278 research outputs found
Calibration of quasi-static aberrations in exoplanet direct-imaging instruments with a Zernike phase-mask sensor
Context. Several exoplanet direct imaging instruments will soon be in
operation. They use an extreme adaptive optics (XAO) system to correct the
atmospheric turbulence and provide a highly-corrected beam to a near-infrared
(NIR) coronagraph for starlight suppression. The performance of the coronagraph
is however limited by the non-common path aberrations (NCPA) due to the
differential wavefront errors existing between the visible XAO sensing path and
the NIR science path, leading to residual speckles in the coronagraphic image.
Aims. Several approaches have been developed in the past few years to
accurately calibrate the NCPA, correct the quasi-static speckles and allow the
observation of exoplanets at least 1e6 fainter than their host star. We propose
an approach based on the Zernike phase-contrast method for the measurements of
the NCPA between the optical path seen by the visible XAO wavefront sensor and
that seen by the near-IR coronagraph. Methods. This approach uses a focal plane
phase mask of size {\lambda}/D, where {\lambda} and D denote the wavelength and
the telescope aperture diameter, respectively, to measure the quasi-static
aberrations in the upstream pupil plane by encoding them into intensity
variations in the downstream pupil image. We develop a rigorous formalism,
leading to highly accurate measurement of the NCPA, in a quasi-linear way
during the observation. Results. For a static phase map of standard deviation
44 nm rms at {\lambda} = 1.625 {\mu}m (0.026 {\lambda}), we estimate a possible
reduction of the chromatic NCPA by a factor ranging from 3 to 10 in the
presence of AO residuals compared with the expected performance of a typical
current-generation system. This would allow a reduction of the level of
quasi-static speckles in the detected images by a factor 10 to 100 hence,
correspondingly improving the capacity to observe exoplanets.Comment: 11 pages, 14 figures, A&A accepted, 2nd version after language-editor
correction
No effect of subthalamic deep brain stimulation on metacognition in Parkinsonâs disease
Deep brain stimulation of the subthalamic nucleus (STN-DBS) is a powerful treatment in Parkinsonâs disease (PD), which provides a positive effect on motor symptoms although the way it operates on high cognitive processes such as metacognition remains unclear. To address this issue, we recorded electroencephalogram (EEG) of PD patients treated with STN-DBS that performed a reversal learning (RL) paradigm endowed with metacognitive self-assessment. We considered two stimulation conditions, namely DBS-ON (stimulation on) and DBS-OFF (stimulation off), and focused our EEG-analysis on the frontal brain region due to its involvement on high cognitive processes. We found a trend towards a significant difference in RL ability between stimulation conditions. STN-DBS showed no effect on metacognition, although a significant association between accuracy and decision confidence level held for DBS OFF, but not in the case of DBS ON. In summary, our study revealed no significant effect of STN-DBS on RL or metacognition
Hydrogen-induced reversible spin-reorientation transition and magnetic stripe domain phase in bilayer Co on Ru(0001)
Imaging the change in the magnetization vector in real time by spin-polarized
low-energy electron microscopy, we observed a hydrogen-induced, reversible
spin-reorientation transition in a cobalt bilayer on Ru(0001). Initially,
hydrogen sorption reduces the size of out-of-plane magnetic domains and leads
to the formation of a magnetic stripe domain pattern, which can be understood
as a consequence of reducing the out-of-plane magnetic anisotropy. Further
hydrogen sorption induces a transition to an in-plane easy-axis. Desorbing the
hydrogen by heating the film to 400 K recovers the original out-of-plane
magnetization. By means of ab-initio calculations we determine that the origin
of the transition is the local effect of the hybridization of the hydrogen
orbital and the orbitals of the Co atoms bonded to the absorbed hydrogen.Comment: 5 figure
Oxidation of graphene on metals
We use low-energy electron microscopy to investigate how graphene is removed
from Ru(0001) and Ir(111) by reaction with oxygen. We find two mechanisms on
Ru(0001). At short times, oxygen reacts with carbon monomers on the surrounding
Ru surface, decreasing their concentration below the equilibrium value. This
undersaturation causes a flux of carbon from graphene to the monomer gas. In
this initial mechanism, graphene is etched at a rate that is given precisely by
the same non-linear dependence on carbon monomer concentration that governs
growth. Thus, during both growth and etching, carbon attaches and detaches to
graphene as clusters of several carbon atoms. At later times, etching
accelerates. We present evidence that this process involves intercalated
oxygen, which destabilizes graphene. On Ir, this mechanism creates observable
holes. It also occurs mostly quickly near wrinkles in the graphene islands,
depends on the orientation of the graphene with respect to the Ir substrate,
and, in contrast to the first mechanism, can increase the density of carbon
monomers. We also observe that both layers of bilayer graphene islands on Ir
etch together, not sequentially.Comment: 15 pages, 10 figures. Manuscript revised to improve discussion,
following referee comments. Accepted for publication in Journal of Physical
Chemistry C, Feb. 11, 201
Evidence for Surface Effects on the Intermolecular Interactions in Fe (II) Spin Crossover Coordination Polymers
From X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) and X-ray photoemission spectroscopy (XPS) it is evident that the spin state transition behavior of Fe(II) spin crossover coordination polymer crystallites at the surface differs from the bulk. A comparison of four different coordination polymers reveals that the observed surface properties may differ from bulk for a variety of reasons. There are Fe(II) spin crossover coordination polymers with either almost complete switching of the spin state at the surface or no switching at all. Oxidation, differences in surface packing, and changes in coordination could all contribute to making the surface very different from the bulk. Some Fe(II) spin crossover coordination polymers may be sufficiently photoactive so that X-ray spectroscopies cannot discern the spin state transition
Selective binding of facial features reveals dynamic expression fragments
The temporal correspondence between two arbitrarily chosen pairs of alternating features can generally be reported for rates up to 3â4âHz. This limit is however surpassed for specialised visual mechanisms that encode conjunctions of features. Here we show that this 3â4âHz limit is exceeded for eye gaze and eyebrow pairing, but not for eye gaze and mouth pairing, suggesting combined eye and eyebrow motion constitutes a dynamic expression fragment; a building block of superordinate facial actions
Real-space imaging of the Verwey transition at the (100) surface of magnetite
5 pags, 4 figsEffects of the Verwey transition on the (100) surface of magnetite were studied using scanning tunneling microscopy and spin polarized low-energy electron microscopy. On cooling through the transition temperature T V, the initially flat surface undergoes a rooflike distortion with a periodicity of âŒ0.5 ÎŒm due to ferroelastic twinning within monoclinic domains of the low-temperature monoclinic structure. The monoclinic c axis orients in the surface plane, along the [001]c directions. At the atomic scale, the charge-ordered (â2Ăâ2)R45 ĂąÌÌ reconstruction of the (100) surface is unperturbed by the bulk transition, and is continuous over the twin boundaries. Time resolved low-energy electron microscopy movies reveal the structural transition to be first order at the surface, indicating that the bulk transition is not an extension of the Verwey-like (â2Ăâ2)R45 ĂąÌÌ reconstruction. Although conceptually similar, the charge-ordered phases of the (100) surface and sub-TV bulk of magnetite are unrelated phenomena. © 2013 American Physical Society.This research was supported by the Spanish Government through Projects No. MAT2009-14578-C03-01 and No. MAT2012-38045-C04-01, by the Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Division of Materials and Engineering Sciences, US Department of Energy under Contract No. AC0205CH11231, and by the Centre for Atomic-Leve lCatalyst Design, an Energy Frontier Research Centre funded by the US Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences under Award No. DE-SC0001058. The work at Tulane is supported by the NSF under Grant No. DMR-1205469. G.S.P. acknowledges support from the Austrian Science Fund Project No. P24925-N20
Effects of proton versus photon irradiation on (lymph) angiogenic, inflammatory, proliferative and anti-tumor immune responses in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma
International audienceThe proximity of organs at risk makes the treatment of head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) challenging by standard radiotherapy. The higher precision in tumor targeting of proton (P) therapy could promote it as the treatment of choice for HNSCC. Besides the physical advantage in dose deposition, few is known about the biological impact of P versus photons (X) in this setting. To investigate the comparative biological effects of P versus X radiation in HNSCC cells, we assessed the relative biological effectiveness (RBE), viability, proliferation and mRNA levels for genes involved in (lymph)angiogenesis, inflammation, proliferation and anti-tumor immunity. These parameters, particularly VEGF-C protein levels and regulations, were documented in freshly irradiated and/or long-term surviving cells receiving low/high-dose, single (SI)/multiple (MI) irradiations with P/X. The RBE was found to be 1.1 Key (lymph)angiogenesis and inflammation genes were downregulated (except for vegf-c) after P and upregulated after X irradiation in MI surviving cells, demonstrating a more favorable profile after P irradiation. Both irradiation types stimulated vegf-c promoter activity in a NF-ÎșB-dependent transcriptional regulation manner, but at a lesser extent after P, as compared to X irradiation, which correlated with mRNA and protein levels. The cells surviving to MI by P or X generated tumors with higher volume, anarchic architecture and increased density of blood vessels. Increased lymphangiogenesis and a transcriptomic analysis in favor of a more aggressive phenotype were observed in tumors generated with X-irradiated cells. Increased detection of lymphatic vessels in relapsed tumors from patients receiving X radiotherapy was consistent with these findings. This study provides new data about the biological advantage of P, as compared to X irradiation. In addition to its physical advantage in dose deposition, P irradiation may help to improve treatment approaches for HNSCC
Localization of Dirac electrons by Moire patterns in graphene bilayers
We study the electronic structure of two Dirac electron gazes coupled by a
periodic Hamiltonian such as it appears in rotated graphene bilayers. Ab initio
and tight-binding approaches are combined and show that the spatially periodic
coupling between the two Dirac electron gazes can renormalize strongly their
velocity. We investigate in particular small angles of rotation and show that
the velocity tends to zero in this limit. The localization is confirmed by an
analysis of the eigenstates which are localized essentially in the AA zones of
the Moire patterns.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Nonvolatile voltage controlled molecular spinâstate switching for memory applications
Nonvolatile, molecular multiferroic devices have now been demonstrated, but it is worth giving some consideration to the issue of whether such devices could be a competitive alternative for solid-state nonvolatile memory. For the Fe (II) spin crossover complex [Fe{H2B(pz)2}2(bipy)], where pz = tris(pyrazol-1-yl)-borohydride and bipy = 2,20-bipyridine, voltage-controlled isothermal changes in the electronic structure and spin state have been demonstrated and are accompanied by changes in conductance. Higher conductance is seen with [Fe{H2B(pz)2}2(bipy)] in the high spin state, while lower conductance occurs for the low spin state. Plausibly, there is the potential here for low-cost molecular solid-state memory because the essential molecular thin films are easily fabricated. However, successful device fabrication does not mean a device that has a practical value. Here, we discuss the progress and challenges yet facing the fabrication of molecular multiferroic devices, which could be considered competitive to silicon
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