Search Results - (Author, Cooperation:S. Wild)
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1Dominik S. Wild, Ephraim Shahmoon, Susanne F. Yelin, and Mikhail D. Lukin
American Physical Society (APS)
Published 2018Staff ViewPublication Date: 2018-09-22Publisher: American Physical Society (APS)Print ISSN: 0031-9007Electronic ISSN: 1079-7114Topics: PhysicsKeywords: Atomic, Molecular, and Optical PhysicsPublished by: -
2P. K. Joshi ; T. Esko ; H. Mattsson ; N. Eklund ; I. Gandin ; T. Nutile ; A. U. Jackson ; C. Schurmann ; A. V. Smith ; W. Zhang ; Y. Okada ; A. Stancakova ; J. D. Faul ; W. Zhao ; T. M. Bartz ; M. P. Concas ; N. Franceschini ; S. Enroth ; V. Vitart ; S. Trompet ; X. Guo ; D. I. Chasman ; J. R. O'Connel ; T. Corre ; S. S. Nongmaithem ; Y. Chen ; M. Mangino ; D. Ruggiero ; M. Traglia ; A. E. Farmaki ; T. Kacprowski ; A. Bjonnes ; A. van der Spek ; Y. Wu ; A. K. Giri ; L. R. Yanek ; L. Wang ; E. Hofer ; C. A. Rietveld ; O. McLeod ; M. C. Cornelis ; C. Pattaro ; N. Verweij ; C. Baumbach ; A. Abdellaoui ; H. R. Warren ; D. Vuckovic ; H. Mei ; C. Bouchard ; J. R. Perry ; S. Cappellani ; S. S. Mirza ; M. C. Benton ; U. Broeckel ; S. E. Medland ; P. A. Lind ; G. Malerba ; A. Drong ; L. Yengo ; L. F. Bielak ; D. Zhi ; P. J. van der Most ; D. Shriner ; R. Magi ; G. Hemani ; T. Karaderi ; Z. Wang ; T. Liu ; I. Demuth ; J. H. Zhao ; W. Meng ; L. Lataniotis ; S. W. van der Laan ; J. P. Bradfield ; A. R. Wood ; A. Bonnefond ; T. S. Ahluwalia ; L. M. Hall ; E. Salvi ; S. Yazar ; L. Carstensen ; H. G. de Haan ; M. Abney ; U. Afzal ; M. A. Allison ; N. Amin ; F. W. Asselbergs ; S. J. Bakker ; R. G. Barr ; S. E. Baumeister ; D. J. Benjamin ; S. Bergmann ; E. Boerwinkle ; E. P. Bottinger ; A. Campbell ; A. Chakravarti ; Y. Chan ; S. J. Chanock ; C. Chen ; Y. D. Chen ; F. S. Collins ; J. Connell ; A. Correa ; L. A. Cupples ; G. D. Smith ; G. Davies ; M. Dorr ; G. Ehret ; S. B. Ellis ; B. Feenstra ; M. F. Feitosa ; I. Ford ; C. S. Fox ; T. M. Frayling ; N. Friedrich ; F. Geller ; G. Scotland ; I. Gillham-Nasenya ; O. Gottesman ; M. Graff ; F. Grodstein ; C. Gu ; C. Haley ; C. J. Hammond ; S. E. Harris ; T. B. Harris ; N. D. Hastie ; N. L. Heard-Costa ; K. Heikkila ; L. J. Hocking ; G. Homuth ; J. J. Hottenga ; J. Huang ; J. E. Huffman ; P. G. Hysi ; M. A. Ikram ; E. Ingelsson ; A. Joensuu ; A. Johansson ; P. Jousilahti ; J. W. Jukema ; M. Kahonen ; Y. Kamatani ; S. Kanoni ; S. M. Kerr ; N. M. Khan ; P. Koellinger ; H. A. Koistinen ; M. K. Kooner ; M. Kubo ; J. Kuusisto ; J. Lahti ; L. J. Launer ; R. A. Lea ; B. Lehne ; T. Lehtimaki ; D. C. Liewald ; L. Lind ; M. Loh ; M. L. Lokki ; S. J. London ; S. J. Loomis ; A. Loukola ; Y. Lu ; T. Lumley ; A. Lundqvist ; S. Mannisto ; P. Marques-Vidal ; C. Masciullo ; A. Matchan ; R. A. Mathias ; K. Matsuda ; J. B. Meigs ; C. Meisinger ; T. Meitinger ; C. Menni ; F. D. Mentch ; E. Mihailov ; L. Milani ; M. E. Montasser ; G. W. Montgomery ; A. Morrison ; R. H. Myers ; R. Nadukuru ; P. Navarro ; M. Nelis ; M. S. Nieminen ; I. M. Nolte ; G. T. O'Connor ; A. Ogunniyi ; S. Padmanabhan ; W. R. Palmas ; J. S. Pankow ; I. Patarcic ; F. Pavani ; P. A. Peyser ; K. Pietilainen ; N. Poulter ; I. Prokopenko ; S. Ralhan ; P. Redmond ; S. S. Rich ; H. Rissanen ; A. Robino ; L. M. Rose ; R. Rose ; C. Sala ; B. Salako ; V. Salomaa ; A. P. Sarin ; R. Saxena ; H. Schmidt ; L. J. Scott ; W. R. Scott ; B. Sennblad ; S. Seshadri ; P. Sever ; S. Shrestha ; B. H. Smith ; J. A. Smith ; N. Soranzo ; N. Sotoodehnia ; L. Southam ; A. V. Stanton ; M. G. Stathopoulou ; K. Strauch ; R. J. Strawbridge ; M. J. Suderman ; N. Tandon ; S. T. Tang ; K. D. Taylor ; B. O. Tayo ; A. M. Toglhofer ; M. Tomaszewski ; N. Tsernikova ; J. Tuomilehto ; A. G. Uitterlinden ; D. Vaidya ; A. van Hylckama Vlieg ; J. van Setten ; T. Vasankari ; S. Vedantam ; E. Vlachopoulou ; D. Vozzi ; E. Vuoksimaa ; M. Waldenberger ; E. B. Ware ; W. Wentworth-Shields ; J. B. Whitfield ; S. Wild ; G. Willemsen ; C. S. Yajnik ; J. Yao ; G. Zaza ; X. Zhu ; R. M. Salem ; M. Melbye ; H. Bisgaard ; N. J. Samani ; D. Cusi ; D. A. Mackey ; R. S. Cooper ; P. Froguel ; G. Pasterkamp ; S. F. Grant ; H. Hakonarson ; L. Ferrucci ; R. A. Scott ; A. D. Morris ; C. N. Palmer ; G. Dedoussis ; P. Deloukas ; L. Bertram ; U. Lindenberger ; S. I. Berndt ; C. M. Lindgren ; N. J. Timpson ; A. Tonjes ; P. B. Munroe ; T. I. Sorensen ; C. N. Rotimi ; D. K. Arnett ; A. J. Oldehinkel ; S. L. Kardia ; B. Balkau ; G. Gambaro ; A. P. Morris ; J. G. Eriksson ; M. J. Wright ; N. G. Martin ; S. C. Hunt ; J. M. Starr ; I. J. Deary ; L. R. Griffiths ; H. Tiemeier ; N. Pirastu ; J. Kaprio ; N. J. Wareham ; L. Perusse ; J. G. Wilson ; G. Girotto ; M. J. Caulfield ; O. Raitakari ; D. I. Boomsma ; C. Gieger ; P. van der Harst ; A. A. Hicks ; P. Kraft ; J. Sinisalo ; P. Knekt ; M. Johannesson ; P. K. Magnusson ; A. Hamsten ; R. Schmidt ; I. B. Borecki ; E. Vartiainen ; D. M. Becker ; D. Bharadwaj ; K. L. Mohlke ; M. Boehnke ; C. M. van Duijn ; D. K. Sanghera ; A. Teumer ; E. Zeggini ; A. Metspalu ; P. Gasparini ; S. Ulivi ; C. Ober ; D. Toniolo ; I. Rudan ; D. J. Porteous ; M. Ciullo ; T. D. Spector ; C. Hayward ; J. Dupuis ; R. J. Loos ; A. F. Wright ; G. R. Chandak ; P. Vollenweider ; A. R. Shuldiner ; P. M. Ridker ; J. I. Rotter ; N. Sattar ; U. Gyllensten ; K. E. North ; M. Pirastu ; B. M. Psaty ; D. R. Weir ; M. Laakso ; V. Gudnason ; A. Takahashi ; J. C. Chambers ; J. S. Kooner ; D. P. Strachan ; H. Campbell ; J. N. Hirschhorn ; M. Perola ; O. Polasek ; J. F. Wilson
Nature Publishing Group (NPG)
Published 2015Staff ViewPublication Date: 2015-07-02Publisher: Nature Publishing Group (NPG)Print ISSN: 0028-0836Electronic ISSN: 1476-4687Topics: BiologyChemistry and PharmacologyMedicineNatural Sciences in GeneralPhysicsKeywords: Biological Evolution ; Blood Pressure/genetics ; Body Height/*genetics ; Cholesterol, LDL/genetics ; *Cognition ; Cohort Studies ; Educational Status ; Female ; Forced Expiratory Volume/genetics ; Genome, Human/genetics ; *Homozygote ; Humans ; Lung Volume Measurements ; Male ; PhenotypePublished by: -
3A. A. High ; R. C. Devlin ; A. Dibos ; M. Polking ; D. S. Wild ; J. Perczel ; N. P. de Leon ; M. D. Lukin ; H. Park
Nature Publishing Group (NPG)
Published 2015Staff ViewPublication Date: 2015-06-13Publisher: Nature Publishing Group (NPG)Print ISSN: 0028-0836Electronic ISSN: 1476-4687Topics: BiologyChemistry and PharmacologyMedicineNatural Sciences in GeneralPhysicsPublished by: -
4Giovanni Scuri, You Zhou, Alexander A. High, Dominik S. Wild, Chi Shu, Kristiaan De Greve, Luis A. Jauregui, Takashi Taniguchi, Kenji Watanabe, Philip Kim, Mikhail D. Lukin, and Hongkun Park
American Physical Society (APS)
Published 2018Staff ViewPublication Date: 2018-01-19Publisher: American Physical Society (APS)Print ISSN: 0031-9007Electronic ISSN: 1079-7114Topics: PhysicsKeywords: Condensed Matter: Electronic Properties, etc.Published by: -
5Staff View
ISSN: 1476-4687Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009Topics: BiologyChemistry and PharmacologyMedicineNatural Sciences in GeneralPhysicsNotes: [Auszug] As stated by Duggin and Hofer1, the interpretation of the powder pattern of Hagg carbide (otherwise known as ^-carbide and iron percarbide) as having an orthorhombic unit cell with contents Fe20C9 (ref. 2) is incorrect. It was realized more than ten years ago that the structure was probably of ...Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
6Staff View
ISSN: 0022-328XSource: Elsevier Journal Backfiles on ScienceDirect 1907 - 2002Topics: Chemistry and PharmacologyType of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
7Staff View
ISSN: 1432-1998Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000Topics: MedicineNotes: Abstract The results of ultrasound (US) head scans performed in a children's hospital over a 6 month period have been reviewed and correlated with the results of computed tomography (CT). Two hundred and twenty-four scans were performed on 141 children ranging in age from a few days to 18 months. The clinical indications with which these children were referred were: abnormal neurological symptoms or signs, screening for hydrocephalus in neural tube defects (NTD), enlarging heads, suspected intra-cranial haemorrhage (ICH) and its sequelae, suspected complications of meningitis, investigations of suspected syndromes and following trauma. Twenty-nine of these children also had CT scans. There was good correlation between the two examinations and in only one case (a subdural collection) was a serious abnormality missed by US. US head scanning has been found to be a very reliable technique. It is the initial investigation of choice for imaging the brain of neonates and infants and in many instances it is the only investigation necessary.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
8Staff View
ISSN: 0022-4480Topics: Linguistics and Literary StudiesEthnic SciencesNotes: REVIEWSURL: -
9Jones, K. C. ; Sanders, G. ; Wild, S. R. ; Burnett, V. ; Johnston, A. E.
[s.l.] : Nature Publishing Group
Published 1992Staff ViewISSN: 1476-4687Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009Topics: BiologyChemistry and PharmacologyMedicineNatural Sciences in GeneralPhysicsNotes: [Auszug] PCBs, first manufactured in 1929, were not reported in environmental samples until 1966. Their industrial use has been restricted in Europe and North America since the 1970s2'8. Even today, however, PCB concentrations in biota are high enough to be implicated in causing adverse reproductive ...Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
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ISSN: 1432-0509Keywords: Mullerian duct cyst ; Enlarged prostatic utricle ; Renal agenesisSource: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000Topics: MedicineNotes: Abstract A case of duplicated Mullerian duct remnants associated with unilateral renal agenesis in a male patient is described. This association is not uncommon in females, but is rarely recognized in male patients. The possibility of Mullerian duct cyst or enlarged prostatic utricle should be considered in the differential diagnosis of a pelvic cyst in a male patient with unilateral renal agenesis.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
11Staff View
ISSN: 1573-4803Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000Topics: Mechanical Engineering, Materials Science, Production Engineering, Mining and Metallurgy, Traffic Engineering, Precision MechanicsNotes: Abstract The compositions of high magnesium content β″-magnesium sialon crystals within the 3M/4X plane of the Mg-Si-Al-O-N system indicate some form of metal atom ordering wihtin the β″ structure. Although it is not possible using X-ray diffraction to detect weak additional reflections arising from the ordering between magnesium, aluminium, and silicon atoms, such weak reflections are revealed on electron diffraction photographs for a β″ phase, resulting in a tripling of the hexagonal latticec-dimension. These show β″ to have a structure very similar to rhombohedral willemite (Zn2SiO4), with the (Mg, Al) metal atoms ordered with respect to the silicon atoms in a 2∶1 ratio. However, there are some additional weak diffraction spots with indices not obeying the rhombohedral condition of −h+k+l=3n. It is proposed that the structure of this β″ is identical to that of willemite and the extra spots are a result of some form of twinning, which implies the existence of “ordered microdomains”.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
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ISSN: 1573-4803Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000Topics: Mechanical Engineering, Materials Science, Production Engineering, Mining and Metallurgy, Traffic Engineering, Precision MechanicsNotes: Abstract MgSiAlON 3M/4X liquids have been crystallized at slow cooling rates from the melt and isothermally at varying degrees of undercooling. Forsterite is always the primary crystallizing phase but the secondary phases vary with the degree of undercooling. A magnesium-substitutedβ′-sialon,β″, grows with forsterite via a coupled mechanism at a slow continous cooling rate. However,β″ is progressively replaced as the secondary phase by a petalite-type Mg-Si-Al-O-N phase and a fourth phase on isothermal crystallization at increasing degrees of undercooling. The compositions ofβ″ and Mg-petalite as analysed by energy-dispersive X-ray microanalysis are discussed.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
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ISSN: 1573-4803Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000Topics: Mechanical Engineering, Materials Science, Production Engineering, Mining and Metallurgy, Traffic Engineering, Precision MechanicsNotes: Abstract Previous reports on the solubility of magnesium in β′-sialons have been conflicting. The present work shows conclusively that crystalline magnesium sialons with the β silicon nitride structure do exist. They are formed by crystallization of magnesium sialon glasses at low temperatures. β″-magnesium sialon crystals nucleate on β′-sialon nuclei which are themselves formed by precipitation from Mg-Si-Al-O-N liquids at high temperatures. The current results suggest that β″-magnesium sialons exist only over a limited composition range within the 3M/4X plane of the Mg-Si-Al-O-N system, which is indicative of some form of ordering within the β″ structure. Although the compositions investigated in the present study are unstable with respect to forsterite above about 1000° C, the possibility of producing β″-magnesium sialons which are stable at much higher temperatures cannot be fully discounted at present.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
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ISSN: 1573-4803Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000Topics: Mechanical Engineering, Materials Science, Production Engineering, Mining and Metallurgy, Traffic Engineering, Precision MechanicsNotes: Abstract Previous investigations of the replacement of silicon by aluminium and nitrogen by oxygen in β-silicon nitride have been based primarily on X-ray powder diffraction studies. In the present work this technique is coupled with parallel infra-red studies. X-ray analyses of sialons over a wide composition range confirm previous observations that increasing substitution of aluminium for silicon and nitrogen for oxygen in β-silicon nitride is accompanied by an increase in cell size, with no evidence of any other structural modification. Parallel infra-red analyses show shifts in certain of the infra-red absorption bands to lower wavenumbers as the degree of substitution increases. Changes in the infrared spectra at the composition Si2Al4N4O4 indicate structural modifications which are not apparent from the X-ray investigations. It is suggested that these changes are a result of the ordering of the different atom types at this composition.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
15Staff View
ISSN: 1573-4803Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000Topics: Mechanical Engineering, Materials Science, Production Engineering, Mining and Metallurgy, Traffic Engineering, Precision MechanicsNotes: Abstract The bond which develops during curing between soil particles in the presence of lime and moisture is a result of the growth and the development of a newly formed cementitious phase (or phases). For the particular soil studied, appreciable reaction occurs between soil particles and lime only at elevated temperature, in a moist environment The growth and development of the new phase is accompanied by an increase in compressive strength of the soil-lime composites. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) studies show the phase to consist of an interlocking network of fine platelets and fibres, and although no direct determination of composition was possible, evidence from X-ray analysis and thermal analysis shows that the new phase is poorly crystalline and probably consists of a hydrate of calcium silicate or calcium aluminate.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
16Staff View
ISSN: 1573-4811Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000Topics: Mechanical Engineering, Materials Science, Production Engineering, Mining and Metallurgy, Traffic Engineering, Precision MechanicsType of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
17Staff View
ISSN: 1573-4811Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000Topics: Mechanical Engineering, Materials Science, Production Engineering, Mining and Metallurgy, Traffic Engineering, Precision MechanicsType of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
18Staff View
ISSN: 1573-4803Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000Topics: Mechanical Engineering, Materials Science, Production Engineering, Mining and Metallurgy, Traffic Engineering, Precision MechanicsType of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
19Staff View
ISSN: 1042-7163Keywords: ChemistrySource: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000Topics: Chemistry and PharmacologyNotes: The phenyl-substituted saturated monocyclic phosphines, PhP(CH2)n, n = 2-5, show an interesting variation in their phosphorus NMR shieldings. The shielding does not vary uniformly with ring size, but rather the smallest ring (n = 2) has the highest shielding while the next smallest (n = 3) has the lowest shielding. Hartree-Fock calculations in the gauge-including atomic orbital (GIAO) approach on the related hydrogen derivatives have reproduced this trend in shielding and allow a qualitative understanding of the experimental observations. With respect to the relatively unstrained n = 4,5 ring systems, the unusual behavior of the n = 2 and 3 molecules can be understood in terms of the differences in the highest occupied molecular orbital/lowest unoccupied molecular orbital (HOMO/LUMO) gaps and the p-character of the phosphorus lone pair. The HOMO/LUMO gap is largest for phosphirane (n = 2) but smallest in phosphetane (n = 3). The hybrid character of the lone pair in phosphirane (n = 2) is almost sp while that for phosphetane (n = 3) is essentially sp2. © 1997 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Heteroatom Chem 8: 451-457, 1997Additional Material: 3 Ill.Type of Medium: Electronic Resource -
20Blake, M. R. ; Garnett, J. L. ; Gregor, I. K. ; Wild, S. B.
Chichester : Wiley-Blackwell
Published 1980Staff ViewISSN: 0030-493XKeywords: Chemistry ; Analytical Chemistry and SpectroscopySource: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000Topics: Chemistry and PharmacologyNotes: Electron attachment reactions of a series of (η6-arene)tricarbonylchromium(O) complexes have been examined in the gas phase. The electron capture process has been shown to be influenced by the structure of the η6-arene ligand and its substituents. Whereas (η6-benzene)- and (η6-mesitylene)tricarbonylchromium(O) undergo dissocative electron capture, or reductive decarbonylation, yielding [M—CO]-· ions of highest abundance in their negative ion mass spectra, [η6-(2,2-dimethylindan-1,3-dione)]tricarbonylchromium(O) forms a molecular negative ion which undergoes sequential CO eliminations and finally a demetallation to give the arene radical ion. A localization of charge on the coordinated arene ligand is proposed for the formation of [M]-· in this case. (η6-Methylbenzoate)tricarbonylchromium(O) also forms a molecular negative ion by secondary electron attachment which decomposes by simultaneous and consecutive eliminations of up to four CO molecules. The elucidation of a mechanism and sequence for these CO eliminations has been achieved by synthesizing and examining the negative ion mass spectrum of [η6-(C6H5·13CO2Me)]Cr(CO)3. The first CO loss in the principal fragmentation pathway occurs solely from the -Cr(CO)3 group of [M]-·. The effect of para substituent groups on the stabilities of molecular negative ions and their fragmentations has been ascertained using a series of para-substituted (η6-methylbenzoate)tricarbonylchromium(O) compounds containing the groups NH2, OH, OCH3, CL and COOMe. The stabilities of the [M]-· ions have been rationalized in terms of the Hammett and Taft parameters σP, σI, σRP, σPO and σRO. The overall electronic substituent effect transmitted to the carbonyl groups of the -Cr(CO)3 unit involves both resonance and inductive components. In this series of compounds the stability of [M]-· decreases as the electron withdrawing capacities of the para substituents increase.Additional Material: 3 Ill.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: