1,036 research outputs found

    Multimodal transition and stochastic antiresonance in squid giant axons

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    The experimental data of N. Takahashi, Y. Hanyu, T. Musha, R. Kubo, and G. Matsumoto, Physica D \textbf{43}, 318 (1990), on the response of squid giant axons stimulated by periodic sequence of short current pulses is interpreted within the Hodgkin-Huxley model. The minimum of the firing rate as a function of the stimulus amplitude I0I_0 in the high-frequency regime is due to the multimodal transition. Below this singular point only odd multiples of the driving period remain and the system is highly sensitive to noise. The coefficient of variation has a maximum and the firing rate has a minimum as a function of the noise intensity which is an indication of the stochastic coherence antiresonance. The model calculations reproduce the frequency of occurrence of the most common modes in the vicinity of the transition. A linear relation of output frequency vs. I0I_0 for above the transition is also confirmed.Comment: 5 pages, 9 figure

    In Vitro Digestibility of Untreated and Ammonia Treated oat Mill By-Product

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    Oat mill by-product (OMB, approximately 80% oat hulls) was treated with 0, 1%, 3%, or 5% NH3 and 10%, 20%, 30%, 40%, or 50% H2O (4 x 5 factorial design) and allowed to react for 28 days. Samples were analyzed for in vitro dry matter digestibility (IVDMD), crude protein (CP) and fiber content (NDF, ADF, ADL). Treatment with 3% NH3 and 20% H20 resulted in maximum improvement of IVDMD. CP was increased and NDF decreased due to treatment. Nutritional value of OMB can be improved by NH3 treatment

    Mass scaling and non-adiabatic effects in photoassociation spectroscopy of ultracold strontium atoms

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    We report photoassociation spectroscopy of ultracold 86^{86}Sr atoms near the intercombination line and provide theoretical models to describe the obtained bound state energies. We show that using only the molecular states correlating with the 1S0^1S_0++3P1^3P_1 asymptote is insufficient to provide a mass scaled theoretical model that would reproduce the bound state energies for all isotopes investigated to date: 84^{84}Sr, 86^{86}Sr and 88^{88}Sr. We attribute that to the recently discovered avoided crossing between the 1S0^1S_0++3P1^3P_1 0u+0_u^+ (3Πu^3\Pi_u) and 1S0^1S_0++1D2^1D_2 0u+0_u^+ (1Σu+^1\Sigma^+_u) potential curves at short range and we build a mass scaled interaction model that quantitatively reproduces the available 0u+0_u^+ and 1u1_u bound state energies for the three stable bosonic isotopes. We also provide isotope-specific two-channel models that incorporate the rotational (Coriolis) mixing between the 0u+0_u^+ and 1u1_u curves which, while not mass scaled, are capable of quantitatively describing the vibrational splittings observed in experiment. We find that the use of state-of-the-art ab initio potential curves significantly improves the quantitative description of the Coriolis mixing between the two -8 GHz bound states in 88^{88}Sr over the previously used model potentials. We show that one of the recently reported energy levels in 84^{84}Sr does not follow the long range bound state series and theorize on the possible causes. Finally, we give the Coriolis mixing angles and linear Zeeman coefficients for all of the photoassociation lines. The long range van der Waals coefficients C6(0u+)=3868(50)C_6(0_u^+)=3868(50)~a.u. and C6(1u)=4085(50)C_6(1_u)=4085(50)~a.u. are reported.Comment: 14 pages, 7 tables, 5 figures. Submitted to Phys. Rev.

    Energy-level quantization in YBa2Cu3O7-x phase-slip nanowires

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    Significant progress has been made in the development of superconducting quantum circuits, however new quantum devices that have longer decoherence times at higher temperatures are urgently required for quantum technologies. Superconducting nanowires with quantum phase slips are promising candidates for use in novel devices that operate on quantum principles. Here, we demonstrate ultra-thin YBa2Cu3O7-x nanowires with phase-slip dynamics and study their switching-current statistics at temperatures below 20 K. We apply theoretical models that were developed for Josephson junctions and show that our results provide strong evidence for energy-level quantization in the nanowires. The crossover temperature to the quantum regime is 12-13 K, while the lifetime in the excited state exceeds 20 ms at 5.4 K. Both values are at least one order of magnitude higher than those in conventional Josephson junctions based on low-temperature superconductors. We also show how the absorption of a single photon changes the phase-slip and quantum state of a nanowire, which is important for the development of single-photon detectors with high operating temperature and superior temporal resolution. Our findings pave the way for a new class of superconducting nanowire devices for quantum sensing and computing

    Constraints on the luminosity of the stellar remnant in SNR1987A

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    We obtain photometric constraints on the luminosity of the stellar remnant in SNR1987A using XMM-Newton and INTEGRAL data. The upper limit in the 2--10 keV band based on the XMM-Newton data is L<5*10^{34}erg/s. We note, however, that the optical depth of the envelope is still high in the XMM-Newton band, therefore, this upper limit does not constrain the true unabsorbed luminosity of the central source. The optical depth is expected to be small in the hard X-ray band of the IBIS telescope aboard the INTEGRAL observatory, therefore it provides an unobscured look at the stellar remnant. We did not detect statistically significant emission from SN1987A in the 20-60 keV band with the upper limit of L<1.1*10^{36}erg/s. We also obtained an upper limit on the mass of radioactive 44Ti M(44Ti)<10^{-3}Msun.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy Letter

    The First Reported Infrared Emission from the SN 1006 Remnant

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    We report results of infrared imaging and spectroscopic observations of the SN 1006 remnant, carried out with the Spitzer Space Telescope. The 24 micron image from MIPS clearly shows faint filamentary emission along the northwest rim of the remnant shell, nearly coincident with the Balmer filaments that delineate the present position of the expanding shock. The 24 micron emission traces the Balmer filaments almost perfectly, but lies a few arcsec within, indicating an origin in interstellar dust heated by the shock. Subsequent decline in the IR behind the shock is presumably due largely to grain destruction through sputtering. The emission drops far more rapidly than current models predict, however, even for a higher proportion of small grains than would be found closer to the Galactic plane. The rapid drop may result in part from a grain density that has always been lower -- a relic effect from an earlier epoch when the shock was encountering a lower density -- but higher grain destruction rates still seem to be required. Spectra from three positions along the NW filament from the IRS instrument all show only a featureless continuum, consistent with thermal emission from warm dust. The dust-to-gas mass ratio in the pre-shock interstellar medium is lower than that expected for the Galactic ISM -- as has also been observed in the analysis of IR emission from other SNRs but whose cause remains unclear. As with other SN Ia remnants, SN 1006 shows no evidence for dust grain formation in the supernova ejecta.Comment: 24 pages, 6 figure
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