7,004 research outputs found
Instanton Contribution to the Proton and Neutron Electric Form Factors
We study the instanton contribution to the proton and neutron electric form
factors. Using the single instanton approximation, we perform the calculations
in a mixed time-momentum representation in order to obtain the form factors
directly in momentum space. We find good agreement with the experimentally
measured electric form factor of the proton. For the neutron, our result falls
short of the experimental data. We argue that this discrepancy is due to the
fact that we neglect the contribution of the sea quarks. We compare to lattice
calculations and a relativistic version of the quark-diquark model.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, updated references, to appear in Phys. Lett.
Quantum Diffusive Dynamics of Macromolecular Transitions
We study the role of quantum fluctuations of atomic nuclei in the real-time
dynamics of non-equilibrium macro-molecular transitions. To this goal we
introduce an extension of the Dominant Reaction Pathways (DRP) formalism, in
which the quantum corrections to the classical overdamped Langevin dynamics are
rigorously taken into account to order h^2 . We first illustrate our approach
in simple cases, and compare with the results of the instanton theory. Then we
apply our method to study the C7_eq to C7_ax transition of alanine dipeptide.
We find that the inclusion of quantum fluctuations can significantly modify the
reaction mechanism for peptides. For example, the energy difference which is
overcome along the most probable pathway is reduced by as much as 50%.Comment: Final version, to appear in the Journal of Chemical Physic
Investigating Biological Matter with Theoretical Nuclear Physics Methods
The internal dynamics of strongly interacting systems and that of
biomolecules such as proteins display several important analogies, despite the
huge difference in their characteristic energy and length scales. For example,
in all such systems, collective excitations, cooperative transitions and phase
transitions emerge as the result of the interplay of strong correlations with
quantum or thermal fluctuations. In view of such an observation, some
theoretical methods initially developed in the context of theoretical nuclear
physics have been adapted to investigate the dynamics of biomolecules. In this
talk, we review some of our recent studies performed along this direction. In
particular, we discuss how the path integral formulation of the molecular
dynamics allows to overcome some of the long-standing problems and limitations
which emerge when simulating the protein folding dynamics at the atomistic
level of detail.Comment: Prepared for the proceedings of the "XII Meeting on the Problems of
Theoretical Nuclear Physics" (Cortona11
Fluctuations in the Ensemble of Reaction Pathways
The dominant reaction pathway (DRP) is a rigorous framework to
microscopically compute the most probable trajectories, in non-equilibrium
transitions. In the low-temperature regime, such dominant pathways encode the
information about the reaction mechanism and can be used to estimate
non-equilibrium averages of arbitrary observables. On the other hand, at
sufficiently high temperatures, the stochastic fluctuations around the dominant
paths become important and have to be taken into account. In this work, we
develop a technique to systematically include the effects of such stochastic
fluctuations, to order k_B T. This method is used to compute the probability
for a transition to take place through a specific reaction channel and to
evaluate the reaction rate
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