379 research outputs found
Low level Îł-ray germanium-spectrometer to measure very low primordial radionuclide concentrations
Abstract A new germanium spectrometer especially suited for large sample measurements is described in detail. It is operated in the Gran Sasso underground laboratory under shielding rock of 3300 m water equivalent, which reduces the muon flux by six orders of magnitude. The integral background counting rate in the energy range from 50 to 2750 keV is about 0.15 minâ1. The low peak count rates of mostly less than 1 count per day together with a relative efficiency of 102% and the high sample capacity makes this spectrometer one of the most sensitive worldwide. Some sample measurements for the solar neutrino experiment BOREXINO and the detector efficiency calibration by the Monte Carlo method are discussed as well
Controlled Dephasing of Electrons by Non-Gaussian Shot Noise
In a 'controlled dephasing' experiment [1-3], an interferometer loses its
coherence due to entanglement with a controlled quantum system ('which path'
detector). In experiments that were conducted thus far in mesoscopic systems
only partial dephasing was achieved. This was due to weak interactions between
many detector electrons and the interfering electron, resulting in a Gaussian
phase randomizing process [4-10]. Here, we report the opposite extreme: a
complete destruction of the interference via strong phase randomization only by
a few electrons in the detector. The realization was based on interfering edge
channels (in the integer quantum Hall effect regime, filling factor 2) in a
Mach-Zehnder electronic interferometer, with an inner edge channel serving as a
detector. Unexpectedly, the visibility quenched in a periodic lobe-type form as
the detector current increased; namely, it periodically decreased as the
detector current, and thus the detector's efficiency, increased. Moreover, the
visibility had a V-shape dependence on the partitioning of the detector
current, and not the expected dependence on the second moment of the shot
noise, T(1-T), with T the partitioning. We ascribe these unexpected features to
the strong detector-interferometer coupling, allowing only 1-3 electrons in the
detector to fully dephase the interfering electron. Consequently, in this work
we explored the non-Gaussian nature of noise [11], namely, the direct effect of
the shot noise full counting statistics [12-15].Comment: 14 pages, 4 figure
Brote de mastitis clĂnica por Corynebacterium spp. y Streptococcus dysgalactiae en cabras en Salta, Argentina
Intramammary infections are a serious problem for goatâs milk production worldwide. Staphylococcus spp.
are the most prevalent pathogens responsible for intramammary infection in small ruminants; however, there
is only little information about goat mastitis in Argentina. The objective of this communication was to describe
an outbreak of clinical mastitis affecting 12 of 24 lactating goats. Corynebacterium spp. and Streptococcus
dysgalactiae were isolated in pure culture from all milk samples. All the clinical isolates were identified by biochemical
tests and subjected to antibiotic susceptibility tests
Current-voltage correlations in interferometers
We investigate correlations of current at contacts and voltage fluctuations
at voltage probes coupled to interferometers. The results are compared with
correlations of current and occupation number fluctuations at dephasing probes.
We use a quantum Langevin approach for the average quantities and their
fluctuations. For higher order correlations we develop a stochastic path
integral approach and find the generating functions of voltage or occupation
number fluctuations. We also derive a generating function for the joint
distribution of voltage or occupation number at the probe and current
fluctuations at a terminal of a conductor. For energy independent scattering we
found earlier that the generating function of current cumulants in
interferometers with a one-channel dephasing or voltage probe are identical.
Nevertheless, the distribution function for voltage and the distribution
function for occupation number fluctuations differ, the latter being broader
than that of former in all examples considered here.Comment: 23 pages, 10 figures, minor changes, additional appendix, added
reference
Nonequilibrium Dephasing in an Electronic Mach-Zehnder Interferometer
We study nonequilibrium dephasing in an electronic Mach-Zehnder
interferometer. We demonstrate that the shot noise at the beam splitter of the
interferometer generates an ensemble of nonequilibrium electron density
configurations and that electron interactions induce configuration-specific
phase shifts of an interfering electron. The resulting dephasing exhibits two
characteristic features, a lobe pattern in the visibility and phase jumps of
, in good agreement with experimental data.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures; some typos are corrected; published versio
The pattern and timing of breathing during incremental exercise: a normative study
Clinical evaluation of the pattern and timing of breathing during submaximal exercise can be valuable for the identification of the mechanical ventilatory consequences of different disease processes and for assessing the efficacy of certain interventions.Sedentary individuals (60 male/60 female, aged 20-80 yrs) were randomly selected from >8,000 subjects and submitted to ramp incremental cycle ergometry. Tidal volume (V-T)/ resting inspiratory capacity, respiratory frequency, total respiratory time (Trot), inspiratory time (T-I), expiratory time (T-E), duty cycle (TI/Ttot) and mean inspiratory flow (V-T/T-I) were analysed at selected submaximal ventilatory intensities.Senescence and female sex were associated with a more tachypnoeic breathing pattern during isoventilation. the decline in T-tot was proportional to the TI and TE P reductions, i.e. T-I/T-tot was remarkably constant across age strata, independent of sex. the pattern, but not timing, of breathing was also influenced by weight and height; a set of demographically and anthropometrically based prediction equations are therefore presented.These data provide a frame of reference for assessing the normality of some clinically useful indices of the pattern and timing of breathing during incremental cycle ergometry in sedentary males and females aged 20-80 yrs.Universidade Federal de SĂŁo Paulo, Pulmonary Funct & Clin Exercise Physiol Unit, Div Resp, Dept Med,Paulista Sch Med, BR-04020050 SĂŁo Paulo, BrazilUniv Glasgow, Ctr Exercise Sci & Med, Inst Biol & Life Sci, Glasgow, Lanark, ScotlandUniversidade Federal de SĂŁo Paulo, Pulmonary Funct & Clin Exercise Physiol Unit, Div Resp, Dept Med,Paulista Sch Med, BR-04020050 SĂŁo Paulo, BrazilWeb of Scienc
Coarse-grained simulation of transmembrane peptides in the gel phase
We use Dissipative Particle Dynamics simulations, combined with parallel tempering and umbrella sampling, to investigate the potential of mean force between model transmembrane peptides in the various phases of a lipid bilayer, including the low-temperature gel phase.
The observed oscillations in the effective interaction between peptides are consistent with the different structures of the surrounding lipid phases
Non-Equilibrium Edge Channel Spectroscopy in the Integer Quantum Hall Regime
Heat transport has large potentialities to unveil new physics in mesoscopic
systems. A striking illustration is the integer quantum Hall regime, where the
robustness of Hall currents limits information accessible from charge
transport. Consequently, the gapless edge excitations are incompletely
understood. The effective edge states theory describes them as prototypal
one-dimensional chiral fermions - a simple picture that explains a large body
of observations and calls for quantum information experiments with quantum
point contacts in the role of beam splitters. However, it is in ostensible
disagreement with the prevailing theoretical framework that predicts, in most
situations, additional gapless edge modes. Here, we present a setup which gives
access to the energy distribution, and consequently to the energy current, in
an edge channel brought out-of-equilibrium. This provides a stringent test of
whether the additional states capture part of the injected energy. Our results
show it is not the case and thereby demonstrate regarding energy transport, the
quantum optics analogy of quantum point contacts and beam splitters. Beyond the
quantum Hall regime, this novel spectroscopy technique opens a new window for
heat transport and out-of-equilibrium experiments.Comment: 13 pages including supplementary information, Nature Physics in prin
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