722 research outputs found
Interlayer pair tunneling and gap anisotropy in YBaCuO
Recent ARPES measurement observed a large -axis gap anisotropy,
, in clean YBaCuO. This
indicates that some sub-dominant component may exist in the -wave
dominant gap. We propose that the interlayer pairing tunneling contribution can
be determined through the investigation of the order parameter anisotropy.
Their potentially observable features in transport and spin dynamics are also
studied.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
More on FOX News: FOXA1 on the horizon of estrogen receptor function and endocrine response
Estrogen receptor α (ER) is a major driver of breast cancer and the target of endocrine therapy. Full disclosure of the cofactors regulating ER interactions with chromatin and its transcriptional regulatory activity is still elusive. Novel genome-wide profiling tools have mapped ER binding events in breast cancer cells and delineated cofactors important in ER activity. Among these, the Forkhead protein FOXA1 is emerging as a key factor dictating global chromatin structure and the transcriptional function of ER in breast and non-breast cancer cells. The significance of FOXA1 in the chromatin interactions and transcriptional regulation of both estrogen- and tamoxifen-bound ER, and in supporting tamoxifen-resistant cell growth, may impact current endocrine therapies
Transport and the Order Parameter of Superconducting SrRuO
Recent experiments make it appear more likely that the order parameter of the
unconventional superconductor SrRuO has a spin-triplet -wave
symmetry. We study ultrasonic absorption and thermal conductivity of
superconducting SrRuO and fit to the recent data for various -wave
candidates. It is shown that only -wave symmetry can account
qualitatively for the transport data.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, references added and update
Anisotropic superconductivity mediated by phonons in layered compounds with weak screening effect
Anisotropic pairing interactions mediated by phonons are examined in layer
systems. It is shown that the screening effects become weaker when the layer
spacing increases. Then the anisotropic components of the pairing interactions
increase with the screening length since the momentum dependence changes. As a
result, various types of anisotropic superconductivity occur depending on the
parameter region. For example, p-wave superconductivity occurs when the
short-range part of Coulomb repulsion is strong and the layer spacing is large.
Two kinds of inter-layer pairing may occur when the layer spacing is not too
large. Although the phonon contribution to the d-wave pairing interaction is
weaker than the p-wave interaction, it increases with the layer spacing.
Relevance of the present results to organic superconductors, high-T_c cuprates,
and Sr_2RuO_4 is discussed.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, (Latex, revtex.sty, epsf.sty
Morning Cortisol Levels and Cognitive Abilities in People With Type 2 Diabetes: The Edinburgh Type 2 Diabetes Study
Low-Energy Quasiparticles in Cuprate Superconductors: A Quantitative Analysis
A residual linear term is observed in the thermal conductivity of
optimally-doped Bi-2212 at very low temperatures whose magnitude is in
excellent agreement with the value expected from Fermi-liquid theory and the
d-wave energy spectrum measured by photoemission spectroscopy, with no
adjustable parameters. This solid basis allows us to make a quantitative
analysis of thermodynamic properties at low temperature and establish that
thermally-excited quasiparticles are a significant, perhaps even the dominant
mechanism in suppressing the superfluid density in cuprate superconductors
Bi-2212 and YBCO.Comment: Revised version with additional page, figure, table and reference; to
appear in Physical Review B (1 August 2000
Shape-based peak identification for ChIP-Seq
We present a new algorithm for the identification of bound regions from
ChIP-seq experiments. Our method for identifying statistically significant
peaks from read coverage is inspired by the notion of persistence in
topological data analysis and provides a non-parametric approach that is robust
to noise in experiments. Specifically, our method reduces the peak calling
problem to the study of tree-based statistics derived from the data. We
demonstrate the accuracy of our method on existing datasets, and we show that
it can discover previously missed regions and can more clearly discriminate
between multiple binding events. The software T-PIC (Tree shape Peak
Identification for ChIP-Seq) is available at
http://math.berkeley.edu/~vhower/tpic.htmlComment: 12 pages, 6 figure
Thermal Conductivity across the Phase Diagram of Cuprates: Low-Energy Quasiparticles and Doping Dependence of the Superconducting Gap
Heat transport in the cuprate superconductors YBaCuO and
LaSrCuO was measured at low temperatures as a function of
doping. A residual linear term kappa_{0}/T is observed throughout the
superconducting region and it decreases steadily as the Mott insulator is
approached from the overdoped regime. The low-energy quasiparticle gap
extracted from kappa_{0}/T is seen to scale closely with the pseudogap. The
ubiquitous presence of nodes and the tracking of the pseudogap shows that the
overall gap remains of the pure d-wave form throughout the phase diagram, which
excludes the possibility of a complex component (ix) appearing at a putative
quantum phase transition and argues against a non-superconducting origin to the
pseudogap. A comparison with superfluid density measurements reveals that the
quasiparticle effective charge is weakly dependent on doping and close to
unity.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figure
Quasiparticle transport in the vortex state of YBa_2Cu_3O_6.9
The effect of vortices on quasiparticle transport in cuprate superconductors
was investigated by measuring the low temperature thermal conductivity of
YBa_2Cu_3O_6.9 in magnetic fields up to 8 T. The residual linear term (as T \to
0) is found to increase with field, directly reflecting the occupation of
extended quasiparticle states. A study for different Zn impurity concentrations
reveals a good agreement with recent calculations for a d-wave superconductor,
thereby shedding light on the nature of scattering by both impurities and
vortices. It also provides a quantitative measure of the gap near the nodes.Comment: 4 pages, 2 included eps figures, significant new analysis wrt other
experiments, to appear in Phys Rev Lett 29 March 199
Food insecurity, school absenteeism and educational attainment of adolescents in Jimma Zone Southwest Ethiopia: a longitudinal study
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Food insecurity not only affects physical growth and health of children but also their intellectual development, school attendance and academic performance. However, most evidences are based on studies in high income countries. Although food insecurity is common in Ethiopia, to what extent it affects school attendance and educational attainment of adolescents is not explored. We hypothesized that food insecure adolescents would be more likely to be absent from school and have lower grades attained after 1 year compared to their food secure peers.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>We used data from 2009 adolescents in the age group of 13-17 years from two consecutive surveys of a five year longitudinal family study in Southwest Ethiopia. A stratified random sampling was used to select participants. Regression analyses were used to compare school absenteeism and the highest grade attained after 1 year of follow-up in food secure and insecure adolescents. The analysis was adjusted for demographic factors, reported illness and workload.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Significantly more (33.0%) food insecure adolescents were absent from school compared with their food secure peers (17.8%, P < 0.001). Multivariable logistic regression analyses showed that after adjusting for gender, place of residence and gender of the household head, adolescent food insecurity [OR 1.77 (1.34-2.33)], severe household food insecurity [OR 1.62 (1.27-2.06)], illness during the past one month before the survey [OR 2.26 (1.68-3.06)], the highest grade aspired to be completed by the adolescent [OR 0.92 (0.88-0.96)], and the number of days that the adolescent had to work per week [OR 1.16 (1.07-1.26)] were independent predictors of school absenteeism. Similarly after controlling for household income and gender of the household head, adolescent food insecurity(P < 0.001), severe household food insecurity(P < 0.001), illness during the last month(P < 0.001) and rural residence(P < 0.001) were inversely associated with highest grade attained, while age of the adolescent(P < 0.001), the highest grade intended to be completed(P < 0.001) and residence in semi urban area(P < 0.001) were positively associated with the highest grade attained.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Adolescent and household food insecurity are positively associated with school absenteeism and a lower educational attainment. Programs aiming to achieve universal access to primary education in food insecure environments should integrate interventions to ensure food security of adolescents.</p
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