6,942 research outputs found
Entanglement entropy in a holographic p-wave superconductor model
In a recent paper, arXiv:1309.4877, a holographic p-wave model has been
proposed in an Einstein-Maxwell-complex vector field theory with a negative
cosmological constant. The model exhibits rich phase structure depending on the
mass and the charge of the vector field. We investigate the behavior of the
entanglement entropy of dual field theory in this model. When the above two
model parameters change, we observe the second order, first order and zeroth
order phase transitions from the behavior of the entanglement entropy at some
intermediate temperatures. These imply that the entanglement entropy can
indicate not only the occurrence of the phase transition, but also the order of
the phase transition. The entanglement entropy is indeed a good probe to phase
transition. Furthermore, the "retrograde condensation" which is a sub-dominated
phase is also reflected on the entanglement entropy.Comment: figures added; accepted by Nuclear Physics
J/\psi polarization in photo-production up-to the next-to-leading order of QCD
We investigate the J/psi polarization in photoproduction at the Hadron
Electron Ring Accelerator(HERA) up to the next-to-leading order of QCD. The
results show that the transverse momentum p_t and energy fraction z
distributions of J/psi production do not agree with the observed ones very
well. The theoretical uncertainties for the z distributions of the J/psi
polarization parameters with respect to various choices of the renormalization
and factorization scales are too large to give an accurate prediction. The
uncertainties for the p_t distributions of these parameters are small when
p_t>3GeV and the obtained p_t distributions can not describe the experimental
data even in this region.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. Discussion on the theoretical uncertainties from
the choice of renormalization scale was adde
Single cell functional proteomics for assessing immune response in cancer therapy: technology, methods, and applications
In the past decade, significant progresses have taken place in the field of cancer
immunotherapeutics, which are being developed for most human cancers. New
immunotherapeutics, such as Ipilimumab (anti-CTLA-4), have been approved for clinical
treatment; cell-based immunotherapies such as adoptive cell transfer (ACT) have either
passed the final stage of human studies (e.g., Sipuleucel-T) for the treatment of selected
neoplastic malignancies or reached the stage of phase II/III clinical trials. Immunotherapetics
has become a sophisticated field. Multimodal therapeutic regimens comprising
several functional modules (up to five in the case of ACT) have been developed to provide
focused therapeutic responses with improved efficacy and reduced side-effects. However,
a major challenge remains: the lack of effective and clinically applicable immune assessment
methods. Due to the complexity of antitumor immune responses within patients, it
is difficult to provide comprehensive assessment of therapeutic efficacy and mechanism.
To address this challenge, new technologies have been developed to directly profile the
cellular immune functions and the functional heterogeneity. With the goal to measure the
functional proteomics of single immune cells, these technologies are informative, sensitive,
high-throughput, and highly multiplex. They have been used to uncover new knowledge
of cellular immune functions and have been utilized for rapid, informative, and longitudinal
monitoring of immune response in clinical anti-cancer treatment. In addition, new computational
tools are required to integrate high-dimensional data sets generated from the
comprehensive, single cell level measurements of patient’s immune responses to guide
accurate and definitive diagnostic decision. These single cell immune function assessment
tools will likely contribute to new understanding of therapy mechanism, pre-treatment
stratification of patients, and ongoing therapeutic monitoring and assessment
The Most Familiar Stranger: The Acculturation Of Mainland Chinese Students Studying In Taiwan
Mainland China and Taiwan have a homogenous macroculture, but a heterogenous microculture. To understand the acculturation of students from mainland China to Taiwan, the present study applies Berry’s(1997) two-dimensional model of acculturation, together with the concept of cultural types as its analytical framework, using focus group interviews to analyze different directions of acculturation among students from mainland China in Taiwan. The results show that regarding personal values, due to Taiwan’s restrictions on students from mainland China and the fact that they must eventually return to their place of origin, the acculturation of students from mainland China mainly takes the “separation/segregation” mode. Regarding peer selection, due to differences between individuals in their interpersonal choices, they may adopt “separation/segregation” or “integration” modes. Regarding the period of residence in Taiwan, as students from mainland China spend longer in Taiwan, they tend more towards “integration.” However, when teachers show greater contempt for the culture of mainland China, the acculturation of students from mainland China tends toward the “separation/segregation” mode
Triangle singularity in the decay
In this work, we study the role of triangle singularity in the decay. We find that through a triangle mechanism,
involving a triangle loop composed by , and , this decay may
develop a triangle singularity and produce a visible peak in the invariant mass
around 1.73 GeV with a width of 0.02 GeV. Such a triangle
mechanism may also cause significant spin effects on the final , which
can be detected by measuring its spin density matrix elements. Our calculations
show that the branching ratios due to the triangle mechanism is Br()=. Hopefully, this
reaction can be investigated at BESIII and future experiments, e.g. Super
Tau-Charm Facility, and the narrow width of the induced structure, the moving
TS position and the distinct features of the spin density matrix elements of
the may serve as signals for the triangle singularity mechanism.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
Origin of Scaling Behavior of Protein Packing Density: A Sequential Monte Carlo Study of Compact Long Chain Polymers
Single domain proteins are thought to be tightly packed. The introduction of
voids by mutations is often regarded as destabilizing. In this study we show
that packing density for single domain proteins decreases with chain length. We
find that the radius of gyration provides poor description of protein packing
but the alpha contact number we introduce here characterize proteins well. We
further demonstrate that protein-like scaling relationship between packing
density and chain length is observed in off-lattice self-avoiding walks. A key
problem in studying compact chain polymer is the attrition problem: It is
difficult to generate independent samples of compact long self-avoiding walks.
We develop an algorithm based on the framework of sequential Monte Carlo and
succeed in generating populations of compact long chain off-lattice polymers up
to length . Results based on analysis of these chain polymers suggest
that maintaining high packing density is only characteristic of short chain
proteins. We found that the scaling behavior of packing density with chain
length of proteins is a generic feature of random polymers satisfying loose
constraint in compactness. We conclude that proteins are not optimized by
evolution to eliminate packing voids.Comment: 9 pages, 10 figures. Accepted by J. Chem. Phy
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