576 research outputs found
Non-Equilibrium Dynamics and Superfluid Ring Excitations in Binary Bose-Einstein Condensates
We revisit a classic study [D. S. Hall {\it et al.}, Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf
81}, 1539 (1998)] of interpenetrating Bose-Einstein condensates in the
hyperfine states and of Rb and observe striking new non-equilibrium
component separation dynamics in the form of oscillating ring-like structures.
The process of component separation is not significantly damped, a finding that
also contrasts sharply with earlier experimental work, allowing a clean first
look at a collective excitation of a binary superfluid. We further demonstrate
extraordinary quantitative agreement between theoretical and experimental
results using a multi-component mean-field model with key additional features:
the inclusion of atomic losses and the careful characterization of trap
potentials (at the level of a fraction of a percent).Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures (low res.), to appear in PR
Hall Coefficient of a Dilute 2D Electron System in Parallel Magnetic Field
Measurements in magnetic fields applied at a small angle with respect to the
2D plane of the electrons of a low-density silicon MOSFET indicate that the
Hall coefficient is independent of parallel field from H=0 to , the
field above which the longitudinal resistance saturates and the electrons have
reached full spin-polarization. This implies that the mobilities of the spin-up
and spin-down electrons remain comparable at all magnetic fields, and suggests
there is strong mixing of spin-up and spin-down electron states.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Parallel magnetic field induced giant magnetoresistance in low density {\it quasi}-two dimensional layers
We provide a possible theoretical explanation for the recently observed giant
positive magnetoresistance in high mobility low density {\it quasi}-two
dimensional electron and hole systems. Our explanation is based on the strong
coupling of the parallel field to the {\it orbital} motion arising from the
{\it finite} layer thickness and the large Fermi wavelength of the {\it
quasi}-two dimensional system at low carrier densities.Comment: 4 pages with 4 figures. Accepted for Publication in Physical Review
Letter
Compared effects of inhibition and exogenous administration of hydrogen sulphide in ischaemia-reperfusion injury
INTRODUCTION: Haemorrhagic shock is associated with an inflammatory response consecutive to ischaemia-reperfusion (I/R) that leads to cardiovascular failure and organ injury. The role of and the timing of administration of hydrogen sulphide (H2S) remain uncertain. Vascular effects of H2S are mainly mediated through K+ATP-channel activation. Herein, we compared the effects of D,L-propargylglycine (PAG), an inhibitor of H2S production, as well as sodium hydrosulphide (NaHS), an H2S donor, on haemodynamics, vascular reactivity and cellular pathways in a rat model of I/R. We also compared the haemodynamic effects of NaHS administered before and 10 minutes after reperfusion. METHODS: Mechanically ventilated and instrumented rats were bled during 60 minutes in order to maintain mean arterial pressure at 40 +/- 2 mmHg. Ten minutes prior to retransfusion, rats randomly received either an intravenous bolus of NaHS (0.2 mg/kg) or vehicle (0.9% NaCl) or PAG (50 mg/kg). PNU, a pore-forming receptor inhibitor of K+ATP channels, was used to assess the role of K+ATP channels. RESULTS: Shock and I/R induced a decrease in mean arterial pressure, lactic acidosis and ex vivo vascular hyporeactivity, which were attenuated by NaHS administered before reperfusion and PNU but not by PAG and NaHS administered 10 minutes after reperfusion. NaHS also prevented aortic inducible nitric oxide synthase expression and nitric oxide production while increasing Akt and endothelial nitric oxide synthase phosphorylation. NaHS reduced JNK activity and p-P38/P38 activation, suggesting a decrease in endothelial cell activation without variation in ERK phosphorylation. PNU + NaHS increased mean arterial pressure when compared with NaHS or PNU alone, suggesting a dual effect of NaHS on vascular reactivity. CONCLUSION: NaHS when given before reperfusion protects against the effects of haemorrhage-induced I/R by acting primarily through a decrease in both proinflammatory cytokines and inducible nitric oxide synthase expression and an upregulation of the Akt/endothelial nitric oxide synthase pathway
In-plane magnetic field-induced spin polarization and transition to insulating behavior in two-dimensional hole systems
Using a novel technique, we make quantitative measurements of the spin
polarization of dilute (3.4 to 6.8*10^{10} cm^{-2}) GaAs (311)A two-dimensional
holes as a function of an in-plane magnetic field. As the field is increased
the system gradually becomes spin polarized, with the degree of spin
polarization depending on the orientation of the field relative to the crystal
axes. Moreover, the behavior of the system turns from metallic to insulating
\textit{before} it is fully spin polarized. The minority-spin population at the
transition is ~8*10^{9} cm^{-2}, close to the density below which the system
makes a transition to an insulating state in the absence of a magnetic field.Comment: 4 pages with figure
Exploring emotional prototypes in a high dimensional TTS latent space
Recent TTS systems are able to generate prosodically varied and realistic speech. However, it is unclear how this prosodic variation contributes to the perception of speakers’ emotional states. Here we use the recent psychological paradigm ‘Gibbs Sampling with People’ to search the prosodic latent space in a trained Global Style Token Tacotron model to explore prototypes of emotional prosody. Participants are recruited online and collectively manipulate the latent space of the generative speech model in a sequentially adaptive way so that the stimulus presented to one group of participants is determined by the response of the previous groups. We demonstrate that (1) particular regions of the model’s latent space are reliably associated with particular emotions, (2) the resulting emotional prototypes are well-recognized by a separate group of human raters, and (3) these emotional prototypes can be effectively transferred to new sentences. Collectively, these experiments demonstrate a novel approach to the understanding of emotional speech by providing a tool to explore the relation between the latent space of generative models and human semantics
Temperature-Dependence of the Resistivity of a Dilute 2D Electron System in High Parallel Magnetic Field
We report measurements of the resistance of silicon MOSFETs as a function of
temperature in high parallel magnetic fields where the 2D system of electrons
has been shown to be fully spin-polarized. A magnetic field suppresses the
metallic behavior observed in the absence of a magnetic field. In a field of
10.8 T, insulating behavior is found for densities up to n_s approximately 1.35
x 10^{11} cm^{-2} or 1.5 n_c; above this density the resistance is a very weak
function of temperature, varying less than 10% between 0.25 K and 1.90 K. At
low densities the resistance goes to infinity more rapidly as the temperature
is reduced than in zero field and the magnetoresistance diverges as T goes to
0.Comment: 4 pages, including 4 figures. References adde
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The influence of clouds on radical concentrations: Observations and modelling studies of HOx during the Hill Cap Cloud Thuringia (HCCT) campaign in 2010
The potential for chemistry occurring in cloud droplets to impact atmospheric composition has been known for some time. However, the lack of direct observations and uncertainty in the magnitude of these reactions led to this area being overlooked in most chemistry transport models. Here we present observations from Mt Schmücke, Germany, of the HO2 radical made alongside a suite of cloud measurements. HO2 concentrations were depleted in-cloud by up to 90% with the rate of heterogeneous loss of HO2 to clouds necessary to bring model and measurements into agreement, demonstrating a dependence on droplet surface area and pH. This provides the first observationally derived assessment for the uptake coefficient of HO2 to cloud droplets and was found to be in good agreement with theoretically derived parameterisations. Global model simulations, including this cloud uptake, showed impacts on the oxidising capacity of the troposphere that depended critically on whether the HO2 uptake leads to production of H2O2 or H2O
The influence of clouds on radical concentrations: observations and modelling studies of HOx during the Hill Cap Cloud Thuringia (HCCT) campaign in 2010
The potential for chemistry occurring in cloud droplets to impact atmospheric composition has been known for some time. However, the lack of direct observations and uncertainty in the magnitude of these reactions led to this area being overlooked in most chemistry transport models. Here we present observations from Mt Schmücke, Germany, of the HO2 radical made alongside a suite of cloud measurements. HO2 concentrations were depleted in-cloud by up to 90% with the rate of heterogeneous loss of HO2 to clouds necessary to bring model and measurements into agreement, demonstrating a dependence on droplet surface area and pH. This provides the first observationally derived assessment for the uptake coefficient of HO2 to cloud droplets and was found to be in good agreement with theoretically derived parameterisations. Global model simulations, including this cloud uptake, showed impacts on the oxidising capacity of the troposphere that depended critically on whether the HO2 uptake leads to production of H2O2 or H2O
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