8,341 research outputs found
Landau-Zener Tunnelling in a Nonlinear Three-level System
We present a comprehensive analysis of the Landau-Zener tunnelling of a
nonlinear three-level system in a linearly sweeping external field. We find the
presence of nonzero tunnelling probability in the adiabatic limit (i.e., very
slowly sweeping field) even for the situation that the nonlinear term is very
small and the energy levels keep the same topological structure as that of
linear case. In particular, the tunnelling is irregular with showing an
unresolved sensitivity on the sweeping rate. For the case of fast-sweeping
fields, we derive an analytic expression for the tunnelling probability with
stationary phase approximation and show that the nonlinearity can dramatically
influence the tunnelling probability when the nonlinear "internal field"
resonate with the external field. We also discuss the asymmetry of the
tunnelling probability induced by the nonlinearity. Physics behind the above
phenomena is revealed and possible application of our model to triple-well
trapped Bose-Einstein condensate is discussed.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figure
Accelerated colorimetric immunosensingusing surface-modified porous monolithsand gold nanoparticles
A rapid and sensitive immunoassay platform integrating polymerized monoliths and gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) has been developed. The porous monoliths are photopolymerized in situ within a silica capillary and serve as solid support for high-mass transport and high-density capture antibody immobilization to create a shorter diffusion length for antibody–antigen interactions, resulting in a rapid assay and low reagent consumption. AuNPs are modified with detection antibodies and are utilized as signals for colorimetric immunoassays without the need for enzyme, substrate and sophisticated equipment for quantitative measurements. This platform has been verified by performing a human IgG sandwich immunoassay with a detection limit of 0.1 ng ml−1. In addition, a single assay can be completed in 1 h, which is more efficient than traditional immunoassays that require several hours to complete
Podoplanin-positive cancer cells at the edge of esophageal squamous cell carcinomas are involved in invasion
Podoplanin (PDPN) is a well established lymphatic endothelial marker and has frequently been observed in cancer cells at the edge of cancer masses. Previous studies investigating the association between PDPN expression and patient prognosis have had contradictory results. In the present study, it was hypothesized that the different locations of PDPNpositive cells may explain these varying results. The present study aimed to focus on PDPN expression at the edge of esophageal cancer cell nests. In order to analyze the clinical significance of this PDPN expression, immunohistochemistry was performed using esophageal cancer tissue microarrays. PDPN expression at the edge of the cancer cell nest was found to be significantly associated with invasion (P<0.05) and poor prognosis (P<0.001) in patients with cancer. To further investigate the role of PDPN expression in cancer cells, the PDPN gene was cloned and transfected into esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC) cell lines. PDPN expression was also knocked down using small interfering RNA. PDPNpositive cancer cells were found to exhibit invasion characteristics. Thus, PDPN expression at the edge of a cancer cell nest may indicate invasion and represent a poor prognostic factor for ESCCs.published_or_final_versio
ADTH: Bounded Nodal Delay for Better Performance in Wireless Ad-hoc Networks
© 2018 Delay is an unavoidable factor that occurs within networks and may be exacerbated by the nature of wireless ad-hoc networks. Maintaining a manageable level of delay may be required to provide satisfactory performance for each of the nodes that form the network. The variability of IoT devices, topologies and network conditions demand that a standalone and scalable scheme be used. ADTH is first shown to accomplish this through simulations with the NS-2 network simulator. The scheme was then used with testbed implementation with Gumstix devices and real-time traffic provided by an STC Traffic Generator. These demonstrated its effectiveness in managing flows of delay sensitive traffic, in addition to delivering superior bandwidth utilisation than standard policies
On the equivalence of Eulerian and Lagrangian variables for the two-component Camassa-Holm system
The Camassa-Holm equation and its two-component Camassa-Holm system
generalization both experience wave breaking in finite time. To analyze this,
and to obtain solutions past wave breaking, it is common to reformulate the
original equation given in Eulerian coordinates, into a system of ordinary
differential equations in Lagrangian coordinates. It is of considerable
interest to study the stability of solutions and how this is manifested in
Eulerian and Lagrangian variables. We identify criteria of convergence, such
that convergence in Eulerian coordinates is equivalent to convergence in
Lagrangian coordinates. In addition, we show how one can approximate global
conservative solutions of the scalar Camassa-Holm equation by smooth solutions
of the two-component Camassa-Holm system that do not experience wave breaking
Practical gigahertz quantum key distribution robust against channel disturbance
Quantum key distribution (QKD) provides an attractive solution for secure
communication. However, channel disturbance severely limits its application
when a QKD system is transfered from the laboratory to the field. Here, a
high-speed Faraday-Sagnac-Michelson QKD system is proposed that can
automatically compensate for the channel polarization disturbance, which
largely avoids the intermittency limitations of environment mutation. Over a
50-km fiber channel with 30-Hz polarization scrambling, the practicality of
this phase-coding QKD system was characterized with an interference fringe
visibility of 99:35% over 24 hours, and a stable secure key rate of 306k bits/s
over 7 days without active polarization alignment
Wnt2 secreted by tumour fibroblasts promotes tumour progression in oesophageal cancer by activation of the Wnt/β-catenin signalling pathway
Objectives: Interaction between neoplastic and stromal cells plays an important role in tumour progression. It was recently found that WNT2 was frequently overexpressed in fibroblasts isolated from tumour tissue tumour fibroblasts (TF) compared with fibroblasts from non-tumour tissue normal fibroblasts in oesophageal squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC). This study aimed to investigate the effect of TF-secreted Wnt2 in OSCC development via the tumour - stroma interaction. Methods: Quantitative PCR, western blotting, immunohistochemistry and immunofluorescence were used to study the expression pattern of Wnt2 and its effect on the Wnt/β-catenin pathway. A Wnt2-secreting system was established in Chinese hamster ovary cells and its conditioned medium was used to study the role of Wnt2 in cell proliferation and invasion. Results: Expression of Wnt2 could only be detected in TF but not in OSCC cancer cell lines. In OSCC tissues, Wnt2 (+) cells were mainly detected in the boundary between stroma and tumour tissue or scattered within tumour tissue. In this study, Wnt2-positive OSCC was defined when five or more Wnt2(+) cells were observed in 2003X microscopy field. Interestingly, Wnt2-positive OSCC (22/51 cases) was significantly associated with lymph node metastases (p=0.001), advanced TNM stage (p=0.001) and disease-specific survival (p<0.0001). Functional study demonstrated that secreted Wnt2 could promote oesophageal cancer cell growth by activating the Wnt/β-catenin signalling pathway and subsequently upregulated cyclin D1 and c-myc expression. Further study found that Wnt2 could enhance cell motility and invasiveness by inducing epithelial-mesenchymal transition. Conclusions: TF-secreted Wnt2 acts as a growth and invasion-promoting factor through activating the canonical Wnt/β-catenin signalling pathway in oesophageal cancer cells.published_or_final_versio
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