1,685 research outputs found
Vortices in dipolar Bose-Einstein condensates
Quantized vortices are the hallmark of superfluidity, and are often sought
out as the first observable feature in new superfluid systems. Following the
recent experimental observation of vortices in Bose-Einstein condensates
comprised of atoms with inherent long-range dipole-dipole interactions [Nat.
Phys. 18, 1453-1458 (2022)], we thoroughly investigate vortex properties in the
three-dimensional dominantly dipolar regime, where beyond-mean-field effects
are crucial for stability, and investigate the interplay between trap geometry
and magnetic field tilt angle.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figure
Breathlessness in the elderly during the last year of life sufficient to restrict activity
OBJECTIVES: Breathlessness is prevalent in older people. Symptom control at the end of life is important. This study investigated relationships between age, clinical characteristics and breathlessness sufficient to have people spend at least one half a day in that month in bed or cut down on their usual activities (restricting breathlessness) during the last year of life. DESIGN: Secondary data-analysis SETTING: General community PARTICIPANTS: 754 non-disabled persons, aged 70 and older. Monthly telephone interviews were conducted to determine the occurrence of restricting breathlessness. The primary outcome was the percentage of months with restricting breathlessness reported during the last year of life. RESULTS: Data regarding breathlessness were available for 548/589 (93.0%) decedents (mean age 86.7 years (range 71 to 106; males 38.8%). 311/548 (56.8%) reported restricting breathlessness at some time-point during the last year of life but no-one reported this every month. Frequency increased in the months closer to death irrespective of cause. Restricting breathlessness was associated with anxiety, (0.25 percentage point increase in months breathlessness per percentage point months reported anxiety, 95% CI 0.16 to 0.34, P<0.001), depression (0.14, 0.05 to 0.24, P=0.002) and mobility problems (0.07, 0.03 to 0.1, P=0.001). Percentage months of restricting breathlessness increased if chronic lung disease was noted at the most recent comprehensive assessment (6.62 percentage points, 95% CI 4.31 to 8.94, P<0.001), heart failure (3.34, 0.71 to 5.97, P<0.01), and ex-smoker status (3.01, 0.94 to 5.07, P=0.002), but decreased with older age (─0.19, ─0.37 to ─0.02, P=0.03). CONCLUSION: Restricting breathlessness increased in this elderly population in the months preceding death from any cause. Breathlessness should be assessed and managed in the context of poor prognosis
Superconducting Diamond on Silicon Nitride for Device Applications
Chemical vapour deposition (CVD) grown nanocrystalline diamond is an
attractive material for the fabrication of devices. For some device
architectures, optimisation of its growth on silicon nitride is essential.
Here, the effects of three pre-growth surface treatments, often employed as
cleaning methods of silicon nitride, were investigated. Such treatments provide
control over the surface charge of the substrate through modification of the
surface functionality, allowing for the optimisation of electrostatic diamond
seeding densities. Zeta potential measurements and X-ray photoelectron
spectroscopy (XPS) were used to analyse the silicon nitride surface following
each treatment. Exposing silicon nitride to an oxygen plasma offered optimal
surface conditions for the electrostatic self-assembly of a hydrogen-terminated
diamond nanoparticle monolayer. The subsequent growth of boron-doped
nanocrystalline diamond thin films on modified silicon nitride substrates under
CVD conditions produced coalesced films for oxygen plasma and solvent
treatments, whilst pin-holing of the diamond film was observed following RCA-1
treatment. The sharpest superconducting transition was observed for diamond
grown on oxygen plasma treated silicon nitride, demonstrating it to be of the
least structural disorder. Modifications to the substrate surface optimise the
seeding and growth processes for the fabrication of diamond on silicon nitride
devices
Glitches in rotating supersolids
Glitches, spin-up events in neutron stars, are of prime interest as they
reveal properties of nuclear matter at subnuclear densities. We numerically
investigate the glitch mechanism due to vortex unpinning using analogies
between neutron stars and dipolar supersolids. We explore the vortex and
crystal dynamics during a glitch and its dependence on the supersolid quality,
providing a tool to study glitches from different radial depths of a neutron
star. Benchmarking our theory against neutron star observations, our work will
open a new avenue for the quantum simulation of stellar objects from Earth.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figure
Bioinformatic analysis of the neprilysin (M13) family of peptidases reveals complex evolutionary and functional relationships
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The neprilysin (M13) family of endopeptidases are zinc-metalloenzymes, the majority of which are type II integral membrane proteins. The best characterised of this family is neprilysin, which has important roles in inactivating signalling peptides involved in modulating neuronal activity, blood pressure and the immune system. Other family members include the endothelin converting enzymes (ECE-1 and ECE-2), which are responsible for the final step in the synthesis of potent vasoconstrictor endothelins. The ECEs, as well as neprilysin, are considered valuable therapeutic targets for treating cardiovascular disease. Other members of the M13 family have not been functionally characterised, but are also likely to have biological roles regulating peptide signalling. The recent sequencing of animal genomes has greatly increased the number of M13 family members in protein databases, information which can be used to reveal evolutionary relationships and to gain insight into conserved biological roles.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>The phylogenetic analysis successfully resolved vertebrate M13 peptidases into seven classes, one of which appears to be specific to mammals, and insect genes into five functional classes and a series of expansions, which may include inactive peptidases. Nematode genes primarily resolved into groups containing no other taxa, bar the two nematode genes associated with <it>Drosophila </it>DmeNEP1 and DmeNEP4. This analysis reconstructed only one relationship between chordate and invertebrate clusters, that of the ECE sub-group and the DmeNEP3 related genes. Analysis of amino acid utilisation in the active site of M13 peptidases reveals a basis for their biochemical properties. A relatively invariant S1' subsite gives the majority of M13 peptidases their strong preference for hydrophobic residues in P1' position. The greater variation in the S2' subsite may be instrumental in determining the specificity of M13 peptidases for their substrates and thus allows M13 peptidases to fulfil a broad range of physiological roles.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>The M13 family of peptidases have diversified extensively in all species examined, indicating wide ranging roles in numerous physiological processes. It is predicted that differences in the S2' subsite are fundamental to determining the substrate specificities that facilitate this functional diversity.</p
Prototype Cryospheric Experimental Synthetic Aperture Radiometer (CESAR)
Present satellite microwave radiometers typically have a coarse spatial resolution of several kilometers or more. This is only adequate only over homogenous areas. Significantly enhanced spatial resolution is critically important to reduce the uncertainty of estimated cryospheric parameters in heterogeneous and climatically-sensitive areas. Examples include: (1) dynamic sea ice areas with frequent lead and polynya developments and variable ice thicknesses, (2) mountainous areas that require improved retrieval of snow water equivalent, and (3) melting outlet glacier or ice shelf areas along the coast of Greenland and Antarctica. For these situations and many others, an Earth surface spot size of no more than 100 m is necessary to retrieve the information needed for significant new scientific progress, including the synthesis of field observations with satellite observations with high confidence
Observation of vortices in a dipolar supersolid
Supersolids are states of matter that spontaneously break two continuous
symmetries: translational invariance due to the appearance of a crystal
structure and phase invariance due to phase locking of single-particle wave
functions, responsible for superfluid phenomena. While originally predicted to
be present in solid helium, ultracold quantum gases provided a first platform
to observe supersolids, with particular success coming from dipolar atoms.
Phase locking in dipolar supersolids has been probed through e.g. measurements
of the phase coherence and gapless Goldstone modes, but quantized vortices, a
hydrodynamic fingerprint of superfluidity, have not yet been observed. Here,
with the prerequisite pieces at our disposal, namely a method to generate
vortices in dipolar gases and supersolids with two-dimensional crystalline
order, we report on the theoretical investigation and experimental observation
of vortices in the supersolid phase. Our work reveals a fundamental difference
in vortex seeding dynamics between unmodulated and modulated quantum fluids.
This opens the door to study the hydrodynamic properties of exotic quantum
systems with multiple spontaneously broken symmetries, in disparate domains
such as quantum crystals and neutron stars.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figure
Profile of the U 5f magnetization in U/Fe multilayers
Recent calculations, concerning the magnetism of uranium in the U/Fe
multilayer system have described the spatial dependence of the 5f polarization
that might be expected. We have used the x-ray resonant magnetic reflectivity
technique to obtain the profile of the induced uranium magnetic moment for
selected U/Fe multilayer samples. This study extends the use of x-ray magnetic
scattering for induced moment systems to the 5f actinide metals. The spatial
dependence of the U magnetization shows that the predominant fraction of the
polarization is present at the interfacial boundaries, decaying rapidly towards
the center of the uranium layer, in good agreement with predictions.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure
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