6,348 research outputs found
Biophysical regulation of stem cell behavior within the niche.
Stem cells reside within most tissues throughout the lifetimes of mammalian organisms. To maintain their capacities for division and differentiation and thereby build, maintain, and regenerate organ structure and function, these cells require extensive and precise regulation, and a critical facet of this control is the local environment or niche surrounding the cell. It is well known that soluble biochemical signals play important roles within such niches, and a number of biophysical aspects of the microenvironment, including mechanical cues and spatiotemporally varying biochemical signals, have also been increasingly recognized to contribute to the repertoire of stimuli that regulate various stem cells in various tissues of both vertebrates and invertebrates. For example, biochemical factors immobilized to the extracellular matrix or the surface of neighboring cells can be spatially organized in their placement. Furthermore, the extracellular matrix provides mechanical support and regulatory information, such as its elastic modulus and interfacial topography, which modulate key aspects of stem cell behavior. Numerous examples of each of these modes of regulation indicate that biophysical aspects of the niche must be appreciated and studied in conjunction with its biochemical properties
Subsurface impurities and vacancies in a three-dimensional topological insulator
Using a three-dimensional microscopic lattice model of a strong topological
insulator (TI) we study potential impurities and vacancies in surface and
subsurface positions. For all impurity locations we find impurity-induced
resonance states with energy proportional to the inverse of the impurity
strength, although the impurity strength needed for a low-energy resonance
state increases with the depth of the impurity. For strong impurities and
vacancies as deep as 15 layers into the material, resonance peaks will appear
at and around the Dirac point in the surface energy spectrum, splitting the
original Dirac point into two nodes located off-center. Furthermore, we study
vacancy clusters buried deep inside the bulk and find zero-energy resonance
states for both single and multiple-site vacancies. Only fully symmetric
multiple-site vacancy clusters show resonance states expelled from the bulk
gap.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures. Minor changes in v
Strong potential impurities on the surface of a topological insulator
Topological insulators (TIs) are said to be stable against non-magnetic
impurity scattering due to suppressed backscattering in the Dirac surface
states. We solve a lattice model of a three-dimensional TI in the presence of
strong potential impurities and find that both the Dirac point and low-energy
states are significantly modified: low-energy impurity resonances are formed
that produce a peak in the density of states near the Dirac point, which is
destroyed and split into two nodes that move off-center. The impurity-induced
states penetrate up to 10 layers into the bulk of the TI. These findings
demonstrate the importance of bulk states for the stability of TIs and how they
can destroy the topological protection of the surface.Comment: 4+ pages, 3 figures. Published versio
Odd-frequency superconducting pairing in topological insulators
We discuss the appearance of odd-frequency spin-triplet s-wave
superconductivity, first proposed by Berezinskii [{\it JETP} {\bf 20}, 287
(1974)], on the surface of a topological insulator proximity coupled to a
conventional spin-singlet s-wave superconductor. Using both analytical and
numerical methods we show that this disorder robust odd-frequency state is
present whenever there is an in-surface gradient in the proximity induced gap,
including superconductor-normal state (SN) junctions. The time-independent
order parameter for the odd-frequency superconductor is proportional to the
in-surface gap gradient. The induced odd-frequency component does not produce
any low-energy states.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures. v2 contains minor changes + supplementary
materia
Triplet proximity effect and odd-frequency pairing in graphene
We study the interplay between proximity-induced superconductivity and
ferromagnetism in graphene by self-consistently solving the Bogoliubov-de
Gennes equations on the honeycomb lattice. We find that a strong triplet
proximity effect is generated in graphene, leading to odd-frequency pairing
correlations. These odd-frequency correlations are clearly manifested in the
local density of states of the graphene sheet, which can be probed via
STM-measurements. Motivated by recent experiments on SNS graphene
Josephson junctions, we also study the spectrum of Andreev-bound states formed
in the normal region due to the proximity effect. Our results may be useful for
interpreting spectroscopic data and can also serve as a guideline for future
experiments.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. Submitted to Physical Review
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