13,718 research outputs found
Generalized Theory of Forster-Type Nonradiative Energy Transfer in Nanostructures with Mixed Dimensionality
Cataloged from PDF version of article.Forster-type nonradiative energy transfer (NRET) is widely used, especially utilizing nanostructures in different combinations and configurations. However, the existing well-accepted Forster theory is only for the case of a single particle serving as a donor together with another particle serving as an acceptor. There are also other special cases previously studied; however, there is no complete picture and unified understanding. Therefore, there is a strong need for a complete theory that models Forster-type NRET for the cases of mixed dimensionality including all combinations and configurations. We report a generalized theory for the Forster-type, NRET, which includes the derivation of the effective dielectric function due to the donor in different confinement geometries and the derivation of transfer rates distance dependencies due to the acceptor in different confinement geometries, resulting in a complete picture and understanding of the mixed dimensionality
Changes in Crude Protein and Fiber Contents of Small Grain Cereals for Forage over Time
Oat, triticale, wheat and barley are small grain cereals used as forage in many temperate Mexican regions. The objective was to determine crude protein and van Soest fiber contents of these forages cut at 80, 96, 108, 121, 138 and 153 days after seeding. Cultivars used were: Chihuahua (OC) for oat; Arne (TA), Bicentenario (TB) and Siglo XXI (TS) for triticale; Saturno (WS) for wheat; and San Marcos (BSM) for barley. Experiment was under greenhouse conditions from November 2015 to May 2016. Crude protein (CP), neutral (NDF) and acid (ADF) detergents fibers were determined on the forage harvested at each time. Statistical analysis was by linear regression with cultivar as a dummy variable (R2= 0.5843 to 0.6861), response variables were CP, NDF and ADF contents over days after seeding (R2≥ 0.7693), the model included first grade interaction. Models developed were compared based on the slopes calculated. First grade interaction was significant (p\u3c 0.05) in CP due to the pattern change in TS, and in NDF due to the pattern change in OC and in ADF due to the pattern change in TA. So that, individual models and coefficient confident intervals were developed for each species and cultivar to compare them and to declare similarities or differences at p\u3c 0.05. Overall, CP decreased (p\u3e 0.05) from 0.11 to 0.39; while NDF and ADF increased (p\u3e 0.05) from 0.60 to 1.10, and from 0.20 to 0.83 percentage units day-1 respectively. It was concluded that crude protein, neutral and acid detergent fiber contents in small grain cereals are not dependent on harvesting time when measured at development stages close to physiological maturity
Phonon-Assisted Exciton Transfer into Silicon Using Nanoemitters: The Role of Phonons and Temperature Effects in Forster Resonance Energy Transfer
Cataloged from PDF version of article.We study phonon-assisted Forster resonance energy transfer (FRET) into an indirect band-gap semiconductor using nanoemitters. The unusual temperature dependence of this energy transfer, which is measured using the donor nanoemitters of quantum dot (QD) layers integrated on the acceptor monocrystalline bulk silicon as a model system, is predicted by a phonon-assisted exciton transfer model proposed here. The model includes the phonon-mediated optical properties of silicon, while considering the contribution from the multimonolayer-equivalent QD film to the nonradiative energy transfer, which is derived with a d(-3) distance dependence. The FRET efficiencies are experimentally observed to decrease at cryogenic temperatures, which are well explained by the model considering the phonon depopulation in the indirect band-gap acceptor together with the changes in the quantum yield of the donor. These understandings will be crucial for designing FRET-enabled sensitization of silicon based high-efficiency excitonic systems using nanoemitters
EURONU WP6 2009 yearly report: Update of the physics potential of Nufact, superbeams and betabeams
Many studies in the last ten years have shown that we can measure the unknown
angle theta13, discover leptonic CP violation and determine the neutrino
hierarchy in more precise neutrino oscillation experiments, searching for the
subleading channel nue -> numu in the atmospheric range. In this first report
of WP6 activities the following new results are reviewed: (1) Re-evaluation of
the physics reach of the upcoming generation of experiments to measure theta13
and delta; (2) New tools to explore a larger parameter space as needed beyond
the standard scenario; (3) Neutrino Factory: (a) evaluation of the physics
reach of a Nufact regards sterile neutrinos; (b) evaluation of the physics
reach of a Nufact as regards non-standard interactions; (c) evaluation of the
physics reach of a Nufact as regards violation of unitarity; (d) critical
assessment on long baseline tau-detection at Nufact; (e) new physics searches
at a near detector in a Nufact; (4) Beta-beams: (a) choice of ions and location
for a gamma = 100 CERN-based beta-beam; (b) re-evaluation of atmospheric
neutrino background for the gamma = 100 beta-beam scenario; (c) study of a two
baseline beta-beam; (d) measuring absolute neutrino mass with beta-beams; (e)
progress on monochromatic beta-beams; (5) Update of the physics potential of
the SPL super-beam. Eventually, we present an updated comparison of the
sensitivity to theta13, delta and the neutrino mass hierarchy of several of the
different proposed facilities.Comment: 2009 Yearly report of the Working Package 6 (Physics) of the EUROnu
FP7 EU project. 55 pages, 21 figures
Excitonic enhancement of nonradiative energy transfer to bulk silicon with the hybridization of cascaded quantum dots
Cataloged from PDF version of article.We report enhanced sensitization of silicon through nonradiative energy transfer (NRET) of the excitons in an energy-gradient structure composed of a cascaded bilayer of green-and red-emitting CdTe quantum dots (QDs) on bulk silicon. Here NRET dynamics were systematically investigated comparatively for the cascaded energy-gradient and mono-dispersed QD structures at room temperature. We show experimentally that NRET from the QD layer into silicon is enhanced by 40% in the case of an energy-gradient cascaded structure as compared to the mono-dispersed structures, which is in agreement with the theoretical analysis based on the excited state population-depopulation dynamics of the QDs. (C) 2013 AIP Publishing LLC
Forage Quality of Cereal–Common Vetch at Different Age and Proportions
Cereal plant age at harvesting and the proportion of vetch in the harvested forage from cereal-common vetch mixtures might influence total forage quality. The objectives were to determine forage of a forage mixture cereal-vetch, from cereal harvested at two development stages and vetch at different proportion. Cereals were oats and triticale, cultivars: Chihuahua, Bicentenario and Siglo XXI, the last two were triticale; cereal development stages at harvest were: 50% flowering and hard grain. Vetch was harvested at two development stages: 100% flowering and pod formation, while vetch proportions in the forage mix were: 0, 0.25, 0.5, 0.75 and 1.0. Forage quality measures were: crude protein (CP), neutral detergent fiber (NDF), organic matter (OM), ether extract (EE) and dry matter digestibility (DMD). Statistical analysis was by linear regression; cereal cultivar was a categorical variable. Models developed showed a R2≥0.7871. As vetch proportion increased in the mix so did CP while NDF decreased, CP increased from 9.2 to 17.5% and 9.2 to 14.4% and NDF decreased from 71.4 to 57.6% and 79.1 to 58.9%, as vetch proportion increased, when cereal was harvested at 50% flowering and grain hard, respectively. OM and EE showed small changes over vetch proportion and cereal development stage. DMD showed major (p\u3c 0.05) changes with cereal development stage at harvesting. It was concluded that forage quality of cereal-vetch mix depends on vetch proportion and stage of development of the cereal at the time of harvest
Proper motions of the HH1 jet
We describe a new method for determining proper motions of extended objects,
and a pipeline developed for the application of this method. We then apply this
method to an analysis of four epochs of [S~II] HST images of the HH~1 jet
(covering a period of ~yr).
We determine the proper motions of the knots along the jet, and make a
reconstruction of the past ejection velocity time-variability (assuming
ballistic knot motions). This reconstruction shows an "acceleration" of the
ejection velocities of the jet knots, with higher velocities at more recent
times. This acceleration will result in an eventual merging of the knots in
~yr and at a distance of from the outflow source, close to
the present-day position of HH~1.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figure
Pasture Attributes and Live-Weight Gain of Lambs Grazing with Different Supplementation Levels
The purpose of this study was to determine pasture attributes, liveweight gain and stocking rate from a mixed pasture grazed by lambs recieving different supplementation levels. There were four treatments: in two, lambs grazed at 4 or 8% herbage allowance, no supplement; in the other two, lambs grazed at 4% herbage allowance plus a concentrate to cover 25 and 30 or 50 and 60% of estimated daily needs of metabolizable energy and crude protein. Pasture was of perennial and annual ryegrass, orchard grass and red clover. Pre and postgrazing forage mass, crude protein and dead material were not different (P\u3e.05) among treatments. The highest live-weight gain was 145g/lamb/day found in lambs recieving concentrate. Stocking rate was 56 lambs/ha in 4% allowance-treatments and 29 lambs/ha with 8% allowance. Supplementation did not influence pasture attributes while giving higher live-weight gain in lambs. Doubling herbage allowance gave lower lamb performance than offering a concentrate and decreased stocking rate
General type-2 radial basis function neural network: a data-driven fuzzy model
This paper proposes a new General Type-2 Radial Basis Function Neural Network (GT2-RBFNN) that is functionally equivalent to a GT2 Fuzzy Logic System (FLS) of either Takagi-Sugeno-Kang (TSK) or Mamdani type. The neural structure of the GT2-RBFNN is based on the alpha-planes representation, in which the antecedent and consequent part of each fuzzy rule uses GT2 Fuzzy Sets (FSs). To reduce the iterative nature of the Karnik-Mendel algorithm, the Enhaned-Karnik-Mendel (EKM) type-reduction and three popular direct-defuzzification methods, namely the 1) Nie-Tan approach (NT), the 2) Wu-Mendel uncertain bounds method (WU) and the 3) Biglarbegian-Melek-Mendel algorithm (BMM) are employed. For that reason, this paper provides four different neural structures of the GT2-RBFNN and their structural and parametric optimisation. Such optimisation is a two-stage methodology that first implements an Iterative Information Granulation approach to estimate the antecedent parameters of each fuzzy rule. Secondly, each consequent part and the fuzzy rule base of the GT2-RBFNN is trained and optimised using an Adaptive Gradient Descent method (AGD) respectively. Several benchmark data sets, including a problem of identification of a nonlinear system and a chaotic time series are considered. The reported comparative analysis of experimental results is used to evaluate the performance of the suggested GT2 RBFNN with respect to other popular methodologies
Chemotherapeutic agent 5-fluorouracil increases survival of SOD1 mouse model of ALS
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a lethal motor neuron disease with no cure. Currently there are only two ALS drugs approved by the FDA, both with a limited therapeutic effect. In the search for drug candidates for ALS, we studied the effect of known stem cell mobilizing agents (treatment) and antimetabolite 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) (anti-treatment) in SOD1G93A model of ALS. Surprisingly, we found that anti-cancer drug 5-FU increases lifespan, delays the disease onset and improves motor performance in ALS mice. Although we were not able to demonstrate the mechanistic basis of the beneficial 5-FU action in ALS mice, our findings suggest that 5-FU or similar drugs are possible drug candidates for the treatment of motor neuron diseases through drug repurposing
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