115 research outputs found
Structural, magnetic, and transport properties of CoFeSi Heusler films
We report the deposition of thin CoFeSi films by RF magnetron sputtering.
Epitaxial (100)-oriented and L2 ordered growth is observed for films grown
on MgO(100) substrates. (110)-oriented films on AlO(110) show several
epitaxial domains in the film plane. Investigation of the magnetic properties
reveals a saturation magnetization of 5.0 at low temperatures. The
temperature dependence of the resistivity exhibits a crossover
from a T^3.5 law at T<50K to a T^1.65 behaviour at elevated temperatures.
shows a small anisotropic magnetoresistive effect. A weak
dependence of the normal Hall effect on the external magnetic field indicates
the compensation of electron and hole like contributions at the Fermi surface.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures to be published in J. Phys. D: Appl. Phy
Weights of holomorphic extension and restriction
AbstractLet D ⊂⊂Cn be a domain and D′ ⊂ D a closed complex submanifold. A normalized weight function ϕ on D′ is called weight of restriction, if the restriction of any L2-holomorphic function f on D to D′ is contained in L2(D′, ϕ), and it is called a weight of extension, if any holomorphic function in L2(D′, ϕ) can be extended to a L2-holomorphic function on D. Properties of the families of weights of restriction and weights of extension and relations between them are studied in this article. An application to the boundary behavior of the Bergman metric is given
Bergman kernel and complex singularity exponent
We give a precise estimate of the Bergman kernel for the model domain defined
by where
is a holomorphic map from to ,
in terms of the complex singularity exponent of .Comment: to appear in Science in China, a special issue dedicated to Professor
Zhong Tongde's 80th birthda
On the Bergman representative coordinates
We study the set where the so-called Bergman representative coordinates (or
Bergman functions) form an immersion. We provide an estimate of the size of a
maximal geodesic ball with respect to the Bergman metric, contained in this
set. By concrete examples we show that these estimates are the best possible.Comment: 20 page
The effect of a preoperative subconjuntival injection of dexamethasone on blood–retinal barrier breakdown following scleral buckling retinal detachment surgery: a prospective randomized placebo-controlled double blind clinical trial
textabstractBackground: Blood-retinal barrier breakdown secondary to retinal detachment and retinal detachment repair is a factor in the pathogenesis of proliferative vitreoretinopathy (PVR). We wished to investigate whether an estimated 700 to 1000 ng/ml subretinal dexamethasone concentration at the time of surgery would decrease the blood-retinal barrier breakdown postoperatively. Methods: Prospective, placebo-controlled, double blind clinical trial. In 34 patients with rhegmatogenous retinal detachment scheduled for conventional scleral buckling retinal detachment surgery, a subconjunctival injection of 0.5 ml dexamethasone diphosphate (10 mg) or 0.5 ml placebo was given 5-6 hours before surgery. Differences in laser flare photometry (KOWA) measurements taken 1, 3 and 6 weeks after randomisation between dexamethasone and placebo were analysed using mixed model ANOVA, while correcting for the preoperative flare measurement. Results: Six patients did not complete the study, one because of recurrent detachment within 1 week, and five because they missed their postoperative laser flare visits. The use of dexamethasone resulted in a statistically significant decrease in laser flare measurements at the 1-week postoperative visit. Conclusion: The use of a preoperative subconjunctival injection of dexamethasone decreased 1-week postoperative blood-retina barrier breakdown in patients undergoing conventional scleral buckling retinal detachment surgery. This steroid priming could be useful as a part of a peri-operative regime that would aim at decreasing the incidence of PVR
Influence of Motor Planning on Distance Perception within the Peripersonal Space
We examined whether movement costs as defined by movement magnitude have an impact on distance perception in near space. In Experiment 1, participants were given a numerical cue regarding the amplitude of a hand movement to be carried out. Before the movement execution, the length of a visual distance had to be judged. These visual distances were judged to be larger, the larger the amplitude of the concurrently prepared hand movement was. In Experiment 2, in which numerical cues were merely memorized without concurrent movement planning, this general increase of distance with cue size was not observed. The results of these experiments indicate that visual perception of near space is specifically affected by the costs of planned hand movements
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