2,093 research outputs found
Pacific Ocean Forcing and Atmospheric Variability are the Dominant Causes of Spatially Widespread Droughts in the Contiguous United States
The contributions of oceanic and atmospheric variability to spatially widespread summer droughts in the contiguous United States (hereafter, pan-CONUS droughts) are investigated using 16-member ensembles of the Community Climate Model version 3 (CCM3) forced with observed sea surface temperatures (SSTs) from 1856 to 2012. The employed SST forcing fields are either (i) global or restricted to the (ii) tropical Pacific or (iii) tropical Atlantic to isolate the impacts of these two ocean regions on pan-CONUS droughts. Model results show that SST forcing of pan-CONUS droughts originates almost entirely from the tropical Pacific because of atmospheric highs from the northern Pacific to eastern North America established by La Nia conditions, with little contribution from the tropical Atlantic. Notably, in all three model configurations, internal atmospheric variability influences pan-CONUS drought occurrence by as much or more than the ocean forcing and can alone cause pan-CONUS droughts by establishing a dominant high centered over the US montane West. Similar results are found for the Community Atmosphere Model version 5 (CAM5). Model results are compared to the observational record, which supports model-inferred contributions to pan-CONUS droughts from La Nias and internal atmospheric variability. While there may be an additional association with warm Atlantic SSTs in the observational record, this association is ambiguous due to the limited number of observed pan-CONUS. The ambiguity thus opens the possibility that the observational results are limited by sampling over the 20th-century and not at odds with the suggested dominance of Pacific Ocean forcing in the model ensembles
Gate induced g-factor control and dimensional transition for donors in multi-valley semiconductors
The dependence of the g-factors of semiconductor donors on applied electric
and magnetic fields is of immense importance in spin based quantum computation
and in semiconductor spintronics. The donor g-factor Stark shift is sensitive
to the orientation of the electric and magnetic fields and strongly influenced
by the band-structure and spin-orbit interactions of the host. Using a
multimillion atom tight-binding framework the spin-orbit Stark parameters are
computed for donors in multi-valley semiconductors, silicon and germanium.
Comparison with limited experimental data shows good agreement for a donor in
silicon. Results for gate induced transition from 3D to 2D wave function
confinement show that the corresponding g-factor shift in Si is experimentally
observable.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Atomistic simulations of adiabatic coherent electron transport in triple donor systems
A solid-state analogue of Stimulated Raman Adiabatic Passage can be
implemented in a triple well solid-state system to coherently transport an
electron across the wells with exponentially suppressed occupation in the
central well at any point of time. Termed coherent tunneling adiabatic passage
(CTAP), this method provides a robust way to transfer quantum information
encoded in the electronic spin across a chain of quantum dots or donors. Using
large scale atomistic tight-binding simulations involving over 3.5 million
atoms, we verify the existence of a CTAP pathway in a realistic solid-state
system: gated triple donors in silicon. Realistic gate profiles from commercial
tools were combined with tight-binding methods to simulate gate control of the
donor to donor tunnel barriers in the presence of cross-talk. As CTAP is an
adiabatic protocol, it can be analyzed by solving the time independent problem
at various stages of the pulse - justifying the use of time-independent
tight-binding methods to this problem. Our results show that a three donor CTAP
transfer, with inter-donor spacing of 15 nm can occur on timescales greater
than 23 ps, well within experimentally accessible regimes. The method not only
provides a tool to guide future CTAP experiments, but also illuminates the
possibility of system engineering to enhance control and transfer times.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
Elevated intracellular cAMP exacerbates vulnerability to oxidative stress in optic nerve head astrocytes.
Glaucoma is characterized by a progressive loss of retinal ganglion cells and their axons, but the underlying biological basis for the accompanying neurodegeneration is not known. Accumulating evidence indicates that structural and functional abnormalities of astrocytes within the optic nerve head (ONH) have a role. However, whether the activation of cyclic adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate (cAMP) signaling pathway is associated with astrocyte dysfunction in the ONH remains unknown. We report here that the cAMP/protein kinase A (PKA) pathway is critical to ONH astrocyte dysfunction, leading to caspase-3 activation and cell death via the AKT/Bim/Bax signaling pathway. Furthermore, elevated intracellular cAMP exacerbates vulnerability to oxidative stress in ONH astrocytes, and this may contribute to axonal damage in glaucomatous neurodegeneration. Inhibition of intracellular cAMP/PKA signaling activation protects ONH astrocytes by increasing AKT phosphorylation against oxidative stress. These results strongly indicate that activation of cAMP/PKA pathway has an important role in astrocyte dysfunction, and suggest that modulating cAMP/PKA pathway has therapeutic potential for glaucomatous ONH degeneration
BTN1A1 Is a Novel Immune Checkpoint Mutually Exclusive to PD-L1
BACKGROUND: While Programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1)/programmed cell death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) blockade is a potent antitumor treatment strategy, it is effective in only limited subsets of patients with cancer, emphasizing the need for the identification of additional immune checkpoints. Butyrophilin 1A1 (BTN1A1) has been reported to exhibit potential immunoregulatory activity, but its ability to function as an immune checkpoint remains to be systematically assessed, and the mechanisms underlying such activity have yet to be characterized.
METHODS: BTN1A1 expression was evaluated in primary tumor tissue samples, and its ability to suppress T-cell activation and T cell-dependent tumor clearance was examined. The relationship between BTN1A1 and PD-L1 expression was further characterized, followed by the development of a BTN1A1-specific antibody that was administered to tumor-bearing mice to test the amenability of this target to immune checkpoint inhibition.
RESULTS: BTN1A1 was confirmed to suppress T-cell activation in vitro and in vivo. Robust BTN1A1 expression was detected in a range of solid tumor tissue samples, and BTN1A1 expression was mutually exclusive with that of PD-L1 as a consequence of its inhibition of Janus-activated kinase/signal transducer and activator of transcription signaling-induced PD-L1 upregulation. Antibody-mediated BTN1A1 blockade suppressed tumor growth and enhanced immune cell infiltration in syngeneic tumor-bearing mice.
CONCLUSION: Together, these results confirm that the potential of BTN1A1 is a bona fide immune checkpoint and a viable immunotherapeutic target for the treatment of individuals with anti-PD-1/PD-L1 refractory or resistant disease, opening new avenues to improving survival outcomes for patients with a range of cancers
Orbital Stark effect and quantum confinement transition of donors in silicon
Adiabatic shuttling of single impurity bound electrons to gate induced
surface states in semiconductors has attracted much attention in recent times,
mostly in the context of solid-state quantum computer architecture. A recent
transport spectroscopy experiment for the first time was able to probe the
Stark shifted spectrum of a single donor in silicon buried close to a gate.
Here we present the full theoretical model involving large-scale quantum
mechanical simulations that was used to compute the Stark shifted donor states
in order to interpret the experimental data. Use of atomistic tight-binding
technique on a domain of over a million atoms helped not only to incorporate
the full band structure of the host, but also to treat realistic device
geometries and donor models, and to use a large enough basis set to capture any
number of donor states. The method yields a quantitative description of the
symmetry transition that the donor electron undergoes from a 3D Coulomb
confined state to a 2D surface state as the electric field is ramped up
adiabatically. In the intermediate field regime, the electron resides in a
superposition between the states of the atomic donor potential and that of the
quantum dot like states at the surface. In addition to determining the effect
of field and donor depth on the electronic structure, the model also provides a
basis to distinguish between a phosphorus and an arsenic donor based on their
Stark signature. The method also captures valley-orbit splitting in both the
donor well and the interface well, a quantity critical to silicon qubits. The
work concludes with a detailed analysis of the effects of screening on the
donor spectrum.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figures, journa
Mapping donor electron wave function deformations at sub-Bohr orbit resolution
Quantum wave function engineering of dopant-based Si nano-structures reveals
new physics in the solid-state, and is expected to play a vital role in future
nanoelectronics. Central to any fundamental understanding or application is the
ability to accurately characterize the deformation of the electron wave
functions in these atom-based structures through electromagnetic field control.
We present a method for mapping the subtle changes that occur in the electron
wave function through the measurement of the hyperfine tensor probed by 29Si
impurities. Our results show that detecting the donor electron wave function
deformation is possible with resolution at the sub-Bohr radius level.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, and 1 tabl
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