8,096 research outputs found
Experimental Observation of Modulation Instability and Optical Spatial Soliton Arrays in Soft Condensed Matter
In this Letter we report observations of optically induced self-organization
of colloidal arrays in the presence of un-patterned counter-propagating
evanescent waves. The colloidal arrays formed along the laser propagation-axis
are shown to be linked to the break-up of the incident field into optical
spatial solitons, the lateral spacing of the arrays being related to modulation
instability of the soft condensed matter system.Comment: 16 pages, 3 figure
Superconducting Surface Impedance under Radiofrequency Field
Based on BCS theory with moving Cooper pairs, the electron states
distribution at 0K and the probability of electron occupation with finite
temperature have been derived and applied to anomalous skin effect theory to
obtain the surface impedance of a superconductor under radiofrequency (RF)
field. We present the numerical results for Nb and compare these with
representative RF field-dependent effective surface resistance measurements
from a 1.5 GHz resonant structure
Investigating the evolution of apoptosis in malaria parasites: the importance of ecology
Apoptosis is a precisely regulated process of cell death which occurs widely in multicellular organisms and is essential for normal development and immune defences. In recent years, interest has grown in the occurrence of apoptosis in unicellular organisms. In particular, as apoptosis has been reported in a wide range of species, including protozoan malaria parasites and trypanosomes, it may provide a novel target for intervention. However, it is important to understand when and why parasites employ an apoptosis strategy before the likely long-and short-term success of such an intervention can be evaluated. The occurrence of apoptosis in unicellular parasites provides a challenge for evolutionary theory to explain as organisms are expected to have evolved to maximise their own proliferation, not death. One possible explanation is that protozoan parasites undergo apoptosis in order to gain a group benefit from controlling their density as this prevents premature vector mortality. However, experimental manipulations to examine the ultimate causes behind apoptosis in parasites are lacking. In this review, we focus on malaria parasites to outline how an evolutionary framework can help make predictions about the ecological circumstances under which apoptosis could evolve. We then highlight the ecological considerations that should be taken into account when designing evolutionary experiments involving markers of cell death, and we call for collaboration between researchers in different fields to identify and develop appropriate markers in reference to parasite ecology and to resolve debates on terminology.Host-parasite interactio
TEACHING MARKETING AND MANAGEMENT TO AN EXTENSION AUDIENCE IN AN INTER-DISCIPLINARY SETTING
This paper discusses how economists utilize an inter-disciplinary workshop to teach marketing and management concepts to beef cattle producers and beef industry advisors. Range and animal scientists along with economists teach concepts in the classroom and then demonstrate these concepts with hands-on field activities in an 8-day Ranch Practicum, spread over an 8-month period.Teaching/Communication/Extension/Profession,
CLASSIFICATION OF RISK PREFERENCES WITH ELICITED UTILITY DATA: DOES FUNCTIONAL FORM MATTER?
Recently, several problems with elicited utility functions have emerged. This paper concerns a fundamental problem in risk preference classification with elicited data. For the sample in this research, different functional forms resulted in reversals in preference classifications. This paper suggests that preference classifications must be interpreted with caution.Research Methods/ Statistical Methods,
Anelastic deformation of Pb(Zr,Ti)O3 thin films by non-180° ferroelectric domain wall movements during nanoindentation
3 pages, 3 figures.Lead zirconate titanate Pb(Zr,Ti)O3 ferroelectric thin films show significant anelastic deformation when indented with spherical tipped indenters. Experiments on films with different Zr/Ti ratio and a mixed [001,100] preferred crystallographic orientation have shown that there is a good agreement between the anelastic deformation and the maximum strain achievable by non-180° domain wall movement. An expected increase of the indentation stiffness of the films also accompanies the anelastic deformation because of the single crystal elastic anisotropy. All these observations seem to indicate that non-180° ferroelectric domain wall movements occur under indentation stresses and cause anelasticity. Stresses for maximum anelastic deformation are compared with those for recently reported stress-induced depolarization.Peer reviewe
Proton-irradiation-induced intermixing of InGaAs quantum dots
Proton irradiation was used to create interdiffusion in In₀.₅Ga₀.₅Asquantum dots(QDs), grown by low-pressure metalorganic chemical vapor deposition. After 25-keV proton irradiation, the QD samples were annealed at two temperatures (700 or 750 °C) for 30 s. It was found that much lower annealing temperatures were needed to recover the photoluminescence signals than in the quantum-well case. Large blueshifts (120 meV) and narrowing of the photoluminescence spectra were seen. Various doses (5×10¹³–1×10¹⁵ cm⁻²) and implant temperatures (20–200 °C) were used to study the interdiffusion processes in these samples. In QD samples, much lower doses were required to achieve similar energy shifts than reported in quantum-well samples
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