6,642 research outputs found
Long-lived heteronuclear spin-singlet states
We report observation of long-lived spin-singlet states in a 13C-1H spin pair
at zero magnetic field. In 13C-labeled formic acid, we observe spin-singlet
lifetimes as long as 37 seconds, about a factor of three longer than the T1
lifetime of dipole polarization in the triplet state. We also observe that the
lifetime of the singlet-triplet coherence, T2, is longer than T1. Moreover, we
demonstrate that this singlet states formed by spins of a heteronucleus and a
1H nucleus, can exhibit longer lifetimes than the respective triplet states in
systems consisting of more than two nuclear spins. Although long-lived
homonuclear spin-singlet states have been extensively studied, this is the
first experimental observation of analogous spin-singlets consisting of a
heteronucleus and a proton.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Fixed base simulator study of an externally blown flap STOL transport airplane during approach and landing
A fixed-base simulator study was conducted to determine the flight characteristics of a representative STOL transport having a high wing and equipped with an external-flow jet flap in combination with four high-bypass-ratio fan-jet engines during the approach and landing. Real-time digital simulation techniques were used. The computer was programed with equations of motion for six degrees of freedom and the aerodynamic inputs were based on measured wind-tunnel data. A visual display of a STOL airport was provided for simulation of the flare and touchdown characteristics. The primary piloting task was an instrument approach to a breakout at a 200-ft ceiling with a visual landing
The Millennium Galaxy Catalogue: The connection between close pairs and asymmetry; implications for the galaxy merger rate
We compare the use of galaxy asymmetry and pair proximity for measuring
galaxy merger fractions and rates for a volume limited sample of 3184 galaxies
with -21 < M(B) -5 log h < -18 mag. and 0.010 < z < 0.123 drawn from the
Millennium Galaxy Catalogue. Our findings are that:
(i) Galaxies in close pairs are generally more asymmetric than isolated
galaxies and the degree of asymmetry increases for closer pairs. At least 35%
of close pairs (with projected separation of less than 20 h^{-1} kpc and
velocity difference of less than 500 km s^{-1}) show significant asymmetry and
are therefore likely to be physically bound.
(ii) Among asymmetric galaxies, we find that at least 80% are either
interacting systems or merger remnants. However, a significant fraction of
galaxies initially identified as asymmetric are contaminated by nearby stars or
are fragmented by the source extraction algorithm. Merger rates calculated via
asymmetry indices need careful attention in order to remove the above sources
of contamination, but are very reliable once this is carried out.
(iii) Close pairs and asymmetries represent two complementary methods of
measuring the merger rate. Galaxies in close pairs identify future mergers,
occurring within the dynamical friction timescale, while asymmetries are
sensitive to the immediate pre-merger phase and identify remnants.
(iv) The merger fraction derived via the close pair fraction and asymmetries
is about 2% for a merger rate of (5.2 +- 1.0) 10^{-4} h^3 Mpc^{-3} Gyr^{-1}.
These results are marginally consistent with theoretical simulations (depending
on the merger time-scale), but imply a flat evolution of the merger rate with
redshift up to z ~1.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figures, emulateapj format. ApJ, accepte
Strongly enhanced photon collection from diamond defect centres under micro-fabricated integrated solid immersion lenses
The efficiency of collecting photons from optically active defect centres in
bulk diamond is greatly reduced by refraction and reflection at the diamond-air
interface. We report on the fabrication and measurement of a geometrical
solution to the problem; integrated solid immersion lenses (SILs) etched
directly into the surface of diamond. An increase of a factor of 10 was
observed in the saturated count-rate from a single negatively charged
nitrogen-vacancy (NV-) within a 5um diameter SIL compared with NV-s under a
planar surface in the same crystal. A factor of 3 reduction in background
emission was also observed due to the reduced excitation volume with a SIL
present. Such a system is potentially scalable and easily adaptable to other
defect centres in bulk diamond.Comment: 5 Pages, 5 figures (4 subfigures) - corrected typ
External-field-induced tricritical point in a fluctuation-driven nematic-smectic-A transition
We study theoretically the effect of an external field on the
nematic-smectic-A (NA) transition close to the tricritical point, where
fluctuation effects govern the qualitative behavior of the transition. An
external field suppresses nematic director fluctuations, by making them
massive. For a fluctuation-driven first-order transition, we show that an
external field can drive the transition second-order. In an appropriate liquid
crystal system, we predict the required magnetic field to be of order 10 T. The
equivalent electric field is of order .Comment: revtex, 4 pages, 1 figure; revised version, some equations have been
modifie
Ultra-bright and efficient single photon generation based on N-V centres in nanodiamonds on a solid immersion lens
Single photons are fundamental elements for quantum information technologies
such as quantum cryptography, quantum information storage and optical quantum
computing. Colour centres in diamond have proven to be stable single photon
sources and thus essential components for reliable and integrated quantum
information technology. A key requirement for such applications is a large
photon flux and a high efficiency. Paying tribute to various attempts to
maximise the single photon flux we show that collection efficiencies of photons
from colour centres can be increased with a rather simple experimental setup.
To do so we spin-coated nanodiamonds containing single nitrogen-vacancy colour
centres on the flat surface of a ZrO2 solid immersion lens. We found stable
single photon count rates of up to 853 kcts/s at saturation under continuous
wave excitation while having excess to more than 100 defect centres with count
rates from 400 kcts/s to 500 kcts/s. For a blinking defect centre we found
count rates up to 2.4 Mcts/s for time intervals of several ten seconds. It
seems to be a general feature that very high rates are accompanied by a
blinking behaviour. The overall collection efficiency of our setup of up to
4.2% is the highest yet reported for N-V defect centres in diamond. Under
pulsed excitation of a stable emitter of 10 MHz, 2.2% of all pulses caused a
click on the detector adding to 221 kcts/s thus opening the way towards diamond
based on-demand single photon sources for quantum applications
The maintenance of urban circulation: An operational logic of infrastructural control
This paper examines the increased visibility of urban infrastructures occurring through a close coupling of information technologies and the selective integration of urban services. It asks how circulatory flow is managed in the contemporary city, by focusing on the emergence of new forms of governmentality associated with “smart” technologies. Drawing on Foucault’s governmentality, and based on a case study of Rio de Janeiro’s Operations Centre (COR), the paper argues that new understandings of the city are being developed, representing a new mode of urban infrastructure based on the partial and selective rebundling of splintered networks and fragmented urban space. The COR operates through a “un-black boxing” of urban infrastructures, where the extension of control room logics to the totality of the city points to their fragility and the continuous effort involved in their operational accomplishment. It also functions through a collapse in relations of control—of the everyday and the emergency—, which, enabled by the incorporation of the public in operational control, further raise public awareness of urban infrastructures. These characteristics point to a specific form of urban governmentality based on the operationalisation of infrastructural flows and the development of novel ways of seeing and engaging with the city
Zap1 Control of Cell-Cell Signaling in \u3ci\u3eCandida albicans\u3c/i\u3e Biofilms
Biofilms of Candida albicans include both yeast cells and hyphae. Prior studies indicated that a zap1/ mutant, defective in zinc regulator Zap1, has increased accumulation of yeast cells in biofilms. This altered yeast-hypha balance may arise from internal regulatory alterations or from an effect on the production of diffusible quorum-sensing (QS) molecules. Here, we develop biosensor reporter strains that express yeastspecific YWP1-RFP or hypha-specific HWP1-RFP, along with a constitutive TDH3-GFP normalization standard. Seeding these biosensor strains into biofilms allows a biological activity assay of the surrounding biofilm milieu. A zap1/ biofilm induces the yeast-specific YWP1-RFP reporter in a wild-type biosensor strain, as determined by both quantitative reverse transcription-PCR (qRT-PCR) gene expression measurements and confocal microscopy. Remediation of the zap1/ zinc uptake defect through zinc transporter gene ZRT2 overexpression reverses induction of the yeast-specific YWP1-RFP reporter. Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) measurements of known organic QS molecules show that the zap1/ mutant accumulates significantly less farnesol than wild-type or complemented strains and that ZRT2 overexpression does not affect farnesol accumulation. Farnesol is a well-characterized inhibitor of hypha formation; hence, a reduction in farnesol levels in zap1/ biofilms is unexpected. Our findings argue that a Zap1- and zinc-dependent signal affects the yeast-hypha balance and that it is operative in the low-farnesol environment of the zap1/ biofilm. In addition, our results indicate that Zap1 is a positive regulator of farnesol accumulation
Thermal transistor: Heat flux switching and modulating
Thermal transistor is an efficient heat control device which can act as a
heat switch as well as a heat modulator. In this paper, we study systematically
one-dimensional and two-dimensional thermal transistors. In particular, we show
how to improve significantly the efficiency of the one-dimensional thermal
transistor. The study is also extended to the design of two-dimensional thermal
transistor by coupling different anharmonic lattices such as the
Frenkel-Kontorova and the Fermi-Pasta-Ulam lattices. Analogy between anharmonic
lattices and single-walled carbon nanotube is drawn and possible experimental
realization with multi-walled nanotube is suggested.Comment: To appear in J. Phys. Soc. Jp
Pseudogap effects induced by resonant pair scattering
We demonstrate how resonant pair scattering of correlated electrons above T_c
can give rise to pseudogap behavior. This resonance in the scattering T-matrix
appears for superconducting interactions of intermediate strength, within the
framework of a simple fermionic model. It is associated with a splitting of the
single peak in the spectral function into a pair of peaks separated by an
energy gap. Our physical picture is contrasted with that derived from other
T-matrix schemes, with superconducting fluctuation effects, and with preformed
pair (boson-fermion) models. Implications for photoemission and tunneling
experiments in the cuprates are discussed.Comment: REVTeX3.0; 4 pages, 4 EPS figures (included
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