1,913 research outputs found

    Possibilities and limitations of off-resonance polarization sensitive cars of short chain proteins

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    Polarization sensitive CARS in the absence of resonance enhancement is applied to a short chain protein. The minimum concentration to record polarization sensitive CARS spectra of protein solutions is estimated to be 10 mg/ml. The effects limiting the protein concentration are discussed and regarded from an experimental point of view. Signal strength and line parameters of polarization sensitive CARS spectra of the short chain protein Lysyl-Tryptophyl-Lysine are compared with those of a normal Raman spectrum

    Tips for research recruitment: The views of sexual minority youth

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    Researchers often experience difficulties recruiting hard-to-reach populations. This is especially so for studies involving those who have been historically stigmatized, such as individuals who challenge heteronormative expectations or people who experience mental ill health. The authors aimed to obtain the views of sexual minority adolescents (n=25) about what encouraged their participation in a research project. The authors used a general inductive approach to analyze interview data. Feedback consisted of 2 main overarching themes: tips and suggestions for future research and appreciate participants’ motivation to get involved in research. Strategies for how recruitment can be optimized for studies involving sexual minority young people are discussed

    A Lightweight Multilevel Markup Language for Connecting Software Requirements and Simulations

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    [Context] Simulation is a powerful tool to validate specified requirements especially for complex systems that constantly monitor and react to characteristics of their environment. The simulators for such systems are complex themselves as they simulate multiple actors with multiple interacting functions in a number of different scenarios. To validate requirements in such simulations, the requirements must be related to the simulation runs. [Problem] In practice, engineers are reluctant to state their requirements in terms of structured languages or models that would allow for a straightforward relation of requirements to simulation runs. Instead, the requirements are expressed as unstructured natural language text that is hard to assess in a set of complex simulation runs. Therefore, the feedback loop between requirements and simulation is very long or non-existent at all. [Principal idea] We aim to close the gap between requirements specifications and simulation by proposing a lightweight markup language for requirements. Our markup language provides a set of annotations on different levels that can be applied to natural language requirements. The annotations are mapped to simulation events. As a result, meaningful information from a set of simulation runs is shown directly in the requirements specification. [Contribution] Instead of forcing the engineer to write requirements in a specific way just for the purpose of relating them to a simulator, the markup language allows annotating the already specified requirements up to a level that is interesting for the engineer. We evaluate our approach by analyzing 8 original requirements of an automotive system in a set of 100 simulation runs

    Non-resonant background suppression in preresonance CARS spectra of flavin adenine dinucleotide: Demonstration of a background suppression technique using phase mismatching and comparison with the polarization-sensitive CARS technique

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    Polarization-sensitive CARS spectra of a 5.7 × 10-3 mol dm-3 flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) solution were recorded under preresonance conditions at a pump wavelength of 532 nm. The depolarization ratios of the vibrations are shown to be close to the depolarization ratio of the non-resonant background. This results in a severe reduction of the vibration resonant signal (a factor of 700-900) in the polarization CARS spectrum, and a poor improvement in the ratio of the resonant signal and the non-resonant background (<10). \ud In this context, a non-resonant background suppression technique is discussed and demonstrated for 5.7 × 10-3 and 1.4 × 10-3 mol dm-3 FAD solutions excited at 532 nm; the non-resonant susceptibility of the walls of the cuvette, which contains the FAD solution, is used to compensate the non-resonant signal contribution of the solution. An improvement in the signal-to-noise ratio of ca. 50 is achieved at the cost of a factor of 30 in the resonant signal strength. Lorentzian-shaped spectral bands are obtained, facilitating the determination of band position, width and intensity. Line shape parameters and depolarization ratios for FAD are extracted from the presented spectra by curve fitting. The signal strength and background suppression achieved with these techniques and the resonance CARS technique (at a pump wavelength of 480 nm) are compared and discussed

    Current-driven and field-driven domain walls at nonzero temperature

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    We present a model for the dynamics of current- and field-driven domain-wall lines at nonzero temperature. We compute thermally-averaged drift velocities from the Fokker-Planck equation that describes the nonzero-temperature dynamics of the domain wall. As special limits of this general description, we describe rigid domain walls as well as vortex domain walls. In these limits, we determine also depinning times of the domain wall from an extrinsic pinning potential. We compare our theory with previous theoretical and experimental work

    Dados portugueses para o estudo dos salários na Índia: Cananor, 1516-1517

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    This essay discusses new evidence for wage developments in Western India from c. 1300 to 1600. By introducing wage and price data for Kannur (Cananor in Portuguese and British sources) for the years 1516-1517 we contribute to a larger discussion about standards of living in South Asia. These figures from unpublished Portuguese archival sources are compared to Indian ones for the early fourteenth and late sixteenth centuries (no other being available so far). We conclude that the overall purchasing power of wage earners in Kannur in 1516-1517 was not substantially lower than in Delhi 1311. This suggests that real wages remained stable at a low level in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, then rose during the sixteenth century to an all-time high around 1600, before dropping again (if expressed in grain), though never returning to the low levels of 1300-1500.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Optimizing propagating spin wave spectroscopy

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    The frequency difference between two oppositely propagating spin waves can be used to probe several interesting magnetic properties, such as the Dzyaloshinkii-Moriya interaction (DMI). Propagating spin wave spectroscopy is a technique that is very sensitive to this frequency difference. Here we show several elements that are important to optimize devices for such a measurement. We demonstrate that for wide magnetic strips there is a need for de-embedding. Additionally, for these wide strips there is a large parasitic antenna-antenna coupling that obfuscates any spin wave transmission signal, which is remedied by moving to smaller strips. The conventional antenna design excites spin waves with two different wave vectors. As the magnetic layers become thinner, the resulting resonances move closer together and become very difficult to disentangle. In the last part we therefore propose and verify a new antenna design that excites spin waves with only one wave vector. We suggest to use this antenna design to measure the DMI in thin magnetic layers.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figure

    Spin motive forces due to magnetic vortices and domain walls

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    We study spin motive forces, i.e, spin-dependent forces, and voltages induced by time-dependent magnetization textures, for moving magnetic vortices and domain walls. First, we consider the voltage generated by a one-dimensional field-driven domain wall. Next, we perform detailed calculations on field-driven vortex domain walls. We find that the results for the voltage as a function of magnetic field differ between the one-dimensional and vortex domain wall. For the experimentally relevant case of a vortex domain wall, the dependence of voltage on field around Walker breakdown depends qualitatively on the ratio of the so-called β\beta-parameter to the Gilbert damping constant, and thus provides a way to determine this ratio experimentally. We also consider vortices on a magnetic disk in the presence of an AC magnetic field. In this case, the phase difference between field and voltage on the edge is determined by the β\beta parameter, providing another experimental method to determine this quantity.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figures, submitted to PR
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