14,441 research outputs found
Response of arum lily calli to culture filtrate of Pectobacterium carotovorum subsp. carotovorum
This report demonstrated that culture filtrate of Pectobacterium carotovorum ssp. carotovorum isolate ZT0505, the pathogen of bacterial soft rot disease of arum lily (Zantedeschia sp.), contained extracellular enzymes and caused arum lily leaf tissue and callus maceration. Arum lily leaf tissue and callus sensitivity to culture filtrate coincided with the host susceptibility to the pathogen. The rates of survival of callus pieces were determined after exposure for various times to culture filtrate. Survival of callus pieces (%) increased with reduction of exposure time from 20 to 14 h and from 14 to 8 h. One out of 30 callus pieces was still viable after 3 cycles of 8 h exposure. Subsequently, the surviving cells in this callus pieces proliferated and differentiated into shoots. Based on this initial work, the callus screening using culture filtrate as selection agent may be useful for in vitro selection of soft rot resistant germplasm in arum lily
Performance of Photosensors in the PandaX-I Experiment
We report the long term performance of the photosensors, 143 one-inch
R8520-406 and 37 three-inch R11410-MOD photomultipliers from Hamamatsu, in the
first phase of the PandaX dual-phase xenon dark matter experiment. This is the
first time that a significant number of R11410 photomultiplier tubes were
operated in liquid xenon for an extended period, providing important guidance
to the future large xenon-based dark matter experiments.Comment: v3 as accepted by JINST with modifications based on reviewers'
comment
Low-temperature heat transport of Nd_2CuO_4: Roles of Nd magnons and spin-structure transitions
We report the magnetic-field dependence of thermal conductivity (\kappa) of
an insulating cuprate Nd_2CuO_4 at very low temperatures down to 0.3 K. It is
found that apart from the paramagnetic moments scattering on phonons, the
Nd^{3+} magnons can act as either heat carriers or phonon scatterers, which
strongly depends on the long-range antiferromagnetic transition and the
field-induced transitions of spin structure. In particular, the Nd^{3+} magnons
can effectively transport heat in the spin-flopped state of the Nd^{3+}
sublattice. However, both the magnon transport and the magnetic scattering are
quenched at very high fields. The spin re-orientations under the in-plane field
can be conjectured from the detailed field dependence of \kappa.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Non-ancient solution of the Ricci flow
For any complete noncompact Khler manifold with nonnegative and
bounded holomorphic bisectional curvature,we provide the necessary and
sufficient condition for non-ancient solution to the Ricci flow in this paper.Comment: seven pages, latex fil
Raman spectroscopy of epitaxial graphene on a SiC substrate
The fabrication of epitaxial graphene (EG) on SiC substrate by annealing has
attracted a lot of interest as it may speed up the application of graphene for
future electronic devices. The interaction of EG and the SiC substrate is
critical to its electronic and physical properties. In this work, Raman
spectroscopy was used to study the structure of EG and its interaction with SiC
substrate. All the Raman bands of EG blue shift from that of bulk graphite and
graphene made by micromechanical cleavage, which was attributed to the
compressive strain induced by the substrate. A model containing 13 x 13
honeycomb lattice cells of graphene on carbon nanomesh was constructed to
explain the origin of strain. The lattice mismatch between graphene layer and
substrate causes the compressive stress of 2.27 GPa on graphene. We also
demonstrate that the electronic structures of EG grown on Si and C terminated
SiC substrates are quite different. Our experimental results shed light on the
interaction between graphene and SiC substrate that are critical to the future
applications of EG.Comment: 20 pages, 5 figure
Single crystal growth of the pyrochlores TiO ( = rare earth) by the optical floating-zone method
We report a systematic study on the crystal growth of the rare-earth
titanates TiO ( = Gd, Tb, Dy, Ho, Y, Er, Yb and Lu) and Y-doped
TbYTiO ( = 0.2 and 1) using an optical floating-zone
method. High-quality single crystals were successfully obtained and the growth
conditions were carefully optimized. The oxygen pressure was found to be the
most important parameter and the appropriate ones are 0.1--0.4 MPa, depending
on the radius of rare-earth ions. The growth rate is another parameter and was
found to be 2.5--4 mm/h for different rare-earth ions. X-ray diffraction data
demonstrated the good crystallinity of these crystals. The basic physical
properties of these crystals were characterized by the magnetic susceptibility
and specific heat measurements.Comment: 18 pages, 7 figures, 1 table, published in Journal Crystal Growt
Intense beam of metastable Muonium
Precision spectroscopy of the Muonium Lamb shift and fine structure requires
a robust source of 2S Muonium. To date, the beam-foil technique is the only
demonstrated method for creating such a beam in vacuum. Previous experiments
using this technique were statistics limited, and new measurements would
benefit tremendously from the efficient 2S production at a low energy muon
( keV) facility. Such a source of abundant low energy has
only become available in recent years, e.g. at the Low-Energy Muon beamline at
the Paul Scherrer Institute. Using this source, we report on the successful
creation of an intense, directed beam of metastable Muonium. We find that even
though the theoretical Muonium fraction is maximal in the low energy range of
keV, scattering by the foil and transport characteristics of the beamline
favor slightly higher energies of keV. We estimate that
an event detection rate of a few events per second for a future Lamb shift
measurement is feasible, enabling an increase in precision by two orders of
magnitude over previous determinations
- …
