3,113 research outputs found
Cosmogenic rare gases and 10-Be in a cross section of Knyahinya
The concentrations of cosmogenic nuclides were studied as a function of shielding on samples from a cross section of the 293 kg main fragment of the L5 chondrite Knyahinya. The stone broke into two nearly symmetrical parts upon its fall in 1866. The planar cross section has diameters between 40 and 55 cm. He, Ne, and Ar were measured on about 20 samples by mass spectrometry and the 10-Be activities on aliquots of 10 selected samples were determined by AMS. The 10-Be data are presented and the abundances of spallogenic nuclides are compared with the model calculations reported by Reedy for spherical L chondrites. The 10-Be production rates in Knyahinya are shown versus the shielding parameter 22-Ne/21-Ne
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Guide for developing data quality objectives for ecological risk assessment at DOE Oak Ridge Operations facilities
For the past several years the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has been attempting to streamline and increase the efficiency of field data collection programs, especially Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA) Remedial Investigation (RI) programs, by encouraging project managers to develop Data Quality Objectives (DQOs) prior to sampling. The DQO process is a strategic planning approach that is used to prepare for a data collection activity. It provides a systematic procedure for defining the criteria that a data collection design should satisfy, including when to collect samples, where to collect samples, the tolerable level of decision errors for study, and how many samples to collect. It is important to note that DQOs are developed through a process that ties data collection to specific problems and decisions
Quantification of complementarity in multi-qubit systems
Complementarity was originally introduced as a qualitative concept for the
discussion of properties of quantum mechanical objects that are classically
incompatible. More recently, complementarity has become a \emph{quantitative}
relation between classically incompatible properties, such as visibility of
interference fringes and "which-way" information, but also between purely
quantum mechanical properties, such as measures of entanglement. We discuss
different complementarity relations for systems of 2-, 3-, or \textit{n}
qubits. Using nuclear magnetic resonance techniques, we have experimentally
verified some of these complementarity relations in a two-qubit system.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figures (A display error about the figures in the
previous version
Direct observation of the oxygen isotope effect on the in-plane magnetic field penetration depth in optimally doped YBaCuO
We report the first direct observation of the oxygen-isotope
(O/O) effect on the in-plane penetration depth in
a nearly optimally doped YBaCuO film using the novel
low-energy muon-spin rotation technique. Spin polarized low energy muons are
implanted in the film at a known depth beneath the surface and precess in
the local magnetic field . This feature allows us to measure directly the
profile of the magnetic field inside the superconducting film in the
Meissner state and to make a model independent determination of .
A substantial isotope shift % at 4 K is
observed, implying that the in-plane effective supercarrier mass
is oxygen-isotope dependent with .Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Magnetism, superconductivity and coupling in cuprate heterostructures probed by low-energy muon-spin rotation
We present a low-energy muon-spin-rotation study of the magnetic and
superconducting properties of YBa2Cu3O7/PrBa2Cu3O7 trilayer and bilayer
heterostructures. By determining the magnetic-field profiles throughout these
structures we show that a finite superfluid density can be induced in otherwise
semiconducting PrBa2Cu3O7 layers when juxtaposed to YBa2Cu3O7 "electrodes"
while the intrinsic antiferromagnetic order is unaffected.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures; figure 9 corrected in version
Cell-specific activity-dependent fractionation of layer 2/3→5B excitatory signaling in mouse auditory cortex
© The Author(s), 2015. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Journal of Neuroscience 35 (2015): 3112-3123, doi:10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0836-14.2015.Auditory cortex (AC) layer 5B (L5B) contains both corticocollicular neurons, a type of pyramidal-tract neuron projecting to the inferior colliculus, and corticocallosal neurons, a type of intratelencephalic neuron projecting to contralateral AC. Although it is known that these neuronal types have distinct roles in auditory processing and different response properties to sound, the synaptic and intrinsic mechanisms shaping their input–output functions remain less understood. Here, we recorded in brain slices of mouse AC from retrogradely labeled corticocollicular and neighboring corticocallosal neurons in L5B. Corticocollicular neurons had, on average, lower input resistance, greater hyperpolarization-activated current (Ih), depolarized resting membrane potential, faster action potentials, initial spike doublets, and less spike-frequency adaptation. In paired recordings between single L2/3 and labeled L5B neurons, the probabilities of connection, amplitude, latency, rise time, and decay time constant of the unitary EPSC were not different for L2/3→corticocollicular and L2/3→corticocallosal connections. However, short trains of unitary EPSCs showed no synaptic depression in L2/3→corticocollicular connections, but substantial depression in L2/3→corticocallosal connections. Synaptic potentials in L2/3→corticocollicular connections decayed faster and showed less temporal summation, consistent with increased Ih in corticocollicular neurons, whereas synaptic potentials in L2/3→corticocallosal connections showed more temporal summation. Extracellular L2/3 stimulation at two different rates resulted in spiking in L5B neurons; for corticocallosal neurons the spike rate was frequency dependent, but for corticocollicular neurons it was not. Together, these findings identify cell-specific intrinsic and synaptic mechanisms that divide intracortical synaptic excitation from L2/3 to L5B into two functionally distinct pathways with different input–output functions.This work was supported by National Institutes of Health grants DC013272 (T.T. and G.M.G.S.), DC007905 (T.T.), NS061963 (G.M.G.S), R03DC012585 (J.W.M.), T32DC011499 (C.T.A.), and F32DC013734 (C.T.A), and by the Albert and Ellen Grass Faculty Award (T.T. and G.M.G.S.) and Charles Evans Foundation Award (T.T. and G.M.G.S.).2015-08-1
Measuring complete quantum states with a single observable
Experimental determination of an unknown quantum state usually requires
several incompatible measurements. However, it is also possible to determine
the full quantum state from a single, repeated measurement. For this purpose,
the quantum system whose state is to be determined is first coupled to a second
quantum system (the "assistant") in such a way that part of the information in
the quantum state is transferred to the assistant. The actual measurement is
then performed on the enlarged system including the original system and the
assistant. We discuss in detail the requirements of this procedure and
experimentally implement it on a simple quantum system consisting of nuclear
spins.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figure
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