24,788 research outputs found
Nonequilibrium Green's function approach to mesoscopic thermal transport
We present a formulation of a nonequilibrium Green's function method for
thermal current in nanojunction atomic systems with nonlinear interactions.
This first-principle approach is applied to the calculation of the thermal
conductance in carbon nanotube junctions. It is shown that nonlinearity already
becomes important at low temperatures. Nonlinear interactions greatly suppress
phonon transmission at room temperature. The peak of thermal conductance is
found to be around 400K, in good agreement with experiments. High-order phonon
scattering processes are important for diffusive heat transport.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Association Signals Unveiled by a Comprehensive Gene Set Enrichment Analysis of Dental Caries Genome-Wide Association Studies
Gene set-based analysis of genome-wide association study (GWAS) data has recently emerged as a useful approach to examine the joint effects of multiple risk loci in complex human diseases or phenotypes. Dental caries is a common, chronic, and complex disease leading to a decrease in quality of life worldwide. In this study, we applied the approaches of gene set enrichment analysis to a major dental caries GWAS dataset, which consists of 537 cases and 605 controls. Using four complementary gene set analysis methods, we analyzed 1331 Gene Ontology (GO) terms collected from the Molecular Signatures Database (MSigDB). Setting false discovery rate (FDR) threshold as 0.05, we identified 13 significantly associated GO terms. Additionally, 17 terms were further included as marginally associated because they were top ranked by each method, although their FDR is higher than 0.05. In total, we identified 30 promising GO terms, including 'Sphingoid metabolic process,' 'Ubiquitin protein ligase activity,' 'Regulation of cytokine secretion,' and 'Ceramide metabolic process.' These GO terms encompass broad functions that potentially interact and contribute to the oral immune response related to caries development, which have not been reported in the standard single marker based analysis. Collectively, our gene set enrichment analysis provided complementary insights into the molecular mechanisms and polygenic interactions in dental caries, revealing promising association signals that could not be detected through single marker analysis of GWAS data. © 2013 Wang et al
Compression Algorithm Based on Irregular Sequence
The paper introduces a new lossless, highly robust compression algorithm that
similar with LZW algorithm, yet the algorithm discards dictionary processing
and uses irregular sequences with massive, random information instead. Then the
paper found the ineffectiveness of the algorithm due to limited computing
ability of hardware and made a few improvements to the algorithm. The algorithm
is recommended to be applied in interplanetary communications between a
high-compute-ability device and a low-compute-ability receiving device, whose
signal would be easily interfered by cosmos rays.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figures, accepted by 2020 The 4th International Conference
on Graphics and Signal Processing (ICGSP, http://www.icgsp.org/index.html),
yet has not been publishe
Spin photocurrent, its spectra dependence, and current-induced spin polarization in an InGaAs/InAlAs two-dimensional electron gas
Converse effect of spin photocurrent and current induced spin polarization
are experimentally demonstrated in the same two-dimensional electron gas system
with Rashba spin splitting. Their consistency with the strength of the Rashba
coupling as measured from beating of the Shubnikov-de Haas oscillations reveals
a unified picture for the spin photocurrent, current-induced spin polarization
and spin orbit coupling. In addition, the observed spectral inversion of the
spin photocurrent indicates the system with dominating structure inversion
asymmetry.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figure
Turbulent particle transport as a function of toroidal rotation in DIII-D H-mode plasmas
In this paper we show how changes in toroidal rotation, by controlling the injected torque, affect particle transport and confinement. The toroidal rotation is altered using the co- and counter neutral beam injection (NBI) in low collisionality H-mode plasmas on DIII-D (Luxon 2002 Nucl. Fusion 42 614) with dominant electron cyclotron heating (ECH). We find that there is no correlation between the toroidal rotation shear and the inverse density gradient, which is observed on AUG when T-e/T-i is varied using ECH (Angioni et al 2011 Phys. Rev. Lett. 107 215003). In DIII-D, we find that in a discharge with balanced torque injection, the E x B shear is smaller than the linear gyrokinetic growth rate for small k(theta)rho(s) for rho = 0.6-0.85. This results in lower particle confinement. In the co- and counter-injected discharges the E x B shear is larger or close to the linear growth rate at the plasma edge and both configurations have higher particle confinement. In order to measure particle transport, we use a small periodic perturbative gas puff. This gas puff perturbs the density profiles and allows us to extract the perturbed diffusion and inward pinch coefficients. We observe a strong increase in the inward particle pinch in the counter-torque injected plasma. Finally, the calculated quasi-linear particle flux, nor the linear growth rates using TGLF (Staebler et al 2005 Phys. Plasmas 12 102508) agree with experimental observations
Epidemiological and virological characteristics of pandemic influenza A (H1N1) 2009 in school outbreaks in China
Background: During the 2009 pandemic influenza H1N1 (2009) virus (pH1N1) outbreak, school students were at an
increased risk of infection by the pH1N1 virus. However, the estimation of the attack rate showed significant variability.
Methods: Two school outbreaks were investigated in this study. A questionnaire was designed to collect information by
interview. Throat samples were collected from all the subjects in this study 6 times and sero samples 3 times to confirm the
infection and to determine viral shedding. Data analysis was performed using the software STATA 9.0.
Findings: The attack rate of the pH1N1 outbreak was 58.3% for the primary school, and 52.9% for the middle school. The
asymptomatic infection rates of the two schools were 35.8% and 37.6% respectively. Peak virus shedding occurred on the
day of ARI symptoms onset, followed by a steady decrease over subsequent days (p = 0.026). No difference was found either
in viral shedding or HI titer between the symptomatic and the asymptomatic infectious groups.
Conclusions: School children were found to be at a high risk of infection by the novel virus. This may be because of a
heightened risk of transmission owing to increased mixing at boarding school, or a lack of immunity owing to socioeconomic
status. We conclude that asymptomatically infectious cases may play an important role in transmission of the
pH1N1 virus
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