918 research outputs found

    Air-core photonic band-gap fibers: the impact of surface modes

    Full text link
    We study the dispersion and leakage properties for the recently reported low-loss photonic band-gap fiber by Smith et al. [Nature 424, 657 (2003)]. We find that surface modes have a significant impact on both the dispersion and leakage properties of the fundamental mode. Our dispersion results are in qualitative agreement with the dispersion profile reported recently by Ouzounov et al. [Science 301, 1702 (2003)] though our results suggest that the observed long-wavelength anomalous dispersion is due to an avoided crossing (with surface modes) rather than band-bending caused by the photonic band-gap boundary of the cladding.Comment: 7 pages including 4 figures. Accepted for Optics Expres

    Purification of the head-pieces of the elementary particles from beef heart mitochondria: their morphological structure and enzymatic activity

    Get PDF
    1. In order to obtain direct evidence for the enzymatic identification of the head-pieces of the elementary particles in the inner mitochondrial membrane, the head-pieces were detached by sonication from the isolated inner membrane of beef heart mitochondria, purified by pursuing the particles with the electron microscope, and analyzed for enzymatic properties. 2. Electron microscope examination revealed that the isolated headpieces are the spherical particles about 90&#192; in diameter which are quite similar in appearance to the head-pieces of the elementary particles lining the inner mitochondrial membranes. 3. The head-pieces are identified as ATPase sensitive to oligomysin when attached by stalks to the membrane, and become insensitive when detached or purified from the membrane. 4. The head-piece is labile to cold with respect to ATPase activity and morphology.</p

    Probing Elemental Abundances in SNR 1987A Using XMM-Newton

    Full text link
    We report on the latest (2007 Jan) observations of supernova remnant (SNR) 1987A from the XMM-Newton mission. Since the 2003 May observations of Haberl et al. (2006), 11 emission lines have experienced increases in flux by factors ~ 3 to 10, with the 775 eV line of O VIII showing the greatest increase; we have observed 6 lines of Fe XVII and Fe XVIII previously unreported by XMM-Newton. A two-shock model representing plasmas in non-equilibrium ionization is fitted to the EPIC-pn spectra, yielding temperatures of ~ 0.4 and ~ 3 keV, as well as elemental abundances for N, O, Ne, Mg, Si, S and Fe. We demonstrate that the abundance ratio of N and O can be constrained to less than ~20% accuracy. Within the same confidence interval, the same analysis suggests that the C+N+O abundance varies from ~ 1.1 to 1.4 X 10^-4. Normalizing our obtained abundances by the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) values of Hughes, Hayashi & Koyama (1998), we find that O, Ne, Mg and Fe are under-abundant, while Si and S are over-abundant, consistent with the findings of Aschenbach (2007). Such a result has implications for both the single-star and binary accretion/merger models for the progenitor of SNR 1987A. In the context of the binary merger scenario proposed by Morris & Podsiadlowski (2006, 2007), material forming the inner, equatorial ring was expelled after the merger, implying that either our derived Fe abundance is inconsistent with typical LMC values or that iron is under-abundant at the site of the progenitor star of SNR 1987A.Comment: 14 pages, 10 diagrams (2 omitted). Accepted by Ap

    Reducing Complexity Assumptions for Oblivious Transfer

    Get PDF
    Reducing the minimum assumptions needed to construct various cryptographic primitives is an important and interesting task in theoretical cryptography. Oblivious Transfer, one of the most basic cryptographic building blocks, is also studied under this scenario. Reducing the minimum assumptions for Oblivious Transfer seems not an easy task, as there are a few impossibility results under black-box reductions. Until recently, it is widely believed that Oblivious Transfer can be constructed with trapdoor permutations but not trapdoor functions in general. In this paper, we enhance previous results and show one Oblivious Transfer protocol based on a collection of trapdoor functions with some extra properties. We also provide reasons for adding the extra properties and argue that the assumptions in the protocol are nearly minimum

    Signal for supernova νμ\nu_\mu and ντ\nu_\tau neutrinos in water \v{C}erenkov detectors

    Get PDF
    We suggest that photons with energies between 5 and 10 MeV, generated by the (ν,ν′pγ\nu,\nu'p\gamma) and (ν,ν′nγ\nu,\nu'n\gamma) reactions on 16^{16}O, constitute a signal which allows a unique identification of supernova νμ\nu_\mu and ντ\nu_\tau neutrinos in water \v{C}erenkov detectors. We calculate the yield of such γ\gamma events and estimate that a few hundred of them would be detected in Superkamiokande for a supernova at 10 kpc distance.Comment: 8 pages, RevTex 3.0, figures and text available at http://www.krl.caltech.edu/preprints/MAP.htm

    Novel diffusion mechanism on the GaAs(001) surface: the role of adatom-dimer interaction

    Get PDF
    Employing first principles total energy calculations we have studied the behavior of Ga and Al adatoms on the GaAs(001)-beta2 surface. The adsorption site and two relevant diffusion channels are identified. The channels are characterized by different adatom-surface dimer interaction. Both affect in a novel way the adatom migration: in one channel the diffusing adatom jumps across the surface dimers and leaves the dimer bonds intact, in the other one the surface dimer bonds are broken. The two channels are taken into account to derive effective adatom diffusion barriers. From the diffusion barriers we conclude a strong diffusion anisotropy for both Al and Ga adatoms with the direction of fastest diffusion parallel to the surface dimers. In agreement with experimental observations we find higher diffusion barriers for Al than for Ga.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, Phys. Rev. Lett. 79 (1997). Other related publications can be found at http://www.rz-berlin.mpg.de/th/paper.htm

    Do Hadronic Charge Exchange Reactions Measure Electroweak L = 1 Strength?

    Get PDF
    An eikonal model has been used to assess the relationship between calculated strengths for first forbidden beta decay and calculated cross sections for (p,n) charge exchange reactions. It is found that these are proportional for strong transitions, suggesting that hadronic charge exchange reactions may be useful in determining the spin-dipole matrix elements for astrophysically interesting leptonic transitions.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures, Submitted to Physical Review

    SALL4 Expression in Gonocytes and Spermatogonial Clones of Postnatal Mouse Testes

    Get PDF
    The spermatogenic lineage is established after birth when gonocytes migrate to the basement membrane of seminiferous tubules and give rise to spermatogonial stem cells (SSC). In adults, SSCs reside within the population of undifferentiated spermatogonia (Aundiff) that expands clonally from single cells (Asingle) to form pairs (Apaired) and chains of 4, 8 and 16 Aaligned spermatogonia. Although stem cell activity is thought to reside in the population of Asingle spermatogonia, new research suggests that clone size alone does not define the stem cell pool. The mechanisms that regulate self-renewal and differentiation fate decisions are poorly understood due to limited availability of experimental tools that distinguish the products of those fate decisions. The pluripotency factor SALL4 (sal-like protein 4) is implicated in stem cell maintenance and patterning in many organs during embryonic development, but expression becomes restricted to the gonads after birth. We analyzed the expression of SALL4 in the mouse testis during the first weeks after birth and in adult seminiferous tubules. In newborn mice, the isoform SALL4B is expressed in quiescent gonocytes at postnatal day 0 (PND0) and SALL4A is upregulated at PND7 when gonocytes have colonized the basement membrane and given rise to spermatogonia. During steady-state spermatogenesis in adult testes, SALL4 expression overlapped substantially with PLZF and LIN28 in Asingle, Apaired and Aaligned spermatogonia and therefore appears to be a marker of undifferentiated spermatogonia in mice. In contrast, co-expression of SALL4 with GFRα1 and cKIT identified distinct subpopulations of Aundiff in all clone sizes that might provide clues about SSC regulation. Collectively, these results indicate that 1) SALL4 isoforms are differentially expressed at the initiation of spermatogenesis, 2) SALL4 is expressed in undifferentiated spermatogonia in adult testes and 3) SALL4 co-staining with GFRα1 and cKIT reveals distinct subpopulations of Aundiff spermatogonia that merit further investigation. © 2013 Gassei, Orwig

    Supernova Neutrinos and the LSND Evidence for Neutrino Oscillations

    Full text link
    The observation of the νˉe\bar{\nu}_e energy spectrum from a supernova burst can provide constraints on neutrino oscillations. We derive formulas for adiabatic oscillations of supernova antineutrinos for a variety of 3- and 4-neutrino mixing schemes and mass hierarchies which are consistent with the LSND evidence for νˉμ→νˉe\bar{\nu}_{\mu}\to \bar{\nu}_e oscillations. Finally, we explore the constraints on these models and LSND given by the supernova SN1987A νˉe\bar{\nu}_e's observed by the Kamiokande-2 and IMB-3 detectors.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures. Changes with respect to original version: appendix added; minor changes in text, figures, reference
    • …
    corecore