517 research outputs found
Enhancement of the Fractional Quantum Hall State in a Small In-Plane Magnetic Field
Using a 50-nm width, ultra-clean GaAs/AlGaAs quantum well, we have studied
the Landau level filling factor fractional quantum Hall effect in a
perpendicular magnetic field 1.7 T and determined its dependence on
tilted magnetic fields. Contrary to all previous results, the 5/2 resistance
minimum and the Hall plateau are found to strengthen continuously under an
increasing tilt angle (corresponding to an in-plane
magnetic field 0 T). In the same range of
the activation gaps of both the 7/3 and the 8/3 states are found to increase
with tilt. The 5/2 state transforms into a compressible Fermi liquid upon tilt
angle , and the composite fermion series [2+],
1, 2 can be identified. Based on our results, we discuss the relevance of
a Skyrmion spin texture at associated with small Zeeman energy in
wide quantum wells, as proposed by Wjs ., Phys. Rev.
Lett. 104, 086801 (2010).Comment: 5+ pages, 3 figures, accepted for by Phy. Rev. Let
Impact of location on placentation in live tubal and cesarean scar ectopic pregnancies
INTRODUCTION: The objective of this study was to evaluate the impact of implantation outside the normal intra-uterine endometrium on development of the gestational sac. METHODS: We reviewed and compared the ultrasound measurements and vascularity score around the gestational sac in 69 women diagnosed with a live tubal ectopic pregnancy (TEP) and 54 with a cesarean scar ectopic pregnancy (CSP) at 6-11 weeks of gestation who were certain of their last menstrual period. RESULTS: The rate of a fetus with a cardiac activity in the study population was significantly (P < 0.001) higher in CSPs than in TEPs. The median maternal age, gravidity and parity were significantly (P =.005; P < 0.001 and P < 0.001, respectively) lower in the TEP than in the CSP group. The number of gestational sac size <5th centile for gestational age was significantly (P < 0.001) higher in the TEP than in the CSP group. There were no differences between the groups for the other ultrasound measurements. In cases matched for gestational age, the gestational sac size was significantly (P < 0.001) smaller in the TEP compared to the CSP group. There was a significant (P < 0.001) difference in the distribution of blood flow score with CSP presenting with higher incidence of moderate and high vascularity than TEP. DISCUSSION: Both TEP and CSP are associated with a higher rate of miscarriage than intrauterine pregnancies and the slow development of the gestation sac is more pronounced in TEPs probably as a consequence of a limited access to decidual gland secretions
Sleep Hygiene and Light Exposure Can Improve Performance Following Long-Haul Air Travel.
PURPOSE:To assess the efficacy of a combined light exposure and sleep hygiene intervention to improve team-sport performance following eastward long-haul transmeridian travel. METHODS:Twenty physically trained males underwent testing at 09:00 and 17:00 hours local time on 4 consecutive days at home (baseline) and the first 4 days following 21 hours of air travel east across 8 time zones. In a randomized, matched-pairs design, participants traveled with (INT; n = 10) or without (CON; n = 10) a light exposure and sleep hygiene intervention. Performance was assessed via countermovement jump, 20-m sprint, T test, and Yo-Yo Intermittent Recovery Level 1 tests, together with perceptual measures of jet lag, fatigue, mood, and motivation. Sleep was measured using wrist activity monitors in conjunction with self-report diaries. RESULTS:Magnitude-based inference and standardized effect-size analysis indicated there was a very likely improvement in the mean change in countermovement jump peak power (effect size 1.10, ±0.55), and likely improvement in 5-m (0.54, ±0.67) and 20-m (0.74, ±0.71) sprint time in INT compared with CON across the 4 days posttravel. Sleep duration was most likely greater in INT both during travel (1.61, ±0.82) and across the 4 nights following travel (1.28, ±0.58) compared with CON. Finally, perceived mood and motivation were likely worse (0.73, ±0.88 and 0.63, ±0.87) across the 4 days posttravel in CON compared with INT. CONCLUSIONS:Combined light exposure and sleep hygiene improved speed and power but not intermittent-sprint performance up to 96 hours following long-haul transmeridian travel. The reduction of sleep disruption during and following travel is a likely contributor to improved performance
Thermally Induced Diffusion and Restructuring of Iron Triade (Fe, Co, Ni) Nanoparticles Passivated by Several Layers of Gold
9 pags., 5 figs., 3 tabs.The temperature-induced structural changes of Fe−,
Co−, and Ni−Au core−shell nanoparticles with diameters around
5 nm are studied via atomically resolved transmission electron
microscopy. We observe structural transitions from local toward
global energy minima induced by elevated temperatures. The
experimental observations are accompanied by a computational
modeling of all core−shell particles with either centralized or
decentralized core positions. The embedded atom model is
employed and further supported by density functional theory
calculations. We provide a detailed comparison of vacancy formation
energies obtained for all materials involved in order to explain the
variations in the restructuring processes which we observe in
temperature-programmed TEM studies of the particles.This research has been supported by the Austrian Science
Fund (FWF) under Grant No. P 29893-N36, the FWF and the
Christian Doppler Research Association (CDG) under Grant
No. PIR8-N34, the Horizon 2020 research program of the
European Union under Grant No. 823717-ESTEEM3, and the
Spanish Agencia Estatal de Investigacion (AEI) and the Fondo ́
Europeo de Desarrollo Regional (FEDER, UE) under Grant
No. MAT2016-75354-P. The authors acknowledge the use of
HPC resources provided by the ZID of Graz University of
Technology and by the Vienna Scientific Cluster (VSC).
Further support by NAWI Graz is gratefully acknowledged.
The CESGA supercomputer center (Spain) is also acknowledged for having provided computational resources.Peer reviewe
Effects of CO2 on H2O band profiles and band strengths in mixed H2O:CO2 ices
H2O is the most abundant component of astrophysical ices. In most lines of
sight it is not possible to fit both the H2O 3 um stretching, the 6 um bending
and the 13 um libration band intensities with a single pure H2O spectrum.
Recent Spitzer observations have revealed CO2 ice in high abundances and it has
been suggested that CO2 mixed into H2O ice can affect relative strengths of the
3 um and 6 um bands. We used laboratory infrared transmission spectroscopy of
H2O:CO2 ice mixtures to investigate the effects of CO2 on H2O ice spectral
features at 15-135 K. We find that the H2O peak profiles and band strengths are
significantly different in H2O:CO2 ice mixtures compared to pure H2O ice. In
all H2O:CO2 mixtures, a strong free-OH stretching band appears around 2.73 um,
which can be used to put an upper limit on the CO2 concentration in the H2O
ice. The H2O bending mode profile also changes drastically with CO2
concentration; the broad pure H2O band gives way to two narrow bands as the CO2
concentration is increased. This makes it crucial to constrain the environment
of H2O ice to enable correct assignments of other species contributing to the
interstellar 6 um absorption band. The amount of CO2 present in the H2O ice of
B5:IRS1 is estimated by simultaneously comparing the H2O stretching and bending
regions and the CO2 bending mode to laboratory spectra of H2O, CO2, H2O:CO2 and
HCOOH.Comment: 12 pages, 11 figures, accepted by A&
Infrared spectroscopy of HCOOH in interstellar ice analogues
Context: HCOOH is one of the more common species in interstellar ices with
abundances of 1-5% with respect to solid H2O. Aims: This study aims at
characterizing the HCOOH spectral features in astrophysically relevant ice
mixtures in order to interpret astronomical data. Methods: The ices are grown
under high vacuum conditions and spectra are recorded in transmission using a
Fourier transform infrared spectrometer. Pure HCOOH ices deposited at 15 K and
145 K are studied, as well as binary and tertiary mixtures containing H2O, CO,
CO2 and CH3OH. The mixture concentrations are varied from 50:50% to ~10:90% for
HCOOH:H2O. Binary mixtures of HCOOH:X and tertiary mixtures of HCOOH:H2O:X with
X = CO, CO2, and CH3OH, are studied for concentrations of ~10:90% and
~7:67:26%, respectively. Results: Pure HCOOH ice spectra show broad bands which
split around 120 K due to the conversion of a dimer to a chain-structure. Broad
single component bands are found for mixtures with H2O. Additional spectral
components are present in mixtures with CO, CO2 and CH3OH. The resulting peak
position, full width at half maximum and band strength depend strongly on ice
structure, temperature, matrix constituents and the HCOOH concentration.
Comparison of the solid HCOOH 5.9, 7.2, and 8.1 micron features with
astronomical data toward the low mass source HH 46 and high mass source W 33A
shows that spectra of binary mixtures do not reproduce the observed ice
features. However, our tertiary mixtures especially with CH3OH match the
astronomical data very well. Thus interstellar HCOOH is most likely present in
tertiary or more complex mixtures with H2O, CH3OH and potentially also CO or
CO2, providing constraints on its formation.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figures, accepted by A&
High Resolution K-band Spectroscopy of MWC 480 and V1331 Cyg
We present high resolution (R=25,000-35,000) K-band spectroscopy of two young
stars, MWC 480 and V1331 Cyg. Earlier spectrally dispersed (R=230)
interferometric observations of MWC 480 indicated the presence of an excess
continuum emission interior to the dust sublimation radius, with a spectral
shape that was interpreted as evidence for hot water emission from the inner
disk of MWC 480. Our spectrum of V1331 Cyg reveals strong emission from CO and
hot water vapor, likely arising in a circumstellar disk. In comparison, our
spectrum of MWC 480 appears mostly featureless. We discuss possible ways in
which strong water emission from MWC 480 might go undetected in our data. If
strong water emission is in fact absent from the inner disk, as our data
suggest, the continuum excess interior to the dust sublimation radius that is
detected in the interferometric data must have another origin. We discuss
possible physical origins for the continuum excess.Comment: 29 pages, 5 figures, to appear in Ap
The c2d Spitzer Spectroscopic Survey Of Ices Around Low-Mass Young Stellar Objects. I. H2O And The 5-8 Mu M Bands
To study the physical and chemical evolution of ices in solar-mass systems, a spectral survey is conducted of a sample of 41 low-luminosity YSOs (L similar to 0.1-10 L-circle dot) using 3-38 mu m Spitzer and ground-based spectra. The sample is complemented with previously published Spitzer spectra of background stars and with ISO spectra of well-studied massive YSOs (L similar to 10(5) L-circle dot). The long-known 6.0 and 6.85 mu m bands are detected toward all sources, with the Class 0-type YSOs showing the deepest bands ever observed. The 6.0 mu m band is often deeper than expected from the bending mode of pure solid H2O. The additional 5-7 mu m absorption consists of five independent components, which, by comparison to laboratory studies, must be from at least eight different carriers. Much of this absorption is due to simple species likely formed by grain surface chemistry, at abundances of 1%-30% for CH3OH, 3%-8% for NH3, 1%-5% for HCOOH, similar to 6% for H2CO, and similar to 0.3% for HCOO- relative to solid H2O. The 6.85 mu m band has one or two carriers, of which one may be less volatile than H2O. Its carrier(s) formed early in the molecular cloud evolution and do not survive in the diffuse ISM. If an NH4+- containing salt is the carrier, its abundance relative to solid H2O is similar to 7%, demonstrating the efficiency of low-temperature acid-base chemistry or cosmic-ray-induced reactions. Possible origins are discussed for enigmatic, very broad absorption between 5 and 8 mu m. Finally, the same ices are observed toward massive and low-mass YSOs, indicating that processing by internal UV radiation fields is a minor factor in their early chemical evolution.NWO SpinozaNOVAEuropean Research Training Network PLANETS HPRN-CT-2002-00308NASA Origins NAG5-13050NASA Hubble Fellowship 01201.01NASA NAS 5-26555Astronom
C2D Spitzer-IRS spectra of disks around T Tauri stars: I. Silicate emission and grain growth
Infrared ~5--35 um spectra for 40 solar-mass T Tauri stars and 7
intermediate-mass Herbig Ae stars with circumstellar disks were obtained using
the Spitzer Space Telescope as part of the c2d IRS survey. This work
complements prior spectroscopic studies of silicate infrared emission from
disks, which were focused on intermediate-mass stars, with observations of
solar-mass stars limited primarily to the 10 um region. The observed 10 and 20
um silicate feature strengths/shapes are consistent with source-to-source
variations in grain size. A large fraction of the features are weak and flat,
consistent with um-sized grains indicating fast grain growth (from 0.1--1.0 um
in radius). In addition, approximately half of the T Tauri star spectra show
crystalline silicate features near 28 and 33 um indicating significant
processing when compared to interstellar grains. A few sources show large
10-to-20 um ratios and require even larger grains emitting at 20 um than at 10
um. This size difference may arise from the difference in the depth into the
disk probed by the two silicate emission bands in disks where dust settling has
occurred. The 10 um feature strength vs. shape trend is not correlated with age
or Halpha equivalent width, suggesting that some amount of turbulent mixing and
regeneration of small grains is occurring. The strength vs. shape trend is
related to spectral type, however, with M stars showing significantly flatter
10 um features (larger grain sizes) than A/B stars. The connection between
spectral type and grain size is interpreted in terms of the variation in the
silicate emission radius as a function of stellar luminosity, but could also be
indicative of other spectral-type dependent factors (e.g, X-rays, UV radiation,
stellar/disk winds, etc.).Comment: 17 pages, 13 figures, accepted for publication by ApJ, formatted with
emulateapj using revtex4 v4.
Warm H2O and OH disk emission in V1331 Cyg
We present high resolution (R=24,000) L-band spectra of the young
intermediate mass star V1331 Cyg obtained with NIRSPEC on the Keck II
telescope. The spectra show strong, rich emission from water and OH that likely
arises from the warm surface region of the circumstellar disk. We explore the
use of the new BT2 (Barber et al. 2006) water line list in fitting the spectra,
and we find that it does a much better job than the well-known HITRAN (Rothman
et al. 1998) water line list in the observed wavelength range and for the warm
temperatures probed by our data. By comparing the observed spectra with
synthetic disk emission models, we find that the water and OH emission lines
have similar widths (FWHM ~ 18 km s-1). If the line widths are set by disk
rotation, the OH and water emission lines probe a similar range of disk radii
in this source. The water and OH emission are consistent with thermal emission
for both components at a temperature ~ 1500 K. The column densities of the
emitting water and OH are large, ~ 10^{21} cm-2 and ~ 10^{20} cm-2,
respectively. Such a high column density of water is more than adequate to
shield the disk midplane from external UV irradiation in the event of complete
dust settling out of the disk atmosphere, enabling chemical synthesis to
continue in the midplane despite a harsh external UV environment. The large
OH-to-water ratio is similar to expectations for UV irradiated disks (e.g.,
Bethell and Bergin 2009), although the large OH column density is less easily
accounted for.Comment: 17 pages, 7 figures, 2 table
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