299 research outputs found
Orientation-dependent bending properties of selectively-filled photonic crystal fibres
A selective-filling technique was demonstrated to improve the optical properties of photonic crystal fibres (PCFs). Such a technique can be used to fill one or more fluid samples selectively into desired air holes. The technique is based on drilling a hole or carving a groove on the surface of a PCF to expose selected air holes to atmosphere by the use of a micromachining system comprising of a femtosecond infrared laser and a microscope. The exposed section was immersed into a fluid and the air holes are then filled through the well-known capillarity action [1, 2]. Provided two or more grooves are fabricated on different locations and different orientation along the fibre surface, different fluids may be filled into different air-holes to form a hybrid fibre. As an example, we filled half of a pure-silica PCF by a fluid with n=1.480 by carving a rectangular groove on the fibre (Figure 1). Consequently, the half-filled PCF became a bandgap-guiding structure (upper half), resulted from a higher refractive index in the fluid rods than in the fibre core [3], and three bandgaps were observed within the wavelength range from 600 to 1700 nm. Whereas, the lower half (unfilled holes) of the fibre remains an air/silica index-guiding structure (Figure 1(b)). When the hybrid PCF is bent, its bandgaps gradually narrowed, resulted from the shifts of the bandgap edges. The bandgap edges had distinct bend-sensitivities when the hybrid PCF was bent toward different directions. Especially, the bandgaps are hardly affected when the half-filled PCF was bent toward the fluid-filled region. Such unique bend properties could be used to monitor simultaneously the bend directions and the curvature of the engineering structures
Selectively fluid-filled microstructured optical fibers and applications
A versatile technique based on micromachining is demonstrated to fill selectively one or several different types of fluids into desired air holes in a microstructured optical fiber (MOF). Unique optical properties and applications of the selective-filled MOF are investigated
Discovery of an extra hard spectral component in the high-energy afterglow emission of GRB 130427A
The extended high-energy gamma-ray (>100 MeV) emission occurred after the
prompt gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) is usually characterized by a single power-law
spectrum, which has been explained as the afterglow synchrotron radiation. The
afterglow inverse-Compton emission has long been predicted to be able to
produce a high-energy component as well, but previous observations have not
revealed such a signature clearly, probably due to the small number of >10 GeV
photons even for the brightest GRBs known so far. In this Letter, we report on
the Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT) observations of the >100 MeV emission from
the very bright and nearby GRB 130427A. We characterize the time-resolved
spectra of the GeV emission from the GRB onset to the afterglow phase. By
performing time-resolved spectral fits of GRB 130427A, we found a strong
evidence of an extra hard spectral component that exists in the extended
high-energy emission of this GRB. We argue that this hard component may arise
from the afterglow inverse Compton emission.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, 2 tables, ApJL, in pres
H2A ubiquitination is essential for Polycomb Repressive Complex 1-mediated gene regulation in Marchantia polymorpha
Background Polycomb repressive complex 1 (PRC1) and PRC2 are chromatin regulators maintaining transcriptional repression. The deposition of H3 lysine 27 tri-methylation (H3K27me3) by PRC2 is known to be required for transcriptional repression, whereas the contribution of H2A ubiquitination (H2Aub) in the Polycomb repressive system remains unclear in plants. Results We directly test the requirement of H2Aub for gene regulation in Marchantia polymorpha by generating point mutations in H2A that prevent ubiquitination by PRC1. These mutants show reduced H3K27me3 levels on the same target sites as mutants defective in PRC1 subunits MpBMI1 and the homolog MpBMI1L, revealing that PRC1-catalyzed H2Aub is essential for Polycomb system function. Furthermore, by comparing transcriptome data between mutants in MpH2A and MpBMI1/1L, we demonstrate that H2Aub contributes to the PRC1-mediated transcriptional level of genes and transposable elements. Conclusion Together, our data demonstrates that H2Aub plays a direct role in H3K27me3 deposition and is required for PRC1-mediated transcriptional changes in both genes and transposable elements in Marchantia
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