252 research outputs found
Gamma-Ray Bursts via Pair Plasma Fireballs from Heated Neutron Stars
In this paper we model the emission from a relativistically expanding
electron-positron pair plasma fireball originating near the surface of a heated
neutron star. This pair fireball is deposited via the annihilation of neutrino
pairs emanating from the surface of the hot neutron star. The heating of
neutron stars may occur in close neutron star binary systems near their last
stable orbit. We model the relativistic expansion and subsequent emission of
the plasma and find 10^51 to 10^52 ergs in gamma-rays are produced with
spectral and temporal properties consistent with observed gamma-ray bursts.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. Submitted to the Conference Proceedings of the
5th Huntsville Gamma-Ray Burst Symposiu
Complementary Metal-oxide Semiconductor-compatible Detector Materials with Enhanced 1550 nm Responsivity via Sn-doping of Ge/Si(100)
Previously developed methods used to grow Ge1−ySny alloys on Si are extended to Sn concentrations in the 1019−1020 cm−3 range. These concentrations are shown to be sufficient to engineer large increases in the responsivity of detectors operating at 1550 nm. The dopant levels of Sn are incorporated at temperatures in the 370–390 °C range, yielding atomically smooth layers devoid of threading defects at high growth rates of 15–30 nm/min. These conditions are far more compatible with complementary metal-oxide semiconductor processing than the high growth and processing temperatures required to achieve the same responsivity via tensile strain in pure Ge on Si. A detailed study of a detector based on a Sn-doped Ge layer with 0.25% (1.1 × 1020 cm−3) Sn range demonstrates the responsivity enhancement and shows much better I-V characteristics than previously fabricated detectors based on Ge1−ySny alloys with y = 0.02
Oral Migalastat HCl Leads to Greater Systemic Exposure and Tissue Levels of Active α-Galactosidase A in Fabry Patients when Co-Administered with Infused Agalsidase.
UnlabelledMigalastat HCl (AT1001, 1-Deoxygalactonojirimycin) is an investigational pharmacological chaperone for the treatment of α-galactosidase A (α-Gal A) deficiency, which leads to Fabry disease, an X-linked, lysosomal storage disorder. The currently approved, biologics-based therapy for Fabry disease is enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) with either agalsidase alfa (Replagal) or agalsidase beta (Fabrazyme). Based on preclinical data, migalastat HCl in combination with agalsidase is expected to result in the pharmacokinetic (PK) enhancement of agalsidase in plasma by increasing the systemic exposure of active agalsidase, thereby leading to increased cellular levels in disease-relevant tissues. This Phase 2a study design consisted of an open-label, fixed-treatment sequence that evaluated the effects of single oral doses of 150 mg or 450 mg migalastat HCl on the PK and tissue levels of intravenously infused agalsidase (0.2, 0.5, or 1.0 mg/kg) in male Fabry patients. As expected, intravenous administration of agalsidase alone resulted in increased α-Gal A activity in plasma, skin, and peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) compared to baseline. Following co-administration of migalastat HCl and agalsidase, α-Gal A activity in plasma was further significantly increased 1.2- to 5.1-fold compared to agalsidase administration alone, in 22 of 23 patients (95.6%). Importantly, similar increases in skin and PBMC α-Gal A activity were seen following co-administration of migalastat HCl and agalsidase. The effects were not related to the administered migalastat HCl dose, as the 150 mg dose of migalastat HCl increased α-Gal A activity to the same extent as the 450 mg dose. Conversely, agalsidase had no effect on the plasma PK of migalastat. No migalastat HCl-related adverse events or drug-related tolerability issues were identified.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov NCT01196871
Gamma-Ray Bursts via the Neutrino Emission from Heated Neutron Stars
A model is proposed for gamma-ray bursts based upon a neutrino burst of about
10^52 ergs lasting a few seconds above a heated collapsing neutron star. This
type of thermal neutrino burst is suggested by relativistic hydrodynamic
studies of the compression, heating, and collapse of close binary neutron stars
as they approach their last stable orbit, but may arise from other sources as
well. We present a hydrodynamic simulation of the formation and evolution of
the pair plasma associated with such a neutrino burst. This pair plasma leads
to the production of ~10^51 - 10^52 ergs in gamma-rays with spectral and
temporal properties consistent with observed gamma-ray bursts.Comment: Final version. 30 pages, 10 figures, 6 tables, accepted for
publication in The Astrophysical Journa
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Morphological stability during solidification of silicon incorporating metallic impurities
We study the stability of a planar solidification front during pulsed laser melting-induced rapid solidification of silicon containing high concentrations of ion-implated metallic impurities. We calculate the critical impurity concentration for destabilizing plane-front solidification, and introduce the "amplification coefficient", which is an empirical parameter describing the degree of amplification that must accord between the time the planar liquid-solid interface first becomes unstable, and the time of formation of morphological features of interface breakdown that are later observed in the microstructure. By connecting our calculations to experimental observations from the literature we determine this parameter for Au, Co, Cr, Fe, Ga, In, and Zn in (100) Si and Ti in (111) Si, and find that it increases with impurity diffusive speed vd approximately as vd^.56. We present an approximate but simple method of estimating the maximum impurity concentration that may be incorporated in a surface layer of a given thickness without the appearance of cellular breakdown.Engineering and Applied Science
Supersaturating silicon with transition metals by ion implantation and pulsed laser melting
We investigate the possibility of creating an intermediate band semiconductor by supersaturating Si with a range of transition metals (Au, Co, Cr, Cu, Fe, Pd, Pt, W, and Zn) using ion implantation followed by pulsed laser melting (PLM). Structural characterization shows evidence of either surface segregation or cellular breakdown in all transition metals investigated, preventing the formation of high supersaturations. However, concentration-depth profiling reveals that regions of Si supersaturated with Au and Zn are formed below the regions of cellular breakdown. Fits to the concentration-depth profile are used to estimate the diffusive speeds, v D, of Au and Zn, and put lower bounds on v D of the other metals ranging from 10² to 10⁴ m/s. Knowledge of v D is used to tailor the irradiation conditions and synthesize single-crystal Si supersaturated with 10¹⁹ Au/cm³ without cellular breakdown. Values of v D are compared to those for other elements in Si. Two independent thermophysical properties, the solute diffusivity at the melting temperature, D s(T m), and the equilibrium partition coefficient, k e, are shown to simultaneously affect v D. We demonstrate a correlation between v D and the ratio D s(T m)/k e ⁰·⁶⁷, which is exhibited for Group III, IV, and V solutes but not for the transition metals investigated. Nevertheless, comparison with experimental results suggests that D s(T m)/k e ⁰·⁶⁷ might serve as a metric for evaluating the potential to supersaturate Si with transition metals by PLM.Research at Harvard was supported by The U.S. Army
Research Office under contracts W911NF-12-1-0196 and
W911NF-09-1-0118. M.T.W. and T.B.’s work was supported
by the U.S. Army Research Laboratory and the U.S.
Army Research Office under Grant No. W911NF-10-1-0442,
and the National Science Foundation (NSF) Faculty Early
Career Development Program ECCS-1150878 (to T.B.).
M.J.S., J.T.S., M.T.W., T.B., and S.G. acknowledge a generous
gift from the Chesonis Family Foundation and support in
part by the National Science Foundation (NSF) and the
Department of Energy (DOE) under NSF CA No. EEC-
1041895. S.C. and J.S.W.’s work was supported by The
Australian Research Council. J.M. was supported by a
National Research Council Research Associateship
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