10,241 research outputs found
Phonon lasing from optical frequency comb illumination of a trapped ion
An atomic transition can be addressed by a single tooth of an optical
frequency comb if the excited state lifetime () is significantly longer
than the pulse repetition period (). In the crossover regime
between fully-resolved and unresolved comb teeth (), we observe Doppler cooling of a pre-cooled trapped atomic ion
by a single tooth of a frequency-doubled optical frequency comb. We find that
for initially hot ions, a multi-tooth effect gives rise to lasing of the ion's
harmonic motion in the trap, verified by acoustic injection locking. The gain
saturation of this phonon laser action leads to a comb of steady-state
oscillation amplitudes, allowing hot ions to be loaded directly into the trap
and laser cooled to crystallization despite the presence of hundreds of
blue-detuned teeth.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Particle acceleration and the origin of gamma-ray emission from Fermi Bubbles
Fermi LAT has discovered two extended gamma-ray bubbles above and below the
galactic plane. We propose that their origin is due to the energy release in
the Galactic center (GC) as a result of quasi-periodic star accretion onto the
central black hole. Shocks generated by these processes propagate into the
Galactic halo and accelerate particles there. We show that electrons
accelerated up to ~10 TeV may be responsible for the observed gamma-ray
emission of the bubbles as a result of inverse Compton (IC) scattering on the
relic photons. We also suggest that the Bubble could generate the flux of CR
protons at energies > 10^15 eV because the shocks in the Bubble have much
larger length scales and longer lifetimes in comparison with those in SNRs.
This may explain the the CR spectrum above the knee.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures. Expanded version of the contribution to the 32nd
ICRC, Beijing, #0589. To appear in the proceeding
Randomised controlled study of treatment for mild and moderate sleep apnoea
Health Services Research Fund & Health Care and Promotion Fund: Research Dissemination Reports (Series 6)published_or_final_versio
Lipopolysaccharide-primed heterotolerant dendritic cells suppress experimental autoimmune uveoretinitis by multiple mechanisms
Exposure of bone-marrow-derived dendritic cells (BMDC) to high-dose ultrapure lipopolysaccharide for 24 hr (LPS-primed BMDC) enhances their potency in preventing inter-photoreceptor retinoid binding protein: complete Freund's adjuvant-induced experimental autoimmune uveoretinitis (EAU). LPS-primed BMDC are refractory to further exposure to LPS (= endotoxin tolerance), evidenced here by decreased phosphorylation of TANK-binding kinase 1, interferon regulatory factor 3 (IRF3), c-Jun N-terminal kinase and p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase as well as impaired nuclear translocation of nuclear factor ÎșB (NF-ÎșB) and IRF3, resulting in reduced tumour necrosis factor-α (TNF-α), interleukin-6 (IL-6), IL-12 and interferon-ÎČ secretion. LPS-primed BMDC also show reduced surface expression of Toll-like receptor-4 and up-regulation of CD14, followed by increased apoptosis, mediated via nuclear factor of activated T cells (NFATc)-2 signalling. LPS-primed BMDC are not only homotolerant to LPS but are heterotolerant to alternative pathogen-associated molecular pattern ligands, such as mycobacterial protein extract (Mycobacterium tuberculosis). Specifically, while M. tuberculosis protein extract induces secretion of IL-1ÎČ, TNF-α and IL-6 in unprimed BMDC, LPS-primed BMDC fail to secrete these cytokines in response to M. tuberculosis. We propose that LPS priming of BMDC, by exposure to high doses of LPS for 24 hr, stabilizes their tolerogenicity rather than promoting immunogenicity, and does so by multiple mechanisms, namely (i) generation of tolerogenic apoptotic BMDC through CD14:NFATc signalling; (ii) reduction of NF-ÎșB and IRF3 signalling and downstream pro-inflammatory cytokine production; and (iii) blockade of inflammasome activation
The Size Distribution of Kuiper Belt Objects
We describe analytical and numerical collisional evolution calculations for
the size distribution of icy bodies in the Kuiper Belt. For a wide range of
bulk properties, initial masses, and orbital parameters, our results yield
power-law cumulative size distributions, N_C propto r^{-q}, with q_L = 3.5 for
large bodies with radii of 10-100 km, and q_s = 2.5-3 for small bodies with
radii lesss than 0.1-1 km. The transition between the two power laws occurs at
a break radius of 1-30 km. The break radius is more sensitive to the initial
mass in the Kuiper Belt and the amount of stirring by Neptune than the bulk
properties of individual Kuiper Belt objects (KBOs). Comparisons with
observations indicate that most models can explain the observed sky surface
density of KBOs for red magnitudes, R = 22-27. For R 28, the model
surface density is sensitive to the amount of stirring by Neptune, suggesting
that the size distribution of icy planets in the outer solar system provides
independent constraints on the formation of Neptune.Comment: 24 pages of text, 12 figures; to appear in the Astronomical Journal,
October 200
Electrochemical Properties of APCVD alpha-Fe2O3 Nanoparticles at 300 degrees C
The growth of hematite (FeIII oxide) by atmospheric pressure chemical vapor deposition was possible at 300 oC by controlling the nitrogen flow rate through the iron precursor bubbler. An increase of crystallinity along with the presence of compact interconnected nanoparticles was observed upon increasing the nitrogen flow rate. The amount of incorporated charge was the highest for the 0.6â
L minâ1 coating presenting reversibility after a period of 1400â
s as obtained from chronoamperometry measurements. Additionally, the charge transfer of lithiumâions across the FeIII oxide / electrolyte interface was easier enhancing its performance presenting capacitance retention of 94â% after 500 scans. The importance of nitrogen flow rate towards the deposition of an anode with good stability and effective electrochemical behavior is highlighted
Efficient Symmetry Reduction and the Use of State Symmetries for Symbolic Model Checking
One technique to reduce the state-space explosion problem in temporal logic
model checking is symmetry reduction. The combination of symmetry reduction and
symbolic model checking by using BDDs suffered a long time from the
prohibitively large BDD for the orbit relation. Dynamic symmetry reduction
calculates representatives of equivalence classes of states dynamically and
thus avoids the construction of the orbit relation. In this paper, we present a
new efficient model checking algorithm based on dynamic symmetry reduction. Our
experiments show that the algorithm is very fast and allows the verification of
larger systems. We additionally implemented the use of state symmetries for
symbolic symmetry reduction. To our knowledge we are the first who investigated
state symmetries in combination with BDD based symbolic model checking
Scalar form factors and nuclear interactions
The scalar-isoscalar term in the two-pion exchange potential is
abnormally large and does not respect the hierarchy of effects predicted by
chiral perturbation theory. We argue that this anomaly is associated with
non-perturbative effects, which are also present in the scalar form
factor.Comment: Talk given at the 20EFB, Pisa, Italy, September 2007. 3 pages and 4
figure
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