172 research outputs found
Coulomb Drag as a Probe of the Nature of Compressible States in a Magnetic Field
Magneto-drag reveals the nature of compressible states and the underlying
interplay of disorder and interactions. At \nu=3/2 a clear T^{4/3} dependence
is observed, which signifies the metallic nature of the N=0 Landau level. In
contrast, drag in higher Landau levels reveals an additional contribution,
which anomalously grows with decreasing T before turning to zero following a
thermal activation law. The anomalous drag is discussed in terms of
electron-hole asymmetry arising from disorder and localization, and the
crossover to normal drag at high fields as due to screening of disorder.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Stable Branched Electron Flow
The pattern of branched electron flow revealed by scanning gate microscopy
shows the distribution of ballistic electron trajectories. The details of the
pattern are determined by the correlated potential of remote dopants with an
amplitude far below the Fermi energy. We find that the pattern persists even if
the electron density is significantly reduced such that the change in Fermi
energy exceeds the background potential amplitude. The branch pattern is robust
against changes in charge carrier density, but not against changes in the
background potential caused by additional illumination of the sample.Comment: Accepted for publication in New Journal of Physic
Protein phosphatase 2A promotes hepatocellular carcinogenesis in the diethylnitrosamine mouse model through inhibition of p53
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is one of the most common cancers worldwide. Most HCCs develop in cirrhotic livers. Alcoholic liver disease, chronic hepatitis B and chronic hepatitis C are the most common underlying liver diseases. Hepatitis C virus (HCV)-specific mechanisms that contribute to HCC are presently unknown. Transgenic expression of HCV proteins in the mouse liver induces an overexpression of the protein phosphatase 2A catalytic subunit (PP2Ac). We have previously reported that HCV-induced PP2Ac overexpression modulates histone methylation and acetylation and inhibits DNA damage repair. In this study, we analyze tumor formation and gene expression using HCV transgenic mice that overexpress PP2Ac and liver tissues from patients with HCC. We demonstrate that PP2Ac overexpression interferes with p53-induced apoptosis. Injection of the carcinogen, diethylnitrosamine, induced significantly more and larger liver tumors in HCV transgenic mice that overexpress PP2Ac compared with control mice. In human liver biopsies from patients with HCC, PP2Ac expression was significantly higher in HCC tissue compared with non-tumorous liver tissue from the same patients. Our findings demonstrate an important role of PP2Ac overexpression in liver carcinogenesis and provide insights into the molecular pathogenesis of HCV-induced HC
A New Type of Electron Nuclear-Spin Interaction from Resistively Detected NMR in the Fractional Quantum Hall Effect Regime
Two dimensional electron gases in narrow GaAs quantum wells show huge
longitudinal resistance (HLR) values at certain fractional filling factors.
Applying an RF field with frequencies corresponding to the nuclear spin
splittings of {69}Ga, {71}Ga and {75}As leads to a substantial decreases of the
HLR establishing a novel type of resistively detected NMR. These resonances are
split into four sub lines each. Neither the number of sub lines nor the size of
the splitting can be explained by established interaction mechanisms.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Scanned Potential Microscopy of Edge and Bulk Currents in the Quantum Hall Regime
Using an atomic force microscope as a local voltmeter, we measure the Hall
voltage profile in a 2D electron gas in the quantum Hall (QH) regime. We
observe a linear profile in the bulk of the sample in the transition regions
between QH plateaus and a distinctly nonlinear profile on the plateaus. In
addition, localized voltage drops are observed at the sample edges in the
transition regions. We interpret these results in terms of theories of edge and
bulk currents in the QH regime.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
The visibility of IQHE at sharp edges: Experimental proposals based on interactions and edge electrostatics
The influence of the incompressible strips on the integer quantized Hall
effect (IQHE) is investigated, considering a cleaved-edge overgrown (CEO)
sample as an experimentally realizable sharp edge system. We propose a set of
experiments to clarify the distinction between the large-sample limit when bulk
disorder defines the IQHE plateau width and the small-sample limit smaller than
the disorder correlation length, when self-consistent edge electrostatics
define the IQHE plateau width. The large-sample or bulk QH regime is described
by the usual localization picture, whereas the small-sample or edge regime is
discussed within the compressible/incompressible strips picture, known as the
screening theory of QH edges. Utilizing the unusually sharp edge profiles of
the CEO samples, a Hall bar design is proposed to manipulate the edge potential
profile from smooth to extremely sharp. By making use of a side-gate
perpendicular to the two dimensional electron system, it is shown that the
plateau widths can be changed or even eliminated altogether. Hence, the
visibility of IQHE is strongly influenced when adjusting the edge potential
profile and/or changing the dc current direction under high currents in the
non-linear transport regime. As a second investigation, we consider two
different types of ohmic contacts, namely highly transmitting (ideal) and
highly reflecting (non-ideal) contacts. We show that if the injection contacts
are non-ideal, however still ohmic, it is possible to measure directly the
non-quantized transport taking place at the bulk of the CEO samples. The
results of the experiments we propose will clarify the influence of the edge
potential profile and the quality of the contacts, under quantized Hall
conditions.Comment: Substantially revised version of manuscript arXiv:0906.3796v1,
including new figures et
Limiting scattering processes in high-mobility InSb quantum wells grown on GaSb buffer systems
We present molecular beam epitaxial grown single- and double-side
-doped InAlSb/InSb quantum wells with varying distances down to 50 nm
to the surface on GaSb metamorphic buffers. We analyze the surface morphology
as well as the impact of the crystalline quality on the electron transport.
Comparing growth on GaSb and GaAs substrates indicates that the structural
integrity of our InSb quantum wells is solely determined by the growth
conditions at the GaSb/InAlSb transition and the InAlSb barrier growth. The
two-dimensional electron gas samples show high mobilities of up to 349 000
cm/Vs at cryogenic temperatures and 58 000 cm/Vs at room temperature.
With the calculated Dingle ratio and a transport lifetime model, ionized
impurities predominantly remote from the quantum well are identified as the
dominant source of scattering events. The analysis of the well pronounced
Shubnikovde Haas oscillations reveals a high spin-orbit coupling with an
effective -factor of in our samples. Along with the smooth surfaces
and long mean free paths demonstrated, our InSb quantum wells are increasingly
competitive for nanoscale implementations of Majorana mode devices.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures, 4 table
Energy security and shifting modes of governance
The concept of energy security fits uneasily into contemporary security debates. It is neither a clearly traditional nor a fully ‘non-traditional’ security issue. There are also limits to the social constructedness of the concept. This article argues that, while it is important to identify the differing securitizations of energy, these must be contextualized within the material realities and the differing historical modes of governance of the political economy of resources. This is essential for understanding the differing meanings accorded to energy security, the shifting modes through which energy is governed, and the extent to which energy security concerns drive international politics. In this context, contemporary concerns over energy security have both material and ideological dimensions: anxiety over the dual shift of power from West to East and from resource-importing to resource-exporting countries; and concern over the normative weakening of the neo-liberal mode of energy governance
The Resource Curse and Rentier States in the Caspian Region : A Need for Context Analysis
Although much attention is paid to the Caspian region with regard to energy issues, the domestic
consequences of the region’s resource production have so far constituted a neglected field of research.
A systematic survey of the latest research trends in the economic and political causalities of
the resource curse and of rentier states reveals that there is a need for context analysis. In reference
to this, the paper traces any shortcomings and promising approaches in the existent body of literature
on the Caspian region. Following on from this, the paper then proposes a new approach; specifically,
one in which any differences and similarities in the context conditions are captured. This
enables a more precise exploration of the exact ways in which they form contemporary post-Soviet
Caspian rentier states.Obwohl der Region am Kaspischen Meer im Zuge von Energiediskursen große Aufmerksamkeit zuteil
wird, stellen die innerstaatlichen Folgen der Ressourcenproduktion in der Region ein bislang
vernachlässigtes Forschungsfeld dar. Ein systematischer Überblick über die jüngsten Forschungstrends
zu wirtschaftlichen und politischen Kausalzusammenhängen des Ressourcenfluchs und zu
Rentierstaaten offenbart die Notwendigkeit von Kontextanalysen. Hierauf Bezug nehmend, analysiert
der Aufsatz sowohl die Mängel als auch viel versprechende Ansätze in der betreffenden Literatur
zur Region am Kaspischen Meer. Der Aufsatz stellt letztendlich einen neuen Ansatz vor, der
Unterschiede und Gemeinsamkeiten in den Kontextbedingungen erfasst, um zu erforschen, wie diese
die gegenwärtigen post-sowjetischen Rentierstaaten in der Region am Kaspischen Meer tatsächlich
prägen
A flagellum-specific chaperone facilitates assembly of the core type III export apparatus of the bacterial flagellum
Many bacteria move using a complex, self-assembling nanomachine, the bacterial flagellum. Biosynthesis of the flagellum depends on a flagellar-specific type III secretion system (T3SS), a protein export machine homologous to the export machinery of the virulence-associated injectisome. Six cytoplasmic (FliH/I/J/G/M/N) and seven integral-membrane proteins (FlhA/B FliF/O/P/Q/R) form the flagellar basal body and are involved in the transport of flagellar building blocks across the inner membrane in a proton motive force-dependent manner. However, how the large, multi-component transmembrane export gate complex assembles in a coordinated manner remains enigmatic. Specific for most flagellar T3SSs is the presence of FliO, a small bitopic membrane protein with a large cytoplasmic domain. The function of FliO is unknown, but homologs of FliO are found in >80% of all flagellated bacteria. Here, we demonstrate that FliO protects FliP from proteolytic degradation and promotes the formation of a stable FliP-FliR complex required for the assembly of a functional core export apparatus. We further reveal the subcellular localization of FliO by super-resolution microscopy and show that FliO is not part of the assembled flagellar basal body. In summary, our results suggest that FliO functions as a novel, flagellar T3SS-specific chaperone, which facilitates quality control and productive assembly of the core T3SS export machinery
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