1,764 research outputs found
Osmoregulation of chloride channels in epithelial cells
__Abstract__
The plasma membrane of mammalian cells is formed by two layers of lipids (lipid
bilayer), primarily phospholipids, glycolipids and cholesterol, in which many
different proteins are embedded. Phospholipid consists of a glycerol backbone
esterified to fatty acids (the "lipid tail") and, via a phosphate group, to either
choline, serine, inositol or ethanolamine (the "head group"). Whereas the head
group is hydrophilic and oriented towards the outer surface of the membrane,
the lipid tail is hydrophobic and pointed towards the inner part.
The plasma membrane is impermeable to large molecules like carbohydrates
and proteins but readily permeable to small uncharged molecules like oxygen,
water, and carbon dioxide. Molecules can move through the membrane either by
direct diffusion or through specialized channels or transport proteins (facilitated
diffusion). In an isolated system, as stated by the Second Law of Thermodynamics,
all events move spontaneously from a higher energy state to a lower energy state
and are driven by the tendency to increase the entropy (degree for randomness/
disorder). When molecules are evenly distributed throughout the available
space, the entropy is at its maximum. Therefore, free moving molecules and
atoms (i.e. not part of a crystal structure and not restrained by additional forces)
tend to distribute themselves over an as large as possible area. As a consequence
of the Second Law of Thermodynamics, differences in the concentrations of
non-permeable solutes between the cell and its surrounding medium will result
in a redistribution of the solvent (e.g. water) to maintain the lowest energy
possible, a phenomenon known as osmosis. Therefore, in response to an osmotic
imbalance, water will move across a semi-permeable membrane until the water
molecules are equally distributed, resulting in swelling or shrinkage.
The Gibbs-Don nan effect refers to the observation that under certain conditions
charged molecules or ions fail to distribute evenly across a semi-permeable
membrane. At the Gibbs-Donnan equilibrium, the total number of positive
charges balanced the total number of negative charges (bulk electroneutrality).
Due to the presence of charged membrane-impermeable macromolecules and
the electrogenic Na+ /K+ pump, however, the Gibbs Donnan equilibrium will never
be obtained in an intact cell, leading to an asymmetric distribution of permeable
ions and the generation of the membrane potential.
A consequence of the presence of negatively charged membrane-impermeable
proteins is the constant tendency of cells to accumulate water. To counteract a
potential increase in volume, sodium is removed from the cells by the Na+ /K+
pump on the expenditure of metabolic energy. Because alterations in cell volume
may affect many biochemical and physiological processes, almost all cell types
have additional mechanisms to regulate their volume and to limit or prevent
swelling and shrinkage
Entanglement preparation using symmetric multiports
We investigate the entanglement produced by a multi-path interferometer that
is composed of two symmetric multiports, with phase shifts applied to the
output of the first multiport. Particular attention is paid to the case when we
have a single photon entering the interferometer. For this situation we derive
a simple condition that characterize the types of entanglement that one can
generate. We then show how one can use the results from the single photon case
to determine what kinds of multi-photon entangled states one can prepare using
the interferometer.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in European Journal of
Physics
Demonstration of large ionization coefficient ratio in AlAs0.56Sb0.44 lattice matched to InP
The electron and hole avalanche multiplication characteristics have been measured in bulk AlAs0.56Sb0.44 p-i-n and n-i-p homojunction diodes, lattice matched to InP, with nominal avalanche region thicknesses of ~0.6 μm, 1.0 μm and 1.5 μm. From these and data from two much thinner devices, the bulk electron and hole impact ionization coefficients (α and β respectively), have been determined over an electric-field range from 220-1250 kV/cm for α and from 360-1250 kV/cm for β for the first time. The α/β ratio is found to vary from 1000 to 2 over this field range, making it the first report of a wide band-gap III-V semiconductor with ionization coefficient ratios similar to or larger than that observed in silicon
KLEIN: A New Family of Lightweight Block Ciphers
Resource-efficient cryptographic primitives become fundamental for realizing both security and efficiency in embedded systems like RFID tags and sensor nodes. Among those primitives, lightweight block cipher plays a major role as a building block for security protocols. In this paper, we describe a new family of lightweight block ciphers named KLEIN, which is designed for resource-constrained devices such as wireless sensors and RFID tags. Compared to the related proposals, KLEIN has advantage in the software performance on legacy sensor platforms, while in the same time its hardware implementation can also be compact
Entanglement preparation using symmetric multiports
We investigate the entanglement produced by a multi-path interferometer that
is composed of two symmetric multiports, with phase shifts applied to the
output of the first multiport. Particular attention is paid to the case when we
have a single photon entering the interferometer. For this situation we derive
a simple condition that characterize the types of entanglement that one can
generate. We then show how one can use the results from the single photon case
to determine what kinds of multi-photon entangled states one can prepare using
the interferometer.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in European Journal of
Physics
B_c meson rare decays in the light-cone quark model
We investigate the rare decays
and in the framework of the
light-cone quark model (LCQM). The transition form factors are calculated in
the space-like region and then analytically continued to the time-like region
via exponential parametrization. The branching ratios and longitudinal lepton
polarization asymmetries (LPAs) for the two decays are given and compared with
each other. The results are helpful to investigating the structure of
meson and to testing the unitarity of CKM quark mixing matrix. All these
results can be tested in the future experiments at the LHC.Comment: 9 pages, 11 figures, version accepted for publication in EPJ
Fast multi-computations with integer similarity strategy
Abstract. Multi-computations in finite groups, such as multiexponentiations and multi-scalar multiplications, are very important in ElGamallike public key cryptosystems. Algorithms to improve multi-computations can be classified into two main categories: precomputing methods and recoding methods. The first one uses a table to store the precomputed values, and the second one finds a better binary signed-digit (BSD) representation. In this article, we propose a new integer similarity strategy for multi-computations. The proposed strategy can aid with precomputing methods or recoding methods to further improve the performance of multi-computations. Based on the integer similarity strategy, we propose two efficient algorithms to improve the performance for BSD sparse forms. The performance factor can be improved from 1.556 to 1.444 and to 1.407, respectively
Lepton polarization correlations in
In this work we will study the polarizations of both leptons () in the
decay channel . In the case of the dileptonic inclusive
decay , where apart from the polarization asymmetries
of single lepton , one can also observe the polarization asymmetries of
both leptons simultaneously. If this sort of measurement is possible then we
can have, apart from decay rate, FB asymmetry and the six single lepton
polarization asymmetries (three each for and ), nine more
double polarization asymmetries. This will give us a very useful tool in more
strict testing of SM and the physics beyond. We discuss the double polarization
asymmetries of leptons in the decay mode within
the SM and the Minimal Supersymmetric extensions of it.Comment: 21 pages, 21 figures; version to match paper to appear in PR
B_s --> mu+ mu- decay in the R-parity violating minimal supergravity
We study B_s --> mu+ mu- in the context of the R-parity violating minimal
supergravity in the high tan beta regime. We find that the lowest value of the
branching ratio can go well below the present LHCb sensitivity and hence B_s
--> mu+ mu- can even be invisible to the LHC. We also find that the present
upper bound on Br(B_s --> mu+ mu-) puts strong constraint on the minimal
supergravity parameter space. The constraints become more severe if the upper
bound is close to its standard model prediction.Comment: 18 pages, 10 figures; version to be published in European Physical
Journal
- …
