7,791 research outputs found
Lattice stretching bistability and dynamic heterogeneity
A simple one-dimensional lattice model is suggested to describe the
experimentally observed plateau in force-stretching diagrams for some
macromolecules. This chain model involves the nearest-neighbor interaction of a
Morse-like potential (required to have a saturation branch) and an harmonic
second-neighbor coupling. Under an external stretching applied t o the chain
ends, the intersite Morse-like potential results in the appearance of a
double-well potential within each chain monomer, whereas the interaction
between the second neighbors provide s a homogeneous bistable (degenerate)
ground state, at least within a certain part of the chain.
As a result, different conformational changes occur in the chain under the
external forcing. The transition regions between these conformations are
described as topological solitons. With a strong second-neighbor interaction,
the solitons describe the transition between the bistable ground states.
However, the key point of the model is the appearance of a heterogenous
structure, when the second-neighbor coupling is sufficiently weak. In this
case, a part of the chain has short bonds with a single-well potential, whereas
the complementary part admits strongly stretched bonds with a double-well
potential. This case allows us to explain the existence of a plateau in the
force-stretching diagram for DNA and alpha-helix protein. Finally, the soliton
dynamics are studied in detail.Comment: Submitted to Phys. Rev. E, 13 figure
Quasiperiodic Solutions of the Fibre Optics Coupled Nonlinear Schr{\"o}dinger Equations
We consider travelling periodical and quasiperiodical waves in single mode
fibres, with weak birefringence and under the action of cross-phase modulation.
The problem is reduced to the ``1:2:1" integrable case of the two-particle
quartic potential. A general approach for finding elliptic solutions is given.
New solutions which are associated with two-gap Treibich-Verdier potentials are
found. General quasiperiodic solutions are given in terms of two dimensional
theta functions with explicit expressions for frequencies in terms of theta
constants. The reduction of quasiperiodic solutions to elliptic functions is
discussed.Comment: 24 page
Strangelet dwarfs
If the surface tension of quark matter is low enough, quark matter is not
self bound. At sufficiently low pressure and temperature, it will take the form
of a crystal of positively charged strangelets in a neutralizing background of
electrons. In this case there will exist, in addition to the usual family of
strange stars, a family of low-mass large-radius objects analogous to white
dwarfs, which we call "strangelet dwarfs". Using a generic parametrization of
the equation of state of quark matter, we calculate the mass-radius
relationship of these objects.Comment: 10 pages, LaTeX, added discussion of CFL phase and strangelet
pollution, version to appear in journal. arXiv admin note: text overlap with
arXiv:0808.067
Nonlinearity-induced conformational instability and dynamics of biopolymers
We propose a simple phenomenological model for describing the conformational
dynamics of biopolymers via the nonlinearity-induced buckling and collapse
(i.e. coiling up) instabilities. Taking into account the coupling between the
internal and mechanical degrees of freedom of a semiflexible biopolymer chain,
we show that self-trapped internal excitations (such as amide-I vibrations in
proteins, base-pair vibrations in DNA, or polarons in proteins) may produce the
buckling and collapse instabilities of an initially straight chain. These
instabilities remain latent in a straight infinitely long chain, because the
bending of such a chain would require an infinite energy. However, they
manifest themselves as soon as we consider more realistic cases and take into
account a finite length of the chain. In this case the nonlinear localized
modes may act as drivers giving impetus to the conformational dynamics of
biopolymers. The buckling instability is responsible, in particular, for the
large-amplitude localized bending waves which accompany the nonlinear modes
propagating along the chain. In the case of the collapse instability, the chain
folds into a compact three-dimensional coil. The viscous damping of the aqueous
environment only slows down the folding of the chain, but does not stop it even
for a large damping. We find that these effects are only weakly affected by the
peculiarities of the interaction potentials, and thus they should be generic
for different models of semiflexible chains carrying nonlinear localized
excitations.Comment: 4 pages (RevTeX) with 5 figures (EPS
Non-integrability of the mixmaster universe
We comment on an analysis by Contopoulos et al. which demonstrates that the
governing six-dimensional Einstein equations for the mixmaster space-time
metric pass the ARS or reduced Painlev\'{e} test. We note that this is the case
irrespective of the value, , of the generating Hamiltonian which is a
constant of motion. For we find numerous closed orbits with two
unstable eigenvalues strongly indicating that there cannot exist two additional
first integrals apart from the Hamiltonian and thus that the system, at least
for this case, is very likely not integrable. In addition, we present numerical
evidence that the average Lyapunov exponent nevertheless vanishes. The model is
thus a very interesting example of a Hamiltonian dynamical system, which is
likely non-integrable yet passes the reduced Painlev\'{e} test.Comment: 11 pages LaTeX in J.Phys.A style (ioplppt.sty) + 6 PostScript figures
compressed and uuencoded with uufiles. Revised version to appear in J Phys.
Frobenius-Perron Resonances for Maps with a Mixed Phase Space
Resonances of the time evolution (Frobenius-Perron) operator P for phase
space densities have recently been shown to play a key role for the
interrelations of classical, semiclassical and quantum dynamics. Efficient
methods to determine resonances are thus in demand, in particular for
Hamiltonian systems displaying a mix of chaotic and regular behavior. We
present a powerful method based on truncating P to a finite matrix which not
only allows to identify resonances but also the associated phase space
structures. It is demonstrated to work well for a prototypical dynamical
system.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, 2nd version as published (minor changes
Gluon distributions in nucleons and pions at a low resolution scale
In this paper we study the gluon distribution functions in nucleons and pions
at a low resolution scale. This is an important issue since parton
densities at low have always been taken as an external input which is
adjusted through DGLAP evolution to fit the experimental data at higher scales.
Here, in the framework of a model recently developed, it is shown that the
hypothetical cloud of {\it neutral} pions surrounding nucleons and pions
appears to be responsible for the characteristic valence-like gluon
distributions needed at the inital low scale. As an additional result, we get
the remarkable prediction that neutral and charged pions have different
intrinsic sea flavor contents.Comment: final version to appear in Phys. Rev. D. Discussion on several points
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