349 research outputs found
Stimulated radiative laser cooling
Building a refrigerator based on the conversion of heat into optical energy
is an ongoing engineering challenge. Under well-defined conditions, spontaneous
anti-Stokes fluorescence of a dopant material in a host matrix is capable of
lowering the host temperature. The fluorescence is conveying away a part of the
thermal energy stored in the vibrational oscillations of the host lattice. In
particular, applying this principle to the cooling of (solid-state) lasers
opens up many potential device applications, especially in the domain of
high-power lasers. In this paper, an alternative optical cooling scheme is
outlined, leading to radiative cooling of solid-state lasers. It is based on
converting the thermal energy stored in the host, into optical energy by means
of a stimulated nonlinear process, rather than a spontaneous process. This
should lead to better cooling efficiencies and a higher potential of applying
the principle for device applications
Quantum bath refrigeration towards absolute zero: unattainability principle challenged
A minimal model of a quantum refrigerator (QR), i.e. a periodically
phase-flipped two-level system permanently coupled to a finite-capacity bath
(cold bath) and an infinite heat dump (hot bath), is introduced and used to
investigate the cooling of the cold bath towards the absolute zero (T=0).
Remarkably, the temperature scaling of the cold-bath cooling rate reveals that
it does not vanish as T->0 for certain realistic quantized baths, e.g. phonons
in strongly disordered media (fractons) or quantized spin-waves in ferromagnets
(magnons). This result challenges Nernst's third-law formulation known as the
unattainability principle
Twenty-seven mutations with three novel pathologenic variants causing biotinidase deficiency: a report of 203 patients from the southeastern part of Turkey
BACKGROUND: Biotinidase deficiency (BD) is an autosomal recessive inborn error of metabolism characterized by neurologic and cutaneous symptoms and can be detected by newborn screening. Newborn screening for BD was implemented in Turkey at the end of 2008. METHODS: In total, 203 patients who were identified among the infants detected by the newborn screening were later confirmed to have BD through measurement of serum biotinidase activity. We also performed BTD mutation analysis to characterize the genetic profile. RESULTS: Twenty-seven mutations were identified. The most commonly found variants were c.1330G>C (p.D444H), c.1595C>T (p.T532M), c.470G>A (p.R157H), and c.198_104delGCGGCTGinsTCC (p.C33Ffs ) with allele frequencies of 0.387, 0.175, 0.165 and 0.049, respectively. Three novel pathogenic and likely pathogenic variants were identified: p.W140* (c.419G>A), p.S319F (c.956C>T) and p.L69Hfs*24 (c.192_193insCATC). We also identified three mutations reported in just one patient in the past (p.V442Sfs*59 [c.1324delG], p.H447R [c.1340A>G] and p.198delV [c.592_594delGTC]). Although all of the patients were asymptomatic under the treatment of biotin, only one patient, who had the novel c.419G>A homozygous mutation became symptomatic during an episode of acute gastroenteritis with a presentation of ketosis and metabolic acidosis. Among the screened patients, 156 had partial and 47 had profound BD. CONCLUSIONS: We determined the mutation spectra of BD from the southeastern part of Turkey. The results of this study add three more mutations to the total number of mutations described as causing BD
Mucopolysaccharidosis Type-II with Pathognomonic Skin Appearance: A Case with Pebbling Sign
Mucopolysaccharidosis type-II (MPS-II) is an X-linked lysosomal storage disorder. Here, we report an 8-year-old boy with pebbling sign in the scapular region, coarse facies, claw hand, diastolic murmur, and hepatomegaly. With decreased iduronate-2-sulfatase activity and hemizygous mutation in the IDS gene, the diagnosis was MPS-II. Pebbling sign is a rare but pathognomonic sign of MPS-II
Clinical features of 27 Turkish Propionic acidemia patients with 12 novel mutations
Propionic acidemia (PA) is an inherited metabolic disease caused by the deficiency of one of the four biotin-dependent enzymes propionyl-CoA carboxylase (PCC), and is characterized by coma and death in unrecognized patients, additionally late diagnosis leads to severe developmental delay and neurological sequels. Manifestations of PA over time can include growth impairment, intellectual disability, seizures, basal ganglia lesions, pancreatitis, and cardiomyopathy. Other rarely reported complications include optic atrophy, hearing loss, premature ovarian insufficiency, and chronic renal failure. Mutations in PCCA-PCCB genes cause the clinically heterogeneous disease of PA. In this study, we investigate the mutation spectrum of PCCAPCCB genes and phenotypic features of 27 Turkish patients with PA from the South and Southeast parts of Turkey. We report 12 novel PA mutations, five affecting the PCCA gene and 7 affecting the PCCB gene
Determining Pair Interactions from Structural Correlations
We examine metastable configurations of a two-dimensional system of
interacting particles on a quenched random potential landscape and ask how the
configurational pair correlation function is related to the particle
interactions and the statistical properties of the potential landscape.
Understanding this relation facilitates quantitative studies of magnetic flux
line interactions in type II superconductors, using structural information
available from Lorentz microscope images or Bitter decorations.
Previous work by some of us supported the conjecture that the relationship
between pair correlations and interactions in pinned flux line ensembles is
analogous to the corresponding relationship in the theory of simple liquids.
The present paper aims at a more thorough understanding of this relation. We
report the results of numerical simulations and present a theory for the low
density behavior of the pair correlation function which agrees well with our
simulations and captures features observed in experiments. In particular, we
find that the resulting description goes beyond the conjectured classical
liquid type relation and we remark on the differences.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures. See also http://rainbow.uchicago.edu/~grier
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