19,157 research outputs found
Effect of Edge Roughness on Electronic Transport in Graphene Nanoribbon Channel Metal Oxide Semiconductor Field-Effect Transistors
Results of quantum mechanical simulations of the influence of edge disorder
on transport in graphene nanoribbon metal oxide semiconductor field-effect
transistors (MOSFETs) are reported. The addition of edge disorder significantly
reduces ON-state currents and increases OFF-state currents, and introduces wide
variability across devices. These effects decrease as ribbon widths increase
and as edges become smoother. However the bandgap decreases with increasing
width, thereby increasing the band-to-band tunneling mediated subthreshold
leakage current even with perfect nanoribbons. These results suggest that
without atomically precise edge control during fabrication, MOSFET performance
gains through use of graphene will be difficult to achieve.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
Human papillomavirus E2 regulates SRSF3 (SRp20) to promote capsid protein expression in infected differentiated keratinocytes
The human papillomavirus (HPV) life cycle is tightly linked to differentiation of the infected epithelial cell suggesting a sophisticated interplay between host cell metabolism and virus replication. Previously we demonstrated in differentiated keratinocytes in vitro and in vivo that HPV16 infection caused increased levels of the cellular SR splicing factors (SRSFs) SRSF1 (ASF/SF2), SRSF2 (SC35) and SRSF3 (SRp20). Moreover, the viral E2 transcription and replication factor that is expressed at high levels in differentiating keratinocytes could bind and control activity of the SRSF1 gene promoter. Here we reveal that E2 proteins of HPV16 and HPV31 control expression of SRSFs 1, 2 and 3 in a differentiation-dependent manner. E2 has the greatest trans-activation effect on expression of SRSF3. siRNA depletion experiments in two different models of the HPV16 life cycle (W12E and NIKS16) and one model of the HPV31 life cycle (CIN612-9E) revealed that only SRSF3 contributed significantly to regulation of late events in the virus life cycle. Increased levels of SRSF3 are required for L1 mRNA and capsid protein expression. Capsid protein expression was regulated specifically by SRSF3 and appeared independent of other SRSFs. Taken together these data suggest a significant role of the HPV E2 protein in regulating late events in the HPV life cycle through transcriptional regulation of SRSF3 expression.
IMPORTANCE Human papillomavirus replication is accomplished in concert with differentiation of the infected epithelium. Virus capsid protein expression is confined to the upper epithelial layers so as to avoid immune detection. In this study we demonstrate that the viral E2 transcription factor activates the promoter of the cellular SRSF3 RNA processing factor. SRSF3 is required for expression of the E4̂L1 mRNA and so controls expression of the HPV L1 capsid protein. Thus we reveal a new dimension of virus-host interaction crucial for production of infectious virus. SRSF proteins are known drug targets. Therefore, this study provides an excellent basis for developing strategies to regulate capsid protein production in the infected epithelium and production of new virions
Transport properties of anyons in random topological environments
The quasi one-dimensional transport of Abelian and non-Abelian anyons is
studied in the presence of a random topological background. In particular, we
consider the quantum walk of an anyon that braids around islands of randomly
filled static anyons of the same type. Two distinct behaviours are identified.
We analytically demonstrate that all types of Abelian anyons localise purely
due to the statistical phases induced by their random anyonic environment. In
contrast, we numerically show that non-Abelian Ising anyons do not localise.
This is due to their entanglement with the anyonic environment that effectively
induces dephasing. Our study demonstrates that localisation properties strongly
depend on non-local topological interactions and it provides a clear
distinction in the transport properties of Abelian and non-Abelian statistics.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figure
Exact spin dynamics of the 1/r^2 supersymmetric t-J model in a magnetic field
The dynamical spin structure factor S^{zz}(Q,omega) in the small momentum
region is derived analytically for the one-dimensional supersymmetric t-J model
with 1/r^2 interaction. Strong spin-charge separation is found in the spin
dynamics. The structure factor S^{zz}(Q,omega) with a given spin polarization
does not depend on the electron density in the small momentum region. In the
thermodynamic limit, only two spinons and one antispinon (magnon) contribute to
S^{zz}(Q,omega). These results are derived via solution of the SU(2,1)
Sutherland model in the strong coupling limit.Comment: 20 pages, 8 figures. Accepted for publication in J.Phys.
Management of incidentally detected heart murmurs in dogs and cats
A dog or a cat has an incidentally detected heart murmur if the murmur is an unexpected discovery during a veterinary consultation that was not initially focused on the cardiovascular system. This document presents approaches for managing dogs and cats that have incidentally-detected heart murmurs, with an emphasis on murmur characteristics, signalment profiling, and multifactorial decision-making to choose an optimal course for a given patient
Microscopic Functional Integral Theory of Quantum Fluctuations in Double-Layer Quantum Hall Ferromagnets
We present a microscopic theory of zero-temperature order parameter and
pseudospin stiffness reduction due to quantum fluctuations in the ground state
of double-layer quantum Hall ferromagnets. Collective excitations in this
systems are properly described only when interactions in both direct and
exchange particle-hole channels are included. We employ a functional integral
approach which is able to account for both, and comment on its relation to
diagrammatic perturbation theory. We also discuss its relation to Gaussian
fluctuation approximations based on Hubbard-Stratonovich-transformation
representations of interactions in ferromagnets and superconductors. We derive
remarkably simple analytical expressions for the correlation energy,
renormalized order parameter and renormalized pseudospin stiffness.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figure
Bilayer Quantum Hall Systems at Filling Factor \nu=2: An Exact Diagonalisation Study
We present an exact diagonalisation study of bilayer quantum Hall systems at
a filling factor of two in the spherical geometry. We find the
high-Zeeman-coupling phase boundary of the broken symmetry canted
antiferromagnet is given exactly by previous Hartree-Fock mean-field theories,
but that the state's stability at weak Zeeman coupling has been qualitatively
overestimated. In the absence of interlayer tunneling, degeneracies occur
between total spin multiplets due to the Hamiltonian's invariance under
independent spin-rotations in top and bottom two-dimensional electron layers.Comment: Some remarks added in the discussion of the phase diagram, and some
typos corrected. Version to be published in Phys. Rev. Let
Statistics of quantum transport in chaotic cavities with broken time-reversal symmetry
The statistical properties of quantum transport through a chaotic cavity are
encoded in the traces \T={\rm Tr}(tt^\dag)^n, where is the transmission
matrix. Within the Random Matrix Theory approach, these traces are random
variables whose probability distribution depends on the symmetries of the
system. For the case of broken time-reversal symmetry, we present explicit
closed expressions for the average value and for the variance of \T for all
. In particular, this provides the charge cumulants \Q of all orders. We
also compute the moments of the conductance . All the
results obtained are exact, {\it i.e.} they are valid for arbitrary numbers of
open channels.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures. v2-minor change
The Research Excellence Framework (REF): Assessing the impact of social work research on society
This paper reviews one aspect, impact, of the forthcoming assessment of research in UK universities, the Research Excellence Framework (REF), and examines its meaning and potential for enhanced partnerships between social work practice and academia in the context of the current economic crisis. Examples of case studies being developed to show how research has societal impact are described and some of the complexities of what, on the surface appears to echo social work 19s desire to make a positive difference to the lives of people in society, are drawn out. The importance of the REF for the integration of social work practice and academia have been rehearsed many times. This paper argues that making an impact is everybody 19s concern and practitioners and those who use social work services and their carers have a role to play in its creation and identification
Magnetic Anisotropy in Quantum Hall Ferromagnets
We show that the sign of magnetic anisotropy energy in quantum Hall
ferromagnets is determined by a competition between electrostatic and exchange
energies. Easy-axis ferromagnets tend to occur when Landau levels whose states
have similar spatial profiles cross. We report measurements of integer QHE
evolution with magnetic-field tilt. Reentrant behavior observed for the QHE at high tilt angles is attributed to easy-axis anisotropy. This
interpretation is supported by a detailed calculation of the magnetic
anisotropy energy.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
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