5,006 research outputs found
Light-activated resistance switching in SiOx RRAM devices
We report a study of light-activated resistance switching in silicon oxide (SiOx) resistive random
access memory (RRAM) devices. Our devices had an indium tin oxide/SiOx/p-Si Metal/Oxide/
Semiconductor structure, with resistance switching taking place in a 35 nm thick SiOx layer. The
optical activity of the devices was investigated by characterising them in a range of voltage and
light conditions. Devices respond to illumination at wavelengths in the range of 410–650 nm but
are unresponsive at 1152 nm, suggesting that photons are absorbed by the bottom p-type silicon
electrode and that generation of free carriers underpins optical activity. Applied light causes charging
of devices in the high resistance state (HRS), photocurrent in the low resistance state (LRS),
and lowering of the set voltage (required to go from the HRS to LRS) and can be used in conjunction
with a voltage bias to trigger switching from the HRS to the LRS. We demonstrate negative
correlation between set voltage and applied laser power using a 632.8 nm laser source. We propose
that, under illumination, increased electron injection and hence a higher rate of creation of Frenkel
pairs in the oxide—precursors for the formation of conductive oxygen vacancy filaments—reduce
switching voltages. Our results open up the possibility of light-triggered RRAM devices
Anisotropic KPZ growth in 2+1 dimensions: fluctuations and covariance structure
In [arXiv:0804.3035] we studied an interacting particle system which can be
also interpreted as a stochastic growth model. This model belongs to the
anisotropic KPZ class in 2+1 dimensions. In this paper we present the results
that are relevant from the perspective of stochastic growth models, in
particular: (a) the surface fluctuations are asymptotically Gaussian on a
sqrt(ln(t)) scale and (b) the correlation structure of the surface is
asymptotically given by the massless field.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figure
The TAOS Project: Upper Bounds on the Population of Small KBOs and Tests of Models of Formation and Evolution of the Outer Solar System
We have analyzed the first 3.75 years of data from TAOS, the Taiwanese
American Occultation Survey. TAOS monitors bright stars to search for
occultations by Kuiper Belt Objects (KBOs). This dataset comprises 5e5
star-hours of multi-telescope photometric data taken at 4 or 5 Hz. No events
consistent with KBO occultations were found in this dataset. We compute the
number of events expected for the Kuiper Belt formation and evolution models of
Pan & Sari (2005), Kenyon & Bromley (2004), Benavidez & Campo Bagatin (2009),
and Fraser (2009). A comparison with the upper limits we derive from our data
constrains the parameter space of these models. This is the first detailed
comparison of models of the KBO size distribution with data from an occultation
survey. Our results suggest that the KBO population is comprised of objects
with low internal strength and that planetary migration played a role in the
shaping of the size distribution.Comment: 18 pages, 16 figures, Aj submitte
Antimitogenic effect of bitter taste receptor agonists on airway smooth muscle cells
© 2016 the American Physiological Society. Airway remodeling is a hallmark feature of asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Clinical studies and animal models have demonstrated increased airway smooth muscle (ASM) mass, and ASM thickness is correlated with severity of the disease. Current medications control inflammation and reverse airway obstruction effectively but have limited effect on remodeling. Recently we identified the expression of bitter taste receptors (TAS2R) on ASM cells, and activation with known TAS2R agonists resulted in ASM relaxation and bronchodilation. These studies suggest that TAS2R can be used as new therapeutic targets in the treatment of obstructive lung diseases. To further establish their effectiveness, in this study we aimed to determine the effects of TAS2R agonists on ASM growth and promitogenic signaling. Pretreatment of healthy and asthmatic human ASM cells with TAS2R agonists resulted in a dose-dependent inhibition of ASM proliferation. The antimitogenic effect of TAS2R ligands was not dependent on activation of protein kinase A, protein kinase C, or high/intermediate-conductance calcium-activated K+ channels. Immunoblot analyses revealed that TAS2R agonists inhibit growth factor-activated protein kinase B phosphorylation without affecting the availability of phosphatidylinositol 3,4,5-trisphosphate, suggesting TAS2R agonists block signaling downstream of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase. Furthermore, the antimitogenic effect of TAS2R agonists involved inhibition of induced transcription factors (activator protein-1, signal transducer and activator of transcription-3, E2 factor, nuclear factor of activated T cells) and inhibition of expression of multiple cell cycle regulatory genes, suggesting a direct inhibition of cell cycle progression. Collectively, these findings establish the antimitogenic effect of TAS2R agonists and identify a novel class of receptors and signaling pathways that can be targeted to reduce or prevent airway remodeling as well as bronchoconstriction in obstructive airway disease
On Dimer Models and Closed String Theories
We study some aspects of the recently discovered connection between dimer
models and D-brane gauge theories. We argue that dimer models are also
naturally related to closed string theories on non compact orbifolds of \BC^2
and \BC^3, via their twisted sector R charges, and show that perfect
matchings in dimer models correspond to twisted sector states in the closed
string theory. We also use this formalism to study the combinatorics of some
unstable orbifolds of \BC^2.Comment: 1 + 25 pages, LaTeX, 11 epsf figure
LCANets++: Robust Audio Classification using Multi-layer Neural Networks with Lateral Competition
Audio classification aims at recognizing audio signals, including speech
commands or sound events. However, current audio classifiers are susceptible to
perturbations and adversarial attacks. In addition, real-world audio
classification tasks often suffer from limited labeled data. To help bridge
these gaps, previous work developed neuro-inspired convolutional neural
networks (CNNs) with sparse coding via the Locally Competitive Algorithm (LCA)
in the first layer (i.e., LCANets) for computer vision. LCANets learn in a
combination of supervised and unsupervised learning, reducing dependency on
labeled samples. Motivated by the fact that auditory cortex is also sparse, we
extend LCANets to audio recognition tasks and introduce LCANets++, which are
CNNs that perform sparse coding in multiple layers via LCA. We demonstrate that
LCANets++ are more robust than standard CNNs and LCANets against perturbations,
e.g., background noise, as well as black-box and white-box attacks, e.g.,
evasion and fast gradient sign (FGSM) attacks.Comment: This work has been submitted to the IEEE for possible publication.
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An Optical Study of BG Geminorum: An Ellipsoidal Binary with an Unseen Primar Star
We describe optical photometric and spectroscopic observations of the bright
variable BG Geminorum. Optical photometry shows a pronounced ellipsoidal
variation of the K0 I secondary, with amplitudes of ~0.5 mag at VRI and a
period of 91.645 days. A deep primary eclipse is visible for wavelengths <
4400A; a shallower secondary eclipse is present at longer wavelengths. Eclipse
timings and the radial velocity curve of the K0 secondary star indicate an
interacting binary where a lobe-filling secondary, M_2 ~ 0.5 Msun, transfers
material into a extended disk around a massive primary, M_1 ~ 4.5 Msun. The
primary star is either an early B-type star or a black hole. If it did contain
a black hole, BG Gem would be the longest period black hole binary known by a
factor of 10, as well as the only eclipsing black hole binary system.Comment: 27 pages, includes 8 figures and 5 tables, accepted to A
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