20,619 research outputs found
Hysteresis Switching Loops in Ag-manganite memristive interfaces
Multilevel resistance states in silver-manganite interfaces are studied both
experimentally and through a realistic model that includes as a main ingredient
the oxygen vacancies diffusion under applied electric fields. The switching
threshold and amplitude studied through Hysteresis Switching Loops are found to
depend critically on the initial state. The associated vacancy profiles further
unveil the prominent role of the effective electric field acting at the
interfaces. While experimental results validate main assumptions of the model,
the simulations allow to disentangle the microscopic mechanisms behind the
resistive switching in metal-transition metal oxide interfaces.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figures, to be published in Jour. of Appl. Phy
Kcne4 deletion sex- and age-specifically impairs cardiac repolarization in mice.
Myocardial repolarization capacity varies with sex, age, and pathology; the molecular basis for this variation is incompletely understood. Here, we show that the transcript for KCNE4, a voltage-gated potassium (Kv) channel β subunit associated with human atrial fibrillation, was 8-fold more highly expressed in the male left ventricle compared with females in young adult C57BL/6 mice (P < 0.05). Similarly, Kv current density was 25% greater in ventricular myocytes from young adult males (P < 0.05). Germ-line Kcne4 deletion eliminated the sex-specific Kv current disparity by diminishing ventricular fast transient outward current (Ito,f) and slowly activating K(+) current (IK,slow1). Kcne4 deletion also reduced Kv currents in male mouse atrial myocytes, by >45% (P < 0.001). As we previously found for Kv4.2 (which generates mouse Ito,f), heterologously expressed KCNE4 functionally regulated Kv1.5 (the Kv α subunit that generates IKslow1 in mice). Of note, in postmenopausal female mice, ventricular repolarization was impaired by Kcne4 deletion, and ventricular Kcne4 expression increased to match that of males. Moreover, castration diminished male ventricular Kcne4 expression 2.8-fold, whereas 5α-dihydrotestosterone (DHT) implants in castrated mice increased Kcne4 expression >3-fold (P = 0.01) to match noncastrated levels. KCNE4 is thereby shown to be a DHT-regulated determinant of cardiac excitability and a molecular substrate for sex- and age-dependent cardiac arrhythmogenesis
Boulder Bands on Lobate Debris Aprons: Does Spatial Clustering Reveal Accumulation History for Martian Glaciations?
Glacial landforms such as lobate debris aprons (LDA) and Concentric Crater Fill (CCF) are the dominant debris-covered glacial landforms on Mars. These landforms represent a volumetrically significant component of the Amazonian water ice budget, however, because small craters (diameter D 0.5-1 km) are poorly retained glacial brain terrain surfaces, and, since the glacial landforms are geologically young, it is challenging to reliably constrain either individual glacial deposit ages or formational sequences in order to determine how quickly the glaciers accumulated. A fundamental question remaining is whether ice deposition and flow that formed LDA occurred episodically during a few, short instances, or whether glacial flow was quasi-continuous over a long period (~108 yr). Because glaciation is thought to be controlled largely by obliquity excursions, a larger question is whether glacial deposits on Mars exhibit regional to global characteristics that can be used to infer synchronicity of flow or degradation
Head-on collisions of boson stars
We study head-on collisions of boson stars in three dimensions. We consider
evolutions of two boson stars which may differ in their phase or have opposite
frequencies but are otherwise identical. Our studies show that these phase
differences result in different late time behavior and gravitational wave
output
Investigation of a direction sensitive sapphire detector stack at the 5 GeV electron beam at DESY-II
Extremely radiation hard sensors are needed in particle physics experiments
to instrument the region near the beam pipe. Examples are beam halo and beam
loss monitors at the Large Hadron Collider, FLASH or XFEL. Currently artificial
diamond sensors are widely used. In this paper single crystal sapphire sensors
are considered as a promising alternative. Industrially grown sapphire wafers
are available in large sizes, are of low cost and, like diamond sensors, can be
operated without cooling. Here we present results of an irradiation study done
with sapphire sensors in a high intensity low energy electron beam. Then, a
multichannel direction-sensitive sapphire detector stack is described. It
comprises 8 sapphire plates of 1 cm^2 size and 525 micro m thickness,
metallized on both sides, and apposed to form a stack. Each second metal layer
is supplied with a bias voltage, and the layers in between are connected to
charge-sensitive preamplifiers. The performance of the detector was studied in
a 5 GeV electron beam. The charge collection efficiency measured as a function
of the bias voltage rises with the voltage, reaching about 10 % at 950 V. The
signal size obtained from electrons crossing the stack at this voltage is about
22000 e, where e is the unit charge.
The signal size is measured as a function of the hit position, showing
variations of up to 20 % in the direction perpendicular to the beam and to the
electric field. The measurement of the signal size as a function of the
coordinate parallel to the electric field confirms the prediction that mainly
electrons contribute to the signal. Also evidence for the presence of a
polarisation field was observed.Comment: 13 pages, 7 figures, 3 table
Constraining the initial temperature and shear viscosity in a hybrid hydrodynamic model of =200 GeV Au+Au collisions using pion spectra, elliptic flow, and femtoscopic radii
A new framework for evaluating hydrodynamic models of relativistic heavy ion
collisions has been developed. This framework, a Comprehesive Heavy Ion Model
Evaluation and Reporting Algorithm (CHIMERA) has been implemented by augmenting
UVH 2+1D viscous hydrodynamic model with eccentricity fluctuations,
pre-equilibrium flow, and the Ultra-relativistic Quantum Molecular Dynamic
(UrQMD) hadronic cascade. A range of initial temperatures and shear viscosity
to entropy ratios were evaluated for four initial profiles, and
scaling with and without pre-equilibrium flow. The model results
were compared to pion spectra, elliptic flow, and femtoscopic radii from 200
GeV Au+Au collisions for the 0--20% centrality range.Two sets of initial
density profiles, scaling with pre-equilibrium flow and
scaling without were shown to provide a consistent description of all three
measurements.Comment: 21 pages, 32 figures, version 3 includes additional text for
clarification, division of figures into more manageable units, and placement
of chi-squared values in tables for ease of viewin
The temperature dependence of the isothermal bulk modulus at 1 bar pressure
It is well established that the product of the volume coefficient of thermal
expansion and the bulk modulus is nearly constant at temperatures higher than
the Debye temperature. Using this approximation allows predicting the values of
the bulk modulus. The derived analytical solution for the temperature
dependence of the isothermal bulk modulus has been applied to ten substances.
The good correlations to the experiments indicate that the expression may be
useful for substances for which bulk modulus data are lacking
Reply to the Comment by S.E. Sebastian and N. Harrison
no abstract for comment
Surface Enhancement of Superconductivity in Tin
The possibility of surface enhancement of superconductivity is examined
experimentally. It is shown that single crystal tin samples with cold-worked
surfaces represent a superconductor with a surface-enhanced order parameter (or
negative surface extrapolation length b), whose magnitude can be controlled.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
- …