1,707 research outputs found
Bound States in Sharply Bent Waveguides: Analytical and Experimental Approach
Quantum wires and electromagnetic waveguides possess common features since
their physics is described by the same wave equation. We exploit this analogy
to investigate experimentally with microwave waveguides and theoretically with
the help of an effective potential approach the occurrence of bound states in
sharply bent quantum wires. In particular, we compute the bound states, study
the features of the transition from a bound to an unbound state caused by the
variation of the bending angle and determine the critical bending angles at
which such a transition takes place. The predictions are confirmed by
calculations based on a conventional numerical method as well as experimental
measurements of the spectra and electric field intensity distributions of
electromagnetic waveguides
Microstructured blood vessel surrogates reveal structural tropism of motile malaria parasites
Plasmodium sporozoites, the highly motile forms of the malaria parasite, are transmitted naturally by mosquitoes and traverse the skin to find, associate with, and enter blood capillaries. Research aimed at understanding how sporozoites select blood vessels is hampered by the lack of a suitable experimental system. Arrays of uniform cylindrical pillars can be used to study small cells moving in controlled environments. Here, an array system displaying a variety of pillars with different diameters and shapes is developed in order to investigate how Plasmodium sporozoites associate to the pillars as blood vessel surrogates. Investigating the association of sporozoites to pillars in arrays displaying pillars of different diameters reveals that the crescent-shaped parasites prefer to associate with and migrate around pillars with a similar curvature. This suggests that after transmission by a mosquito, malaria parasites may use a structural tropism to recognize blood capillaries in the dermis in order to gain access to the blood stream
Genome sequence of the Bacteroides fragilis phage ATCC 51477-B1
The genome of a fecal pollution indicator phage, Bacteroides fragilis ATCC 51477-B1, was sequenced and consisted of 44,929 bases with a G+C content of 38.7%. Forty-six putative open reading frames were identified and genes were organized into functional clusters for host specificity, lysis, replication and regulation, and packaging and structural proteins
Crumples as a generic stress-focusing instability in confined sheets
Thin elastic solids are easily deformed into a myriad of three-dimensional
shapes, which may contain sharp localized structures as in a crumpled candy
wrapper, or have smooth and diffuse features like the undulating edge of a
flower. Anticipating and controlling these morphologies is crucial to a variety
of applications involving textiles, synthetic skins, and inflatable structures.
Here we show that a "wrinkle-to-crumple" transition, previously observed in
specific settings, is a ubiquitous response for confined sheets. This unified
picture is borne out of a suite of model experiments on polymer films confined
to liquid interfaces with spherical, hyperbolic, and cylindrical geometries,
which are complemented by experiments on macroscopic membranes inflated with
gas. We use measurements across this wide range of geometries, boundary
conditions, and lengthscales to quantify several robust morphological features
of the crumpled phase, and we build an empirical phase diagram for crumple
formation that disentangles the competing effects of curvature and compression.
Our results suggest that crumples are a generic microstructure that emerge at
large curvatures due to a competition of elastic and substrate energies.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figure
Uakitite, VN, a new mononitride mineral from uakit iron meteorite (IIAB)
Uakitite was observed in small troilite–daubréelite (±schreibersite) inclusions (up to 100 µm) and in large troilite–daubréelite nodules (up to 1 cm) in Fe-Ni-metal (kamacite) of the Uakit iron meteorite (IIAB), Republic of Buryatia, Russia. Such associations in the Uakit meteorite seemed to form due to high-temperature (>1000 °C) separation of Fe-Cr-rich sulfide liquid from Fe-metal melt. Most inclusions represent alternation of layers of troilite and daubréelite, which may be a result of solid decay of an initial Fe-Cr-sulfide. These inclusions are partially resorbed and mainly located in fissures of the meteorite, which is now filled with magnetite, and rarely other secondary minerals. Phase relations indicate that uakitite is one of the early minerals in these associations. It forms isometric (cubic) crystals (in daubréelite) or rounded grains (in schreibersite). The size of uakitite grains is usually less than 5 µm. It is associated with sulfides (daubréelite, troilite, grokhovskyite), schreibersite and magnetite. Carlsbergite CrN, a more abundant nitride in the Uakit meteorite, was not found in any assemblages with uakitite. Physical and optical properties of uakitite are quite similar to synthetic VN: yellow and transparent phase with metallic luster; Mohs hardness: 9–10; light gray color with a pinky tint in reflected light; density (calc.) = 6.128 g/cm3. Uakitite is structurally related to the osbornite group minerals: carlsbergite CrN and osbornite TiN. Structural data were obtained for three uakitite crystals using the electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) technique. Fitting of the EBSD patterns for a synthetic VN model (cubic, Fm-3m, a = 4.1328(3) Å; V = 70.588(9) Å3; Z = 4) resulted in the parameter MAD = 0.14–0.37° (best-good fit). Analytical data for uakitite (n = 54, in wt. %) are: V, 71.33; Cr, 5.58; Fe, 1.56; N, 21.41; Ti, below detection limit (<0.005). The empirical formula (V0.91Cr0.07Fe0.02)1.00N1.00 indicates that chromium incorporates in the structure according to the scheme V3+ → Cr3+ (up to 7 mol. % of the carlsbergite end-member). © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.Russian Foundation for Basic Research, RFBR: 17-05-00129, IGM SD 0330-2016-0005Government Council on Grants, Russian FederationMinistry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian FederationFunding: The investigations were partly supported by RFBR (grant 17-05-00129) and the State assignment project (IGM SD 0330-2016-0005). This work was also supported by the Initiative Project of Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation and by Act 211 of the Government of the Russian Federation, agreement no. 02.A03.21.0006
Stable Isotope Phosphate Labelling of Diverse Metabolites is Enabled by a Family of O-18-Phosphoramidites**
A family of 18O2-phosphoramidites facilitates synthetic access on gram-scale to various isotopically pure 18O-labelled phosphate products, like nucleotides, inositol phosphates, polyphosphates, and DNA. The utility of these 18O-natural products is underlined in the assignment of various metabolites from biological matrices using capillary electrophoresis electrospray ionisation triple quadrupole mass spectrometry. Stable isotope labelling is state-of-the-art in quantitative mass spectrometry, yet often accessing the required standards is cumbersome and very expensive. Here, a unifying synthetic concept for 18O-labelled phosphates is presented, based on a family of modified 18O2-phosphoramidite reagents. This toolbox offers access to major classes of biologically highly relevant phosphorylated metabolites as their isotopologues including nucleotides, inositol phosphates, -pyrophosphates, and inorganic polyphosphates. 18O-enrichment ratios >95 % and good yields are obtained consistently in gram-scale reactions, while enabling late-stage labelling. We demonstrate the utility of the 18O-labelled inositol phosphates and pyrophosphates by assignment of these metabolites from different biological matrices. We demonstrate that phosphate neutral loss is negligible in an analytical setup employing capillary electrophoresis electrospray ionisation triple quadrupole mass spectrometry
Assessment of the comagmaticity of gabbroids and syenites of the Arsentyevsky massif (Western Transbaikalia)
Object . The results of geochronological and isotope-geochemical studies of the Arsentyevsky titaniferous gabbro-syenite massif of the Western Transbaikalia, which previously referred to the gabbro-syenite series of a two-phase structure are presented. The rocks of the massif contain an increased concentration of titanomagnetite, ilmenite, magnetite and in some cases apatite and are considered as complex iron-titanium ores. Methods. The studies were performed by silicate analysis methods, XRF and ICP-MS; age determination for zircons was carried out by LA-ICP-MS and SHRIMP-II methods. The composition of minerals on the X-ray microarray analyzer MAP-3 and electron microscope LEO-1430 was studied. Results. In the basites, a standard trend is observed for the evolution of compositions from melanocratic to terminal leucocratic differences with an increase in the content of silica, alumina, and sodium, and a decrease in magnesium and calcium. Syenites differ from anorthosites in the content of impurity elements including rubidium, niobium, strontium and REE The geochronological studies of rocks of Arsent’evsky gabbro-syenite massif, showed a significant time gap in the formation of gabbroids relative to syenites. The U-Pb age of the gabbroids was 279.5 ± 2.0 Ma, alkali feldspar syenites have age 229.4 ± 2.8 Ma, and biotite syenites - 226 ± 2.4 Ma. Conclusion. The obtained results by age and data on the geochemical features of the rocks made it possible to conclude that there was no genetic relationship between basites and syenites. Petrochemical and geochemical features of biotite and alkali-feldspar syenites proved to be close to the rocks of the Mesozoic Kunaleisky complex
Measurement of Leptonic Asymmetries and Top Quark Polarization in ttbar Production
We present measurements of lepton (l) angular distributions in ttbar -> W+ b
W- b -> l+ nu b l- nubar bbar decays produced in ppbar collisions at a
center-of-mass energy of sqrt(s)=1.96TeV, where l is an electron or muon. Using
data corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 5.4fb^-1, collected with the
D0 detector at the Fermilab Collider, we find that the angular distributions of
l- relative to anti-protons and l+ relative to protons are in agreement with
each other. Combining the two distributions and correcting for detector
acceptance we obtain the forward-backward asymmetry A^l_FB = (5.8 +- 5.1(stat)
+- 1.3(syst))%, compared to the standard model prediction of A^l_FB (predicted)
= (4.7 +- 0.1)%. This result is further combined with the measurement based on
the analysis of the l+jets final state to obtain A^l_FB = (11.8 +- 3.2)%.
Furthermore, we present a first study of the top-quark polarization.Comment: submitted versio
Precise measurement of the top quark mass in the dilepton channel at D0
We measure the top quark mass (mt) in ppbar collisions at a center of mass
energy of 1.96 TeV using dilepton ttbar->W+bW-bbar->l+nubl-nubarbbar events,
where l denotes an electron, a muon, or a tau that decays leptonically. The
data correspond to an integrated luminosity of 5.4 fb-1 collected with the D0
detector at the Fermilab Tevatron Collider. We obtain mt = 174.0 +- 1.8(stat)
+- 2.4(syst) GeV, which is in agreement with the current world average mt =
173.3 +- 1.1 GeV. This is currently the most precise measurement of mt in the
dilepton channel.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
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