509 research outputs found
-brane type I superstring background fields in terms of type IIB ones by canonical method and T-duality approach
We consider type IIB superstring theory with embedded -brane and choose
boundary conditions which preserve half of the initial supersymmetry. In the
canonical approach that we use, boundary conditions are treated as canonical
constraints. The effective theory, obtained from the initial one on the
solution of boundary conditions, has the form of the type I superstring theory
with embedded -brane. We obtain the expressions for -brane background
fields of type I theory in terms of the -brane background fields of type
IIB theory. We show that beside known even fields, they contain
squares of odd ones, where is world-sheet parity
transformation, . We relate result of this paper and
the results of [1] using T-dualities along four directions orthogonal to
-brane
Intermittent random walks for an optimal search strategy: One-dimensional case
We study the search kinetics of an immobile target by a concentration of
randomly moving searchers. The object of the study is to optimize the
probability of detection within the constraints of our model. The target is
hidden on a one-dimensional lattice in the sense that searchers have no a
priori information about where it is, and may detect it only upon encounter.
The searchers perform random walks in discrete time n=0,1,2, ..., N, where N is
the maximal time the search process is allowed to run. With probability \alpha
the searchers step on a nearest-neighbour, and with probability (1-\alpha) they
leave the lattice and stay off until they land back on the lattice at a fixed
distance L away from the departure point. The random walk is thus intermittent.
We calculate the probability P_N that the target remains undetected up to the
maximal search time N, and seek to minimize this probability. We find that P_N
is a non-monotonic function of \alpha, and show that there is an optimal choice
\alpha_{opt}(N) of \alpha well within the intermittent regime, 0 <
\alpha_{opt}(N) < 1, whereby P_N can be orders of magnitude smaller compared to
the "pure" random walk cases \alpha =0 and \alpha = 1.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figures; submitted to Journal of Physics: Condensed
Matter; special issue on Chemical Kinetics Beyond the Textbook: Fluctuations,
Many-Particle Effects and Anomalous Dynamics, eds. K.Lindenberg, G.Oshanin
and M.Tachiy
Morphological, physiological and pathogenic variability of small-spore Alternaria sp. causing leaf blight of Solanaceous plants in Algeria
Due to premature defoliation, early blight epidemics can cause major yield losses. Large-spore Alternaria species such as A. solani and A. tomatophila have long been recognized as important pathogens responsible for such blight disease in the family Solanaceae and thus represent a serious risk for crop production. Small-spore Alternaria species have also been frequently isolated from plant samples with typical blight symptoms but their incidence as primary pathogens is often controversial. In order to study the diversity of small-spore Alternaria species, 32 isolates were selected from a larger collection of 130 isolates from infected leaves, fruits and stems of tomato from various growing regions of North-West Algeria. Morphological characterization under standard conditions and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) analyses using specific primers to amplify a part of the ITS regions and the 5.8S gene were conducted to confirm their identification as members of the alternata section. They were then examined according to morphological characteristics of conidia and sporulation patterns on potato carrot agar (PCA) and were segregated into three morphological species: A. alternata, A. tenuissima and A. arborescens. Colony type, substrate colour, margin, zonation, pigmentation, colony diameter and conidia production were studied on potato sucrose agar (PSA). Physiological parameters and nutritional requirements of the isolates were also assessed and a data matrix based on cluster analysis and Euclidean distance was constructed. Results of pathogenicity test on tomato showed obvious diversity among the isolates and they could be separated into two groups based on their virulence. The dendrogram based on the influence of cultural, nutritional and physiological characters suggests moderate heterogeneity within the populations of A. alternata and A. tenuissima. The small-spore species formed five clusters that fundamentally paralleled the morphological groupings. However, the results provided no evidence for geographical and pathogenicity clustering of isolates
Intermittent exploration on a scale-free network
We study an intermittent random walk on a random network of scale-free degree
distribution. The walk is a combination of simple random walks of duration
and random long-range jumps. While the time the walker needs to cover all
the nodes increases with , the corresponding time for the edges displays a
non monotonic behavior with a minimum for some nontrivial value of . This
is a heterogeneity-induced effect that is not observed in homogeneous
small-world networks. The optimal increases with the degree of
assortativity in the network. Depending on the nature of degree correlations
and the elapsed time the walker finds an over/under-estimate of the degree
distribution exponent.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, 1 table, published versio
First-principles derivation of the AdS/CFT Y-systems
We provide a first-principles, perturbative derivation of the AdS5/CFT4
Y-system that has been proposed to solve the spectrum problem of N=4 SYM. The
proof relies on the computation of quantum effects in the fusion of some loop
operators, namely the transfer matrices. More precisely we show that the
leading quantum corrections in the fusion of transfer matrices induce the
correct shifts of the spectral parameter in the T-system. As intermediate steps
we study UV divergences in line operators up to first order and compute the
fusion of line operators up to second order for the pure spinor string in
AdS5xS5. We also argue that the derivation can be easily extended to other
integrable models, some of which describe string theory on AdS4, AdS3 and AdS2
spacetimes.Comment: 45 pages, 5 figures; v2: minor additions, JHEP versio
Probing microscopic origins of confined subdiffusion by first-passage observables
Subdiffusive motion of tracer particles in complex crowded environments, such
as biological cells, has been shown to be widepsread. This deviation from
brownian motion is usually characterized by a sublinear time dependence of the
mean square displacement (MSD). However, subdiffusive behavior can stem from
different microscopic scenarios, which can not be identified solely by the MSD
data. In this paper we present a theoretical framework which permits to
calculate analytically first-passage observables (mean first-passage times,
splitting probabilities and occupation times distributions) in disordered media
in any dimensions. This analysis is applied to two representative microscopic
models of subdiffusion: continuous-time random walks with heavy tailed waiting
times, and diffusion on fractals. Our results show that first-passage
observables provide tools to unambiguously discriminate between the two
possible microscopic scenarios of subdiffusion. Moreover we suggest experiments
based on first-passage observables which could help in determining the origin
of subdiffusion in complex media such as living cells, and discuss the
implications of anomalous transport to reaction kinetics in cells.Comment: 21 pages, 3 figures. Submitted versio
Alternaria species associated with early blight epidemics on tomato and other Solanaceae crops in northwestern Algeria
Early blight is a common disease of Solanaceae crops worldwide. The occurrence of Alternaria spp. was studied during three epidemics on tomato in northwestern Algeria. Alternaria was detected in more than 80 % of the diseased plant samples and accounted for more than 50 % of the total fungal isolates recovered from these samples. Morphological and molecular investigations revealed that small-spored isolates producing beaked conidia, i.e. belonging to the section alternaria, were prominent in most of the surveyed locations representing more than 80 % of the total Alternaria isolates in three locations (Mascara, Ain Témouchent and Sidi Belabbèsse). Based on their sporulation patterns they were recognized as A. alternata and A. tenuissima. Small-spored isolates producing conidia without beak and assigned to A. consortialis were also found at a low frequency (< 1 %). Large-spored isolates producing conidia ended by typical long beaks and identified as A. linariae (syn. A. tomatophila), A. solani and A. grandis were also recovered from all the sampled areas and represented 33.8 %, 6.3 % and 1.3 % of the total Alternaria isolates, respectively. Pathogenicity tests on tomato with a selection of 85 strains representative of the isolates collection revealed that all the tested isolates were able to produce extending lesions on inoculated leaves albeit with variable intensity. Large-spored species included the most aggressive isolates. Small-spored Alternaria, although less aggressive than large-spored Alternaria, had the ability to provoke brown necrotic spots and circumstantially developed synergistic interactions in mixed infections with moderately aggressive isolates of A. linariae
Non-chiral current algebras for deformed supergroup WZW models
We study deformed WZW models on supergroups with vanishing Killing form. The
deformation is generated by the isotropic current-current perturbation which is
exactly marginal under these assumptions. It breaks half of the global
isometries of the original supergroup. The current corresponding to the
remaining symmetry is conserved but its components are neither holomorphic nor
anti-holomorphic. We obtain the exact two- and three-point functions of this
current and a four-point function in the first two leading orders of a 1/k
expansion but to all orders in the deformation parameter. We further study the
operator product algebra of the currents, the equal time commutators and the
quantum equations of motion. The form of the equations of motion suggests the
existence of non-local charges which generate a Yangian. Possible applications
to string theory on Anti-de Sitter spaces and to condensed matter problems are
briefly discussed.Comment: 43 pages, Latex, one eps figure; v.2: minor corrections, a reference
adde
Random walks on finite lattice tubes
Exact results are obtained for random walks on finite lattice tubes with a
single source and absorbing lattice sites at the ends. Explicit formulae are
derived for the absorption probabilities at the ends and for the expectations
that a random walk will visit a particular lattice site before being absorbed.
Results are obtained for lattice tubes of arbitrary size and each of the
regular lattice types; square, triangular and honeycomb. The results include an
adjustable parameter to model the effects of strain, such as surface curvature,
on the surface diffusion. Results for the triangular lattice tubes and the
honeycomb lattice tubes model diffusion of adatoms on single walled zig-zag
carbon nano-tubes with open ends.Comment: 22 pages, 4 figure
Geometry-controlled kinetics
It has long been appreciated that transport properties can control reaction
kinetics. This effect can be characterized by the time it takes a diffusing
molecule to reach a target -- the first-passage time (FPT). Although essential
to quantify the kinetics of reactions on all time scales, determining the FPT
distribution was deemed so far intractable. Here, we calculate analytically
this FPT distribution and show that transport processes as various as regular
diffusion, anomalous diffusion, diffusion in disordered media and in fractals
fall into the same universality classes. Beyond this theoretical aspect, this
result changes the views on standard reaction kinetics. More precisely, we
argue that geometry can become a key parameter so far ignored in this context,
and introduce the concept of "geometry-controlled kinetics". These findings
could help understand the crucial role of spatial organization of genes in
transcription kinetics, and more generally the impact of geometry on
diffusion-limited reactions.Comment: Submitted versio
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