896 research outputs found
Shot noise in carbon nanotube based Fabry-Perot interferometers
We report on shot noise measurements in carbon nanotube based Fabry-Perot
electronic interferometers. As a consequence of quantum interferences, the
noise power spectral density oscillates as a function of the voltage applied to
the gate electrode. The quantum shot noise theory accounts for the data
quantitatively. It allows to confirm the existence of two nearly degenerate
orbitals. At resonance, the transmission of the nanotube approaches unity, and
the nanotube becomes noiseless, as observed in quantum point contacts. In this
weak backscattering regime, the dependence of the noise on the backscattering
current is found weaker than expected, pointing either to electron-electron
interactions or to weak decoherence
Conserved spin and orbital phase along carbon nanotubes connected with multiple ferromagnetic contacts
We report on spin dependent transport measurements in carbon nanotubes based
multi-terminal circuits. We observe a gate-controlled spin signal in non-local
voltages and an anomalous conductance spin signal, which reveal that both the
spin and the orbital phase can be conserved along carbon nanotubes with
multiple ferromagnetic contacts. This paves the way for spintronics devices
exploiting both these quantum mechanical degrees of freedom on the same
footing.Comment: 8 pages - minor differences with published versio
Cross-linguistic study of vocal pathology: perceptual features of spasmodic dysphonia in French-speaking subjects
Clinical characterisation of Spasmodic Dysphonia of the adductor type (SD) in French speakers by Klap and colleagues (1993) appears to differ from that of SD in English. This perceptual analysis aims to describe the phonetic features of French SD. A video of 6 French speakers with SD supplied by Klap and colleagues was analysed for frequency of phonatory breaks, pitch breaks, harshness, creak, breathiness and falsetto voice, rate of production, and quantity of speech output. In contrast to English SD, the French speaking SD patients demonstrated no evidence pitch breaks, but phonatory breaks, harshness and breathiness were prominent features. This verifies the French authors’ (1993) clinical description. These findings suggest that phonetic properties of a specific language may affect the manifestation of pathology in neurogenic voice disorders
An index method of estimating relative population densities of the Common Vole (Microtus arvalis) at landscape scale
Many issues in fundamental and applied ecology require the use of sampling protocols
at the sectoral or even regional scales at which many important ecological mechanisms occur.
The lack of workable sampling methods at these scales is a major obstacle to the analysis and
understanding of these mechanisms. We test the validity of an index method of estimating
relative population densities, applicable along transects of several kilometers in length, for a
population of Common Voles (Microtus arvalis). The results show that the index method of
estimating relative density is weil adapted for monitoring variations in the abundance and
spatial distribution of Common Vole populations and authorizes studies for a wide range of
objectives and spatial scalesDe nombreuses questions d'écologie fondamentale ou appliquée imposent l'application de protocoles d'échantillonnage à des échelles sectorielles, voire régionales, auxquelles se réalisent de nombreux mécanismes écologiques
mportants. L'absence de méthodes d'échantillonnage utilisables à ces échelles représente un obstacle majeur à l'analyse et à la compréhension de ces mécanismes, Pour une population de Campagnols des champs (Microlus aryalis) nous avons testé la validite d'une méthode d'estimation indiciaire
en densité relative applicable le long de transect, plurikilométriques. Les résultats obtenus montrent que cette méthode d'estimation indiciaire en densité relative est bien adaptée au suivi des variations d'abondance et de distribution des populations du Campagnol des champs et autorise des
études pour une grande diversité d'objectifs et d'échelles spatiales
Age structure, dispersion and diet of a population of stoats (Mustela erminea) in southern Fiordland during the decline phase of the beechmast cycle
The dispersion, age structure and diet of stoats (Mustela erminea) in beech forest in the Borland and Grebe Valleys, Fiordland National Park, were examined during December and January 2000/01, 20 months after a heavy seed-fall in 1999. Thirty trap stations were set along a 38-km transect through almost continuous beech forest, at least 1 km apart. Mice were very scarce (nights, C/100TN) along two standard index lines placed at either end of the transect, compared with November 1999 (>60/100TN), but mice were detected (from footprints in stoat tunnels) along an 8 km central section of the transect (stations 14-22). Live trapping with one trap per station (total 317.5 trap nights) in December 2000 caught 2 female and 23 male stoats, of which 10 (including both females) were radio collared. The minimum range lengths of the two females along the transect represented by the trap line were 2.2 and 6.0 km; those of eight radio-tracked males averaged 2.9 ± 1.7 km. Stations 14-22 tended to be visited more often, by more marked individual stoats, than the other 21 stations.
Fenn trapping at the same 30 sites, but with multiple traps per station (1333.5 trap nights), in late January 2001 collected carcasses of 35 males and 28 females (including 12 of the marked live-trapped ones). Another two marked males were recovered dead. The stoat population showed no sign of chronic nutritional stress (average fat reserve index = 2.8 on a scale of 1-4 where 4 = highest fat content); and only one of 63 guts analysed was empty. Nevertheless, all 76 stoats handled were adults with 1-3 cementum annuli in their teeth, showing that reproduction had failed that season. Prey categories recorded in descending frequency of occurrence were birds, carabid beetle (ground beetle), weta, possum, rat, and mouse. The frequencies of occurrence of mice and birds in the diet of these stoats (10% and 48%, respectively) were quite different from those in stoats collected in Pig Creek, a tributary of the Borland River (87%, 5%), 12 months previously when mice were still abundant. Five of the six stoat guts containing mice were collected within 1 km of stations 14-22
Noisy Kondo impurities
The anti-ferromagnetic coupling of a magnetic impurity carrying a spin with
the conduction electrons spins of a host metal is the basic mechanism
responsible for the increase of the resistance of an alloy such as
CuFe at low temperature, as originally suggested by
Kondo . This coupling has emerged as a very generic property of localized
electronic states coupled to a continuum . The possibility to design artificial
controllable magnetic impurities in nanoscopic conductors has opened a path to
study this many body phenomenon in unusual situations as compared to the
initial one and, in particular, in out of equilibrium situations. So far,
measurements have focused on the average current. Here, we report on
\textit{current fluctuations} (noise) measurements in artificial Kondo
impurities made in carbon nanotube devices. We find a striking enhancement of
the current noise within the Kondo resonance, in contradiction with simple
non-interacting theories. Our findings provide a test bench for one of the most
important many-body theories of condensed matter in out of equilibrium
situations and shed light on the noise properties of highly conductive
molecular devices.Comment: minor differences with published versio
The CAST Time Projection Chamber
One of the three X-ray detectors of the CAST experiment searching for solar
axions is a Time Projection Chamber (TPC) with a multi-wire proportional
counter (MWPC) as a readout structure. Its design has been optimized to provide
high sensitivity to the detection of the low intensity X-ray signal expected in
the CAST experiment. A low hardware threshold of 0.8 keV is safely set during
normal data taking periods, and the overall efficiency for the detection of
photons coming from conversion of solar axions is 62 %. Shielding has been
installed around the detector, lowering the background level to 4.10 x 10^-5
counts/cm^2/s/keV between 1 and 10 keV. During phase I of the CAST experiment
the TPC has provided robust and stable operation, thus contributing with a
competitive result to the overall CAST limit on axion-photon coupling and mass.Comment: 19 pages, 11 figures and images, submitted to New Journal of Physic
Prediction of Response to Temozolomide in Low-Grade Glioma Patients Based on Tumor Size Dynamics and Genetic Characteristics
International audienceBoth molecular profiling of tumors and longitudinal tumor size data modeling are relevant strategies to predict cancer patients' response to treatment. Herein we propose a model of tumor growth inhibition integrating a tumor's genetic characteristics (p53 mutation and 1p/19q codeletion) that successfully describes the time course of tumor size in patients with low-grade gliomas treated with first-line temozolomide chemotherapy. The model captures potential tumor progression under chemotherapy by accounting for the emergence of tissue resistance to treatment following prolonged exposure to temozolomide. Using information on individual tumors' genetic characteristics, in addition to early tumor size measurements, the model was able to predict the duration and magnitude of response, especially in those patients in whom repeated assessment of tumor response was obtained during the first 3 months of treatment. Combining longitudinal tumor size quantitative modeling with a tumor''s genetic characterization appears as a promising strategy to personalize treatments in patients with low-grade gliomas. WHAT IS THE CURRENT KNOWLEDGE ON THE TOPIC? þ First-line temozolomide is frequently used to treat low-grade gliomas (LGG), which are slow-growing brain tumors. The duration of response depends on genetic characteristics such as 1p/19q chromosomal codeletion, p53 mutation, and IDH mutations. However, up to now there are no means of predicting, at the individual level, the duration of the response to TMZ and its potential benefit for a given patient. • WHAT QUESTION DID THIS STUDY ADDRESS? þ The present study assessed whether combining longitudinal tumor size quantitative modeling with a tumor's genetic characterization could be an effective means of predicting the response to temozolomide at the individual level in LGG patients. • WHAT THIS STUDY ADDS TO OUR KNOWLEDGE þ For the first time, we developed a model of tumor growth inhibition integrating a tumor's genetic characteristics which successfully describes the time course of tumor size and captures potential tumor progression under chemotherapy in LGG patients treated with first-line temozolomide. The present study shows that using information on individual tumors' genetic characteristics, in addition to early tumor size measurements, it is possible to predict the duration and magnitude of response to temozolomide. • HOW THIS MIGHT CHANGE CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY AND THERAPEUTICS þ Our model constitutes a rational tool to identify patients most likely to benefit from temozolomide and to optimize in these patients the duration of temozolomide therapy in order to ensure the longest duration of response to treatment. Response evaluation criteria such as RECIST—or RANO for brain tumors—are commonly used to assess response to anticancer treatments in clinical trials. 1,2 They assign a patient's response to one of four categories, ranging from " complete response " to " disease progression. " Yet, criticisms have been raised regarding the use of such categorical criteria in the drug development process, 3,4 and regulatory agencies have promoted the additional analysis of longitudinal tumor size measurements through the use of quantitative modeling. 5 Several mathematical models of tumor growth and response to treatment have been developed for this purpose. 6,7 These analyses have led to th
Strong quantum memory at resonant Fermi edges revealed by shot noise
Studies of non-equilibrium current fluctuations enable assessing correlations
involved in quantum transport through nanoscale conductors. They provide
additional information to the mean current on charge statistics and the
presence of coherence, dissipation, disorder, or entanglement. Shot noise,
being a temporal integral of the current autocorrelation function, reveals
dynamical information. In particular, it detects presence of non-Markovian
dynamics, i.e., memory, within open systems, which has been subject of many
current theoretical studies. We report on low-temperature shot noise
measurements of electronic transport through InAs quantum dots in the
Fermi-edge singularity regime and show that it exhibits strong memory effects
caused by quantum correlations between the dot and fermionic reservoirs. Our
work, apart from addressing noise in archetypical strongly correlated system of
prime interest, discloses generic quantum dynamical mechanism occurring at
interacting resonant Fermi edges.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
Landscape effects on the population dynamics of small mammal communities: A preliminary analysis of prey-resource variations
This study aims at estimating the effect of landscape composition on the availability of
small mammal preys (in terms of biomass) to predators on a sectorial scale (n x 1 km2). Four
study sites, representative of different stages of agriculture intensification, were selected in
eastern France according to landscape composition. The population dynarnics of Microtus arvalis, Arvicola terrestris, Clethrionomys
glareolus and Apodemus sp. were monitored from 1992 to 1996 by using index methods and
trapping.
M. arvalis and A. terrestris population biomasses were stable in landscapes with low
percentage of permanent grassland. M. arvalis populations displayed greater biomass
variations with sharp declines in the sites where the proportion of permanent grassland to
farmland was greater than 50 %. A. terrestris populations were very unstable in one study site
where the proportion of permanent grassland to farmland was greater than 85 %. Synchronic
patterns between M. arvalis populations and the populations of hedgerow rodents were
suspected at sites with large fluctuations of M. arvalis: every decline of the populations of
hedgerow rodents was concomitant with the M. arvalis decline.
These results suggest that two kinds of ecological systems in terms of prey-resource
variations for mammalian predators can be distinguished: (i) stable in landscapes with lower
proportion of permanent grassland, and (ii) unstable, with grassland species crashes and
synchronous declines of the rodent community, in landscapes with higher proportion of
permanent grassland.
Moreover, the population dynamics of small mammals were asynchronous between the
four sites situated at relatively short distance (some tens kilometres)L'objectif de cette étude est d'estimer l'effet de la composition du paysage sur les variations de disponibilité en biomasse de micro-mammifères pour les prédateurs, à l'échelle sectorielle (n × 1 km2), Quatre sites d'étude
représentatifs d'un gradient d'intensification agricole ont été choisis dans l'est de la France en fonction de la composition du paysage. Les fluctuations de biomasses de Microtus arvalis et Arvicola terrestris (espèces prairiales), de Clethrionomys glareolus et Apodemus sp. (espèces de
milieux fermés) ont été suivies de 1992 à 1996 par méthodes indiciaires et piégeage. Les synchronies entre les populations de M. arvalis et celles de rongeurs de milieux fermés ont été recherchées. Les fluctuations de biomasse de M. arvalis et A. terrestris sont stables dans les sites où la
proportion de prairie permanente est la plus faible. Les populations de M. arvalis présentent les plus larges amplitudes de variation de biomasse et les déclins les plus prononcés dans les sites où la proportion de prairie permanente sur la surface agricole est supérieure à 50 %. Les
populations d'A. terrestris ne sont instables que dans un site, là où la proportion de prairie permanente sur surface agricole est supérieure à 85 %. Les déclins de populations de rongeurs de milieux fermés (Clethrionomys glareolus et Apodemus sp.) sont concomitants de ceux de M. arvalis
dans les sites à fortes variations de biomasse de cette dernière espèce. Ces résultats suggèrent deux types de fonctionnement, en terme de variation de disponibilité en proies pour les prédateurs: (i) stable dans les paysages à faible proportion de prairie permanente, et (ii) instable, avec
des déclins prononcés et rapides des populations d'espèces prairiales, entraînant des déclins synchrones du peuplement de micro-mammifères étudié, dans les paysages à forte proportion de prairie permanente. Aucune synchronie dans les dynamiques de population de ces micro-mammifères n'est
observée entre les sites d'étude, éloignés de quelques dizaines de kilomètres seulement
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