3,392 research outputs found
Role of Many-particle excitations in Coulomb Blockaded Transport
We discuss the role of electron-electron and electron-phonon correlations in
current flow in the Coulomb Blockade regime, focusing specifically on
nontrivial signatures arising from the break-down of mean-field theory. By
solving transport equations directly in Fock space, we show that
electron-electron interactions manifest as gateable excitations experimentally
observed in the current-voltage characteristic. While these excitations might
merge into an incoherent sum that allows occasional simplifications, a clear
separation of excitations into slow `traps' and fast `channels' can lead to
further novelties such as negative differential resistance, hysteresis and
random telegraph signals. Analogous novelties for electron-phonon correlation
include the breakdown of commonly anticipated Stokes-antiStokes intensities,
and an anomalous decrease in phonon population upon heating due to reabsorption
of emitted phonons.Comment: 14 pages 10 figures, Invited article for the special issue on
"Conductivity of single molecules and supramolecular architectures", IOP
Journal of Physics Condensed matte
Similarities Between Classical Timelike Geodesics in a Naked Reissner-Nordstrom Singularity Background and the Behaviour of Electrons in Quantum Theory
It is generally assumed that naked singularities must be physically excluded,
as they could otherwise introduce unpredictable influences in their future null
cones. Considering geodesics for a naked Reissner-Nordstrom singularity, it is
found that the singularity is effectively clothed by its repulsive nature.
Regarding electron as naked singularity, the size of the clothed singularity
(electron) turns out to be classical electro-magnetic radius of the electron,
to an observer falling freely from infinity, initially at rest. The size
shrinks for an observer falling freely from infinity, with a positive initial
velocity. For geodetic parameters corresponding to negative energy there are
trapped geodesics. The similarity of this picture with that arising in the
Quantum Theory is discussed.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
Uniqueness of Flat Spherically Symmetric Spacelike Hypersurfaces Admitted by Spherically Symmetric Static Spactimes
It is known that spherically symmetric static spacetimes admit a foliation by
{\deg}at hypersurfaces. Such foliations have explicitly been constructed for
some spacetimes, using different approaches, but none of them have proved or
even discussed the uniqueness of these foliations. The issue of uniqueness
becomes more important due to suitability of {\deg}at foliations for studying
black hole physics. Here {\deg}at spherically symmetric spacelike hy-
persurfaces are obtained by a direct method. It is found that spherically
symmetric static spacetimes admit {\deg}at spherically symmetric hypersurfaces,
and that these hypersurfaces are unique up to translation under the time- like
Killing vector. This result guarantees the uniqueness of {\deg}at spherically
symmetric foliations for such spacetimes.Comment: 10 page
Asymptotic Behaviour of the Proper Length and Volume of the Schwarzschild Singularity
Though popular presentations give the Schwarzschild singularity as a point it
is known that it is spacelike and not timelike. Thus it has a "length" and is
not a "point". In fact, its length must necessarily be infinite. It has been
proved that the proper length of the Qadir-Wheeler suture model goes to
infinity [1], while its proper volume shrinks to zero, and the asymptotic
behaviour of the length and volume have been calculated. That model consists of
two Friedmann sections connected by a Schwarzschild "suture". The question
arises whether a similar analysis could provide the asymptotic behaviour of the
Schwarzschild black hole near the singularity. It is proved here that, unlike
the behaviour for the suture model, for the Schwarzschild essential singularity
and , where
is the mean extrinsic curvature, or the York time.Comment: 13 pages, 1 figur
Phonon runaway in nanotube quantum dots
We explore electronic transport in a nanotube quantum dot strongly coupled
with vibrations and weakly with leads and the thermal environment. We show that
the recent observation of anomalous conductance signatures in single-walled
carbon nanotube (SWCNT) quantum dots can be understood quantitatively in terms
of current driven `hot phonons' that are strongly correlated with electrons.
Using rate equations in the many-body configuration space for the joint
electron-phonon distribution, we argue that the variations are indicative of
strong electron-phonon coupling requiring an analysis beyond the traditional
uncorrelated phonon-assisted transport (Tien-Gordon) approach.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
The use of isothermal titration calorimetry for the assay of enzyme activity: Application in higher education practical classes
Determination of enzyme activity is crucial for discovery, research, and development in life sciences. The activity of enzymes is routinely determined using spectrophotometric assays that measure rates of substrate consumption or product formation. Though colorimetric-based detection systems are simple, rapid, and economical to perform, the majority of enzymes are unsuitable for this technique as their substrates/products do not absorb in the UV or visible range. This limitation can be addressed by the use of coupled-enzyme assays or artificial chromogenic substrates; however these approaches have their own drawbacks. Here, we describe a method based on the use of an isothermal titration calorimeter (ITC) to measure the heat produced or absorbed during any enzyme-catalyzed reaction. The concept of calorimetric enzyme assays was demonstrated for the determination of enzyme hexokinase activity, which cannot be monitored colorimetrically without first coupling it to another enzymatic reaction. The assay is suitable for incorporation into undergraduate laboratory classes, providing students with an appreciation for; the versatility and ease of use of ITC assays; ITC as a flexible generic method for exploring the functional characteristics of uncharacterized enzymes; an activity detection parameter suitable for enzymes that either have no straightforward colorimetric methods available or require the use of nonartificial chromogenic substrates
Extended Huckel theory for bandstructure, chemistry, and transport. II. Silicon
In this second paper, we develop transferable semi-empirical parameters for
the technologically important material, silicon, using Extended Huckel Theory
(EHT) to calculate its electronic structure. The EHT-parameters areoptimized to
experimental target values of the band dispersion of bulk-silicon. We obtain a
very good quantitative match to the bandstructure characteristics such as
bandedges and effective masses, which are competitive with the values obtained
within an orthogonal-tight binding model for silicon. The
transferability of the parameters is investigated applying them to different
physical and chemical environments by calculating the bandstructure of two
reconstructed surfaces with different orientations: Si(100) (2x1) and Si(111)
(2x1). The reproduced - and -surface bands agree in part
quantitatively with DFT-GW calculations and PES/IPES experiments demonstrating
their robustness to environmental changes. We further apply the silicon
parameters to describe the 1D band dispersion of a unrelaxed rectangular
silicon nanowire (SiNW) and demonstrate the EHT-approach of surface passivation
using hydrogen. Our EHT-parameters thus provide a quantitative model of
bulk-silicon and silicon-based materials such as contacts and surfaces, which
are essential ingredients towards a quantitative quantum transport simulation
through silicon-based heterostructures.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figure
Sonographic fetal biometry charts for a Pakistani cohort.
This study aimed to develop growth centiles at different gestational weeks for fetal biparietal diameter, abdominal circumference, femur length and head circumference in a Pakistani cohort. Data were collected at a tertiary referral hospital from pregnant women at gestational ages 13-40 weeks referred for obstetric ultrasound as a part of routine antenatal care. A total of 1599 fetal sonographic biometric measurements were collected after screening for the inclusion criteria. For each measurement, separate regression models were derived to estimate the mean, standard deviation and reference percentiles at each week of gestational age for this cohort. The best fitting model for each variable was selected. These charts will help radiologists and clinicians in predicting dates of delivery, assessing fetal growth and identifying intrauterine fetal insufficiency in the Pakistani population
Nodule heterogeneity as shown by size differences between the targeted nodule and the tumor in thyroidectomy specimen
BACKGROUND. Missed papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC) diagnoses on fine-needle aspiration (FNA) can result from many causes. To the authors' knowledge, the issue of whether the detection of PTC is correlated with nodule heterogeneity has not been studied to date. METHODS. The authors identified all thyroidectomy specimens with a diagnosis of PTC that had undergone at least 1 prior FNA in the study institution between 1998 and 2003. The tumor size at the time of the resection, the ultrasound (US)-determined nodule size, and other parameters were compared between the 2 groups in which PTC was or was not diagnosed on FNA. RESULTS. Of a total of 89 specimens, 47 were diagnosed on FNA with an average tumor size of 1.7 cm and an US-determined nodule size of 2.1 cm (a difference of 0.4 cm). Forty-two specimens with a smaller average tumor size of 0.9 cm ( P <.0001) and a US-determined nodule size of 2.4 cm (a difference of 1.5 cm) were missed. The differences with regard to the US-determined nodule size and tumor size between the 2 groups were significant (0.4 cm vs 1.5 cm; P < .0001). In the missed group, 29 specimens were found to have PTC foci that measured ≤1.0 cm and 26 had a reasonable size difference (RSD; defined as a PTC size outside the range of ±50% of the US-determined nodule size) as the indicator of the mixed nature of nodules targeted for FNA, whereas in the diagnostic group, 9 foci measured ≤1.0 cm and 6 had RSD. There was no cytologic evidence with which to render a diagnosis of PTC on further review in the missed group. CONCLUSIONS. The major reason for a missed diagnosis of PTC on FNA is because of inadequate tumor sampling due to the heterogeneity of the nodule targeted for FNA. This is illustrated by the RSD noted between the targeted nodule and the actual PTC tumor focus in the resection specimen. Cancer (Cancer Cytopathol) 2008. © 2007 American Cancer Society.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/58022/1/23253_ftp.pd
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