6,746 research outputs found

    In silico Protein Structural Modeling and Active binding site Evaluation of Streptococcus pneumoniae

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    Structure function relation of glucose kinese in Streptococcus pneumoniae. However, a solved structure for _Streptococcus pneumoniae_ glucose kinese is not available at the protein data bank. Glucose kinase is a regulatory enzyme capable of adding phosphate group to glucose in the first step of streptomycin biosynthesis. The activity of glucose kinase was regulated by the Carbon Catabolite Repression system. So, we created a model of glucose kinese from _Streptococcus pnemoniae_ using the X-ray crystallography structure of glucose kinese enzymes from _Enterobacteria faecalis_ as template with Molsoft ICM v3.5 software. The model was validated using protein structure checking tools such as PROCHECK, WHAT IF: for reliability. The active site amino acid "Asp114" in the template is retained in _S. pneumoniae_ Glucose kinese model "Asp115". Solvent accessible surface area analysis of the glucose kinese model showed that known key residues playing important role in active site for ligand binding and metal ion binding are buried and hence not accessible to solvent. The information thus discussed provides insight to the molecular understanding of _Streptococcus pneumoniae_ in glucose kinase

    Constrained Stabilization of Discrete-Time Systems

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    Based on the growth rate of the set of states reachable with unit-energy inputs, we show that a discrete-time controllable linear system is globally controllable to the origin with constrained inputs if and only if all its eigenvalues lie in the closed unit disk. These results imply that the constrained Infinite-Horizon Model Predictive Control algorithm is globally stabilizing for a sufficiently large number of control moves if and only if the controlled system is controllable and all its eigenvalues lie in the closed unit disk. In the second part of the paper, we propose an implementable Model Predictive Control algorithm and show that with this scheme a discrete-time linear system with n poles on the unit disk (with any multiplicity) can be globally stabilized if the number of control moves is larger than n. For pure integrator systems, this condition is also necessary. Moreover, we show that global asymptotic stability is preserved for any asymptotically constant disturbance entering at the plant input

    Characterizing the geometrical edges of nonlocal two-qubit gates

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    Nonlocal two-qubit gates are geometrically represented by tetrahedron known as Weyl chamber within which perfect entanglers form a polyhedron. We identify that all edges of the Weyl chamber and polyhedron are formed by single parametric gates. Nonlocal attributes of these edges are characterized using entangling power and local invariants. In particular, SWAP (power)alpha family of gates constitutes one edge of the Weyl chamber with SWAP-1/2 being the only perfect entangler. Finally, optimal constructions of controlled-NOT using SWAP-1/2 gate and gates belong to three edges of the polyhedron are presented.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures, Phys. Rev. A 79, 052339 (2009

    Median computation in graphs using consensus strategies

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    Following the Majority Strategy in graphs, other consensus strategies, namely Plurality Strategy, Hill Climbing and Steepest Ascent Hill Climbing strategies on graphs are discussed as methods for the computation of median sets of profiles. A review ofalgorithms for median computation on median graphs is discussed and their time complexities are compared. Implementation of the consensus strategies on median computation in arbitrary graphs is discussed.majority strategy;consensus strategy;Hill climbing median computation

    Probing the interplay between surface and bulk states in the topological Kondo insulator SmB6_6 through conductance fluctuation spectroscopy

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    We present results of resistance fluctuation spectroscopy on single crystals of the predicted Kondo topological insulator material SmB6_6. Our measurements show that at low temperatures, transport in this system takes place only through surface states. The measured noise in this temperature range arises due to Universal Conductance Fluctuations whose statistics was found to be consistent with theoretical predictions for that of two-dimensional systems in the Symplectic symmetry class. At higher temperatures, we find signatures of glassy dynamics and establish that the measured noise is caused by mobility fluctuations in the bulk. We find that, unlike the topological insulators of the dichalcogenide family, the noise in surface and bulk conduction channels in SmB6_6 are completely uncorrelated. Our measurements establish that at sufficiently low temperatures, the bulk has no discernible contribution to electrical transport in SmB6_6 making it an ideal platform for probing the physics of topological surface states.Comment: 9 pages, 11 figure
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