4,224 research outputs found
Columbus Surpassed: Biophysical Aspects of How Stingless Bees Place an Egg Upright on Their Liquid Food
The highly eusocial stingless bees (reviewed
in [1, 2]) constitute a phylogenetically
old group [3] within the
Apidae. Probably related to this ancient
origin is their mass provisioning
of brood cells: they deposit all the
food on which the larva will develop
into the brood cell, prior to oviposition
and subsequent closure of the
cell.
The other social members of the Apidae,
the honeybees and the bumblebees,
regularly visit the larvae in their
cells to administer small amounts of
liquid food at a time. This system is
called progressive provisioning. Mass
provisioning is practiced by almost all
the other bees. However, while most
of them have a solid type of larval
food, the stingless bees produce a liquid
food. In relation to this, their cylindrical
brood cells are constructed
vertically and are often arranged in
horizontal combs. The food, regurgitated
from the stomach, consists of a
mixture of pollen, nectar, and glandular
secretions [1, 2, 4]. After the workers
have put this liquid food into the
cell, the queen oviposits. Her egg,
with its elongated shape, stands
upright on the fluid
Unanticipated proximity behavior in ferromagnet-superconductor heterostructures with controlled magnetic noncollinearity
Magnetization noncollinearity in ferromagnet-superconductor (F/S)
heterostructures is expected to enhance the superconducting transition
temperature (Tc) according to the domain-wall superconductivity theory, or to
suppress Tc when spin-triplet Cooper pairs are explicitly considered. We study
the proximity effect in F/S structures where the F layer is a Sm-Co/Py
exchange-spring bilayer and the S layer is Nb. The exchange-spring contains a
single, controllable and quantifiable domain wall in the Py layer. We observe
an enhancement of superconductivity that is nonmonotonic as the Py domain wall
is increasingly twisted via rotating a magnetic field, different from
theoretical predictions. We have excluded magnetic fields and vortex motion as
the source of the nonmonotonic behavior. This unanticipated proximity behavior
suggests that new physics is yet to be captured in the theoretical treatments
of F/S systems containing noncollinear magnetization.Comment: 17 pages, 4 figures. Physical Review Letters in pres
Magnetically asymmetric interfaces in a (LaMnO)/(SrMnO) superlattice due to structural asymmetries
Polarized neutron reflectivity measurements of a ferromagnetic
[(LaMnO)/(SrMnO)] superlattice reveal a modulated
magnetic structure with an enhanced magnetization at the interfaces where
LaMnO was deposited on SrMnO (LMO/SMO). However, the opposite
interfaces (SMO/LMO) are found to have a reduced ferromagnetic moment. The
magnetic asymmetry arises from the difference in lateral structural roughness
of the two interfaces observed via electron microscopy, with strong
ferromagnetism present at the interfaces that are atomically smooth over tens
of nanometers. This result demonstrates that atomic-scale roughness can
destabilize interfacial phases in complex oxide heterostructures.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Delta Doping of Ferromagnetism in Antiferromagnetic Manganite Superlattices
We demonstrate that delta-doping can be used to create a dimensionally
confined region of metallic ferromagnetism in an antiferromagnetic (AF)
manganite host, without introducing any explicit disorder due to dopants or
frustration of spins. Delta-doped carriers are inserted into a manganite
superlattice (SL) by a digital-synthesis technique. Theoretical consideration
of these additional carriers show that they cause a local enhancement of
ferromagnetic (F) double-exchange with respect to AF superexchange, resulting
in local canting of the AF spins. This leads to a highly modulated
magnetization, as measured by polarized neutron reflectometry. The spatial
modulation of the canting is related to the spreading of charge from the doped
layer, and establishes a fundamental length scale for charge transfer,
transformation of orbital occupancy and magnetic order in these manganites.
Furthermore, we confirm the existence of the canted, AF state as was predicted
by de Gennes [P.-G. de Gennes, Phys. Rev. 118, 141 (1960)], but had remained
elusive
Test beam Characterizations of 3D Silicon Pixel detectors
3D silicon detectors are characterized by cylindrical electrodes
perpendicular to the surface and penetrating into the bulk material in contrast
to standard Si detectors with planar electrodes on its top and bottom. This
geometry renders them particularly interesting to be used in environments where
standard silicon detectors have limitations, such as for example the radiation
environment expected in an LHC upgrade. For the first time, several 3D sensors
were assembled as hybrid pixel detectors using the ATLAS-pixel front-end chip
and readout electronics. Devices with different electrode configurations have
been characterized in a 100 GeV pion beam at the CERN SPS. Here we report
results on unirradiated devices with three 3D electrodes per 50 x 400 um2 pixel
area. Full charge collection is obtained already with comparatively low bias
voltages around 10 V. Spatial resolution with binary readout is obtained as
expected from the cell dimensions. Efficiencies of 95.9% +- 0.1 % for tracks
parallel to the electrodes and of 99.9% +- 0.1 % at 15 degrees are measured.
The homogeneity of the efficiency over the pixel area and charge sharing are
characterized.Comment: 5 pages, 7 figure
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