313 research outputs found
Evidence of silicene in honeycomb structures of silicon on Ag(111)
In the search for evidence of silicene, a two-dimensional honeycomb lattice
of silicon, it is important to obtain a complete picture for the evolution of
Si structures on Ag(111), which is believed to be the most suitable substrate
for growth of silicene so far. In this work we report the finding and evolution
of several monolayer superstructures of silicon on Ag(111) depending on the
coverage and temperature. Combined with first-principles calculations, the
detailed structures of these phases have been illuminated. These structure were
found to share common building blocks of silicon rings, and they evolve from a
fragment of silicene to a complete monolayer silicene and multilayer silicene.
Our results elucidate how silicene formes on Ag(111) surface and provide
methods to synthesize high-quality and large-scale silicene.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Potential application of mesh-free SPH method in turbulent river flows
A comprehensive review has been completed on the simulation of turbulent flow over rough beds using mesh-free particle models. Based on the outcomes of this review, an improved Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics (SPH) method has been developed for open channel flows over a rough bed, in which a mixing length model is used for modeling the 2D turbulence and a drag force equation is proposed for treating the boundary shear. The proposed model was applied to simulate a depth-limited open channel flow over a rough bed surface. The results of the velocity profile and shear stress distribution show a good agreement with the experimental data and existing analytical solutions. This work reveals that in order to correctly model turbulent open channel flow over a rough bed, the treatment of both flow turbulence and bed roughness effect is equally important
The myogenic transcriptional network
Myogenesis has been a leading model for elucidating the molecular mechanisms that underlie tissue differentiation and development since the discovery of MyoD. During myogenesis, the fate of myogenic precursor cells is first determined by Pax3/Pax7. This is followed by regulation of the myogenic differentiation program by muscle regulatory factors (Myf5, MyoD, Myog, and Mrf4) to form muscle tissues. Recent studies have uncovered a detailed myogenic program that involves the RP58 (Zfp238)-dependent regulatory network, which is critical for repressing the expression of inhibitor of DNA binding (Id) proteins. These novel findings contribute to a comprehensive understanding of the muscle differentiation transcriptional program
meson photoproduction on proton
The cross section is estimated for the invariant mass
distribution in the reaction in the GeV region. This reaction is
assumed to proceed through the formation of the meson in the
intermediate state, since the production cross section for this meson in the
reaction in GeV region is significant and it has large branching
ratio (88.8%) in the channel. The cross sections for this
reaction have been calculated using the energy dependent reaction amplitude,
i.e., , extracted from the latest meson
photoproduction data. We use established procedure to calculate other factors,
like width and propagator of the meson, so that our calculation can
provide reliable cross section. The calculated results reproduce the measured
invariant mass distribution spectra in the
reaction.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figure
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