19,788 research outputs found
A phenomenological model of the superconducting state of the Bechgaard salts
We present a group theoretical analysis of the superconducting state of the
Bechgaard salts, e.g., (TMTSF)_2PF_6 or (TMTSF)_2ClO_6. We show that there are
eight symmetry distinct superconducting states. Of these only the (fully
gapped, even frequency, p-wave, triplet) 'polar state' is consistent with the
full range of the experiments on the Bechgaard salts. The gap of the polar
state is d(k) (psi_uk,0,0), where psi_uk may be any odd parity function that is
translationally invariant.Comment: 4 pages, no figure
Development of silicon carbide semiconductor devices for high temperature applications
The semiconducting properties of electronic grade silicon carbide crystals, such as wide energy bandgap, make it particularly attractive for high temperature applications. Applications for high temperature electronic devices include instrumentation for engines under development, engine control and condition monitoring systems, and power conditioning and control systems for space platforms and satellites. Discrete prototype SiC devices were fabricated and tested at elevated temperatures. Grown p-n junction diodes demonstrated very good rectification characteristics at 870 K. A depletion-mode metal-oxide-semiconductor field-effect transistor was also successfully fabricated and tested at 770 K. While optimization of SiC fabrication processes remain, it is believed that SiC is an enabling high temperature electronic technology
Advances in silicon carbide Chemical Vapor Deposition (CVD) for semiconductor device fabrication
Improved SiC chemical vapor deposition films of both 3C and 6H polytypes were grown on vicinal (0001) 6H-SiC wafers cut from single-crystal boules. These films were produced from silane and propane in hydrogen at one atmosphere at a temperature of 1725 K. Among the more important factors which affected the structure and morphology of the grown films were the tilt angle of the substrate, the polarity of the growth surface, and the pregrowth surface treatment of the substrate. With proper pregrowth surface treatment, 6H films were grown on 6H substrates with tilt angles as small as 0.1 degrees. In addition, 3C could be induced to grow within selected regions on a 6H substrate. The polarity of the substrate was a large factor in the incorporation of dopants during epitaxial growth. A new growth model is discussed which explains the control of SiC polytype in epitaxial growth on vicinal (0001) SiC substrates
Targeted expression of SV40 T antigen in the hair follicle of transgenic mice produces an aberrant hair phenotype
Directed expression of SV40 large T antigen (TAg) in transgenic mice can induce tissue-specific tumorigenesis and useful cell lines exhibiting differentiated characteristics can be established from resultant tumor cells. In an attempt to produce an immortalised mouse hair follicle cortical cell line for the study of hair keratin gene control, SV40 TAg expression was targeted to the hair follicles of transgenic mice using a sheep hair gene promoter. Expression of SV40 TAg in the follicle cortex disrupted normal fiber ultrastructure, producing a marked phenotypic effect. Affected hairs were wavy or severely kinked (depending on the severity of the phenotype) producing an appearance ranging from a ruffled coat to a stubble covering the back of the mouse. The transgenic hairs appeared to be weakened at the base of the fibers, leading to premature hair-loss and a thinner pelage, or regions of temporary nudity. No follicle tumors or neoplasia were apparent and immortalisation of cortical cells could not be established in culture. In situ hybridisation studies in the hair follicle using histone H3 as a cell proliferation marker suggested that cell proliferation had ceased prior to commencement of K2.10-TAg expression and was not re-established in the differentiating cortical cells. Hence, TAg was unable to induce cell immortalisation at that stage of cortical cell differentiation. However, transgenic mice developed various other abnormalities including vertebral abnormalities and bladder, liver and intestinal tumors, which resulted in reduced life expectancy.R. Keough, B. Powell and G. Roger
A Knowledge Gradient Policy for Sequencing Experiments to Identify the Structure of RNA Molecules Using a Sparse Additive Belief Model
We present a sparse knowledge gradient (SpKG) algorithm for adaptively
selecting the targeted regions within a large RNA molecule to identify which
regions are most amenable to interactions with other molecules. Experimentally,
such regions can be inferred from fluorescence measurements obtained by binding
a complementary probe with fluorescence markers to the targeted regions. We use
a biophysical model which shows that the fluorescence ratio under the log scale
has a sparse linear relationship with the coefficients describing the
accessibility of each nucleotide, since not all sites are accessible (due to
the folding of the molecule). The SpKG algorithm uniquely combines the Bayesian
ranking and selection problem with the frequentist regularized
regression approach Lasso. We use this algorithm to identify the sparsity
pattern of the linear model as well as sequentially decide the best regions to
test before experimental budget is exhausted. Besides, we also develop two
other new algorithms: batch SpKG algorithm, which generates more suggestions
sequentially to run parallel experiments; and batch SpKG with a procedure which
we call length mutagenesis. It dynamically adds in new alternatives, in the
form of types of probes, are created by inserting, deleting or mutating
nucleotides within existing probes. In simulation, we demonstrate these
algorithms on the Group I intron (a mid-size RNA molecule), showing that they
efficiently learn the correct sparsity pattern, identify the most accessible
region, and outperform several other policies
On the Properties of Plastic Ablators in Laser-Driven Material Dynamics Experiments
Radiation hydrodynamics simulations were used to study the effect of plastic
ablators in laser-driven shock experiments. The sensitivity to composition and
equation of state was found to be 5-10% in ablation pressure. As was found for
metals, a laser pulse of constant irradiance gave a pressure history which
decreased by several percent per nanosecond. The pressure history could be made
more constant by adjusting the irradiance history. The impedance mismatch with
the sample gave an increase o(100%) in the pressure transmitted into the
sample, for a reduction of several tens of percent in the duration of the peak
load applied to the sample, and structured the release history by adding a
release step to a pressure close to the ablation pressure. Algebraic relations
were found between the laser pulse duration, the ablator thickness, and the
duration of the peak pressure applied to the sample, involving quantities
calculated from the equations of state of the ablator and sample using shock
dynamics.Comment: Typos fixe
Regulation of a hair follicle keratin intermediate filament gene promoter
During hair growth, cortical cells emerging from the proliferative follicle bulb rapidly undergo a differentiation program and synthesise large amounts of hair keratin proteins. To identify some of the controls that specify expression of hair genes we have defined the minimal promoter of the wool keratin intermediate filament gene K2.10. The region of this gene spanning nucleotides -350 to +53 was sufficient to direct expression of the lacZ gene to the follicle cortex of transgenic mice but deletion of nucleotides -350 to -150 led to a complete loss of promoter activity. When a four base substitution mutation was introduced into the minimal functional promoter at the binding site for lymphoid enhancer factor 1 (LEF-1), promoter activity in transgenic mice was decreased but specificity was not affected. To investigate the interaction of trans-acting factors within the minimal K2.10 promoter we performed DNase I footprinting analyses and electrophoretic mobility shift assays. In addition to LEF-1, Sp1, AP2-like and NF1-like proteins bound to the promoter. The Sp1 and AP2-like proteins bound sequences flanking the LEF-1 binding site whereas the NF1-like proteins bound closer to the transcription start site. We conclude that the LEF-1 binding site is an enhancer element of the K2.10 promoter in the hair follicle cortex and that factors other than LEF-1 regulate promoter tissue- and differentiation-specificity.S. M. Dunn, R. A. Keough, G. E. Rogers and B. C. Powel
Relation between the eigenfrequencies of Bogoliubov excitations of Bose-Einstein condensates and the eigenvalues of the Jacobian in a time-dependent variational approach
We study the relation between the eigenfrequencies of the Bogoliubov
excitations of Bose-Einstein condensates, and the eigenvalues of the Jacobian
stability matrix in a variational approach which maps the Gross-Pitaevskii
equation to a system of equations of motion for the variational parameters. We
do this for Bose-Einstein condensates with attractive contact interaction in an
external trap, and for a simple model of a self-trapped Bose-Einstein
condensate with attractive 1/r interaction. The stationary solutions of the
Gross-Pitaevskii equation and Bogoliubov excitations are calculated using a
finite-difference scheme. The Bogoliubov spectra of the ground and excited
state of the self-trapped monopolar condensate exhibits a Rydberg-like
structure, which can be explained by means of a quantum defect theory. On the
variational side, we treat the problem using an ansatz of time-dependent
coupled Gaussians combined with spherical harmonics. We first apply this ansatz
to a condensate in an external trap without long-range interaction, and
calculate the excitation spectrum with the help of the time-dependent
variational principle. Comparing with the full-numerical results, we find a
good agreement for the eigenfrequencies of the lowest excitation modes with
arbitrary angular momenta. The variational method is then applied to calculate
the excitations of the self-trapped monopolar condensates, and the
eigenfrequencies of the excitation modes are compared.Comment: 15 pages, 12 figure
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