1,721 research outputs found
‘Stick that knife in me’: Shane Meadows’ children
This article brings Shane Meadows’ Dead Man's Shoes (2004) into dialogue with the history of the depiction of the child on film. Exploring Meadows’ work for its complex investment in the figure of the child on screen, it traces the limits of the liberal ideology of the child in his cinema and the structures of feeling mobilised by its uses – at once aesthetic and sociological – of technologies of vision
An inverse source problem for the heat equation and the enclosure method
An inverse source problem for the heat equation is considered. Extraction
formulae for information about the time and location when and where the unknown
source of the equation firstly appeared are given from a single lateral
boundary measurement. New roles of the plane progressive wave solutions or
their complex versions for the backward heat equation are given.Comment: 23page
Analog of Magnetoelectric Effect in High-Tc Granular Superconductors
We propose the existence of an electric-field induced nonlinear magnetization
in a weakly coupled granular superconductor due to time-parity violation. As
the field increases the induced magnetization passes from para- to dia-magnetic
behavior. We discuss conditions under which this effect could be experimentally
measured in high-temperature superconductors.Comment: REVTEX (epsf style), 1 PS figure; to appear in Europhysics Letter
Nonlinear Seebeck Effect in a Model Granular Superconductor
The change of the Josephson supercurrent density of a weakly-connected
granular superconductor in response to externally applied arbitrary thermal
gradient dT/dx (nonlinear Seebeck effect) is considered within a model of 3D
Josephson junction arrays. For dT/dx>(dT/dx)_c, where (dT/dx)_c is estimated to
be of the order of 10^4 K/m for YBCO ceramics with an average grain's size of
10 microns, the weak-links-dominated thermopower S (Seebeck coefficient) is
predicted to become strongly dT/dx-dependent.Comment: REVTEX, no figure
GABA-enhanced collective behavior in neuronal axons underlies persistent gamma-frequency oscillations
Gamma (30–80 Hz) oscillations occur in mammalian electroencephalogram in a manner that indicates cognitive relevance. In vitro models of gamma oscillations demonstrate two forms of oscillation: one occurring transiently and driven by discrete afferent input and the second occurring persistently in response to activation of excitatory metabotropic receptors. The mechanism underlying persistent gamma oscillations has been suggested to involve gap-junctional communication between axons of principal neurons, but the precise relationship between this neuronal activity and the gamma oscillation has remained elusive. Here we demonstrate that gamma oscillations coexist with high-frequency oscillations (>90 Hz). High-frequency oscillations can be generated in the axonal plexus even when it is physically isolated from pyramidal cell bodies. They were enhanced in networks by nonsomatic -aminobutyric acid type A (GABAA) receptor activation, were modulated by perisomatic GABAA receptor-mediated synaptic input to principal cells, and provided the phasic input to interneurons required to generate persistent gamma-frequency oscillations. The data suggest that high-frequency oscillations occurred as a consequence of random activity within the axonal plexus. Interneurons provide a mechanism by which this random activity is both amplified and organized into a coherent network rhythm
Nucleation of Stable Superconductivity in YBCO-Films
By means of the linear dynamic conductivity, inductively measured on
epitaxial films between 30mHz and 30 MHz, the transition line to
generic superconductivity is studied in fields between B=0 and 19T. It follows
closely the melting line described recently in terms of a blowout of
thermal vortex loops in clean materials. The critical exponents of the
correlation length and time near , however, seem to be dominated by
some intrinsic disorder. Columnar defects produced by heavy-ion irradiation up
to field-equivalent-doses of lead to a disappointing reduction
of while for the generic line of the pristine film
is recovered. These novel results are also discussed in terms of a loop-driven
destruction of generic superconductivity.Comment: 11 pages including 7 EPS figures, accepted for publication in the
Proceedings of the Spring Meeting of the German Physical Society, Muenster
1999,Festkoerperprobleme/Advances in Solid State Physics 199
A role for fast rhythmic bursting neurons in cortical gamma oscillations in vitro
Basic cellular and network mechanisms underlying gamma frequency oscillations (30–80 Hz) have been well characterized in the hippocampus and associated structures. In these regions, gamma rhythms are seen as an emergent property of networks of principal cells and fast-spiking interneurons. In contrast, in the neocortex a number of elegant studies have shown that specific types of principal neuron exist that are capable of generating powerful gamma frequency outputs on the basis of their intrinsic conductances alone. These fast rhythmic bursting (FRB) neurons (sometimes referred to as "chattering" cells) are activated by sensory stimuli and generate multiple action potentials per gamma period. Here, we demonstrate that FRB neurons may function by providing a large-scale input to an axon plexus consisting of gap-junctionally connected axons from both FRB neurons and their anatomically similar counterparts regular spiking neurons. The resulting network gamma oscillation shares all of the properties of gamma oscillations generated in the hippocampus but with the additional critical dependence on multiple spiking in FRB cells
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