline
Differential inhibition of polymorphonuclear leukocyte recruitment in vivo by dextran sulphate and fucoidan
The selectin-mediated rolling of leukocytes along the endothelial cells is a prerequisite step followed by firm adhesion and extravasation into the inflamed tissue. This initial contact can be suppressed by sulphated polysaccharides. We have studied the effect of sulphated polysaccharides on the ultimate polymorphonuclear leukocyte (PMN) recruitment and plasma leakage in rabbit skin in response to intradermal injection of various inflammatory mediators. PMN infiltration evoked by various PMN chemoattractants (FMLP, C5a desArg, LTB4 and IL-8) was significantly inhibited after intravenous injection of dextran sulphate (25 mg/kg), heparin (2 × 90 mg/kg) or fucoidan (1 mg/kg). PMN-dependent plasma leakage was equally well reduced by the different sulphated polymers. Vascular permeability induced by histamine or thrombin acting via a PMN-independent mechanism was not reduced. Fucoidan was the only polysaccharide able to suppress IL-1-induced PMN infiltration for 60–70%. Local administration of dextran sulphate had no effect on PMN-dependent plasma leakage. Differential inhibition of PMN recruitment was determined after injection of dextran sulphate or fucoidan depending on the type of insult. Therefore, these results suggest that different adhesion pathways are utilized during PMN recruitment in vivo in response to chemoattractants and IL-1
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