73 research outputs found
Quantum mechanics emerges from information theory applied to causal horizons
It is suggested that quantum mechanics is not fundamental but emerges from
classical information theory applied to causal horizons. The path integral
quantization and quantum randomness can be derived by considering information
loss of fields or particles crossing Rindler horizons for accelerating
observers. This implies that information is one of the fundamental roots of all
physical phenomena. The connection between this theory and Verlinde's entropic
gravity theory is also investigated.Comment: REvtex4-1, 6pages, 2 figures, final versio
Solar-Sail Navigation: Estimation of Force, Moments, and Optical Parameters
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/77367/1/AIAA-24340-772.pd
Imprints of the Quantum World in Classical Mechanics
The imprints left by quantum mechanics in classical (Hamiltonian) mechanics
are much more numerous than is usually believed. We show Using no physical
hypotheses) that the Schroedinger equation for a nonrelativistic system of
spinless particles is a classical equation which is equivalent to Hamilton's
equations.Comment: Paper submitted to Foundations of Physic
Path Integrals and Their Application to Dissipative Quantum Systems
Introduction
Path Integrals
- Introduction
- Propagator
- Free Particle
- Path Integral Representation of Quantum Mechanics
- Particle on a Ring
- Particle in a Box
- Driven Harmonic Oscillator
- Semiclassical Approximation
- Imaginary Time Path Integral
Dissipative Systems
- Introduction
- Environment as Collection of Harmonic Oscillators
- Effective Action
Damped Harmonic Oscillator
- Partition Function
- Ground State Energy and Density of States
- Position Autocorrelation FunctionComment: 55 pages, 13 figures. To be published in "Coherent Evolution in Noisy
Environments", Lecture Notes in Physics
(http://link.springer.de/series/lnpp/) (Springer Verlag,
Berlin-Heidelberg-New York
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BENEFIT RISK JUDGMENTS FOR PATIENTS RECEIVING RETINOIDS ON A SHORT-TERM AND LONG-TERM BASIS - PANEL DISCUSSION
Alu expression in human cell lines and their retrotranspositional potential.
BACKGROUND: The vast majority of the 1.1 million Alu elements are retrotranspositionally inactive, where only a few loci referred to as 'source elements' can generate new Alu insertions. The first step in identifying the active Alu sources is to determine the loci transcribed by RNA polymerase III (pol III). Previous genome-wide analyses from normal and transformed cell lines identified multiple Alu loci occupied by pol III factors, making them candidate source elements.
FINDINGS: Analysis of the data from these genome-wide studies determined that the majority of pol III-bound Alus belonged to the older subfamilies Alu S and Alu J, which varied between cell lines from 62.5% to 98.7% of the identified loci. The pol III-bound Alus were further scored for estimated retrotransposition potential (ERP) based on the absence or presence of selected sequence features associated with Alu retrotransposition capability. Our analyses indicate that most of the pol III-bound Alu loci candidates identified lack the sequence characteristics important for retrotransposition.
CONCLUSIONS: These data suggest that Alu expression likely varies by cell type, growth conditions and transformation state. This variation could extend to where the same cell lines in different laboratories present different Alu expression patterns. The vast majority of Alu loci potentially transcribed by RNA pol III lack important sequence features for retrotransposition and the majority of potentially active Alu loci in the genome (scored high ERP) belong to young Alu subfamilies. Our observations suggest that in an in vivo scenario, the contribution of Alu activity on somatic genetic damage may significantly vary between individuals and tissues
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