The role of the strain state in epitaxial (001)-oriented Cu/Ni(14 nm)/Cu rings is investigated using a combination of magnetic force microscopy and finite-element calculations. Rings with an external diameter of 3 and 2 μm and linewidth W larger than 400 nm show two different structures: domains with magnetization oriented in the radial direction exist at the inner and outer radius, separated by an area in the interior of the ring consisting of stripe domains with perpendicular magnetization. The former is the sole magnetic structure observed for W < 400 nm. Micromagnetic calculations on narrow-linewidth structures indicate that the radial domain-wall structure consists of elliptical Bloch lines with a shorter and longer length along the tangential and radial directions, respectively. Finite-element calculations show that the anisotropic relaxation of the in-plane strain is larger at the ring inner and outer edges than in the interior part of the ring and accounts for the reorientation of the magnetization direction.
Wireless Mesh Networks (WMNs) with chain topologies are very useful in road and railroad transportation or in tunnel and mine applications. The proposed protocols for WMNs usually support best-effort traffic or some kind of Quality of Service (QoS). However, some applications such as remotecontrolled machines in industrial control networks have Hard Real-Time (HRT) requirements, i.e., strict deadlines. Moreover, voice, video and data communications can be added to HRT traffic in order to provide them with reserved bandwidth and bounded latency. For this reason, this paper presents WICKPro (WIreless Chain networK Protocol), a HRT protocol for WMNs with chain topologies. WICKPro is a token-passing approach and is based on the ideas of the Timed-token protocol and the cyclic executive. We have designed this protocol to work on top of IEEE 802.11, made a testbed using commercial 802.11 wireless cards and compared the protocol's performance with the 802.11 protocol and three specific protocols for WMNs with chain topologies.
Nitric oxide (NO) has been proposed as an inhibitory transmitter in gastrointestinal muscle relaxation. We analyzed the distribution of nitric-oxide producing neurons in the rabbit intestine through nicotinamide-adenine-dinucleotide-phosphate-diaphorase histochemistry. By this reliable and convenient method, we visualized neuronal nitric-oxide-synthase, the enzyme responsible for nitric oxide generation, in the rabbit intestine. In the ileum and rectum, nitric-oxide-synthase-related diaphorase activity was present in the myenteric plexus ganglion cells, and in the nerve fibers in the internodal strand, secondary, and tertiary plexuses. These fibers were particularly abundant in the deep circular rather than in the outer longitudinal muscle layer. In the inner submucosal plexus, we found scarce labeled neurons. Labeled neural somata showed a range of sizes and shapes suggesting different functional roles. The present basic information is required to use the rabbit as an experimental animal in neurochemical NO enteric research.
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