1,576 research outputs found
Deterministic mechanical model of T-killer cell polarization reproduces the wandering of aim between simultaneously engaged targets
T-killer cells of the immune system eliminate virus-infected and tumorous cells through direct cell-cell interactions. Reorientation of the killing apparatus inside the T cell to the T-cell interface with the target cell ensures specificity of the immune response. The killing apparatus can also oscillate next to the cell-cell interface. When two target cells are engaged by the T cell simultaneously, the killing apparatus can oscillate between the two interface areas. This oscillation is one of the most striking examples of cell movements that give the microscopist an unmechanistic impression of the cell's fidgety indecision. We have constructed a three-dimensional, numerical biomechanical model of the molecular-motor-driven microtubule cytoskeleton that positions the killing apparatus. The model demonstrates that the cortical pulling mechanism is indeed capable of orienting the killing apparatus into the functional position under a range of conditions. The model also predicts experimentally testable limitations of this commonly hypothesized mechanism of T-cell polarization. After the reorientation, the numerical solution exhibits complex, multidirectional, multiperiodic, and sustained oscillations in the absence of any external guidance or stochasticity. These computational results demonstrate that the strikingly animate wandering of aim in T-killer cells has a purely mechanical and deterministic explanation. © 2009 Kim, Maly
The pseudogap state in superconductors: Extended Hartree approach to time-dependent Ginzburg-Landau Theory
It is well known that conventional pairing fluctuation theory at the Hartree
level leads to a normal state pseudogap in the fermionic spectrum. Our goal is
to extend this Hartree approximated scheme to arrive at a generalized mean
field theory of pseudogapped superconductors for all temperatures . While an
equivalent approach to the pseudogap has been derived elsewhere using a more
formal Green's function decoupling scheme, in this paper we re-interpret this
mean field theory and BCS theory as well, and demonstrate how they naturally
relate to ideal Bose gas condensation. Here we recast the Hartree approximated
Ginzburg-Landau self consistent equations in a T-matrix form. This recasting
makes it possible to consider arbitrarily strong attractive coupling, where
bosonic degrees of freedom appear at considerably above . The
implications for transport both above and below are discussed. Below
we find two types of contributions. Those associated with fermionic
excitations have the usual BCS functional form. That they depend on the
magnitude of the excitation gap, nevertheless, leads to rather atypical
transport properties in the strong coupling limit, where this gap (as distinct
from the order parameter) is virtually -independent. In addition, there are
bosonic terms arising from non-condensed pairs whose transport properties are
shown here to be reasonably well described by an effective time-dependent
Ginzburg-Landau theory.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures, REVTeX4, submitted to PRB; clarification of the
diagrammatic technique added, one figure update
Local Government Fiscal Burden in Nonmetropolitan America
Rising fiscal pressure on local governments in rural areas of the United States is documented in this study. The level of fiscal burden on taxpayers to support local governments in nonmetropolitan areas is found to be higher than that in metropolitan areas between 1977 and 1987. Using a model from the urban fiscal literature, the level of fiscal burden in nonmetropolitan areas is found to be influenced by a combination of demographic, socioeconomic, intergovernmental, and historical factors. Intergovernmental revenue transfers from the state and federal government play a critical role in determining the level of fiscal burden rural taxpayers bear. These findings have implications for rural economic development and for understanding how rural areas are influenced by the larger society
Probing superconducting phase fluctuations from the current noise spectrum of pseudogaped metal-superconductor tunnel junctions
We study the current noise spectra of a tunnel junction of a metal with
strong pairing phase fluctuation and a superconductor. It is shown that there
is a characteristic peak in the noise spectrum at the intrinsic Josephson
frequency when is smaller than the pairing gap but
larger than the pairing scattering rate. In the presence of an AC voltage, the
tunnelling current noise shows a series of characteristic peaks with increasing
DC voltage. Experimental observation of these peaks will give direct evidence
of the pair fluctuation in the normal state of high- superconductors and
from the half width of the peaks the pair decay rate can be estimated.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Magnetic Field Effects in the Pseudogap Phase: A Competing Energy Gap Scenario for Precursor Superconductivity
We study the sensitivity of T_c and T^* to low fields, H, within the
pseudogap state using a BCS-based approach extended to arbitrary coupling. We
find that T^* and T_c, which are of the same superconducting origin, have very
different H dependences. This is due to the pseudogap, \Delta_{pg}, which is
present at the latter, but not former temperature. Our results for the
coherence length \xi fit well with existing experiments.We predict that very
near the insulator \xi will rapidly increase.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, RevTe
Reduction of Tc due to Impurities in Cuprate Superconductors
In order to explain how impurities affect the unconventional
superconductivity, we study non-magnetic impurity effect on the transition
temperature using on-site U Hubbard model within a fluctuation exchange (FLEX)
approximation. We find that in appearance, the reduction of Tc roughly
coincides with the well-known Abrikosov-Gor'kov formula. This coincidence
results from the cancellation between two effects; one is the reduction of
attractive force due to randomness, and another is the reduction of the damping
rate of quasi-particle arising from electron interaction. As another problem,
we also study impurity effect on underdoped cuprate as the system showing
pseudogap phenomena. To the aim, we adopt the pairing scenario for the
pseudogap and discuss how pseudogap phenomena affect the reduction of Tc by
impurities. We find that 'pseudogap breaking' by impurities plays the essential
role in underdoped cuprate and suppresses the Tc reduction due to the
superconducting (SC) fluctuation.Comment: 14 pages, 28 figures To be published in JPS
Superconducting transitions from the pseudogap state: d-wave symmetry, lattice, and low-dimensional effects
We investigate the behavior of the superconducting transition temperature
within a previously developed BCS-Bose Einstein crossover picture. This
picture, based on a decoupling scheme of Kadanoff and Martin, further extended
by Patton, can be used to derive a simple form for the superconducting
transition temperature in the presence of a pseudogap. We extend previous work
which addressed the case of s-wave pairing in jellium, to explore the solutions
for T_c as a function of variable coupling in more physically relevant
situations. We thereby ascertain the effects of reduced dimensionality,
periodic lattices and a d-wave pairing interaction. Implications for the
cuprate superconductors are discussed.Comment: REVTeX, 11 pages, 6 EPS figures included, Replace with published
versio
The pseudogap in underdoped high Tc superconductors in the framework of the Boson Fermion model
The question of whether the pseudogap in high cuprates is related to
super conducting precursor effects or to the existence of extrinsic bosonic
massive excitations is investigated on the basis of the Boson-Fermion model.
The characteristic three peak structure of the electronic spectral function and
the temperature dependent Fermi vector derived here are signatures for a two
component scenario which can be tested by ARPES and BIS experiments.Comment: revtex version with 3 eps figures. Revised version to appear in Phys.
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