4,272 research outputs found
Force induced stretched state: Effects of temperature
A model of self avoiding walks with suitable constraint has been developed to
study the effect of temperature on a single stranded DNA (ssDNA) in the
constant force ensemble. Our exact calculations for small chains show that the
extension (reaction co-ordinate) may increase or decrease with the temperature
depending upon the applied force. The simple model developed here which
incorporates semi-microscopic details of base direction provide an explanation
of the force induced transitions in ssDNA as observed in experiments.Comment: 5 pages, 8 figures, RevTex
Experimental evidence of accelerated energy transfer in turbulence
We investigate the vorticity dynamics in a turbulent vortex using scattering
of acoustic waves. Two ultrasonic beams are adjusted to probe simultaneously
two spatial scales in a given volume of the flow, thus allowing a dual channel
recording of the dynamics of coherent vorticity structures. Our results show
that this allows to measure the average energy transfer time between different
spatial length scales, and that such transfer goes faster at smaller scales.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Interplay between the Beale-Kato-Majda theorem and the analyticity-strip method to investigate numerically the incompressible Euler singularity problem
Numerical simulations of the incompressible Euler equations are performed
using the Taylor-Green vortex initial conditions and resolutions up to
. The results are analyzed in terms of the classical analyticity strip
method and Beale, Kato and Majda (BKM) theorem. A well-resolved acceleration of
the time-decay of the width of the analyticity strip is observed at
the highest resolution for while preliminary 3D visualizations
show the collision of vortex sheets. The BKM criterium on the power-law growth
of supremum of the vorticity, applied on the same time-interval, is not
inconsistent with the occurrence of a singularity around .
These new findings lead us to investigate how fast the analyticity strip
width needs to decrease to zero in order to sustain a finite-time singularity
consistent with the BKM theorem. A new simple bound of the supremum norm of
vorticity in terms of the energy spectrum is introduced and used to combine the
BKM theorem with the analyticity-strip method. It is shown that a finite-time
blowup can exist only if vanishes sufficiently fast at the
singularity time. In particular, if a power law is assumed for then
its exponent must be greater than some critical value, thus providing a new
test that is applied to our Taylor-Green numerical simulation.
Our main conclusion is that the numerical results are not inconsistent with a
singularity but that higher-resolution studies are needed to extend the
time-interval on which a well-resolved power-law behavior of takes
place, and check whether the new regime is genuine and not simply a crossover
to a faster exponential decay
A one-dimensional model for theoretical analysis of single molecule experiments
In this paper we compare two polymer stretching experiments. The outcome of
both experiments is a force-extension relation. We use a one-dimensional model
to show that in general the two quantities are not equal. In certain limits,
however, both force-extension relations coincide.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figure
Effects of Eye-phase in DNA unzipping
The onset of an "eye-phase" and its role during the DNA unzipping is studied
when a force is applied to the interior of the chain. The directionality of the
hydrogen bond introduced here shows oscillations in force-extension curve
similar to a "saw-tooth" kind of oscillations seen in the protein unfolding
experiments. The effects of intermediates (hairpins) and stacking energies on
the melting profile have also been discussed.Comment: RevTeX v4, 9 pages with 7 eps figure
DNA unzipped under a constant force exhibits multiple metastable intermediates
Single molecule studies, at constant force, of the separation of
double-stranded DNA into two separated single strands may provide information
relevant to the dynamics of DNA replication. At constant applied force, theory
predicts that the unzipped length as a function of time is characterized by
jumps during which the strands separate rapidly, followed by long pauses where
the number of separated base pairs remains constant. Here, we report previously
uncharacterized observations of this striking behavior carried out on a number
of identical single molecules simultaneously. When several single lphage
molecules are subject to the same applied force, the pause positions are
reproducible in each. This reproducibility shows that the positions and
durations of the pauses in unzipping provide a sequence-dependent molecular
fingerprint. For small forces, the DNA remains in a partially unzipped state
for at least several hours. For larger forces, the separation is still
characterized by jumps and pauses, but the double-stranded DNA will completely
unzip in less than 30 min
Non-equilibrium Lorentz gas on a curved space
The periodic Lorentz gas with external field and iso-kinetic thermostat is
equivalent, by conformal transformation, to a billiard with expanding
phase-space and slightly distorted scatterers, for which the trajectories are
straight lines. A further time rescaling allows to keep the speed constant in
that new geometry. In the hyperbolic regime, the stationary state of this
billiard is characterized by a phase-space contraction rate, equal to that of
the iso-kinetic Lorentz gas. In contrast to the iso-kinetic Lorentz gas where
phase-space contraction occurs in the bulk, the phase-space contraction rate
here takes place at the periodic boundaries
Ideal evolution of MHD turbulence when imposing Taylor-Green symmetries
We investigate the ideal and incompressible magnetohydrodynamic (MHD)
equations in three space dimensions for the development of potentially singular
structures. The methodology consists in implementing the four-fold symmetries
of the Taylor-Green vortex generalized to MHD, leading to substantial computer
time and memory savings at a given resolution; we also use a re-gridding method
that allows for lower-resolution runs at early times, with no loss of spectral
accuracy. One magnetic configuration is examined at an equivalent resolution of
points, and three different configurations on grids of
points. At the highest resolution, two different current and vorticity sheet
systems are found to collide, producing two successive accelerations in the
development of small scales. At the latest time, a convergence of magnetic
field lines to the location of maximum current is probably leading locally to a
strong bending and directional variability of such lines. A novel analytical
method, based on sharp analysis inequalities, is used to assess the validity of
the finite-time singularity scenario. This method allows one to rule out
spurious singularities by evaluating the rate at which the logarithmic
decrement of the analyticity-strip method goes to zero. The result is that the
finite-time singularity scenario cannot be ruled out, and the singularity time
could be somewhere between and More robust conclusions will
require higher resolution runs and grid-point interpolation measurements of
maximum current and vorticity.Comment: 18 pages, 13 figures, 2 tables; submitted to Physical Review
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