23,535 research outputs found
Self-powered mixer for pressurized containers
Mechanical stirrer, installed entirely within tank, is powered by turbine driven by discharge flow of fluid. Contents of tank are automatically mixed whenever fluid in tank is discharged. Magnetic coupling eliminates need for shaft seal, particularly in high-pressure tanks
Anisotropic superconducting properties of aligned SmLaFeAsOF microcrystalline powder
The SmLaFeAsOF compound is a quasi-2D
layered superconductor with a superconducting transition temperature T = 52
K. Due to the Fe spin-orbital related anisotropic exchange coupling
(antiferromagnetic or ferromagnetic fluctuation), the tetragonal
microcrystalline powder can be aligned at room temperature using the
field-rotation method where the tetragonal -plane is parallel to the
aligned magnetic field B and -axis along the rotation axis.
Anisotropic superconducting properties with anisotropic diamagnetic ratio
2.4 + 0.6 was observed from low field susceptibility
(T) and magnetization M(B). The anisotropic low-field phase diagram
with the variation of lower critical field gives a zero-temperature penetration
depth (0) = 280 nm and (0) = 120 nm. The magnetic
fluctuation used for powder alignment at 300 K may be related with the pairing
mechanism of superconductivity at lower temperature.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figure
Inferring evolutionary histories of pathway regulation from transcriptional profiling data
One of the outstanding challenges in comparative genomics is to interpret the
evolutionary importance of regulatory variation between species. Rigorous
molecular evolution-based methods to infer evidence for natural selection from
expression data are at a premium in the field, and to date, phylogenetic
approaches have not been well-suited to address the question in the small sets
of taxa profiled in standard surveys of gene expression. We have developed a
strategy to infer evolutionary histories from expression profiles by analyzing
suites of genes of common function. In a manner conceptually similar to
molecular evolution models in which the evolutionary rates of DNA sequence at
multiple loci follow a gamma distribution, we modeled expression of the genes
of an \emph{a priori}-defined pathway with rates drawn from an inverse gamma
distribution. We then developed a fitting strategy to infer the parameters of
this distribution from expression measurements, and to identify gene groups
whose expression patterns were consistent with evolutionary constraint or rapid
evolution in particular species. Simulations confirmed the power and accuracy
of our inference method. As an experimental testbed for our approach, we
generated and analyzed transcriptional profiles of four \emph{Saccharomyces}
yeasts. The results revealed pathways with signatures of constrained and
accelerated regulatory evolution in individual yeasts and across the phylogeny,
highlighting the prevalence of pathway-level expression change during the
divergence of yeast species. We anticipate that our pathway-based phylogenetic
approach will be of broad utility in the search to understand the evolutionary
relevance of regulatory change.Comment: 30 pages, 12 figures, 2 tables, contact authors for supplementary
table
Heterostructures in GaInP grown using a change in Te doping
Journal ArticleIn organometallic vapor phase epitaxy, changes in growth conditions can be used to modulate the extent of CuPt ordering and, hence, the band gap energy of GaInP. One method is to add Te during growth. An increase in the band gap energy of 0.1 eV due to a decrease in ordering has been obtained by increasing the input pressure of diethyltelluride from 0 to 8 10 6 Torr, which corresponds to a doping concentration of 6 1017 cm_3. This simple procedure offers an attractive method to grow quantum wells (QWs) and superlattices, which are useful for band gap engineering, by modulating the input pressure of the Te precursor. Various heterostructures with abrupt interfaces were successfully grown with interruptions at the interfaces between the Te-doped and undoped GaInP layers. QWs as thin as 10 nm can be clearly seen from transmission electron microscope images
Quantum wells due to ordering in GaInP
Journal ArticleCuPt ordering results in a reduction of the band-gap energy of GaInP. Thus, heterostructures and quantum wells can be produced by simply varying the order parameter, without changing the solid composition. Changes in the order parameter can be induced by changes in growth conditions. The disordered/ordered/disordered quantum wells described here are grown by changing the PH3 flow rate. Transmission electron microscopy results show that the quantum wells produced in this way are clearly defined, with abrupt interfaces. Low-temperature photoluminescence spectra show distinct peaks from quantum wells _x0002_QWs_x0003_ of different widths. The QW photoluminescence peak energy increases with decreasing well width due to quantum size effects. The difference in band-gap energy between the ordered and disordered single layers is determined from photoluminescence excitation spectroscopy to be 0.06 eV
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Diurnal variability of tropical rainfall retrieved from combined GOES and TRMM satellite information
Recent progress in satellite remote-sensing techniques for precipitation estimation, along with more accurate tropical rainfall measurements from the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) Microwave Imager (TMI) and precipitation radar (PR) instruments, have made it possible to monitor tropical rainfall diurnal patterns and their intensities from satellite information. One year (August 1998-July 1999) of tropical rainfall estimates from the Precipitation Estimation from Remotely Sensed Information using Artificial Neural Networks (PERSIANN) systems were used to produce monthly means of rainfall diurnal cycles at hourly and 1° × 1° scales over a domain (30°S-30°N, 80°E-10°W) from the Americas across the Pacific Ocean to Australia and eastern Asia. The results demonstrate pronounced diurnal variability of tropical rainfall intensity at synoptic and regional scales. Seasonal signals of diurnal rainfall are presented over the large domain of the tropical Pacific Ocean, especially over the ITCZ and South Pacific convergence zone (SPCZ) and neighboring continents. The regional patterns of tropical rainfall diurnal cycles are specified in the Amazon, Mexico, the Caribbean Sea, Calcutta, Bay of Bengal, Malaysia, and northern Australia. Limited validations for the results include comparisons of 1) the PERSIANN-derived diurnal cycle of rainfall at Rondonia, Brazil, with that derived from the Tropical Ocean Global Atmosphere Coupled Ocean-Atmosphere Response Experiment (TOGA COARE) radar data; 2) the PERSIANN diurnal cycle of rainfall over the western Pacific Ocean with that derived from the data of the optical rain gauges mounted on the TOGA-moored buoys: and 3) the monthly accumulations of rainfall samples from the orbital TMI and PR surface rainfall with the accumulations of concurrent PERSIANN estimates. These comparisons indicate that the PERSIANN-derived diurnal patterns at the selected resolutions produce estimates that are similar in magnitude and phase
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