2,606 research outputs found
Single-sided continuous optoelectrowetting (SCOEW) for droplet manipulation with light patterns †
Electrowetting-on-dielectric (EWOD) promises to be an important lab-on-a-chip approach for effectively manipulating droplets with electric field-controlled surface tension. Droplets manipulated in electrowetting-based devices are typically sandwiched between two parallel plates and actuated by digital electrodes. The size of pixilated electrodes limits the minimum droplet size that can be manipulated. Here, we report on a single-sided continuous optoelectrowetting (SCOEW) mechanism that enables light-patterned electrowetting modulation for continuous droplet manipulation on an open, featureless, and photoconductive surface. SCOEW overcomes the size limitation of physical pixilated electrodes by utilizing dynamic and reconfigurable optical patterns and enables the continuous transport, splitting, merging, and mixing of droplets with volumes ranging from 50 mL to 250 pL, over 5-orders of magnitude. This single-sided open configuration provides a flexible interface for integration with other microfluidic components, such as sample reservoirs through simple tubing. Light-triggered, parallel, and volume-tunable droplet injection with volume variation less than 1% has been demonstrated with SCOEW. The unique lateral field-driven optoelectrowetting mechanism also enables extremely low light intensity actuation, and droplet manipulation can be achieved by directly positioning the SCOEW chip on a LCD screen used in a laptop or portable cellular phone
Semiparametric Multivariate Accelerated Failure Time Model with Generalized Estimating Equations
The semiparametric accelerated failure time model is not as widely used as
the Cox relative risk model mainly due to computational difficulties. Recent
developments in least squares estimation and induced smoothing estimating
equations provide promising tools to make the accelerate failure time models
more attractive in practice. For semiparametric multivariate accelerated
failure time models, we propose a generalized estimating equation approach to
account for the multivariate dependence through working correlation structures.
The marginal error distributions can be either identical as in sequential event
settings or different as in parallel event settings. Some regression
coefficients can be shared across margins as needed. The initial estimator is a
rank-based estimator with Gehan's weight, but obtained from an induced
smoothing approach with computation ease. The resulting estimator is consistent
and asymptotically normal, with a variance estimated through a multiplier
resampling method. In a simulation study, our estimator was up to three times
as efficient as the initial estimator, especially with stronger multivariate
dependence and heavier censoring percentage. Two real examples demonstrate the
utility of the proposed method
Tachyon Field Quantization and Hawking Radiation
We quantize the tachyon field in a static two dimensional dilaton gravity
black hole background,and we calculate the Hawking radiation rate. We find that
the thermal radiation flux, due to the tachyon field, is larger than the
conformal matter one. We also find that massive scalar fields which do not
couple to the dilaton, do not give any contribution to the thermal radiation,
up to terms quadratic in the scalar curvature.Comment: 13 pages, Latex file, 1 figure available upon reques
Nitrogen-Functionalized Graphene Nanoflakes (GNFs:N): Tunable Photoluminescence and Electronic Structures
This study investigates the strong photoluminescence (PL) and X-ray excited
optical luminescence observed in nitrogen-functionalized 2D graphene nanoflakes
(GNFs:N), which arise from the significantly enhanced density of states in the
region of {\pi} states and the gap between {\pi} and {\pi}* states. The
increase in the number of the sp2 clusters in the form of pyridine-like N-C,
graphite-N-like, and the C=O bonding and the resonant energy transfer from the
N and O atoms to the sp2 clusters were found to be responsible for the blue
shift and the enhancement of the main PL emission feature. The enhanced PL is
strongly related to the induced changes of the electronic structures and
bonding properties, which were revealed by the X-ray absorption near-edge
structure, X-ray emission spectroscopy, and resonance inelastic X-ray
scattering. The study demonstrates that PL emission can be tailored through
appropriate tuning of the nitrogen and oxygen contents in GNFs and pave the way
for new optoelectronic devices.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures (including toc figure
Opto-mechanical measurement of micro-trap via nonlinear cavity enhanced Raman scattering spectrum
High-gain resonant nonlinear Raman scattering on trapped cold atoms within a
high-fineness ring optical cavity is simply explained under a nonlinear
opto-mechanical mechanism, and a proposal using it to detect frequency of
micro-trap on atom chip is presented. The enhancement of scattering spectrum is
due to a coherent Raman conversion between two different cavity modes mediated
by collective vibrations of atoms through nonlinear opto-mechanical couplings.
The physical conditions of this technique are roughly estimated on Rubidium
atoms, and a simple quantum analysis as well as a multi-body semiclassical
simulation on this nonlinear Raman process is conducted.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figure
Hydrodynamics of a 5D Einstein-dilaton black hole solution and the corresponding BPS state
We apply the potential reconstruction approach to generate a series of
asymptotically AdS (aAdS) black hole solutions, with a self-interacting bulk
scalar field. Based on the method, we reproduce the pure AdS solution as a
consistency check and we also generate a simple analytic 5D black hole
solution. We then study various aspects of this solution, such as temperature,
entropy density and conserved charges. Furthermore, we study the hydrodynamics
of this black hole solution in the framework of fluid/gravity duality, e.g. the
ratio of the shear viscosity to the entropy density. In a degenerate case of
the 5D black hole solution, we find that the c function decreases monotonically
from UV to IR as expected. Finally, we investigate the stability of the
degenerate solution by studying the bosonic functional energy of the gravity
and the Witten-Nester energy . We confirm that the degenerate solution
is a BPS domain wall solution. The corresponding superpotential and the
solution of the killing spinor equation are found explicitly.Comment: V2: 23 pages, no figure, minor changes, typos corrected, new
references and comments added, version accepted by JHE
Cosmological Evolution of a Brane Universe in a Type 0 String Background
We study the cosmological evolution of a D3-brane Universe in a type 0 string
background. We follow the brane-universe along the radial coordinate of the
background and we calculate the energy density which is induced on the brane
because of its motion in the bulk. We find that for some typical values of the
parameters and for a particular range of values of the scale factor of the
brane-universe, the effective energy density is dominated by a term
proportional to indicating a slow varying inflationary
phase. For larger values of the scale factor the effective energy density takes
a constant value and the brane-universe enters its usual inflationary period.Comment: 25 pages,1 figure,LaTex file,final version to appear in Phys. Rev.
Differential requirements for the Pax6(5a) genes eyegone and twin of eyegone during eye development in Drosophila
In eye development the tasks of tissue specification and cell proliferation are regulated, in part, by the Pax6 and Pax6(5a) proteins respectively. In vertebrates, Pax6(5a) is generated as an alternately spliced isoform of Pax6. This stands in contrast to the fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster, which has two Pax6(5a) homologs that are encoded by the eyegone and twin of eyegone genes. In this report we set out to determine the respective contributions that each gene makes to the development of the fly retina. Here we demonstrate that both eyg and toe encode transcriptional repressors, are expressed in identical patterns but at significantly different levels. We further show, through a molecular dissection of both proteins, that Eyg makes differential use of several domains when compared to Toe and that the number of repressor domains also differs between the two Pax6(5a) homologs. We predict that these results will have implications for elucidating the functional differences between closely related members of other Pax subclasses
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