5 results match your criteria: "C.N.R.S. et Universités Paris 6 et 7[Affiliation]"

Probing the superfluid velocity with a superconducting tip: the Doppler shift effect.

Phys Rev Lett

July 2006

Institut des Nanosciences de Paris, I.N.S.P., Universités Paris 6 et 7, C.N.R.S., UMR 75 88, 75015 Paris, France.

We address the question of probing the supercurrents in superconducting (SC) samples on a local scale by performing scanning tunneling spectroscopy (STS) experiments with a SC tip. In this configuration, we show that the tunneling conductance is highly sensitive to the Doppler shift term in the SC quasiparticle (QP) spectrum of the sample, thus allowing the local study of the superfluid velocity. Intrinsic screening currents, such as those surrounding the vortex cores in a type II SC in a magnetic field, are directly probed.

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Cellular infiltrations forming lymphoid-like aggregates were previously observed in gonads of two turtle species exhibiting temperature-dependent sex determination (TSD): at hatching in Chelydra serpentina; at and after hatching in Emys orbicularis. We show here that such aggregates are also present in gonads of Testudo graeca by the end of embryonic development, suggesting that their occurrence is general in turtles. Since in C.

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The objectives of this work were to determine whether or not plasma levels of testosterone and estradiol reflect the various grades of sex reversal in genetic female chickens treated with Fadrozole (CGS 16949 A), a nonsteroidal aromatase inhibitor, and whether gonadal aromatase activity and plasma levels of testosterone and estradiol in treated females can or not be modified by post-hatch treatments with Fadrozole or Fadrozole + testosterone. Eggs were injected with 1 mg Fadrozole on day 4 of incubation. In females having developed sex-reversed gonads, endocrine parameters (estradiol and testosterone) at and after 13 weeks of age were indicative of the degree of sex reversal, with, for example, sex-reversed females with two testes having the highest levels of testosterone and the lowest levels of estradiol.

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In the European pond turtle (Emys orbicularis), gonadal sex differentiation is temperature-dependent. The temperature sensitive period (TSP) of gonadogenesis lies between stages 16 and 22 of embryonic development. Previous studies have shown that embryos incubated at 30 degrees C, a temperature yielding 100% phenotypic females, can be sex reversed by treatments with an aromatase inhibitor administered during TSP or even somewhat after TSP (as of stage 22+).

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Emys orbicularis is a freshwater turtle with temperature-dependent sex determination. Estrogens play a major role in gonadal differentiation; when they are produced at high levels during the thermosensitive period (TSP), ovaries differentiate; when their synthesis is very low, testes differentiate. Estrogens are synthesized from androgens through the activity of aromatase.

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