3,546 research outputs found
Quantum State Transfer Characterized by Mode Entanglement
We study the quantum state transfer (QST) of a class of tight-bonding Bloch
electron systems with mirror symmetry by considering the mode entanglement.
Some rigorous results are obtained to reveal the intrinsic relationship between
the fidelity of QST and the mirror mode concurrence (MMC), which is defined to
measure the mode entanglement with a certain spatial symmetry and is just the
overlap of a proper wave function with its mirror image. A complementarity is
discovered as the maximum fidelity is accompanied by a minimum of MMC. And at
the instant, which is just half of the characteristic time required to
accomplish a perfect QST, the MMC can reach its maximum value one. A large
class of perfect QST models with a certain spectrum structure are discovered to
support our analytical results.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures. to appear in PR
Study of a Newtonian Fluid through Circular Channels with Slip Boundary Taking into Account Electrokinetic Effect
We study the slip flow of fluids driven by the combined effect of electrical force and pressure gradient. The underlying boundary value problem is solved through the use of Fourier series expansion in time and Bessel function in space. The exact solutions and numerical investigations show that the slip length and electrical field parameters have significant effects on the velocity profile. By varying these system parameters, one can achieve smooth velocity profiles or wave form profiles with different wave amplitude and frequency. This opens the way for optimizing the flow by choosing the slip length, the electrical field, and electrolyte solutions
Pollinator attraction in Cornus capitata (Cornaceae): the relative role of visual and olfactory cues
Aims It is generally accepted that visual displays and floral scent play important roles in communication between flowering plants and their pollinators. However, the relative role of visual and olfactory cues in pollinator attraction is largely unknown. In this study, we determined the roles of both types of cue in attracting pollinators to Cornus capitata, a medium sized tree with each capitulum surrounded by four large, white, petaloid bracts. Methods Pollinator observations and pollination experiments were conducted in a natural population; the inflorescences' visual and olfactory signals were characterized by spectral and chemical analyses; the responses of pollinators to visual and olfactory cues were tested using dual-choice behavioural bioassays; the relative roles of visual and olfactory cues in pollinator attraction were tested by comparing the responses of pollinators to inflorescences subjected to three experimental treatments (intact, all bracts removed, and capitulum removed) within the natural population. Important Findings For fruit set, C. capitata is entirely dependent on pollinators, with a bee, Anthophora sp., being the main pollinator. Bracts present high colour distance and green contrast against the leaves. Twelve volatile compounds in the floral scent were detected, most of which have previously been reported to be attractive to a broad spectrum of bee species. Behavioural bioassays showed that both, visual cues alone and olfactory cues alone, are attractive to pollinating bees. However, visual cues alone attracted significantly more approaches than olfactory cues alone, while olfactory cues alone elicited a significantly higher landing percentage than visual cues alone. The finding suggests that, in the C. capitata-Anthophora sp. interaction, visual cues are mainly used for location from long distances, while olfactory cues mainly aid landing from short distances. Our results indicate that different modalities of floral cues should be considered together to understand fully the communication between flowering plant and pollinator
Microstructural evolution in m-plane GaN growth on m-plane SiC
This letter presents a study on the nucleation and microstructural evolution of m-plane GaN epilayers on m-plane SiC substrates using high-temperature AlN buffer layers. Controlled growth interruptions were carried out to render snapshots of heteroepitaxial dynamics. It was discovered that island coalescence results in an inhomogeneous mosaic tilt along the c-axis. Mesoscopic study of nucleation evolution helps elucidate the origin of commonly observed surface undulation and striation, which is attributed to concave growth due to the coalescence of trapezoidal islands upon contact. A model correlating microstructural defects with optical properties is proposed to explain the observed pattern in spatially resolved cathodoluminescence mapping.open221
Exchanging-based Multimodal Fusion with Transformer
We study the problem of multimodal fusion in this paper. Recent
exchanging-based methods have been proposed for vision-vision fusion, which aim
to exchange embeddings learned from one modality to the other. However, most of
them project inputs of multimodalities into different low-dimensional spaces
and cannot be applied to the sequential input data. To solve these issues, in
this paper, we propose a novel exchanging-based multimodal fusion model MuSE
for text-vision fusion based on Transformer. We first use two encoders to
separately map multimodal inputs into different low-dimensional spaces. Then we
employ two decoders to regularize the embeddings and pull them into the same
space. The two decoders capture the correlations between texts and images with
the image captioning task and the text-to-image generation task, respectively.
Further, based on the regularized embeddings, we present CrossTransformer,
which uses two Transformer encoders with shared parameters as the backbone
model to exchange knowledge between multimodalities. Specifically,
CrossTransformer first learns the global contextual information of the inputs
in the shallow layers. After that, it performs inter-modal exchange by
selecting a proportion of tokens in one modality and replacing their embeddings
with the average of embeddings in the other modality. We conduct extensive
experiments to evaluate the performance of MuSE on the Multimodal Named Entity
Recognition task and the Multimodal Sentiment Analysis task. Our results show
the superiority of MuSE against other competitors. Our code and data are
provided at https://github.com/RecklessRonan/MuSE
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CR Cistrome: a ChIP-Seq database for chromatin regulators and histone modification linkages in human and mouse
Diversified histone modifications (HMs) are essential epigenetic features. They play important roles in fundamental biological processes including transcription, DNA repair and DNA replication. Chromatin regulators (CRs), which are indispensable in epigenetics, can mediate HMs to adjust chromatin structures and functions. With the development of ChIP-Seq technology, there is an opportunity to study CR and HM profiles at the whole-genome scale. However, no specific resource for the integration of CR ChIP-Seq data or CR-HM ChIP-Seq linkage pairs is currently available. Therefore, we constructed the CR Cistrome database, available online at http://compbio.tongji.edu.cn/cr and http://cistrome.org/cr/, to further elucidate CR functions and CR-HM linkages. Within this database, we collected all publicly available ChIP-Seq data on CRs in human and mouse and categorized the data into four cohorts: the reader, writer, eraser and remodeler cohorts, together with curated introductions and ChIP-Seq data analysis results. For the HM readers, writers and erasers, we provided further ChIP-Seq analysis data for the targeted HMs and schematized the relationships between them. We believe CR Cistrome is a valuable resource for the epigenetics community
Effect of Lycii fructus polysaccharides on ovulation failure in rats
Purpose: To investigate the effect of Lycii Fructus polysaccharides (LFPS) on ovulation failure.Methods: A rat model of ovulation failure was established by intragastric administration of hydroxyurea (300 mg/kg). Rats with ovulation failure then received LFPS via oral administration at doses of 100, 200, or 400 mg/kg. The body, uterus and ovary of each rat were weighed using electronic scales. The hypothalamic-pituitary-ovarian (HPO) axis hormones, including estradiol (E2) level, follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) activity, and luteinizing hormone (LH) activity in the serum of each rat were determined by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). The levels of pro-apoptotic proteins (Fas, FasL, FADD, c-caspase-8, c-caspase-10, c-caspase-3, c-caspase-6, and c-caspase-7) in the ovarian tissue of each rat were detected by western blot.Results: Hydroxyurea reduced significantly (p < 0.01) uterus and ovary indices (uterus or ovary weight/body weight) (0.119 and 0.026 %), E2 level (3.42 pmol/L), and FSH and LH activities (2.28 and 2.76 U/L), compared with those in the normal group (0.169 and 0.039 %; 6.72 pmol/L; 2.76 and 3.75 U/L). Hydroxyurea increased significantly (p < 0.01) the levels of the above-mentioned pro-apoptotic proteins relative to those in the normal group. LFPS (100, 200, or 400 mg/kg) reversed significantly (p < 0.05 or 0.01) the effect of hydroxyurea on all of the above indices.Conclusion: LFPS exhibits a protective effect on hydroxyurea-induced ovulation failure by regulating the HPO axis hormones and death receptor-mediated apoptotic pathway.Keywords: Lycii Fructus polysaccharides, Ovulation failure, Hypothalamic-pituitary-ovarian axis, Death receptor-mediated apoptotic pathwa
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