27,013 research outputs found
Steady state current fluctuations and dynamical control in a nonequilibrium single-site Bose-Hubbard system
We investigate nonequilibrium energy transfer in a single-site Bose-Hubbard
model coupled to two thermal baths. By including a quantum kinetic equation
combined with full counting statistics, we investigate the steady state energy
flux and noise power. The influence of the nonlinear Bose-Hubbard interaction
on the transfer behaviors is analyzed, and the nonmonotonic features are
clearly exhibited. Particularly, in the strong on-site repulsion limit, the
results become identical with the nonequilibrium spin-boson model. We also
extend the quantum kinetic equation to study the geometric-phase-induced energy
pump. An interesting reversal behavior is unraveled by enhancing the
Bose-Hubbard repulsion strength.Comment: 12 pages,6 figure
Negative differential thermal conductance and heat amplification in a nonequilibrium triangle-coupled spin-boson system at strong coupling
We investigate the nonequilibrium quantum heat transfer in a triangle-coupled
spin-boson system within a three-terminal setup. By including the
nonequilibrium noninteracting blip approximation approach combined with the
full counting statistics, we analytically obtain the steady state populations
and heat currents. The negative differential thermal conductance and giant heat
amplification factor are clearly observed at strong qubit-bath coupling. %and
the heat amplification is dramatically suppressed in the moderate coupling
regime. Moreover, the strong interaction between the gating qubit and gating
thermal bath is unraveled to be compulsory to exhibit these far-from
equilibrium features.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figure
Multimodal estimation of distribution algorithms
Taking the advantage of estimation of distribution algorithms (EDAs) in preserving high diversity, this paper proposes a multimodal EDA. Integrated with clustering strategies for crowding and speciation, two versions of this algorithm are developed, which operate at the niche level. Then these two algorithms are equipped with three distinctive techniques: 1) a dynamic cluster sizing strategy; 2) an alternative utilization of Gaussian and Cauchy distributions to generate offspring; and 3) an adaptive local search. The dynamic cluster sizing affords a potential balance between exploration and exploitation and reduces the sensitivity to the cluster size in the niching methods. Taking advantages of Gaussian and Cauchy distributions, we generate the offspring at the niche level through alternatively using these two distributions. Such utilization can also potentially offer a balance between exploration and exploitation. Further, solution accuracy is enhanced through a new local search scheme probabilistically conducted around seeds of niches with probabilities determined self-adaptively according to fitness values of these seeds. Extensive experiments conducted on 20 benchmark multimodal problems confirm that both algorithms can achieve competitive performance compared with several state-of-the-art multimodal algorithms, which is supported by nonparametric tests. Especially, the proposed algorithms are very promising for complex problems with many local optima
Kinetic behavior of the general modifier mechanism of Botts and Morales with non-equilibrium binding
In this paper, we perform a complete analysis of the kinetic behavior of the
general modifier mechanism of Botts and Morales in both equilibrium steady
states and non-equilibrium steady states (NESS). Enlightened by the
non-equilibrium theory of Markov chains, we introduce the net flux into
discussion and acquire an expression of product rate in NESS, which has clear
biophysical significance. Up till now, it is a general belief that being an
activator or an inhibitor is an intrinsic property of the modifier. However, we
reveal that this traditional point of view is based on the equilibrium
assumption. A modifier may no longer be an overall activator or inhibitor when
the reaction system is not in equilibrium. Based on the regulation of enzyme
activity by the modifier concentration, we classify the kinetic behavior of the
modifier into three categories, which are named hyperbolic behavior,
bell-shaped behavior, and switching behavior, respectively. We show that the
switching phenomenon, in which a modifier may convert between an activator and
an inhibitor when the modifier concentration varies, occurs only in NESS.
Effects of drugs on the Pgp ATPase activity, where drugs may convert from
activators to inhibitors with the increase of the drug concentration, are taken
as a typical example to demonstrate the occurrence of the switching phenomenon.Comment: 19 pages, 10 figure
A convolutional autoencoder approach for mining features in cellular electron cryo-tomograms and weakly supervised coarse segmentation
Cellular electron cryo-tomography enables the 3D visualization of cellular
organization in the near-native state and at submolecular resolution. However,
the contents of cellular tomograms are often complex, making it difficult to
automatically isolate different in situ cellular components. In this paper, we
propose a convolutional autoencoder-based unsupervised approach to provide a
coarse grouping of 3D small subvolumes extracted from tomograms. We demonstrate
that the autoencoder can be used for efficient and coarse characterization of
features of macromolecular complexes and surfaces, such as membranes. In
addition, the autoencoder can be used to detect non-cellular features related
to sample preparation and data collection, such as carbon edges from the grid
and tomogram boundaries. The autoencoder is also able to detect patterns that
may indicate spatial interactions between cellular components. Furthermore, we
demonstrate that our autoencoder can be used for weakly supervised semantic
segmentation of cellular components, requiring a very small amount of manual
annotation.Comment: Accepted by Journal of Structural Biolog
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