1,467 research outputs found

    Resistance of superconducting nanowires connected to normal metal leads

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    We study experimentally the low temperature resistance of superconducting nanowires connected to normal metal reservoirs. We find that a substantial fraction of the nanowires is resistive, down to the lowest temperature measured, indicative of an intrinsic boundary resistance due to the Andreev-conversion of normal current to supercurrent. The results are successfully analyzed in terms of the kinetic equations for diffusive superconductors

    Patterns of south-south trade in manufactures

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    Global trends and climate change policies

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    De welvaartswaarde van het milieu

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    Nonpolar resistance switching of metal/binary-transition-metal oxides/metal sandwiches: homogeneous/inhomogeneous transition of current distribution

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    Exotic features of a metal/oxide/metal (MOM) sandwich, which will be the basis for a drastically innovative nonvolatile memory device, is brought to light from a physical point of view. Here the insulator is one of the ubiquitous and classic binary-transition-metal oxides (TMO), such as Fe2O3, NiO, and CoO. The sandwich exhibits a resistance that reversibly switches between two states: one is a highly resistive off-state and the other is a conductive on-state. Several distinct features were universally observed in these binary TMO sandwiches: namely, nonpolar switching, non-volatile threshold switching, and current--voltage duality. From the systematic sample-size dependence of the resistance in on- and off-states, we conclude that the resistance switching is due to the homogeneous/inhomogeneous transition of the current distribution at the interface.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, REVTeX4, submitted to Phys. Rev. B (Feb. 23, 2007). If you can't download a PDF file of this manscript, an alternative one can be found on the author's website: http://staff.aist.go.jp/i.inoue

    Phylogenetic analyses reveal a new old introduced red algal species in Europe

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    The detection of invasive species is commonly challenging in marine environments, often related with the insufficient taxonomic knowledge of the local diversity. Using DNA sequences in diversity surveys and their phylogenetic analysis can assist us to clarify the native or introduced origin of some species. We applied this approach to study the red algae Aphanocladia stichidiosa. It was originally described in the Mediterranean (1955), later recorded in Portugal (1960), the Canary Islands (1986), the northwestern Spain (1990) and the Azores (2012). Unexpectedly, our diversity surveys in Australia revealed its presence in Victoria in 2015, finding that European and Australian specimens had identical DNA sequences (rbcL gene) and suggesting that it is introduced in one of the regions. Phylogenetic analysis resolved A. stichidiosa in a highly supported clade with species restricted to the southern hemisphere, mainly from Australia. Accordingly, we conclude that A. stichidiosa is native from Australia, although it has never been recorded there before, and that it represents a relatively old introduction in Europe. In both native and introduced regions, it is frequent in algal turfs, a type of assemblage composed by a carpet of small, morphologically similar species whose identification is often difficult. The type of growth of this species explains the absence of previous records in Australia, where the number of taxonomists studying this assemblage is lower than in Europe. Sequential reports of A. stichidiosa in different European regions suggest that it is expanding its distribution, as well as its abundance is increasing. The invasive character of this species needs to be determined yet, and its small size should not lead to underestimate its potential harmfulness. In the current context, in which kelp forests are globally declining and algal turfs are expanding, this species might play a relevant role in the transformation of the European marine ecosystems
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