871 research outputs found
SpectraFox: A free open-source data management and analysis tool for scanning probe microscopy and spectroscopy
In the last decades scanning probe microscopy and spectroscopy have become
well-established tools in nanotechnology and surface science. This opened the
market for many commercial manufacturers, each with different hardware and
software standards. Besides the advantage of a wide variety of available
hardware, the diversity may software-wise complicate the data exchange between
scientists, and the data analysis for groups working with hardware developed
by different manufacturers. Not only the file format differs between
manufacturers, but also the data often requires further numerical treatment
before publication. SpectraFox is an open-source and independent tool which
manages, processes, and evaluates scanning probe spectroscopy and microscopy
data. It aims at simplifying the documentation in parallel to measurement, and
it provides solid evaluation tools for a large number of data
The Potential Impact of a Proposed Ban on the Sale of U.S. Horses for Slaughter and Human Consumption
Both federal and state governments in the United States are being asked to enact laws that would make slaughtering of horses for human consumption illegal. In the past, the United States was one of the principal exporters of horsemeat to Europe. This paper examines the impacts of a proposed ban on the U.S. horse industry and the U.S. export market for horsemeat. Findings indicate a loss of approximately $300 per horse in the United States as a result of such a ban. The supply of U.S. exported horsemeat has declined during the past decade. The results suggest that the most significant factors influencing this decline are lower real prices and competing imports.horse slaughter, horsemeat, meat exports, Agricultural and Food Policy, Livestock Production/Industries,
How state governments talk about the covid-19 pandemic helps them tackle it.
Much of the responsibility for tackling the COVID-19 pandemic in the US has fallen on states and their governments. Michael Mintrom and Ruby O’Connor write that the stories governors have told their citizens about their state’s COVID-19 policies have been incredibly important. They argue that in order to best aid the acceptance of often controversial policies, policymakers should strive to create consistent messages, crafted to local conditions and that align talk with action
Magnetic anisotropy in Shiba bound states across a quantum phase transition
The exchange coupling between magnetic adsorbates and a superconducting
substrate leads to Shiba states inside the superconducting energy gap and a
Kondo resonance outside the gap. The exchange coupling strength determines
whether the quantum many-body ground state is a Kondo singlet or a singlet of
the paired superconducting quasiparticles. Here, we use scanning tunneling
spectroscopy to identify the different quantum ground states of Manganese
phthalocyanine on Pb(111). We observe Shiba states, which are split into
triplets by magnetocrystalline anisotropy. Their characteristic spectral weight
yields an unambiguous proof of the nature of the quantum ground state.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Linking Illness to Food: Summary of a Workshop on Food Attribution
To identify and prioritize effective food safety interventions, it is critical not only to identify the pathogens responsible for illness, but also to attribute cases of foodborne disease to the specific food vehicle responsible. A wide variety of such “food attribution” approaches and data are used around the world, including the analysis of and extrapolation from outbreak and other surveillance data, case-control studies, microbial subtyping and source-tracking methods, and expert judgment, among others. The Food Safety Research Consortium sponsored the Food Attribution Data Workshop in October 2003 to discuss the virtues and limitations of these approaches and to identify future options for the collection of food attribution data in the United States. This discussion paper summarizes workshop discussions and identifies challenges that affect progress in this critical component of a risk-based approach to improving food safety.foodborne illness, food attribution, outbreaks, case-control studies, microbial fingerprinting, microbial subtyping, FoodNet
End states and subgap structure in proximity-coupled chains of magnetic adatoms
A recent experiment [Nadj-Perge et al., Science 346, 602 (2014)] provides
evidence for Majorana zero modes in iron (Fe) chains on the superconducting
Pb(110) surface. Here, we study this system by scanning tunneling microscopy
using superconducting tips. This high-resolution technique resolves a rich
subgap structure, including zero-energy excitations in some chains. We compare
the symmetry properties of the data under voltage reversal against theoretical
expectations and provide evidence that the putative Majorana signature overlaps
with a previously unresolved low-energy resonance. Interpreting the data within
a Majorana framework suggests that the topological gap is significantly smaller
than previously believed. Aided by model calculations, we also analyze
higher-energy features of the subgap spectrum and their relation to high-bias
peaks which we associate with the Fe d-bands.Comment: 5+5 pages, 5+6 figure
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