195 research outputs found
Cascaded exciton emission of an individual strain-induced quantum dot
Single strain-induced quantum dots are isolated for optical experiments by
selective removal of the inducing InP islands from the sample surface.
Unpolarized emission of single, bi- and triexciton transitions are identified
by power-dependent photoluminescence spectroscopy. Employing time-resolved
experiments performed at different excitation powers we find a pronounced shift
of the rise and decay times of these different transitions as expected from
cascaded emission. Good agreement is found for a rate equation model for a
three step cascade
Direct observation of dynamic surface acoustic wave controlled carrier injection into single quantum posts using phase-resolved optical spectroscopy
A versatile stroboscopic technique based on active phase-locking of a surface
acoustic wave to picosecond laser pulses is used to monitor dynamic
acoustoelectric effects. Time-integrated multi-channel detection is applied to
probe the modulation of the emission of a quantum well for different
frequencies of the surface acoustic wave. For quantum posts we resolve
dynamically controlled generation of neutral and charged excitons and
preferential injection of holes into localized states within the nanostructure.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Combined electrical transport and capacitance spectroscopy of a field effect transistor
We have measured both the current-voltage (-)
and capacitance-voltage (-) characteristics of a
field effect transistor. From the measured capacitance
we calculate the electron surface density and show that its gate voltage
dependence follows the theoretical prediction resulting from the
two-dimensional free electron model. This model allows us to fit the measured
- characteristics over the \emph{entire range} of
. Combining this experimental result with the measured
current-voltage characteristics, we determine the field effect mobility as a
function of gate voltage. We show that for our device this improved combined
approach yields significantly smaller values (more than a factor of 4) of the
electron mobility than the conventional analysis of the current-voltage
characteristics only.Comment: to appear in Applied Physics Letter
Surface acoustic wave controlled carrier injection into self-assembled quantum dots and quantum posts
We report on recent progress in the acousto-electrical control of
self-assembled quantum dot and quantum post using radio frequency surface
acoustic waves (SAWs). We show that the occupancy state of these optically
active nanostructures can be controlled via the SAW-induced dissociation of
photogenerated excitons and the resulting sequential bipolar carrier injection
which strongly favors the formation of neutral excitons for quantum posts in
contrast to conventional quantum dots. We demonstrate high fidelity preparation
of the neutral biexciton which makes this approach suitable for deterministic
entangled photon pair generation. The SAW driven acoustic charge conveyance is
found to be highly efficient within the wide quantum well surrounding the
quantum posts. Finally we present the direct observation of acoustically
triggered carrier injection into remotely positioned, individual quantum posts
which is required for a low-jitter SAW-triggered single photon source.Comment: Proceedings of ISCS 2011; to appear in physics status solidi (c
Enhanced sequential carrier capture into individual quantum dots and quantum posts controlled by surface acoustic waves
Individual self-assembled Quantum Dots and Quantum Posts are studied under
the influence of a surface acoustic wave. In optical experiments we observe an
acoustically induced switching of the occupancy of the nanostructures along
with an overall increase of the emission intensity. For Quantum Posts,
switching occurs continuously from predominantely charged excitons (dissimilar
number of electrons and holes) to neutral excitons (same number of electrons
and holes) and is independent on whether the surface acoustic wave amplitude is
increased or decreased. For quantum dots, switching is non-monotonic and shows
a pronounced hysteresis on the amplitude sweep direction. Moreover, emission of
positively charged and neutral excitons is observed at high surface acoustic
wave amplitudes. These findings are explained by carrier trapping and
localization in the thin and disordered two-dimensional wetting layer on top of
which Quantum Dots nucleate. This limitation can be overcome for Quantum Posts
where acoustically induced charge transport is highly efficient in a wide
lateral Matrix-Quantum Well.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figure
Adhesion and host cell modulation: critical pathogenicity determinants of Bartonella henselae
Bartonella henselae, the agent of cat scratch disease and the vasculoproliferative disorders bacillary angiomatosis and peliosis hepatis, contains to date two groups of described pathogenicity factors: adhesins and type IV secretion systems. Bartonella adhesin A (BadA), the Trw system and possibly filamentous hemagglutinin act as promiscous or specific adhesins, whereas the virulence locus (Vir)B/VirD4 type IV secretion system modulates a variety of host cell functions. BadA mediates bacterial adherence to endothelial cells and extracellular matrix proteins and triggers the induction of angiogenic gene programming. The VirB/VirD4 type IV secretion system is responsible for, e.g., inhibition of host cell apoptosis, bacterial persistence in erythrocytes, and endothelial sprouting. The Trw-conjugation system of Bartonella spp. mediates host-specific adherence to erythrocytes. Filamentous hemagglutinins represent additional potential pathogenicity factors which are not yet characterized. The exact molecular functions of these pathogenicity factors and their contribution to an orchestral interplay need to be analyzed to understand B. henselae pathogenicity in detail
Fourier synthesis of radio frequency nanomechanical pulses with different shapes
The concept of Fourier synthesis is heavily employed in both consumer
electronic products and fundamental research. In the latter, pulse shaping is
key to dynamically initialize, probe and manipulate the state of classical or
quantum systems. In nuclear magnetic resonance, for instance, shaped pulses
have a long-standing tradition and the underlying fundamental concepts have
subsequently been successfully extended to optical frequencies and even to
implement quantum gate operations. Transferring these paradigms to
nanomechanical systems requires tailored nanomechanical waveforms. Here, we
report on an additive Fourier synthesizer for nanomechanical waveforms based on
monochromatic surface acoustic waves. As a proof of concept, we electrically
synthesize four different elementary nanomechanical waveforms from a
fundamental surface acoustic wave at MHz using a superposition
of up to three discrete harmonics . We employ these shaped pulses to
interact with an individual sensor quantum dot and detect their deliberately
and temporally modulated strain component via the opto-mechanical quantum dot
response. Importantly, and in contrast to the direct mechanical actuation by
bulk piezoactuators, surface acoustic waves provide much higher frequencies (>
20 GHz) to resonantly drive mechanical motion. Thus, our technique uniquely
allows coherent mechanical control of localized vibronic modes of
optomechanical crystals, even in the quantum limit when cooled to the
vibrational ground state.Comment: 18 pages - final manuscript and supporting materia
Combined inhibition of Aurora-A and ATR kinase results in regression of MYCN-amplified neuroblastoma
Amplification of MYCN is the driving oncogene in a subset of high-risk neuroblastoma. The MYCN protein and the Aurora-A kinase form a complex during S phase that stabilizes MYCN. Here we show that MYCN activates Aurora-A on chromatin, which phosphorylates histone H3 at serine 10 in S phase, promotes the deposition of histone H3.3 and suppresses R-loop formation. Inhibition of Aurora-A induces transcription-replication conflicts and activates the Ataxia telangiectasia and Rad3 related (ATR) kinase, which limits double-strand break accumulation upon Aurora-A inhibition. Combined inhibition of Aurora-A and ATR induces rampant tumor-specific apoptosis and tumor regression in mouse models of neuroblastoma, leading to permanent eradication in a subset of mice. The therapeutic efficacy is due to both tumor cell-intrinsic and immune cell-mediated mechanisms. We propose that targeting the ability of Aurora-A to resolve transcription-replication conflicts is an effective therapy for MYCN-driven neuroblastoma (141 words)
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