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澳大利亚2024—2025财年预算支持进一步开发关键矿产资源 快报文章
地球科学快报,2024年第10期
作者:  王立伟
Microsoft Word(15Kb)  |  收藏  |  浏览/下载:515/0  |  提交时间:2024/05/25
critical minerals  exploration  processing  
Science刊文量化部分草地保护措施的碳固存潜力 快报文章
气候变化快报,2022年第16期
作者:  秦冰雪
Microsoft Word(15Kb)  |  收藏  |  浏览/下载:620/0  |  提交时间:2022/08/19
Soil Carbon Sequestration  Microbial Processing  
加拿大将建设首座稀土加工厂 快报文章
地球科学快报,2020年第17期
作者:  刘学
Microsoft Word(13Kb)  |  收藏  |  浏览/下载:326/0  |  提交时间:2020/09/09
Canada  Rare earth  Processing factory  The first  
美国首个稀土加工试点工厂开业 快报文章
地球科学快报,2020年第12期
作者:  刘文浩
Microsoft Word(13Kb)  |  收藏  |  浏览/下载:352/0  |  提交时间:2020/06/24
US  Rare earth  processing  
Localization and delocalization of light in photonic moire lattices 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020, 577 (7788) : 42-+
作者:  Wang, Peng;  Zheng, Yuanlin;  Chen, Xianfeng;  Huang, Changming;  Kartashov, Yaroslav V.;  Torner, Lluis;  Konotop, Vladimir V.;  Ye, Fangwei
收藏  |  浏览/下载:11/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/03

Moire lattices consist of two superimposed identical periodic structures with a relative rotation angle. Moire lattices have several applications in everyday life, including artistic design, the textile industry, architecture, image processing, metrology and interferometry. For scientific studies, they have been produced using coupled graphene-hexagonal boron nitride monolayers(1,2), graphene-graphene layers(3,4) and graphene quasicrystals on a silicon carbide surface(5). The recent surge of interest in moire lattices arises from the possibility of exploring many salient physical phenomena in such systems  examples include commensurable-incommensurable transitions and topological defects(2), the emergence of insulating states owing to band flattening(3,6), unconventional superconductivity(4) controlled by the rotation angle(7,8), the quantum Hall effect(9), the realization of non-Abelian gauge potentials(10) and the appearance of quasicrystals at special rotation angles(11). A fundamental question that remains unexplored concerns the evolution of waves in the potentials defined by moire lattices. Here we experimentally create two-dimensional photonic moire lattices, which-unlike their material counterparts-have readily controllable parameters and symmetry, allowing us to explore transitions between structures with fundamentally different geometries (periodic, general aperiodic and quasicrystal). We observe localization of light in deterministic linear lattices that is based on flatband physics(6), in contrast to previous schemes based on light diffusion in optical quasicrystals(12), where disorder is required(13) for the onset of Anderson localization(14) (that is, wave localization in random media). Using commensurable and incommensurable moire patterns, we experimentally demonstrate the twodimensional localization-delocalization transition of light. Moire lattices may feature an almost arbitrary geometry that is consistent with the crystallographic symmetry groups of the sublattices, and therefore afford a powerful tool for controlling the properties of light patterns and exploring the physics of periodic-aperiodic phase transitions and two-dimensional wavepacket phenomena relevant to several areas of science, including optics, acoustics, condensed matter and atomic physics.


  
Quantum entanglement between an atom and a molecule 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020, 581 (7808) : 273-+
作者:  Trisos, Christopher H.;  Merow, Cory;  Pigot, Alex L.
收藏  |  浏览/下载:29/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/03

Conventional information processors convert information between different physical carriers for processing, storage and transmission. It seems plausible that quantum information will also be held by different physical carriers in applications such as tests of fundamental physics, quantum enhanced sensors and quantum information processing. Quantum controlled molecules, in particular, could transduce quantum information across a wide range of quantum bit (qubit) frequencies-from a few kilohertz for transitions within the same rotational manifold(1), a few gigahertz for hyperfine transitions, a few terahertz for rotational transitions, to hundreds of terahertz for fundamental and overtone vibrational and electronic transitions-possibly all within the same molecule. Here we demonstrate entanglement between the rotational states of a (CaH+)-Ca-40 molecular ion and the internal states of a Ca-40(+) atomic ion(2). We extend methods used in quantum logic spectroscopy(1,3) for pure-state initialization, laser manipulation and state readout of the molecular ion. The quantum coherence of the Coulomb coupled motion between the atomic and molecular ions enables subsequent entangling manipulations. The qubit addressed in the molecule has a frequency of either 13.4 kilohertz(1) or 855 gigahertz(3), highlighting the versatility of molecular qubits. Our work demonstrates how molecules can transduce quantum information between qubits with different frequencies to enable hybrid quantum systems. We anticipate that our method of quantum control and measurement of molecules will find applications in quantum information science, quantum sensors, fundamental and applied physics, and controlled quantum chemistry.


Quantum entanglement is realized between rotational levels of a molecular ion with energy differences spanning several orders of magnitude and long-lived internal states of a single atomic ion.


  
Short-range order and its impact on the CrCoNi medium-entropy alloy 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020, 581 (7808) : 283-+
作者:  Tan, Hwei-Ee;  Sisti, Alexander C.;  Jin, Hao;  Vignovich, Martin;  Villavicencio, Miguel;  Tsang, Katherine S.;  Goffer, Yossef;  Zuker, Charles S.
收藏  |  浏览/下载:8/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/03

Traditional metallic alloys are mixtures of elements in which the atoms of minority species tend to be distributed randomly if they are below their solubility limit, or to form secondary phases if they are above it. The concept of multiple-principal-element alloys has recently expanded this view, as these materials are single-phase solid solutions of generally equiatomic mixtures of metallic elements. This group of materials has received much interest owing to their enhanced mechanical properties(1-5). They are usually called medium-entropy alloys in ternary systems and high-entropy alloys in quaternary or quinary systems, alluding to their high degree of configurational entropy. However, the question has remained as to how random these solid solutions actually are, with the influence of short-range order being suggested in computational simulations but not seen experimentally(6,7). Here we report the observation, using energy-filtered transmission electron microscopy, of structural features attributable to short-range order in the CrCoNi medium-entropy alloy. Increasing amounts of such order give rise to both higher stacking-fault energy and hardness. These findings suggest that the degree of local ordering at the nanometre scale can be tailored through thermomechanical processing, providing a new avenue for tuning the mechanical properties of medium- and high-entropy alloys.


Metal alloys consisting of three or more major elemental components show enhanced mechanical properties, which are now shown to be correlated with short-range order observed with electron microscopy.


  
Feedback generates a second receptive field in neurons of the visual cortex 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020
作者:  Shi, Enzheng;  Yuan, Biao;  Shiring, Stephen B.;  Gao, Yao;  Akriti;  Guo, Yunfan;  Su, Cong;  Lai, Minliang;  Yang, Peidong;  Kong, Jing;  Savoie, Brett M.;  Yu, Yi;  Dou, Letian
收藏  |  浏览/下载:44/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/03

Animals sense the environment through pathways that link sensory organs to the brain. In the visual system, these feedforward pathways define the classical feedforward receptive field (ffRF), the area in space in which visual stimuli excite a neuron(1). The visual system also uses visual context-the visual scene surrounding a stimulus-to predict the content of the stimulus(2), and accordingly, neurons have been identified that are excited by stimuli outside their ffRF(3-8). However, the mechanisms that generate excitation to stimuli outside the ffRF are unclear. Here we show that feedback projections onto excitatory neurons in the mouse primary visual cortex generate a second receptive field that is driven by stimuli outside the ffRF. The stimulation of this feedback receptive field (fbRF) elicits responses that are slower and are delayed in comparison with those resulting from the stimulation of the ffRF. These responses are preferentially reduced by anaesthesia and by silencing higher visual areas. Feedback inputs from higher visual areas have scattered receptive fields relative to their putative targets in the primary visual cortex, which enables the generation of the fbRF. Neurons with fbRFs are located in cortical layers that receive strong feedback projections and are absent in the main input layer, which is consistent with a laminar processing hierarchy. The observation that large, uniform stimuli-which cover both the fbRF and the ffRF-suppress these responses indicates that the fbRF and the ffRF are mutually antagonistic. Whereas somatostatin-expressing inhibitory neurons are driven by these large stimuli, inhibitory neurons that express parvalbumin and vasoactive intestinal peptide have mutually antagonistic fbRF and ffRF, similar to excitatory neurons. Feedback projections may therefore enable neurons to use context to estimate information that is missing from the ffRF and to report differences in stimulus features across visual space, regardless of whether excitation occurs inside or outside the ffRF. By complementing the ffRF, the fbRF that we identify here could contribute to predictive processing.


Feedback projections onto neurons of the mouse primary visual cortex generate a second excitatory receptive field that is driven by stimuli outside of the classical feedforward receptive field, with responses mediated by higher visual areas.


  
U1 snRNP regulates chromatin retention of noncoding RNAs 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020
作者:  Dehollain, J. P.;  Mukhopadhyay, U.;  Michal, V. P.;  Wang, Y.;  Wunsch, B.;  Reichl, C.;  Wegscheider, W.;  Rudner, M. S.;  Demler, E.;  Vandersypen, L. M. K.
收藏  |  浏览/下载:23/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/03

Long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) and promoter- or enhancer-associated unstable transcripts locate preferentially to chromatin, where some regulate chromatin structure, transcription and RNA processing(1-13). Although several RNA sequences responsible for nuclear localization have been identified-such as repeats in the lncRNA Xist and Alu-like elements in long RNAs14-16-how lncRNAs as a class are enriched at chromatin remains unknown. Here we describe a random, mutagenesis-coupled, high-throughput method that we name '  RNA elements for subcellular localization by sequencing'  (mutREL-seq). Using this method, we discovered an RNA motif that recognizes the U1 small nuclear ribonucleoprotein (snRNP) and is essential for the localization of reporter RNAs to chromatin. Across the genome, chromatin-bound lncRNAs are enriched with 5 '  splice sites and depleted of 3 '  splice sites, and exhibit high levels of U1 snRNA binding compared with cytoplasm-localized messenger RNAs. Acute depletion of U1 snRNA or of the U1 snRNP protein component SNRNP70 markedly reduces the chromatin association of hundreds of lncRNAs and unstable transcripts, without altering the overall transcription rate in cells. In addition, rapid degradation of SNRNP70 reduces the localization of both nascent and polyadenylated lncRNA transcripts to chromatin, and disrupts the nuclear and genome-wide localization of the lncRNA Malat1. Moreover, U1 snRNP interacts with transcriptionally engaged RNA polymerase II. These results show that U1 snRNP acts widely to tether and mobilize lncRNAs to chromatin in a transcription-dependent manner. Our findings have uncovered a previously unknown role of U1 snRNP beyond the processing of precursor mRNA, and provide molecular insight into how lncRNAs are recruited to regulatory sites to carry out chromatin-associated functions.


Long noncoding RNAs and certain unstable transcripts tend to localize to chromatin, in a process that is shown here to depend on an RNA motif that recognizes the small nuclear ribonuclear protein U1, and to rely on transcription.


  
Universal quantum logic in hot silicon qubits 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020, 580 (7803) : 355-+
作者:  Li, Jia;  Yang, Xiangdong;  Liu, Yang;  Huang, Bolong;  Wu, Ruixia;  Zhang, Zhengwei;  Zhao, Bei;  Ma, Huifang;  Dang, Weiqi;  Wei, Zheng;  Wang, Kai;  Lin, Zhaoyang;  Yan, Xingxu;  Sun, Mingzi;  Li, Bo;  Pan, Xiaoqing;  Luo, Jun;  Zhang, Guangyu;  Liu, Yuan;  Huang, Yu;  Duan, Xidong;  Duan, Xiangfeng
收藏  |  浏览/下载:40/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/03

Quantum computation requires many qubits that can be coherently controlled and coupled to each other(1). Qubits that are defined using lithographic techniques have been suggested to enable the development of scalable quantum systems because they can be implemented using semiconductor fabrication technology(2-5). However, leading solid-state approaches function only at temperatures below 100 millikelvin, where cooling power is extremely limited, and this severely affects the prospects of practical quantum computation. Recent studies of electron spins in silicon have made progress towards a platform that can be operated at higher temperatures by demonstrating long spin lifetimes(6), gate-based spin readout(7) and coherent single-spin control(8). However, a high-temperature two-qubit logic gate has not yet been demonstrated. Here we show that silicon quantum dots can have sufficient thermal robustness to enable the execution of a universal gate set at temperatures greater than one kelvin. We obtain single-qubit control via electron spin resonance and readout using Pauli spin blockade. In addition, we show individual coherent control of two qubits and measure single-qubit fidelities of up to 99.3 per cent. We demonstrate the tunability of the exchange interaction between the two spins from 0.5 to 18 megahertz and use it to execute coherent two-qubit controlled rotations. The demonstration of '  hot'  and universal quantum logic in a semiconductor platform paves the way for quantum integrated circuits that host both the quantum hardware and its control circuitry on the same chip, providing a scalable approach towards practical quantum information processing.