433 research outputs found
Electronic Structure of N<sub>2</sub>P<sub>2</sub> Four-Membered Rings
The biradicaloid character of the ground-state structures of N2P2 rings is studied by using the high-level ab initio multiconfigurational CASPT2/CASSCF method. In order to obtain accurate descriptors, we combine two criteria: 1) singlet–triplet energy gaps and 2) relative values of the occupation numbers for bonding and antibonding orbitals associated with the radical sites. The singlet–triplet energy gaps, the occupation numbers of antibonding-like orbitals, and the weights of the main configuration state functions (CSFs) of the ground-state wavefunctions, that is, Ψ(1A1), are used to derive the biradicaloid character that ranges from 10–15 %
Performance of Solid-State Sensors for Continuous, Real-Time Measurement of Soil CO\u3csub\u3e2\u3c/sub\u3e Concentrations
Recent advances in sensor technology provide a robust capability for continuous measurement of soil gases. The performance of solid-state CO2 sensors (Model GMM220 series, Vaisala, Inc., Helsinki, Finland) was evaluated in laboratory, greenhouse, and irrigated winter wheat (Triticum aestivum L.). In ambient CO2 concentration, the GMM222 sensor averaged 427 ± 8.3 μL L−1. Under variable CO2 concentrations, the sensor was slightly lower than concentrations measured with an infrared gas analyzer (IRGA). In greenhouse pots planted with triticale (Triticale hexaploide Lart.) and an agricultural field of irrigated winter wheat, soil CO2 concentration exceeded the 10,000 μL L−1 limit of the GMM222. Alternatively, the GMM221 sensor, designed to measure between 0 and 20,000 μL L−1, showed soil CO2 concentrations were between 14,000 and 16,000 μL L−1. The GMM222 accurately measures real-time soil CO2 concentrations under field conditions that were within the sensor detection limit. However, periods of high biological soil activity require the GMM221 sensor with a higher detection limit
Magnetization reversal and local switching fields of ferromagnetic Co/Pd microtubes with radial magnetization
Three-dimensional nanomagnetism is a rapidly growing field of research covering both noncollinear spin textures and curved magnetic geometries including microtubular structures. We spatially resolve the field-induced magnetization reversal of free-standing ferromagnetic microtubes utilizing multifrequency magnetic force microscopy (MFM). The microtubes are composed of Co/Pd multilayer films with perpendicular magnetic anisotropy that translates to an anisotropy with radial easy axis upon rolling-up. Simultaneously mapping the topography and the perpendicular magnetostatic force derivative, the relation between surface angle and local magnetization configuration is evaluated for a large number of locations with slopes exceeding 45 degrees. The angle-dependence of the switching field is concurrent with the Kondorsky model, i.e., the rolled-up nanomembrane behaves like a planar magnetic film with perpendicular anisotropy and a pinning dominated magnetization reversal. Additionally, we discuss methodological challenges when detecting magnetostatic force derivatives near steep surfaces
Out-of-surface vortices in spherical shells
The interplay of topological defects with curvature is studied for
out-of-surface magnetic vortices in thin spherical nanoshells. In the case of
easy-surface Heisenberg magnet it is shown that the curvature of the underlying
surface leads to a coupling between the localized out-of-surface component of
the vortex with its delocalized in-surface structure, i.e. polarity-chirality
coupling.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
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Imaging of buried 3D magnetic rolled-up nanomembranes
Increasing performance and enabling novel functionalities of microelectronic devices, such as three-dimensional (3D) on-chip architectures in optics, electronics, and magnetics, calls for new approaches in both fabrication and characterization. Up to now, 3D magnetic architectures had mainly been studied by integral means without providing insight into local magnetic microstructures that determine the device performance. We prove a concept that allows for imaging magnetic domain patterns in buried 3D objects, for example, magnetic tubular architectures with multiple windings. The approach is based on utilizing the shadow contrast in transmission X-ray magnetic circular dichroism (XMCD) photoemission electron microscopy and correlating the observed 2D projection of the 3D magnetic domains with simulated XMCD patterns. That way, we are not only able to assess magnetic states but also monitor the field-driven evolution of the magnetic domain patterns in individual windings of buried magnetic rolled-up nanomembranes
Reconfigurable ferromagnetic liquid droplets.
Solid ferromagnetic materials are rigid in shape and cannot be reconfigured. Ferrofluids, although reconfigurable, are paramagnetic at room temperature and lose their magnetization when the applied magnetic field is removed. Here, we show a reversible paramagnetic-to-ferromagnetic transformation of ferrofluid droplets by the jamming of a monolayer of magnetic nanoparticles assembled at the water-oil interface. These ferromagnetic liquid droplets exhibit a finite coercivity and remanent magnetization. They can be easily reconfigured into different shapes while preserving the magnetic properties of solid ferromagnets with classic north-south dipole interactions. Their translational and rotational motions can be actuated remotely and precisely by an external magnetic field, inspiring studies on active matter, energy-dissipative assemblies, and programmable liquid constructs
AnnoTALE : bioinformatics tools for identification, annotation, and nomenclature of TALEs from Xanthomonas genomic sequences
Transcription activator-like effectors (TALEs) are virulence factors, produced by the bacterial plant-pathogen Xanthomonas, that function as gene activators inside plant cells. Although the contribution of individual TALEs to infectivity has been shown, the specific roles of most TALEs, and the overall TALE diversity in Xanthomonas spp. is not known. TALEs possess a highly repetitive DNA-binding domain, which is notoriously difficult to sequence. Here, we describe an improved method for characterizing TALE genes by the use of PacBio sequencing. We present 'AnnoTALE', a suite of applications for the analysis and annotation of TALE genes from Xanthomonas genomes, and for grouping similar TALEs into classes. Based on these classes, we propose a unified nomenclature for Xanthomonas TALEs that reveals similarities pointing to related functionalities. This new classification enables us to compare related TALEs and to identify base substitutions responsible for the evolution of TALE specificities
Mechanics of extended masses in general relativity
The "external" or "bulk" motion of extended bodies is studied in general
relativity. Compact material objects of essentially arbitrary shape, spin,
internal composition, and velocity are allowed as long as there is no direct
(non-gravitational) contact with other sources of stress-energy. Physically
reasonable linear and angular momenta are proposed for such bodies and exact
equations describing their evolution are derived. Changes in the momenta depend
on a certain "effective metric" that is closely related to a non-perturbative
generalization of the Detweiler-Whiting R-field originally introduced in the
self-force literature. If the effective metric inside a self-gravitating body
can be adequately approximated by an appropriate power series, the
instantaneous gravitational force and torque exerted on it is shown to be
identical to the force and torque exerted on an appropriate test body moving in
the effective metric. This result holds to all multipole orders. The only
instantaneous effect of a body's self-field is to finitely renormalize the
"bare" multipole moments of its stress-energy tensor. The MiSaTaQuWa expression
for the gravitational self-force is recovered as a simple application. A
gravitational self-torque is obtained as well. Lastly, it is shown that the
effective metric in which objects appear to move is approximately a solution to
the vacuum Einstein equation if the physical metric is an approximate solution
to Einstein's equation linearized about a vacuum background.Comment: 39 pages, 2 figures; fixed equation satisfied by the Green function
used to construct the effective metri
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