5,756 research outputs found
Identification of single nucleotides in MoS2 nanopores
Ultrathin membranes have drawn much attention due to their unprecedented
spatial resolution for DNA nanopore sequencing. However, the high translocation
velocity (3000-50000 nt/ms) of DNA molecules moving across such membranes
limits their usability. To this end, we have introduced a viscosity gradient
system based on room-temperature ionic liquids (RTILs) to control the dynamics
of DNA translocation through a nanometer-size pore fabricated in an atomically
thin MoS2 membrane. This allows us for the first time to statistically identify
all four types of nucleotides with solid state nanopores. Nucleotides are
identified according to the current signatures recorded during their transient
residence in the narrow orifice of the atomically thin MoS2 nanopore. In this
novel architecture that exploits high viscosity of RTIL, we demonstrate
single-nucleotide translocation velocity that is an optimal speed (1-50 nt/ms)
for DNA sequencing, while keeping the signal to noise ratio (SNR) higher than
10. Our findings pave the way for future low-cost and rapid DNA sequencing
using solid-state nanopores.Comment: Manuscript 24 pages, 4 Figures Supporting Information 24 pages, 12
Figures, 2 Tables Manuscript in review Nature Nanotechnology since May 27th
201
Fatigue evaluation in maintenance and assembly operations by digital human simulation
Virtual human techniques have been used a lot in industrial design in order
to consider human factors and ergonomics as early as possible. The physical
status (the physical capacity of virtual human) has been mostly treated as
invariable in the current available human simulation tools, while indeed the
physical capacity varies along time in an operation and the change of the
physical capacity depends on the history of the work as well. Virtual Human
Status is proposed in this paper in order to assess the difficulty of manual
handling operations, especially from the physical perspective. The decrease of
the physical capacity before and after an operation is used as an index to
indicate the work difficulty. The reduction of physical strength is simulated
in a theoretical approach on the basis of a fatigue model in which fatigue
resistances of different muscle groups were regressed from 24 existing maximum
endurance time (MET) models. A framework based on digital human modeling
technique is established to realize the comparison of physical status. An
assembly case in airplane assembly is simulated and analyzed under the
framework. The endurance time and the decrease of the joint moment strengths
are simulated. The experimental result in simulated operations under laboratory
conditions confirms the feasibility of the theoretical approach
Chemical abundances and ages of the bulge stars in APOGEE high-velocity peaks
A cold high-velocity (HV, 200 km/s) peak was first reported in several
Galactic bulge fields based on the APOGEE commissioning observations. Both the
existence and the nature of the high-velocity peak are still under debate. Here
we revisit this feature with the latest APOGEE DR13 data. We find that most of
the low latitude bulge fields display a skewed Gaussian distribution with a HV
shoulder. However, only 3 out of 53 fields show distinct high-velocity peaks
around 200 km/s. The velocity distribution can be well described by
Gauss-Hermite polynomials, except the three fields showing clear HV peaks. We
find that the correlation between the skewness parameter () and the mean
velocity (), instead of a distinctive HV peak, is a strong indicator
of the bar. It was recently suggested that the HV peak is composed of
preferentially young stars. We choose three fields showing clear HV peaks to
test this hypothesis using the metallicity, [/M] and [C/N] as age
proxies. We find that both young and old stars show HV features. The similarity
between the chemical abundances of stars in the HV peaks and the main component
indicates that they are not systematically different in terms of chemical
abundance or age. In contrast, there are clear differences in chemical space
between stars in the Sagittarius dwarf and the bulge stars. The strong HV peaks
off-plane are still to be explained properly, and could be different in nature.Comment: 13 pages, 10 figures, published in ApJ. Updated to match the final
ApJ published version. Minor revisions to the text and Figure
Open‐field arena boundary is a primary object of exploration for Drosophila
Drosophila adults, when placed into a novel open‐field arena, initially exhibit an elevated level of activity followed by a reduced stable level of spontaneous activity and spend a majority of time near the arena edge, executing motions along the walls. In order to determine the environmental features that are responsible for the initial high activity and wall‐following behavior exhibited during exploration, we examined wild‐type and visually impaired mutants in arenas with different vertical surfaces. These experiments support the conclusion that the wall‐following behavior of Drosophila is best characterized by a preference for the arena boundary, and not thigmotaxis or centrophobicity. In circular arenas, Drosophila mostly move in trajectories with low turn angles. Since the boundary preference could derive from highly linear trajectories, we further developed a simulation program to model the effects of turn angle on the boundary preference. In an hourglass‐shaped arena with convex‐angled walls that forced a straight versus wall‐following choice, the simulation with constrained turn angles predicted general movement across a central gap, whereas Drosophila tend to follow the wall. Hence, low turn angled movement does not drive the boundary preference. Lastly, visually impaired Drosophila demonstrate a defect in attenuation of the elevated initial activity. Interestingly, the visually impaired w 1118 activity decay defect can be rescued by increasing the contrast of the arena's edge, suggesting that the activity decay relies on visual detection of the boundary. The arena boundary is, therefore, a primary object of exploration for Drosophila . In an open field arena, Drosophila spend the majority of time at the arena boundary even when additional vertical surfaces are present in the interior. The visually impaired white files have defects in the attenuation of exploratory activity. by increasing the contrast of the boundary, we can rescue this defect in white mutants, demonstrating that the boundary is a primary object of exploration in an open field arena.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/90592/1/brb3.36.pd
Double sign reversal of the vortex Hall effect in YBa2Cu3O7-delta thin films in the strong pinning limit of low magnetic fields
Measurements of the Hall effect and the resistivity in twinned
YBa2Cu3O7-delta thin films in magnetic fields B oriented parallel to the
crystallographic c-axis and to the twin boundaries reveal a double sign
reversal of the Hall coefficient for B below 1 T. In high transport current
densities, or with B tilted off the twin boundaries by 5 degrees, the second
sign reversal vanishes. The power-law scaling of the Hall conductivity to the
longitudinal conductivity in the mixed state is strongly modified in the regime
of the second sign reversal. Our observations are interpreted as strong,
disorder-type dependent vortex pinning and confirm that the Hall conductivity
in high temperature superconductors is not independent of pinning.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Pink1 and Parkin regulate Drosophila intestinal stem cell proliferation during stress and aging.
Intestinal stem cells (ISCs) maintain the midgut epithelium in Drosophila melanogaster Proper cellular turnover and tissue function rely on tightly regulated rates of ISC division and appropriate differentiation of daughter cells. However, aging and epithelial injury cause elevated ISC proliferation and decreased capacity for terminal differentiation of daughter enteroblasts (EBs). The mechanisms causing functional decline of stem cells with age remain elusive; however, recent findings suggest that stem cell metabolism plays an important role in the regulation of stem cell activity. Here, we investigate how alterations in mitochondrial homeostasis modulate stem cell behavior in vivo via RNA interference-mediated knockdown of factors involved in mitochondrial dynamics. ISC/EB-specific knockdown of the mitophagy-related genes Pink1 or Parkin suppresses the age-related loss of tissue homeostasis, despite dramatic changes in mitochondrial ultrastructure and mitochondrial damage in ISCs/EBs. Maintenance of tissue homeostasis upon reduction of Pink1 or Parkin appears to result from reduction of age- and stress-induced ISC proliferation, in part, through induction of ISC senescence. Our results indicate an uncoupling of cellular, tissue, and organismal aging through inhibition of ISC proliferation and provide insight into strategies used by stem cells to maintain tissue homeostasis despite severe damage to organelles
High magnetic field scales and critical currents in SmFeAs(O,F) crystals: promising for applications
Superconducting technology provides most sensitive field detectors, promising
implementations of qubits and high field magnets for medical imaging and for
most powerful particle accelerators. Thus, with the discovery of new
superconducting materials, such as the iron pnictides, exploring their
potential for applications is one of the foremost tasks. Even if the critical
temperature Tc is high, intrinsic electronic properties might render
applications rather difficult, particularly if extreme electronic anisotropy
prevents effective pinning of vortices and thus severely limits the critical
current density, a problem well known for cuprates. While many questions
concerning microscopic electronic properties of the iron pnictides have been
successfully addressed and estimates point to a very high upper critical field,
their application potential is less clarified. Thus we focus here on the
critical currents, their anisotropy and the onset of electrical dissipation in
high magnetic fields up to 65 T. Our detailed study of the transport properties
of optimally doped SmFeAs(O,F) single crystals reveals a promising combination
of high (>2 x 10^6 A/cm^2) and nearly isotropic critical current densities
along all crystal directions. This favorable intragrain current transport in
SmFeAs(O,F), which shows the highest Tc of 54 K at ambient pressure, is a
crucial requirement for possible applications. Essential in these experiments
are 4-probe measurements on Focused Ion Beam (FIB) cut single crystals with
sub-\mu\m^2 cross-section, with current along and perpendicular to the
crystallographic c-axis and very good signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) in pulsed
magnetic fields. The pinning forces have been characterized by scaling the
magnetically measured "peak effect"
How close can one approach the Dirac point in graphene experimentally?
The above question is frequently asked by theorists who are interested in
graphene as a model system, especially in context of relativistic quantum
physics. We offer an experimental answer by describing electron transport in
suspended devices with carrier mobilities of several 10^6 cm^2V^-1s^-1 and with
the onset of Landau quantization occurring in fields below 5 mT. The observed
charge inhomogeneity is as low as \approx10^8 cm^-2, allowing a neutral state
with a few charge carriers per entire micron-scale device. Above liquid helium
temperatures, the electronic properties of such devices are intrinsic, being
governed by thermal excitations only. This yields that the Dirac point can be
approached within 1 meV, a limit currently set by the remaining charge
inhomogeneity. No sign of an insulating state is observed down to 1 K, which
establishes the upper limit on a possible bandgap
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