1,485 research outputs found
Prevalence of tail biting in pigs and associations to carcass condemnations - a Finnish pilot study
The aim of this study was to investigate the prevalence of tail biting in Finland and the relationship between tail biting and carcass condemnation
Electronic-structure-induced deformations of liquid metal clusters
Ab initio molecular dynamics is used to study deformations of sodium clusters
at temperatures K. Open-shell Na cluster has two shape
isomers, prolate and oblate, in the liquid state. The deformation is stabilized
by opening a gap at the Fermi level. The closed-shell Na remains magic also
at the liquid state.Comment: REVTex, 11 pages, no figures, figures (2) available upon request
(e-mail to hakkinen at jyfl.jyu.fi), submitted to Phys. Rev.
Conductance through analytic constrictions
We study the dependence of the intrinsic conductance of a nanocontact on its
shape by using the recursion-transfer-matrix method. Hour-glass, torus, and
spherical shapes are defined through analytic potentials, the latter two
serving as rough models for ring-like and spherical molecules, respectively.
The sensitivity of the conductance to geometric details is analyzed and
discussed. Strong resonance effects are found for a spherical contact weakly
coupled to electron reservoirs.Comment: 7 pages, 12 figure
Strong gate coupling of high-Q nanomechanical resonators
The detection of mechanical vibrations near the quantum limit is a formidable
challenge since the displacement becomes vanishingly small when the number of
phonon quanta tends towards zero. An interesting setup for on-chip
nanomechanical resonators is that of coupling them to electrical microwave
cavities for detection and manipulation. Here we show how to achieve a large
cavity coupling energy of up to (2 \pi) 1 MHz/nm for metallic beam resonators
at tens of MHz. We used focused ion beam (FIB) cutting to produce uniform slits
down to 10 nm, separating patterned resonators from their gate electrodes, in
suspended aluminum films. We measured the thermomechanical vibrations down to a
temperature of 25 mK, and we obtained a low number of about twenty phonons at
the equilibrium bath temperature. The mechanical properties of Al were
excellent after FIB cutting and we recorded a quality factor of Q ~ 3 x 10^5
for a 67 MHz resonator at a temperature of 25 mK. Between 0.2K and 2K we find
that the dissipation is linearly proportional to the temperature.Comment: 6 page
Energy relaxation in graphene and its measurement with supercurrent
We study inelastic energy relaxation in graphene for low energies to find out
how electrons scatter with acoustic phonons and other electrons. By coupling
the graphene to superconductors, we create a strong dependence of the measured
signal, i.e.,\ critical Josephson current, on the electron population on
different energy states. Since the relative population of high- and low-energy
states is determined by the inelastic scattering processes, the critical
current becomes an effective probe for their strength. We argue that the
electron-electron interaction is the dominant relaxation method and, in our
model of two-dimensional electron-electron scattering, we find a scattering
time ps at T=500 mK, 1-2 orders of magnitude smaller than
predicted by theory.Comment: 10 pages, 13 figures submitted to Physical Review
Stability of conductance oscillations in monatomic sodium wires
We study the stability of conductance oscillations in monatomic sodium wires
with respect to structural variations. The geometry, the electronic structure
and the electronic potential of sodium wires suspended between two sodium
electrodes are obtained from self-consistent density functional theory
calculations. The conductance is calculated within the framework of the
Landauer-B\"utttiker formalism, using the mode-matching technique as formulated
recently in a real-space finite-difference scheme [Phys. Rev. B \textbf{70},
195402 (2004)]. We find a regular even-odd conductance oscillation as a
function of the wire length, where wires comprising an odd number of atoms have
a conductance close to the quantum unit , and even-numbered
wires have a lower conductance. The conductance of odd-numbered wires is stable
with respect to geometry changes in the wire or in the contacts between the
wire and the electrodes; the conductance of even-numbered wires is more
sensitive. Geometry changes affect the spacing and widths of the wire
resonances. In the case of odd-numbered wires the transmission is on-resonance,
and hardly affected by the resonance shapes, whereas for even-numbered wires
the transmission is off-resonance and sensitive to the resonance shapes.
Predicting the amplitude of the conductance oscillation requires a
first-principles calculation based upon a realistic structure of the wire and
the leads. A simple tight-binding model is introduced to clarify these results.Comment: 16 pages, 20 figure
Cross-Cultural Adaptation and Validation of the Finnish Version of the Michigan Hand Outcomes Questionnaire
Background and Aims: Michigan Hand Outcomes Questionnaire is a widely used patient-reported outcome measure in hand surgery. The aim of this study was to translate and validate the Michigan Hand Outcomes Questionnaire into Finnish for Finnish patients with hand problems following international standards and guidelines. Material and Methods: The original English Michigan Hand Outcomes Questionnaire was translated into Finnish. Altogether, 115 patients completed the Finnish Michigan Hand Outcomes Questionnaire, and reference outcomes: Disabilities of the Arm and Shoulder, EQ-5D 3L and pain intensity on a visual analog scale. Grip and key pinch forces were measured. After 1-2 weeks, 63 patients completed the Finnish Michigan Hand Outcomes Questionnaire the second time. The Michigan Hand Outcomes Questionnaire was analyzed for internal consistency, repeatability, correlations with the reference outcomes, and factor analysis. Results: Cronbach's alpha ranged from 0.90 to 0.97 in all the Michigan Hand Outcomes Questionnaire subscales, showing high internal consistency. The intraclass correlation coefficient showed good to excellent test-retest reliability ranging from 0.66 to 0.91 in all the Michigan Hand Outcomes Questionnaire subscales. In factor analysis, the structure with six subscales was not confirmed. All the subscales correlated with Disabilities of the Arm and Shoulder score, and five subscales correlated with EQ-5D index. Conclusion: The Finnish version of the Michigan Hand Outcomes Questionnaire showed similar properties compared to the original English version and thus can be used as patient-reported outcome measure for Finnish patients with hand problems.Peer reviewe
Multi-shell gold nanowires under compression
Deformation properties of multi-wall gold nanowires under compressive loading
are studied. Nanowires are simulated using a realistic many-body potential.
Simulations start from cylindrical fcc(111) structures at T=0 K. After
annealing cycles axial compression is applied on multi-shell nanowires for a
number of radii and lengths at T=300 K. Several types of deformation are found,
such as large buckling distortions and progressive crushing. Compressed
nanowires are found to recover their initial lengths and radii even after
severe structural deformations. However, in contrast to carbon nanotubes
irreversible local atomic rearrangements occur even under small compressions.Comment: 1 gif figure, 5 ps figure
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