1,374 research outputs found
Preconditioning of low-frequency repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation with transcranial direct current stimulation: evidence for homeostatic plasticity in the human motor cortex
Recent experimental work in animals has emphasized the importance of homeostatic plasticity as a means of stabilizing the properties of neuronal circuits. Here, we report a phenomenon that indicates a homeostatic pattern of cortical plasticity in healthy human subjects. The experiments combined two techniques that can produce long-term effects on the excitability of corticospinal output neurons: transcranial direct current stimulation (TDCS) and repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) of the left primary motor cortex. "Facilitatory preconditioning" with anodal TDCS caused a subsequent period of 1 Hz rTMS to reduce corticospinal excitability to below baseline levels for >20 min. Conversely, "inhibitory preconditioning" with cathodal TDCS resulted in 1 Hz rTMS increasing corticospinal excitability for at least 20 min. No changes in excitability occurred when 1 Hz rTMS was preceded by sham TDCS. Thus, changing the initial state of the motor cortex by a period of DC polarization reversed the conditioning effects of 1 Hz rTMS. These preconditioning effects of TDCS suggest the existence of a homeostatic mechanism in the human motor cortex that stabilizes corticospinal excitability within a physiologically useful range
Performance of Hamamatsu 64-anode photomultipliers for use with wavelength--shifting optical fibres
Hamamatsu R5900-00-M64 and R7600-00-M64 photomultiplier tubes will be used
with wavelength--shifting optical fibres to read out scintillator strips in the
MINOS near detector. We report on measurements of the gain, efficiency,
linearity, crosstalk, and dark noise of 232 of these PMTs, of which 219 met
MINOS requirements.Comment: 15 pages, 12 figures. Accepted by Nucl. Inst. Meth.
Current-Induced Effects in Nanoscale Conductors
We present an overview of current-induced effects in nanoscale conductors
with emphasis on their description at the atomic level. In particular, we
discuss steady-state current fluctuations, current-induced forces, inelastic
scattering and local heating. All of these properties are calculated in terms
of single-particle wavefunctions computed using a scattering approach within
the static density-functional theory of many-electron systems. Examples of
current-induced effects in atomic and molecular wires will be given and
comparison with experimental results will be provided when available.Comment: revtex, 10 pages, 8 figure
Perovskite Solar Cells with Large Area CVD Graphene for Tandem Solar Cells
Perovskite solar cells with transparent contacts may be used to compensate for thermalization losses of silicon solar cells in tandem devices. This offers a way to outreach stagnating efficiencies. However, perovskite top cells in tandem structures require contact layers with high electrical conductivity and optimal transparency. We address this challenge by implementing large area graphene grown by chemical vapor deposition as a highly transparent electrode in perovskite solar cells, leading to identical charge collection efficiencies. Electrical performance of solar cells with a graphene based contact reached those of solar cells with standard gold contacts. The optical transmission by far exceeds that of reference devices and amounts to 64.3 below the perovskite band gap. Finally, we demonstrate a four terminal tandem device combining a high band gap graphene contacted perovskite top solar cell Eg 1.6 eV with an amorphous crystalline silicon bottom solar cell Eg 1.12 e
Quantum Langevin theory of excess noise
In an earlier work [P. J. Bardroff and S. Stenholm], we have derived a fully
quantum mechanical description of excess noise in strongly damped lasers. This
theory is used here to derive the corresponding quantum Langevin equations.
Taking the semi-classical limit of these we are able to regain the starting
point of Siegman's treatment of excess noise [Phys. Rev. A 39, 1253 (1989)].
Our results essentially constitute a quantum derivation of his theory and allow
some generalizations.Comment: 9 pages, 0 figures, revte
Current Profiles of Molecular Nanowires; DFT Green Function Representation
The Liouville-space Green function formalism is used to compute the current
density profile across a single molecule attached to electrodes. Time ordering
is maintained in real, physical, time, avoiding the use of artificial time
loops and backward propagations. Closed expressions for molecular currents,
which only require DFT calculations for the isolated molecule, are derived to
fourth order in the molecule/electrode coupling.Comment: 21 page
A Simple Explanation for DAMA with Moderate Channeling
We consider the possibility that the DAMA signal arises from channeled events
in simple models where the dark matter interaction with nuclei is suppressed at
small momenta. As with the standard WIMP, these models have two parameters (the
dark matter mass and the size of the cross-section), without the need to
introduce an additional energy threshold type of parameter. We find that they
can be consistent with channeling fractions as low as about ~ 15%, so long as
at least ~70% of the nuclear recoil energy for channeled events is deposited
electronically. Given that there are reasons not to expect very large
channeling fractions, these scenarios make the channeling explanation of DAMA
much more compelling.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figure
Experimental implementation of a NMR entanglement witness
Entanglement witnesses (EW) allow the detection of entanglement in a quantum
system, from the measurement of some few observables. They do not require the
complete determination of the quantum state, which is regarded as a main
advantage. On this paper it is experimentally analyzed an entanglement witness
recently proposed in the context of Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR)
experiments to test it in some Bell-diagonal states. We also propose some
optimal entanglement witness for Bell-diagonal states. The efficiency of the
two types of EW's are compared to a measure of entanglement with tomographic
cost, the generalized robustness of entanglement. It is used a GRAPE algorithm
to produce an entangled state which is out of the detection region of the EW
for Bell-diagonal states. Upon relaxation, the results show that there is a
region in which both EW fails, whereas the generalized robustness still shows
entanglement, but with the entanglement witness proposed here with a better
performance
The best way to unblock the pipeline in CS is by getting everyone to code in schools. A debate
Many believe that the push to increase the number of skilled computer scientists must be a multi-pronged approach and be institutionalized at all levels of education. Some federal and local governments are requiring that all students become proficient in technical areas in primary and secondary schooling. Will the call for all schools to teach every student coding be the magic bullet that unblocks the computing pipeline? Is adding another core subject to an already crowded curricula the answer? Are schools ready? It is noted that there is no universal computer science/coding curriculum for teachers to follow, some teachers don't have the skills or the enthusiasm to do this, not all students can think logically so why try to force them? In the words of Einstein "Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid"
Electrostatic potential profiles of molecular conductors
The electrostatic potential across a short ballistic molecular conductor
depends sensitively on the geometry of its environment, and can affect its
conduction significantly by influencing its energy levels and wave functions.
We illustrate some of the issues involved by evaluating the potential profiles
for a conducting gold wire and an aromatic phenyl dithiol molecule in various
geometries. The potential profile is obtained by solving Poisson's equation
with boundary conditions set by the contact electrochemical potentials and
coupling the result self-consistently with a nonequilibrium Green's function
(NEGF) formulation of transport. The overall shape of the potential profile
(ramp vs. flat) depends on the feasibility of transverse screening of electric
fields. Accordingly, the screening is better for a thick wire, a multiwalled
nanotube or a close-packed self-assembled monolayer (SAM), in comparison to a
thin wire, a single-walled nanotube or an isolated molecular conductor. The
electrostatic potential further governs the alignment or misalignment of
intramolecular levels, which can strongly influence the molecular I-V
characteristic. An external gate voltage can modify the overall potential
profile, changing the current-voltage (I-V) characteristic from a resonant
conducting to a saturating one. The degree of saturation and gate modulation
depends on the metal-induced-gap states (MIGS) and on the electrostatic gate
control parameter set by the ratio of the gate oxide thickness to the channel
length.Comment: to be published in Phys. Rev. B 69, No.3, 0353XX (2004
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