1,395 research outputs found
A single photoelectron transistor for quantum optical communications
A single photoelectron can be trapped and its photoelectric charge detected
by a source/drain channel in a transistor. Such a transistor photodetector can
be useful for flagging the safe arrival of a photon in a quantum repeater. The
electron trap can be photo-ionized and repeatedly reset for the arrival of
successive individual photons. This single photoelectron transistor (SPT)
operating at the lambda = 1.3 mu m tele-communication band, was demonstrated by
using a windowed-gate double-quantum-well InGaAs/InAlAs/InP heterostructure
that was designed to provide near-zero electron g-factor. The g-factor
engineering allows selection rules that would convert a photon's polarization
to an electron spin polarization. The safe arrival of the photo-electric charge
would trigger the commencement of the teleportation algorithm
Aminoguanidinium hydrogen succinate
The title compound, CH7N4
+·C4H5O4
−, is a molecular salt containing discrete aminoguanidinium and succinate ions. The aminoguanidinium cation is nearly planar, with a maximum deviation of 0.035 (1) Å. The dihedral angle between the aminoguanidinium cation and the succinate anion is 3.35 (6)°. The crystal packing exhibits intermolecular N—H⋯O and O—H⋯·O hydrogen bonds
Stratification of malaria incidence in Papua New Guinea (2011-2019): contribution towards a sub-national control policy
Malaria risk in Papua New Guinea (PNG) is highly heterogeneous, between and within geographical regions, which is operationally challenging for control. To enhance targeting of malaria interventions in PNG, we investigated risk factors and stratified malaria incidence at the level of health facility catchment areas. Catchment areas and populations of 808 health facilities were delineated using a travel-time accessibility approach and linked to reported malaria cases (2011-2019). Zonal statistics tools were used to calculate average altitude and air temperature in catchment areas before they were spatially joined with incidence rates. In addition, empirical Bayesian kriging (EBK) was employed to interpolate incidence risk strata across PNG. Malaria annual incidence rates are, on average, 186.3 per 1000 population in catchment areas up to 600 m, dropped to 98.8 at (800-1400) m, and to 24.1 cases above 1400 m altitude. In areas above the two altitudinal thresholds 600m and 1400m, the average annual temperature drops below 22°C and 17°C, respectively. EBK models show very low- to low-risk strata ( 200 per 1000) strata are modelled mainly in Momase and Islands Regions. Besides, strata with moderate risk (100-200) predominate throughout the coastal areas. While 35.7% of the PNG population (estimated 3.33 million in 2019) lives in places at high or moderate risk of malaria, 52.2% (estimated 4.88 million) resides in very low-risk areas. In five provinces, relatively large proportions of populations (> 50%) inhabit high-risk areas: New Ireland, East and West New Britain, Sandaun and Milne Bay. Incidence maps show a contrast in malaria risk between coastal and inland areas influenced by altitude. However, the risk is highly variable in low-lying areas. Malaria interventions should be guided by sub-national risk levels in PNG
SpotXplore: a Cytoscape plugin for visual exploration of hotspot expression in gene regulatory networks
Summary: SpotXplore is a plugin for Cytoscape for extraction and visualization of differentially expressed subnetworks (hotspots) from gene networks. The hotspot-based visualization approach enables interactive exploration of regulatory interactions in differentially expressed gene sets, and it allows a researcher to explore gene expression in direct relation to the affected cellular gene network. The hotspots provide a view beyond the commonly used metabolic pathways and gene ontologies
Observation of a continuous phase transition in a shape-memory alloy
Elastic neutron-scattering, inelastic x-ray scattering, specific-heat, and
pressure-dependent electrical transport measurements have been made on single
crystals of AuZn and Au_{0.52}Zn_{0.48} above and below their martensitic
transition temperatures (T_M=64K and 45K, respectively). In each composition,
elastic neutron scattering detects new commensurate Bragg peaks (modulation)
appearing at Q = (1.33,0.67,0) at temperatures corresponding to each sample's
T_M. Although the new Bragg peaks appear in a discontinuous manner in the
Au_{0.52}Zn_{0.48} sample, they appear in a continuous manner in AuZn.
Surprising us, the temperature dependence of the AuZn Bragg peak intensity and
the specific-heat jump near the transition temperature are in favorable accord
with a mean-field approximation. A Landau-theory-based fit to the pressure
dependence of the transition temperature suggests the presence of a critical
endpoint in the AuZn phase diagram located at T_M*=2.7K and p*=3.1GPa, with a
quantum saturation temperature \theta_s=48.3 +/- 3.7K.Comment: 6 figure
Fermi Surface as a Driver for the Shape-Memory Effect in AuZn
Martensites are materials that undergo diffusionless, solid-state
transitions. The martensitic transition yields properties that depend on the
history of the material and may allow it to recover its previous shape after
plastic deformation. This is known as the shape-memory effect (SME). We have
succeeded in identifying the primary electronic mechanism responsible for the
martensitic transition in the shape-memory alloy AuZn by using Fermi-surface
measurements (de Haas-van Alphen oscillations) and band-structure calculations.
This strongly suggests that electronic band structure is an important
consideration in the design of future SME alloys
Comparison and characterization of α-amylase inducers in Aspergillus nidulans based on nuclear localization of AmyR
AmyR, a fungal transcriptional activator responsible for induction of amylolytic genes in Aspergillus nidulans, localizes to the nucleus in response to the physiological inducer isomaltose. Maltose, kojibiose, and d-glucose were also found to trigger the nuclear localization of GFP-AmyR. Isomaltose- and kojibiose-triggered nuclear localization was not inhibited by the glucosidase inhibitor, castanospermine, while maltose-triggered localization was inhibited. Thus, maltose itself does not appear to be an direct inducer, but its degraded or transglycosylated product does. Non-metabolizable d-glucose analogues were also able to trigger the nuclear localization, implying that these sugars, except maltose, directly function as the inducers of AmyR nuclear entry. The inducing activity of d-glucose was 4 orders-of-magnitude weaker compared with isomaltose. Although d-glucose has the ability to induce α-amylase production, this activity would generally be masked by CreA-dependent carbon catabolite repression. Significant induction of α-amylase by d-glucose was observed in creA-defective A. nidulans
Water Splitting Photovoltaic-Photoelectrochemical GaAs/InGaAsP - WO3/BiVO4 Tandem Cell with Extremely Thin Absorber Photoanode Structure
We demonstrate highly efficient solar hydrogen generation via water splitting by photovoltaicphotoelectrochemical (PV-PEC) tandem device based on GaAs/InGaAsP (PV cell) and WO3/BiVO4 core/shell nanorods (PEC cell). We utilized extremely thin absorber (ETA) concept to design the WO3/BiVO4 core/shell heterojunction nanorods and obtained the highest efficiencies of photo-induced charge carriers generation,
separation and transfer that are possible for the WO3/BiVO4 material combination. The PV-PEC tandem shows stable water splitting photocurrent of 6.56 mA cm-2 under standard AM1.5G solar light that corresponds to the record solar-to-hydrogen (STH) conversion efficiency of 8.1%
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