18,699 research outputs found
Lorentz violation dispersion relation and its application
We derive a modified dispersion relation (MDR) in the Lorentz violation
extension of quantum electrodynamics (QED) sector in the standard model
extension (SME) framework. Based on the extended Dirac equation and
corresponding MDR, we observe the resemblance of the Lorentz violation coupling
with spin-gravity coupling. We also develop a neutrino oscillation mechanism
induced by the presence of nondiagonal terms of Lorentz violation couplings in
2-flavor space in a 2-spinor formalism by explicitly assuming neutrinos to be
Marjorana fermions. We also obtain a much stringent bound ()
on one of the Lorentz violation parameters by applying MDR to the ultrahigh
energy cosmic ray (UHECR) problem.Comment: 22 Latex pages, final version in publicatio
Competition between Phase Separation and Spin Density Wave or Charge Density Wave Order: Role of Long-Range Interactions
Recent studies of pairing and charge order in materials such as FeSe,
SrTiO, and 2H-NbSe have suggested that momentum dependence of the
electron-phonon coupling plays an important role in their properties. Initial
attempts to study Hamiltonians which either do not include or else truncate the
range of Coulomb repulsion have noted that the resulting spatial non-locality
of the electron-phonon interaction leads to a dominant tendency to phase
separation. Here we present Quantum Monte Carlo results for such models in
which we incorporate both on-site and intersite electron-electron interactions.
We show that these can stabilize phases in which the density is homogeneous and
determine the associated phase boundaries. As a consequence, the physics of
momentum dependent electron-phonon coupling can be determined outside of the
trivial phase separated regime.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figure
Evaluating probability forecasts
Probability forecasts of events are routinely used in climate predictions, in
forecasting default probabilities on bank loans or in estimating the
probability of a patient's positive response to treatment. Scoring rules have
long been used to assess the efficacy of the forecast probabilities after
observing the occurrence, or nonoccurrence, of the predicted events. We develop
herein a statistical theory for scoring rules and propose an alternative
approach to the evaluation of probability forecasts. This approach uses loss
functions relating the predicted to the actual probabilities of the events and
applies martingale theory to exploit the temporal structure between the
forecast and the subsequent occurrence or nonoccurrence of the event.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/11-AOS902 the Annals of
Statistics (http://www.imstat.org/aos/) by the Institute of Mathematical
Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
Unexpected Accumulation of ncm\u3csup\u3e5\u3c/sup\u3eU and ncm\u3csup\u3e5\u3c/sup\u3es\u3csup\u3e2\u3c/sup\u3eU in a \u3cem\u3etrm9\u3c/em\u3e Mutant Suggests an Additional Step in the Synthesis of mcm\u3csup\u3e5\u3c/sup\u3eU and mcm\u3csup\u3e5\u3c/sup\u3es\u3csup\u3e2\u3c/sup\u3eU
Background
Transfer RNAs are synthesized as a primary transcript that is processed to produce a mature tRNA. As part of the maturation process, a subset of the nucleosides are modified. Modifications in the anticodon region often modulate the decoding ability of the tRNA. At position 34, the majority of yeast cytosolic tRNA species that have a uridine are modified to 5-carbamoylmethyluridine (ncm5U), 5-carbamoylmethyl-2′-O-methyluridine (ncm5Um), 5-methoxycarbonylmethyl-uridine (mcm5U) or 5-methoxycarbonylmethyl-2-thiouridine (mcm5s2U). The formation of mcm5 and ncm5 side chains involves a complex pathway, where the last step in formation of mcm5 is a methyl esterification of cm5 dependent on the Trm9 and Trm112 proteins.
Methodology and Principal Findings
Both Trm9 and Trm112 are required for the last step in formation of mcm5 side chains at wobble uridines. By co-expressing a histidine-tagged Trm9p together with a native Trm112p in E. coli, these two proteins purified as a complex. The presence of Trm112p dramatically improves the methyltransferase activity of Trm9p in vitro. Single tRNA species that normally contain mcm5U or mcm5s2U nucleosides were isolated from trm9Δ or trm112Δ mutants and the presence of modified nucleosides was analyzed by HPLC. In both mutants, mcm5U and mcm5s2U nucleosides are absent in tRNAs and the major intermediates accumulating were ncm5U and ncm5s2U, not the expected cm5U and cm5s2U.
Conclusions
Trm9p and Trm112p function together at the final step in formation of mcm5U in tRNA by using the intermediate cm5U as a substrate. In tRNA isolated from trm9Δ and trm112Δ strains, ncm5U and ncm5s2U nucleosides accumulate, questioning the order of nucleoside intermediate formation of the mcm5 side chain. We propose two alternative explanations for this observation. One is that the intermediate cm5U is generated from ncm5U by a yet unknown mechanism and the other is that cm5U is formed before ncm5U and mcm5U
Dynamically encircling exceptional points: in situ control of encircling loops and the role of the starting point
The most intriguing properties of non-Hermitian systems are found near the
exceptional points (EPs) at which the Hamiltonian matrix becomes defective. Due
to the complex topological structure of the energy Riemann surfaces close to an
EP and the breakdown of the adiabatic theorem due to non-Hermiticity, the state
evolution in non-Hermitian systems is much more complex than that in Hermitian
systems. For example, recent experimental work [Doppler et al. Nature 537, 76
(2016)] demonstrated that dynamically encircling an EP can lead to chiral
behaviors, i.e., encircling an EP in different directions results in different
output states. Here, we propose a coupled ferromagnetic waveguide system that
carries two EPs and design an experimental setup in which the trajectory of
state evolution can be controlled in situ using a tunable external field,
allowing us to dynamically encircle zero, one or even two EPs experimentally.
The tunability allows us to control the trajectory of encircling in the
parameter space, including the size of the encircling loop and the starting/end
point. We discovered that whether or not the dynamics is chiral actually
depends on the starting point of the loop. In particular, dynamically
encircling an EP with a starting point in the parity-time-broken phase results
in non-chiral behaviors such that the output state is the same no matter which
direction the encircling takes. The proposed system is a useful platform to
explore the topology of energy surfaces and the dynamics of state evolution in
non-Hermitian systems and will likely find applications in mode switching
controlled with external parameters.Comment: 15 pages, 11 figure
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