3,865 research outputs found
Noncoding RNAs and gene silencing
Noncoding RNA has long been proposed to control gene expression via sequence-specific interactions with regulatory regions. Here, we review the role of noncoding RNA in heterochromatic silencing and in the silencing of transposable elements (TEs), unpaired DNA in meiosis, and developmentally excised DNA. The role of cotranscriptional processing by RNA interference and by other mechanisms is discussed, as well as parallels with RNA silencing in imprinting, paramutation, polycomb silencing, and X inactivation. Interactions with regulatory sequences may well occur, but at the RNA rather than at the DNA level
Strain control of magnetic anisotropy in (Ga,Mn)As microbars
We present an experimental and theoretical study of magnetocrystalline
anisotropies in arrays of bars patterned lithographically into (Ga,Mn)As
epilayers grown under compressive lattice strain. Structural properties of the
(Ga,Mn)As microbars are investigated by high-resolution X-ray diffraction
measurements. The experimental data, showing strong strain relaxation effects,
are in good agreement with finite element simulations. SQUID magnetization
measurements are performed to study the control of magnetic anisotropy in
(Ga,Mn)As by the lithographically induced strain relaxation of the microbars.
Microscopic theoretical modeling of the anisotropy is performed based on the
mean-field kinetic-exchange model of the ferromagnetic spin-orbit coupled band
structure of (Ga,Mn)As. Based on the overall agreement between experimental
data and theoretical modeling we conclude that the micropatterning induced
anisotropies are of the magnetocrystalline, spin-orbit coupling origin.Comment: 11 pages, 18 figure
Strong coupling between single photons in semiconductor microcavities
We discuss the observability of strong coupling between single photons in
semiconductor microcavities coupled by a chi(2) nonlinearity. We present two
schemes and analyze the feasibility of their practical implementation in three
systems: photonic crystal defects, micropillars and microdisks, fabricated out
of GaAs. We show that if a weak coherent state is used to enhance the chi(2)
interaction, the strong coupling regime between two modes at different
frequencies occupied by a single photon is within reach of current technology.
The unstimulated strong coupling of a single photon and a photon pair is very
challenging and will require an improvement in mirocavity quality factors of
2-4 orders of magnitude to be observable.Comment: 4 page
Drawing bobbin lace graphs, or, Fundamental cycles for a subclass of periodic graphs
In this paper, we study a class of graph drawings that arise from bobbin lace
patterns. The drawings are periodic and require a combinatorial embedding with
specific properties which we outline and demonstrate can be verified in linear
time. In addition, a lace graph drawing has a topological requirement: it
contains a set of non-contractible directed cycles which must be homotopic to
, that is, when drawn on a torus, each cycle wraps once around the minor
meridian axis and zero times around the major longitude axis. We provide an
algorithm for finding the two fundamental cycles of a canonical rectangular
schema in a supergraph that enforces this topological constraint. The polygonal
schema is then used to produce a straight-line drawing of the lace graph inside
a rectangular frame. We argue that such a polygonal schema always exists for
combinatorial embeddings satisfying the conditions of bobbin lace patterns, and
that we can therefore create a pattern, given a graph with a fixed
combinatorial embedding of genus one.Comment: Appears in the Proceedings of the 25th International Symposium on
Graph Drawing and Network Visualization (GD 2017
Spin Hall effect transistor
Spin transistors and spin Hall effects have been two separate leading
directions of research in semiconductor spintronics which seeks new paradigms
for information processing technologies. We have brought the two directions
together to realize an all-semiconductor spin Hall effect transistor. Our
scheme circumvents semiconductor-ferromagnet interface problems of the original
Datta-Das spin transistor concept and demonstrates the utility of the spin Hall
effects in microelectronics. The devices use diffusive transport and operate
without electrical current, i.e., without Joule heating in the active part of
the transistor. We demonstrate a spin AND logic function in a semiconductor
channel with two gates. Our experimental study is complemented by numerical
Monte Carlo simulations of spin-diffusion through the transistor channel.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figure
Low voltage control of ferromagnetism in a semiconductor p-n junction
The concept of low-voltage depletion and accumulation of electron charge in
semiconductors, utilized in field-effect transistors (FETs), is one of the
cornerstones of current information processing technologies. Spintronics which
is based on manipulating the collective state of electron spins in a
ferromagnet provides complementary technologies for reading magnetic bits or
for the solid-state memories. The integration of these two distinct areas of
microelectronics in one physical element, with a potentially major impact on
the power consumption and scalability of future devices, requires to find
efficient means for controlling magnetization electrically. Current induced
magnetization switching phenomena represent a promising step towards this goal,
however, they relay on relatively large current densities. The direct approach
of controlling the magnetization by low-voltage charge depletion effects is
seemingly unfeasible as the two worlds of semiconductors and metal ferromagnets
are separated by many orders of magnitude in their typical carrier
concentrations. Here we demonstrate that this concept is viable by reporting
persistent magnetization switchings induced by short electrical pulses of a few
volts in an all-semiconductor, ferromagnetic p-n junction.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure
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