5,383 research outputs found
Fast ground-state cooling of mechanical resonator with time-dependent optical cavities
We propose a feasible scheme to cool down a mechanical resonator (MR) in a
three-mirror cavity optomechanical system with controllable external optical
drives. Under the Born-Oppenheimer (BO) approximation, the whole dynamics of
the mechanical resonator and cavities is reduced to that of a time-dependent
harmonic oscillator, whose effective frequency can be controlled through the
optical driving fields. The fast cooling of the MR can be realized by
controlling the amplitude of the optical drives. Significantly, we further show
that the ground-state cooling may be achieved via the three-mirror cavity
optomechanical system without the resolved sideband condition.Comment: Some references including our previous works on cooling of mechanical
resonators are added, and some typos are corrected in this new version.
Comments are welcom
Physiological responses during exposure to carbon dioxide and bioeffluents at levels typically occurring indoors
Perfect Function Transfer in two- and three- dimensions without initialization
We find analytic models that can perfectly transfer, without state
initializati$ or remote collaboration, arbitrary functions in two- and
three-dimensional interacting bosonic and fermionic networks. We elaborate on a
possible implementation of state transfer through bosonic or fermionic atoms
trapped in optical lattices. A significant finding is that the state of a spin
qubit can be perfectly transferred through a fermionic system. Families of
Hamiltonians, both linear and nonlinear, are described which are related to the
linear Boson model and that enable the perfect transfer of arbitrary functions.
This includes entangled states such as decoherence-free subsystems enabling
noise protection of the transferred state.Comment: 4 pages, no figur
Role of miR-148a in hepatitis B associated hepatocellular carcinoma
Hepatitis B virus encoded X antigen (HBx) is a trans-regulatory protein that alters the activity of selected transcription factors and cytoplasmic signal transduction pathways. HBx transcriptionally up-regulates the expression of a unique gene, URG11, which in turn transcriptionally up-regulates beta-catenin, thereby contributing importantly to hepatocarcinogenesis. HBx and URG11 also alter the expression of multiple microRNAs, and by miRNA array analysis, both were shown to promote the expression of miR-148a. Elevated miR-148a was also seen in HBx positive liver samples from infected patients. To study the function of miR-148a, anti-148a was introduced into HepG2 and Hep3B cells stably expressing HBx or stably over-expressing URG11. Anti-miR-148a suppressed cell proliferation, cell cycle progression, cell migration, anchorage independent growth in soft agar and subcutaneous tumor formation in SCID mice. Introduction of anti-miR-148a increased PTEN protein and mRNA expression, suggesting that PTEN was targeted by miR-148a. Anti-miR-148a failed to suppress PTEN expression when co-transfected with reporter gene mutants in the 3'UTR of PTEN mRNA. Introduction of anti-miR-148a also resulted in depressed Akt signaling by HBx and URG11, resulting in decreased expression of beta-catenin. Thus, miR-148a may play a central role in HBx/URG11 mediated HCC, and may be an early diagnostic marker and/or therapeutic target associated with this tumor type.published_or_final_versio
Quantum Group as Semi-infinite Cohomology
We obtain the quantum group as semi-infinite cohomology of the
Virasoro algebra with values in a tensor product of two braided vertex operator
algebras with complementary central charges . Each braided VOA is
constructed from the free Fock space realization of the Virasoro algebra with
an additional q-deformed harmonic oscillator degree of freedom. The braided VOA
structure arises from the theory of local systems over configuration spaces and
it yields an associative algebra structure on the cohomology. We explicitly
provide the four cohomology classes that serve as the generators of
and verify their relations. We also discuss the possible extensions of our
construction and its connection to the Liouville model and minimal string
theory.Comment: 50 pages, 7 figures, minor revisions, typos corrected, Communications
in Mathematical Physics, in pres
Association of Exposure to Particular Matter and Carotid Intima-Media Thickness: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
Background: Long time exposure to particular matter has been linked to myocardial infarction, stroke and blood pressure, but its association with atherosclerosis is not clear. This meta-analysis was aimed at assessing whether PM2.5 and PM10 have an effect on subclinical atherosclerosis measured by carotid intima-media thickness (CIMT). Methods: Pubmed, Ovid Medline, Embase and NICK between 1948 and 31 March 2015 were searched by combining the keywords about exposure to the outcome related words. The random-effects model was applied in computing the change of CIMT and their corresponding 95% confidence interval (95% CI). The effect of potential confounding factors was assessed by stratified analysis and the impact of traffic proximity was also estimated. Results: Among 56 identified studies, 11 articles satisfied the inclusion criteria. In overall analysis increments of 10 μg/m3 in PM2.5 and PM10 were associated with an increase of CIMT (16.79 μm; 95% CI, 4.95–28.63 μm and 4.13 μm; 95% CI, −5.79–14.04 μm, respectively). Results shown in subgroup analysis had reference value for comparing with those of the overall analysis. The impact of traffic proximity on CIMT was uncertain. Conclusions: Exposure to PM2.5 had a significant association with CIMT and for women the effect may be more obvious
Plasma deposition of thin carbonfluorine films on aligned carbon nanotube
The thin film of carbonfluorine was deposited on the surfaces of aligned carbon nanotubes using a plasma polymerization treatment. High-resolution transmission electron microscopy images revealed that a thin film of the polymer layer (20 nm)(20nm) was uniformly deposited on the surfaces of the aligned carbon nanotubes. Time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectroscopy and Fourier transform infrared experiments identified the carbonfluorine thin films on the carbon nanotubes. The plasma deposition mechanism is discussed.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/87850/2/043107_1.pd
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