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Institution

Tokyo Institute of Technology

EducationTokyo, Tôkyô, Japan
About: Tokyo Institute of Technology is a education organization based out in Tokyo, Tôkyô, Japan. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Catalysis & Thin film. The organization has 46775 authors who have published 101656 publications receiving 2357893 citations. The organization is also known as: Tokyo Tech & Tokodai.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is reported that granular tau oligomer levels in frontal cortex were significantly increased, even in brains displaying Braak-stage I neuropathology, a stage at which clinical symptoms of AD and NFTs in frontal Cortex are believed to be absent.

275 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a new color center in diamond, composed of a germanium (Ge) and a vacancy (V), was reported, which has a sharp and strong photoluminescence band with a zero-phonon line at 602 nm at room temperature.
Abstract: Atomic-sized fluorescent defects in diamond are widely recognized as a promising solid state platform for quantum cryptography and quantum information processing. For these applications, single photon sources with a high intensity and reproducible fabrication methods are required. In this study, we report a novel color center in diamond, composed of a germanium (Ge) and a vacancy (V) and named the GeV center, which has a sharp and strong photoluminescence band with a zero-phonon line at 602 nm at room temperature. We demonstrate this new color center works as a single photon source. Both ion implantation and chemical vapor deposition techniques enabled fabrication of GeV centers in diamond. A first-principles calculation revealed the atomic crystal structure and energy levels of the GeV center.

274 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
11 Jan 2002-Science
TL;DR: Phenotypic anomalies have been observed among animals cloned from somatic cells, putatively caused by epigenetic alterations, especially those of imprinted genes, but the complexity of potentially contributory technical factors associated with nuclear transfer experiments could be underestimated.
Abstract: Phenotypic anomalies have been observed among animals cloned from somatic cells, putatively caused by epigenetic alterations, especially those of imprinted genes ([1][1]). However, the complexity of potentially contributory technical factors associated with nuclear transfer (NT) experiments could

274 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Tareq Abu-Zayyad1, R. Aida2, M. Allen1, Robert M. Anderson1, R. Azuma3, Elliott Barcikowski1, John Belz1, Douglas Bergman1, Samuel Blake1, Robert Cady1, B. G. Cheon4, Jyunsei Chiba5, Michiyuki Chikawa6, E. J. Cho4, W. R. Cho7, H. Fujii, T. Fujii8, T. Fukuda3, Masaki Fukushima9, Dmitry Gorbunov, William Hanlon1, K. Hayashi3, Y. Hayashi8, Naoaki Hayashida10, K. Hibino10, K. Hiyama9, K. Honda2, T. Iguchi3, Daisuke Ikeda9, K. Ikuta2, N. Inoue11, Takaaki Ishii2, R. Ishimori3, Dmitri Ivanov1, Dmitri Ivanov12, S. Iwamoto2, C. C. H. Jui1, Kenichi Kadota13, Fumio Kakimoto3, Oleg Kalashev, T. Kanbe2, Katsuaki Kasahara14, H. Kawai15, S. Kawakami8, Shingo Kawana11, Eiji Kido9, HangBae Kim4, Hyun-Il Kim7, J. H. Kim4, K. Kitamoto6, K. Kobayashi5, Yoji Kobayashi3, Y. Kondo9, K. Kuramoto8, Vladim Kuzmin, Y. J. Kwon7, S. I. Lim16, S. Machida3, K. Martens9, J. Martineau1, Tomohiro Matsuda, T. Matsuura3, T. Matsuyama8, John N. Matthews1, Isaac Myers1, Mayuko Minamino8, K. Miyata5, H. Miyauchi8, Y. Murano3, Toru Nakamura17, S. W. Nam16, Toshiyuki Nonaka9, Shoichi Ogio8, M. Ohnishi9, Hideyuki Ohoka9, K. Oki9, D. Oku2, Takeshi Okuda8, Akitoshi Oshima8, Shunsuke Ozawa14, Inkyu Park16, Maxim Pshirkov18, D. C. Rodriguez1, S. Y. Roh19, Grigory Rubtsov, Dongsu Ryu19, Hiroyuki Sagawa9, Nobuyuki Sakurai8, A. L. Sampson1, L. M. Scott12, Priti Shah1, Fumiya Shibata2, T.-A. Shibata9, Hideaki Shimodaira9, Bokkyun Shin4, J. I. Shin7, T. Shirahama11, J. D. Smith1, Pierre Sokolsky1, T. J. Sonley1, R. W. Springer1, B. T. Stokes1, S. R. Stratton12, S. R. Stratton1, Tom Stroman1, S. Suzuki, Yukio Takahashi9, M. Takeda9, Akimichi Taketa9, Masato Takita9, Yuichiro Tameda9, Hideki Tanaka8, Kenichi Tanaka20, M. Tanaka, S. B. Thomas1, Gordon Thomson1, Peter Tinyakov18, Igor Tkachev, H. Tokuno3, Taka Tomida2, Sergey Troitsky, Yoshiki Tsunesada3, K. Tsutsumi3, Y. Tsuyuguchi2, Y. Uchihori21, S. Udo10, H. Ukai2, G. Vasiloff1, Y. Wada11, Tiffany Wong1, M. Wood1, Y. Yamakawa9, Hiroshi Yamaoka, K. Yamazaki8, J. Yang16, S. Yoshida15, H. Yoshii22, R. Zollinger1, Zach Zundel1 
TL;DR: The Telescope Array (TA) experiment as discussed by the authors was designed for the observation of extensive air showers from extremely high energy cosmic rays, and it has a surface detector array surrounded by three fluorescence detectors to enable simultaneous detection of shower particles at ground level and fluorescence photons along the shower track.
Abstract: The Telescope Array (TA) experiment, located in the western desert of Utah, USA, is designed for the observation of extensive air showers from extremely high energy cosmic rays. The experiment has a surface detector array surrounded by three fluorescence detectors to enable simultaneous detection of shower particles at ground level and fluorescence photons along the shower track. The TA surface detectors and fluorescence detectors started full hybrid observation in March, 2008. In this article we describe the design and technical features of the TA surface detector.

274 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated relations between environmental concern, attitude toward frugality, perceived ease of behavior, and stated intentions to engage in four different types of pro-environmental behavior, i.e., reductions in electricity and gas use, garbage, and automobile use.

274 citations


Authors

Showing all 46967 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Matthew Meyerson194553243726
Yury Gogotsi171956144520
Masayuki Yamamoto1711576123028
H. Eugene Stanley1541190122321
Takashi Taniguchi1522141110658
Shu-Hong Yu14479970853
Kazunori Kataoka13890870412
Osamu Jinnouchi13588586104
Hector F. DeLuca133130369395
Shlomo Havlin131101383347
Hiroyuki Iwasaki131100982739
Kazunari Domen13090877964
Hideo Hosono1281549100279
Hideyuki Okano128116967148
Andreas Strasser12850966903
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202388
2022358
20213,457
20203,695
20193,783
20183,531