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Furthermore, the scaling behavior between the Knight shift and 1/T_1T has also been discussed. Finally, the present results imply a considerable exchange interaction in infinite-layer nickelates, which sets a strong constraint for the proposed theoretical models.The spin-to-charge conversion of the Ag/Bi interface is studied in a device in which a spin current can be injected from either side selectively. The charge voltages generated by the two counterpropagating spin currents show opposite signs, that is consistent with the inverse spin Hall effect rather than the well-accepted inverse Rashba-Eldestein effect in the Ag/Bi bilayer. Femtosecond laser is further employed to generate the spin-current-induced terahertz signal in a Ag/Bi bilayer, which shows no evidence for the inverse Rashba-Eldestein effect, either. This work provides a clear-cut method to identify the spin-to-charge mechanism in a Rashba electronic state and delivers new understanding for the relevant spin-transport phenomena.Since decoupling in the early Universe in helicity states, primordial neutrinos propagating in astrophysical magnetic fields precess and undergo helicity changes. In view of various experimental bounds allowing a large magnetic moment of neutrinos, we estimate the helicity flipping for relic neutrinos in both cosmic and galactic magnetic fields. The flipping probability is sensitive both to the neutrino magnetic moment and the structure of the magnetic fields and is a potential probe of the fields. As we find, even a magnetic moment well below that suggested by XENON1T could significantly affect relic neutrino helicities and their detection rate via inverse tritium beta decay.In an electronic system with various interactions intertwined, revealing the origin of its many-body ground state is challenging and a direct experimental way to verify the correlated nature of an insulator has been lacking. Here we demonstrate a way to unambiguously distinguish a paradigmatic correlated insulator, a Mott insulator, from a trivial band insulator based on their distinct chemical behavior for a surface adsorbate using 1T-TaS_2, which has been debated between a spin-frustrated Mott insulator or a spin-singlet trivial insulator. We start from the observation of different sizes of spectral gaps on different surface terminations and show that potassium adatoms on these two surface layers behave in totally different ways. This can be straightforwardly understood from distinct properties of Mott and band insulators due to the fundamental difference of the half- and full-filled orbitals involved, respectively. This work not only solves an outstanding problem in this particularly interesting material but also provides a simple touchstone to identify the correlated ground state of electrons experimentally.Liquid-air interfaces can be deformed by surface-tension gradients to create topography, a phenomenon useful for polymer film patterning. A recently developed method creates these gradients by photochemically patterning a solid polymer film. Heating the film to the liquid state leads to flow driven by the patterned surface-tension gradients, but capillary leveling and diffusion of surface-active species facilitate eventual dissipation of the topography. However, experiments demonstrate that using blends of high- and low-molar-mass polymers can considerably delay the decay in topography. To gain insight into this observation, we develop a model based on lubrication theory that yields coupled nonlinear partial differential equations describing how the film height and species concentrations evolve with time and space. Incorporation of a nonmonotonic disjoining pressure is found to significantly increase the lifetime of topographical features, making the model predictions qualitatively consistent with experiments. A parametric study reveals the key variables controlling the kinetics of film deformation and provides guidelines for photochemically induced Marangoni patterning of polymer films.Several recent studies have interrogated the role of quantum coherence in affecting the transfer efficiency of an optical excitation to the designated "trap" state where the energy can be used for subsequent reactions, as in photosynthesis. However, these studies invoke a Markovian approximation for the time correlation function describing the environment-induced stochastic fluctuations. Here, we employ Kubo's quantum stochastic Liouville equation (QSLE) to include memory effects. We extend the existing QSLE scheme to introduce decay of a newly created excitation due to radiative and nonradiative channels and also by desired trapping toward the targeted chromophore. We show that the theoretical formalism based on the QSLE correctly reproduces the rate equation description in the Markovian limit, with the rate constants determined by an appropriate quantum limiting procedure. We find that under certain conditions, the efficiency of excitation transfer to the trap gains from the combined presence of quantum coherence and temporally correlated stochastic fluctuations. We work out different limiting situations in order to discover and quantify the optimum conditions for the energy transfer to the trapped state. We find that maximum energy transfer efficiency is achieved in the intermediate limit between coherent and incoherent transport.Levan-type fructooligosaccharides (LFOs) and levan can potentially be used as ingredients in prebiotics, skincare products, and antitumor agents. The Y246S mutant of Bacillus licheniformis RN-01 levansucrase (oligosaccharide-producing levansucrase, OPL) was reported to productively synthesize LFOs; however, OPL's thermostability is low at high temperatures. To enhance OPL structural stability, this study employed molecular dynamics (AMBER) to identify a highly flexible region, as measured by its average root-mean-square fluctuation (RMSF) value, on the OPL surface and computational protein design (Rosetta) to rigidify and increase favorable interactions to increase its structural stability. AMBER identified region nine (residues 277-317) as a highly flexible region that was selected for design because it has the highest number of residues and the second-highest average RMSF, and it is farthest from the active site. learn more Rosetta designed 14 mutants with the best ΔΔG value in each position, where three mutants have better ΔG than OPL.

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