4,252 research outputs found
Capacitors can radiate - some consequences of the two-capacitor problem with radiation
We fill a gap in the arguments of Boykin et al [American Journal of Physics,
Vol 70 No. 4, pp 415-420 (2002)] by not invoking an electric current loop (i.e.
magnetic dipole model) to account for the radiation energy loss, since an
obvious corollary of their results is that the capacitors should radiate
directly even if the connecting wires are shrunk to zero length. That this is
so is shown here by a direct derivation of capacitor radiation using an
oscillating electric dipole radiator model for the capacitors as well as the
alternative less widely known magnetic 'charge' current loop representation for
an electric dipole [see for example "Electromagnetic Waves" by S.A.Schlekunoff,
van Nostrand (1948)]. Implications for Electromagnetic Compliance (EMC) issues
as well as novel antenna designs further motivate the purpose of this paper.Comment: 5 Pages with No figure
On rolling, tunneling and decaying in some large N vector models
Various aspects of time-dependent processes are studied within the large N
approximation of O(N) vector models in three dimensions. These include the
rolling of fields, the tunneling and decay of vacua. We present an exact
solution for the quantum conformal case and find a solution for more general
potentials when the total change of the value of the field is small.
Characteristic times are found to be shorter when the time dependence of the
field is taken into account in constructing the exact large N effective
potentials. We show that the different approximations yield the same answers in
the regions of the overlap of the validity. A numerical solution of this
potential reveals a tunneling in which the bubble that separates the true
vacuum from the false one is thick
Arbitrary Rotation Invariant Random Matrix Ensembles and Supersymmetry
We generalize the supersymmetry method in Random Matrix Theory to arbitrary
rotation invariant ensembles. Our exact approach further extends a previous
contribution in which we constructed a supersymmetric representation for the
class of norm-dependent Random Matrix Ensembles. Here, we derive a
supersymmetric formulation under very general circumstances. A projector is
identified that provides the mapping of the probability density from ordinary
to superspace. Furthermore, it is demonstrated that setting up the theory in
Fourier superspace has considerable advantages. General and exact expressions
for the correlation functions are given. We also show how the use of hyperbolic
symmetry can be circumvented in the present context in which the non-linear
sigma model is not used. We construct exact supersymmetric integral
representations of the correlation functions for arbitrary positions of the
imaginary increments in the Green functions.Comment: 36 page
Perturbation theory in radial quantization approach and the expectation values of exponential fields in sine-Gordon model
A perturbation theory for Massive Thirring Model (MTM) in radial quantization
approach is developed. Investigation of the twisted sector in this theory
allows us to calculate the vacuum expectation values of exponential fields of the sine-Gordon theory in first order over Massive Thirring
Models coupling constant. It appears that the apparent difficulty in radial
quantization of massive theories, namely the explicite ''time'' dependence of
the Hamiltonian, may be successfully overcome. The result we have obtained
agrees with the exact formula conjectured by Lukyanov and Zamolodchikov and
coincides with the analogous calculations recently carried out in dual angular
quantization approach by one of the authors.Comment: 16 pages, no figures, LaTe
Modeling the Parker instability in a rotating plasma screw pinch
We analytically and numerically study the analogue of the Parker (magnetic
buoyancy) instability in a uniformly rotating plasma screw pinch confined in a
cylinder. Uniform plasma rotation is imposed to create a centrifugal
acceleration, which mimics the gravity required for the classical Parker
instability. The goal of this study is to determine how the Parker instability
could be unambiguously identified in a weakly magnetized, rapidly rotating
screw pinch, in which the rotation provides an effective gravity and a radially
varying azimuthal field is controlled to give conditions for which the plasma
is magnetically buoyant to inward motion. We show that an axial magnetic field
is also required to circumvent conventional current driven magnetohydrodynamic
(MHD) instabilities such as the sausage and kink modes that would obscure the
Parker instability. These conditions can be realized in the Madison Plasma
Couette Experiment (MPCX). Simulations are performed using the extended MHD
code NIMROD for an isothermal compressible plasma model. Both linear and
nonlinear regimes of the instability are studied, and the results obtained for
the linear regime are compared with analytical results from a slab geometry.
Based on this comparison, it is found that in a cylindrical pinch the magnetic
buoyancy mechanism dominates at relatively large Mach numbers (M>5), while at
low Mach numbers (M<1) the instability is due to the curvature of magnetic
field lines. At intermediate values of Mach number (1<M<5) the Coriolis force
has a strong stabilizing effect on the plasma. A possible scenario for
experimental demonstration of the Parker instability in MPCX is discussed
High accuracy binary black hole simulations with an extended wave zone
We present results from a new code for binary black hole evolutions using the
moving-puncture approach, implementing finite differences in generalised
coordinates, and allowing the spacetime to be covered with multiple
communicating non-singular coordinate patches. Here we consider a regular
Cartesian near zone, with adapted spherical grids covering the wave zone. The
efficiencies resulting from the use of adapted coordinates allow us to maintain
sufficient grid resolution to an artificial outer boundary location which is
causally disconnected from the measurement. For the well-studied test-case of
the inspiral of an equal-mass non-spinning binary (evolved for more than 8
orbits before merger), we determine the phase and amplitude to numerical
accuracies better than 0.010% and 0.090% during inspiral, respectively, and
0.003% and 0.153% during merger. The waveforms, including the resolved higher
harmonics, are convergent and can be consistently extrapolated to
throughout the simulation, including the merger and ringdown. Ringdown
frequencies for these modes (to ) match perturbative
calculations to within 0.01%, providing a strong confirmation that the remnant
settles to a Kerr black hole with irreducible mass and spin $S_f/M_f^2 = 0.686923 \pm 10\times10^{-6}
Evaluation of a Tetracycline-Inducible Promoter in Staphylococcus aureus In Vitro and In Vivo and Its Application in Demonstrating the Role of sigB in Microcolony Formation
An inducible promoter system provides a powerful tool for studying the genetic basis for virulence. A variety of inducible systems have been used in other organisms, including pXyl-xylR-inducible promoter, the pSpac-lacI system, and the arabinose-inducible PBAD promoter, but each of these systems has limitations in its application to Staphylococcus aureus. In this study, we demonstrated the efficacy of a tetracycline-inducible promoter system in inducing gene expression in S. aureus in vitro and inside epithelial cells as well as in an animal model of infection. Using the xyl/tetO promoter::gfpuvr fusion carried on a shuttle plasmid, we demonstrated that dose-dependant tetracycline induction, as measured by bacterial fluorescence, occurred in each of the above environments while basal activation under noninduced conditions remained low. To ascertain how the system can be used to elucidate the genetic basis of a pathogenic phenotype, we cloned the sigB gene downstream of the inducible promoter. Induction of SigB expression led to dose-dependent attachment of the tested strain to polystyrene microtiter wells. Additionally, bacterial microcolony formation, an event preceding mature biofilm formation, also increased with tetracycline induction of SigB
Biopython: freely available Python tools for computational molecular biology and bioinformatics
Summary: The Biopython project is a mature open source international collaboration of volunteer developers, providing Python libraries for a wide range of bioinformatics problems. Biopython includes modules for reading and writing different sequence file formats and multiple sequence alignments, dealing with 3D macro molecular structures, interacting with common tools such as BLAST, ClustalW and EMBOSS, accessing key online databases, as well as providing numerical methods for statistical learning.
Availability: Biopython is freely available, with documentation and source code at www.biopython.org under the Biopython license.
Contact: All queries should be directed to the Biopython mailing lists, see www.biopython.org/wiki/[email protected]
Fuels treatment and wildfire effects on runoff from Sierra Nevada mixed-conifer forests
We applied an eco-hydrologic model (Regional Hydro-Ecologic Simulation System [RHESSys]), constrained with spatially distributed field measurements, to assess the impacts of forest-fuel treatments and wildfire on hydrologic fluxes in two Sierra Nevada firesheds. Strategically placed fuels treatments were implemented during 2011â2012 in the upper American River in the central Sierra Nevada (43 km2) and in the upper Fresno River in the southern Sierra Nevada (24 km2). This study used the measured vegetation changes from mechanical treatments and modelled vegetation change from wildfire to determine impacts on the water balance. The well-constrained headwater model was transferred to larger catchments based on geologic and hydrologic similarities. Fuels treatments covered 18% of the American and 29% of the Lewis catchment. Averaged over the entire catchment, treatments in the wetter central Sierra Nevada resulted in a relatively light vegetation decrease (8%), leading to a 12% runoff increase, averaged over wet and dry years. Wildfire with and without forest treatments reduced vegetation by 38% and 50% and increased runoff by 55% and 67%, respectively. Treatments in the drier southern Sierra Nevada also reduced the spatially averaged vegetation by 8%, but the runoff response was limited to an increase of less than 3% compared with no treatment. Wildfire following treatments reduced vegetation by 40%, increasing runoff by 13%. Changes to catchment-scale water-balance simulations were more sensitive to canopy cover than to leaf area index, indicating that the pattern as well as amount of vegetation treatment is important to hydrologic response
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