679 research outputs found
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Exciton Condensation in Molecular-Scale van der Waals Stacks
Recent experiments have realized the Bose-Einstein condensation of excitons, known as exciton condensation, in extended systems such as bilayer graphene and van der Waals heterostructures. Here we computationally demonstrate the beginnings of exciton condensation in multilayer, molecular-scale van der Waals stacks composed of benzene subunits. The populations of excitons, which are computed from the largest eigenvalue of the particle-hole reduced density matrix (RDM) through advanced variational RDM calculations, are shown to increase with the length of the stack. The large eigenvalue indicates a nonclassical long-range ordering of the excitons that can support the frictionless flow of energy. Moreover, we use chemical substitutions and geometric modifications to tune the extent of the condensation. Results suggest exciton condensation in a potentially large family of molecular systems with applications to energy-efficient transport
Strong Coupling Corrections to the Ginzburg-Landau Theory of Superfluid ^{3}He
In the Ginzburg-Landau theory of superfluid He, the free energy is
expressed as an expansion of invariants of a complex order parameter. Strong
coupling effects, which increase with increasing pressure, are embodied in the
set of coefficients of these order parameter invariants\cite{Leg75,Thu87}.
Experiments can be used to determine four independent combinations of the
coefficients of the five fourth order invariants. This leaves the
phenomenological description of the thermodynamics near incomplete.
Theoretical understanding of these coefficients is also quite limited. We
analyze our measurements of the magnetic susceptibility and the NMR frequency
shift in the -phase which refine the four experimental inputs to the
phenomenological theory. We propose a model based on existing experiments,
combined with calculations by Sauls and Serene\cite{Sau81} of the pressure
dependence of these coefficients, in order to determine all five fourth order
terms. This model leads us to a better understanding of the thermodynamics of
superfluid He in its various states. We discuss the surface tension of
bulk superfluid He and predictions for novel states of the superfluid
such as those that are stabilized by elastic scattering of quasiparticles from
a highly porous silica aerogel.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, 2 table
Duties to Organizational Clients
Loyalty to an organizational client means fidelity to the substantive legal structure that constitutes it. Although this principle is not controversial in the abstract, it is commonly ignored in professional discourse and doctrine. This article explains the basic notion of organizational loyalty and identifies some mistaken tendencies in discourse and doctrine, especially the Managerialist Fallacy that leads lawyers to conflate the client organization with its senior managers. The article then applies the basic notion to some hard cases, concluding with a critical appraisal of the rationale for confidentiality with organizational clients
Impact of a Multimodal Antimicrobial Stewardship Program on Pseudomonas aeruginosa Susceptibility and Antimicrobial Use in the Intensive Care Unit Setting
Objective. To study the impact of our multimodal antibiotic stewardship program on Pseudomonas aeruginosa susceptibility and antibiotic use in the intensive care unit (ICU) setting. Methods. Our stewardship program employed the key tenants of published antimicrobial stewardship guidelines. These included prospective audits with intervention and feedback, formulary restriction with preauthorization, educational conferences, guidelines for use, antimicrobial cycling, and de-escalation of therapy. ICU antibiotic use was measured and expressed as defined daily doses (DDD) per 1,000 patient-days. Results. Certain temporal relationships between antibiotic use and ICU resistance patterns appeared to be affected by our antibiotic stewardship program. In particular, the ICU use of intravenous ciprofloxacin and ceftazidime declined from 148 and 62.5 DDD/1,000 patient-days to 40.0 and 24.5, respectively, during 2004 to 2007. An increase in the use of these agents and resistance to these agents was witnessed during 2008–2010. Despite variability in antibiotic usage from the stewardship efforts, we were overall unable to show statistical relationships with P. aeruginosa resistance rate. Conclusion. Antibiotic resistance in the ICU setting is complex. Multimodal stewardship efforts attempt to prevent resistance, but such programs clearly have their limits
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Chemistry of hydrogen oxide radicals (HO_x) in the Arctic troposphere in spring
We use observations from the April 2008 NASA ARCTAS aircraft campaign to the North American Arctic, interpreted with a global 3-D chemical transport model (GEOS-Chem), to better understand the sources and cycling of hydrogen oxide radicals (HO_x≡H+OH+peroxy radicals) and their reservoirs (HO_y≡HO_x+peroxides) in the springtime Arctic atmosphere. We find that a standard gas-phase chemical mechanism overestimates the observed HO_2 and H_2O_2 concentrations. Computation of HO_x and HO_y gas-phase chemical budgets on the basis of the aircraft observations also indicates a large missing sink for both. We hypothesize that this could reflect HO_2 uptake by aerosols, favored by low temperatures and relatively high aerosol loadings, through a mechanism that does not produce H_2O_2. We implemented such an uptake of HO_2 by aerosol in the model using a standard reactive uptake coefficient parameterization with γ(HO_2) values ranging from 0.02 at 275 K to 0.5 at 220 K. This successfully reproduces the concentrations and vertical distributions of the different HO_x species and HO_y reservoirs. HO_2 uptake by aerosol is then a major HO_x and HO_y sink, decreasing mean OH and HO_2 concentrations in the Arctic troposphere by 32% and 31% respectively. Better rate and product data for HO_2 uptake by aerosol are needed to understand this role of aerosols in limiting the oxidizing power of the Arctic atmosphere
Infinite ergodic theory and Non-extensive entropies
We bring into account a series of result in the infinite ergodic theory that
we believe that they are relevant to the theory of non-extensive entropie
Erythrocyte G Protein as a Novel Target for Malarial Chemotherapy
BACKGROUND: Malaria remains a serious health problem because resistance develops to all currently used drugs when their parasite targets mutate. Novel antimalarial drug targets are urgently needed to reduce global morbidity and mortality. Our prior results suggested that inhibiting erythrocyte G(s) signaling blocked invasion by the human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum. METHODS AND FINDINGS: We investigated the erythrocyte guanine nucleotide regulatory protein G(s) as a novel antimalarial target. Erythrocyte “ghosts” loaded with a G(s) peptide designed to block G(s) interaction with its receptors, were blocked in β-adrenergic agonist-induced signaling. This finding directly demonstrates that erythrocyte G(s) is functional and that propranolol, an antagonist of G protein–coupled β-adrenergic receptors, dampens G(s) activity in erythrocytes. We subsequently used the ghost system to directly link inhibition of host G(s) to parasite entry. In addition, we discovered that ghosts loaded with the peptide were inhibited in intracellular parasite maturation. Propranolol also inhibited blood-stage parasite growth, as did other β(2)-antagonists. β-blocker growth inhibition appeared to be due to delay in the terminal schizont stage. When used in combination with existing antimalarials in cell culture, propranolol reduced the 50% and 90% inhibitory concentrations for existing drugs against P. falciparum by 5- to 10-fold and was also effective in reducing drug dose in animal models of infection. CONCLUSIONS: Together these data establish that, in addition to invasion, erythrocyte G protein signaling is needed for intracellular parasite proliferation and thus may present a novel antimalarial target. The results provide proof of the concept that erythrocyte G(s) antagonism offers a novel strategy to fight infection and that it has potential to be used to develop combination therapies with existing antimalarials
Unintentional high density p-type modulation doping of a GaAs/AlAs core-multi-shell nanowire
Achieving significant doping in GaAs/AlAs core/shell nanowires (NWs) is of
considerable technological importance but remains a challenge due to the
amphoteric behavior of the dopant atoms. Here we show that placing a narrow
GaAs quantum well in the AlAs shell effectively getters residual carbon
acceptors leading to an \emph{unintentional} p-type doping. Magneto-optical
studies of such a GaAs/AlAs core multi-shell NW reveal quantum confined
emission. Theoretical calculations of NW electronic structure confirm quantum
confinement of carriers at the core/shell interface due to the presence of
ionized carbon acceptors in the 1~nm GaAs layer in the shell.
Micro-photoluminescence in high magnetic field shows a clear signature of
avoided crossings of the Landau level emission line with the Landau
level TO phonon replica. The coupling is caused by the resonant hole-phonon
interaction, which points to a large 2D hole density in the structure.Comment: just published in Nano Letters
(http://pubs.acs.org/doi/full/10.1021/nl500818k
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