723 research outputs found
Low-temperature specific heat for ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic orders in CaRu1-xMnxO3
Low-temperature specific heat of CaRu1-xMnxO3 was measured to clarify the
role of d electrons in ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic orders observed
above x=0.2. Specific heat divided by temperature C_p/T is found to roughly
follow a T^2 function, and relatively large magnitudes of electronic specific
heat coefficient gamma were obtained in wide x range. In particular, gamma is
unchanged from the value at x=0 (84 mJ/K^2 mol) in the paramagnetic state for
x<=0.1, but linearly reduced with increasing x above x= 0.2. These features of
gamma strongly suggest that itinerant d electrons are tightly coupled with the
evolution of magnetic orders in small and intermediate Mn concentrations.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, to be published in J. Phys.: Conf. Ser. (SCES
2011, Cambridge, UK
PICK1 is not a susceptibility gene for schizophrenia in a Japanese population: Association study in a large case–control population
The protein interacting with C-kinase 1 (PICK1) has been implicated in thesusceptibility to schizophrenia. PICK1 interacts with enzymes and receptors that playroles in the pathogenesis of schizophrenia via glutamatergic dysfunction. Recently, twostudies reported associations between schizophrenia and two PICK1 genepolymorphisms, rs3952 in Chinese and Japanese populations and rs2076369 in aJapanese population. We attempted to confirm these associations in a case-control studyof 1765 Japanese patients with schizophrenia and 1851 Japanese control subjects.Neither polymorphism was associated with schizophrenia (rs3952, p = 0.755;rs2076369, p = 0.997). A haplotype block with these polymorphisms spanning the 5’region of the PICK1 gene showed high linkage disequilibrium in the Japanesepopulation (D’ = 0.98, r2 = 0.34); however, neither haplotype was significantlyassociated with schizophrenia. We conclude that the common haplotypes andpolymorphisms of the PICK1 gene identified thus far are unlikely to contribute togenetic susceptibility to schizophrenia in the Japanese population
Suzaku X-Ray Imaging and Spectroscopy of Cassiopeia A
Suzaku X-ray observations of a young supernova remnant, Cassiopeia A, were
carried out. K-shell transition lines from highly ionized ions of various
elements were detected, including Chromium (Cr-Kalpha at 5.61 keV). The X-ray
continuum spectra were modeled in the 3.4--40 keV band, summed over the entire
remnant, and were fitted with a simplest combination of the thermal
bremsstrahlung and the non-thermal cut-off power-law models. The spectral fits
with this assumption indicate that the continuum emission is likely to be
dominated by the non-thermal emission with a cut-off energy at > 1 keV. The
thermal-to-nonthermal fraction of the continuum flux in the 4-10 keV band is
best estimated as ~0.1. Non-thermal-dominated continuum images in the 4--14 keV
band were made. The peak of the non-thermal X-rays appears at the western part.
The peak position of the TeV gamma-rays measured with HEGRA and MAGIC is also
shifted at the western part with the 1-sigma confidence. Since the location of
the X-ray continuum emission was known to be presumably identified with the
reverse shock region, the possible keV-TeV correlations give a hint that the
accelerated multi-TeV hadrons in Cassiopeia A are dominated by heavy elements
in the reverse shock region.Comment: Publ. Astron. Soc. Japan 61, pp.1217-1228 (2009
Gain in a quantum wire laser of high uniformity
A multi-quantum wire laser operating in the 1-D ground state has been
achieved in a very high uniformity structure that shows free exciton emission
with unprecedented narrow width and low lasing threshold. Under optical pumping
the spontaneous emission evolves from a sharp free exciton peak to a
red-shifted broad band. The lasing photon energy occurs about 5 meV below the
free exciton. The observed shift excludes free excitons in lasing and our
results show that Coulomb interactions in the 1-D electron-hole system shift
the spontaneous emission and play significant roles in laser gain.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, prepared by RevTe
Identification of major dioxin-like compounds and androgen receptor antagonist in acid-treated tissue extracts of high trophic-level animals
We evaluated the applicability of combining in vitro bioassays with instrument analyses to identify potential endocrine disrupting pollutants in sulfuric acid-treated extracts of liver and/or blubber of high trophic-level animals. Dioxin-like and androgen receptor (AR) antagonistic activities were observed in Baikal seals, common cormorants, raccoon dogs, and finless porpoises by using a panel of rat and human cell-based chemical-activated luciferase gene expression (CALUX) reporter gene bioassays. On the other hand, no activity was detected in estrogen receptor α (ERα)-, glucocorticoid receptor (GR)-, progesterone receptor (PR)-, and peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ2 (PPARγ2)-CALUX assays with the sample amount applied. All individual samples (n = 66) showed dioxin-like activity, with values ranging from 21 to 5500 pg CALUX-2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin equivalent (TEQ)/g-lipid. Because dioxins are expected to be strong contributors to CALUX-TEQs, the median theoretical contribution of dioxins calculated from the result of chemical analysis to the experimental CALUX-TEQs was estimated to explain up to 130% for all the tested samples (n = 54). Baikal seal extracts (n = 31), but not other extracts, induced AR antagonistic activities that were 8-150 μg CALUX-flutamide equivalent (FluEQ)/g-lipid. p,p′-DDE was identified as an important causative compound for the activity, and its median theoretical contribution to the experimental CALUX-FluEQs was 59% for the tested Baikal seal tissues (n = 25). Our results demonstrate that combining in vitro CALUX assays with instrument analysis is useful for identifying persistent organic pollutant-like compounds in the tissue of wild animals on the basis of in vitro endocrine disruption toxicity. © 2011 American Chemical Society
Transient four-wave mixing in T-shaped GaAs quantum wires
The binding energy of excitons and biexcitons and the exciton dephasing in T-shaped GaAs quantum wires is investigated by transient four-wave mixing. The T-shaped structure is fabricated by cleaved-edge overgrowth, and its geometry is engineered to optimize the one-dimensional confinement. In this wire of 6.6×24 nm2 size, we find a one-dimensional confinement of more than 20 meV, an inhomogeneous broadening of 3.4 meV, an exciton binding energy of 12 meV, and a biexciton binding energy of 2.0 meV. A dispersion of the homogeneous linewidth within the inhomogeneous broadening due to phonon-assisted relaxation is observed. The exciton acoustic-phonon-scattering coefficient of 6.1±0.5 μeV/K is larger than in comparable quantum-well structures
A development of cloud top height retrieval using thermal infrared spectra observed with GOSAT and comparison with CALIPSO data
An algorithm based on CO2 slicing, which has been used for cirrus cloud
detection using thermal infrared data, was developed for high-resolution
radiance spectra from satellites. The channels were reconstructed based on
sensitivity height information of the original spectral channels to reduce
the effects of measurement errors. Selection of the reconstructed channel
pairs was optimized for several atmospheric profile patterns using
simultaneous studies assuming a cloudy sky. That algorithm was applied to
data by the Greenhouse gases Observing SATellite (GOSAT). Results were
compared with those obtained from the space-borne lidar instrument on-board
Cloud-Aerosol Lidar and Infrared Pathfinder Satellite Observations
(CALIPSO). Monthly mean cloud amounts from the slicing generally agreed with
those from CALIPSO observations despite some differences caused by surface
temperature biases, optically very thin cirrus, multilayer structures of
clouds, extremely low cloud tops, and specific atmospheric conditions.
Comparison of coincident data showed good agreement, except for some cases,
and revealed that the improved slicing method is more accurate than the
traditional slicing method. Results also imply that improved slicing can
detect low-level clouds with cloud top heights as low as approximately 1.5 km
Mother-to-embryo vitellogenin transport in a viviparous teleost Xenotoca eiseni
魚類がお腹の子供に与える栄養素を解明 --哺乳類が失った遺伝子を利用して胎生機構を獲得--. 京都大学プレスリリース. 2019-10-09.Vitellogenin (Vtg), a yolk nutrient protein that is synthesized in the livers of female animals, and subsequently carried into the ovary, contributes to vitellogenesis in oviparous animals. Thus, Vtg levels are elevated during oogenesis. In contrast, Vtg proteins have been genetically lost in viviparous mammals, thus the yolk protein is not involved in their oogenesis and embryonic development. In this study, we identified Vtg protein in the livers of females during the gestation of the viviparous teleost, Xenotoca eiseni. Although vitellogenesis is arrested during gestation, biochemical assays revealed that Vtg protein was present in ovarian tissues and lumen fluid. The Vtg protein was also detected in the trophotaeniae of the intraovarian embryo. Immunoelectron microscopy revealed that Vtg protein is absorbed into intracellular vesicles in the epithelial cells of the trophotaeniae. Furthermore, extraneous Vtg protein injected into the abdominal cavity of a pregnant female was subsequently detected in the trophotaeniae of the intraovarian embryo. Our data suggest that the yolk protein is one of the matrotrophic factors supplied from the mother to the intraovarian embryo during gestation in X. eiseni
Overview on the management of radioactive waste from fusion facilities: ITER, demonstration machines and power plants
In the absence of official standards and guidelines for nuclear fusion plants, fusion designers adopted, as far as possible, well-established standards for fission-based nuclear power plants (NPPs). This often implies interpretation and/or extrapolation, due to differences in structures, systems and components, materials, safety mitigation systems, risks, etc. This approach could result in the consideration of overconservative measures that might lead to an increase in cost and complexity with limited or negligible improvements. One important topic is the generation of radioactive waste in fusion power plants. Fusion waste is significantly different to fission NPP waste, i.e. the quantity of fusion waste is much larger. However, it mostly comprises low-level waste (LLW) and intermediate level waste (ILW). Notably, the waste does not contain many long-lived isotopes, mainly tritium and other activation isotopes but no-transuranic elements. An important benefit of fusion employing reduced-activation materials is the lower decay heat removal and rapid radioactivity decay overall. The dominant fusion wastes are primarily composed of structural materials, such as different types of steel, including reduced activation ferritic martensitic steels, such as EUROFER97 and F82H, AISI 316L, bainitic, and JK2LB. The relevant long-lived radioisotopes come from alloying elements, such as niobium, molybdenum, nickel, carbon, nitrogen, copper and aluminum and also from uncontrolled impurities (of the same elements, but also, e.g. of potassium and cobalt). After irradiation, these isotopes might preclude disposal in LLW repositories. Fusion power should be able to avoid creating high-level waste, while the volume of fusion ILW and LLW will be significant, both in terms of pure volume and volume per unit of electricity produced. Thus, efforts to recycle and clear are essential to support fusion deployment, reclaim resources (through less ore mining) and minimize the radwaste burden for future generations
- …
