262 research outputs found
TYPE II DNA: when the interfacial energy becomes negative
An important step in transcription of a DNA base sequence to a protein is the
initiation from the exact starting point, called promoter region. We propose a
physical mechanism for identification of the promoter region, which relies on a
new classification of DNAs into two types, Type-I and Type-II, like
superconductors, depending on the sign of the energy of the interface
separating the zipped and the unzipped phases. This is determined by the
energies of helical ordering and stretching over two independent length scales.
The negative interfacial energy in Type II DNA leads to domains of helically
ordered state separated by defect regions, or blobs, enclosed by the
interfaces. The defect blobs, pinned by non-coding promoter regions, would be
physically distinct from all other types of bubbles. We also show that the
order of the melting transition under a force is different for Type I and Type
II.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, Eq.(4) corrected in 4th versio
Thermodynamics as a nonequilibrium path integral
Thermodynamics is a well developed tool to study systems in equilibrium but
no such general framework is available for non-equilibrium processes. Only hope
for a quantitative description is to fall back upon the equilibrium language as
often done in biology. This gap is bridged by the work theorem. By using this
theorem we show that the Barkhausen-type non-equilibrium noise in a process,
repeated many times, can be combined to construct a special matrix
whose principal eigenvector provides the equilibrium distribution. For an
interacting system , and hence the equilibrium distribution, can be
obtained from the free case without any requirement of equilibrium.Comment: 15 pages, 5 eps files. Final version to appear in J Phys.
Statistics of leading digits leads to unification of quantum correlations
We show that the frequency distribution of the first significant digits of
the numbers in the data sets generated from a large class of measures of
quantum correlations, which are either entanglement measures, or belong to the
information-theoretic paradigm, exhibit a universal behaviour. In particular,
for Haar uniformly simulated arbitrary two-qubit states, we find that the
first-digit distribution corresponding to a collection of chosen computable
quantum correlation quantifiers tend to follow the first-digit law, known as
the Benford's law, when the rank of the states increases. Considering a
two-qubit state which is obtained from a system governed by paradigmatic spin
Hamiltonians, namely, the XY model in a transverse field, and the XXZ model, we
show that entanglement as well as information theoretic measures violate the
Benford's law. We quantitatively discuss the violation of the Benford's law by
using a violation parameter, and demonstrate that the violation parameter can
signal quantum phase transitions occurring in these models. We also comment on
the universality of the statistics of first significant digits corresponding to
appropriate measures of quantum correlations in the case of multipartite
systems as well as systems in higher dimensions.Comment: v1: 11 pages, 5 figures, 2 tables; v2: 11 pages, 6 figures, 2 tables,
new results added, extended version of the published pape
Classical integrability in the BTZ black hole
Using the fact the BTZ black hole is a quotient of AdS_3 we show that
classical string propagation in the BTZ background is integrable. We construct
the flat connection and its monodromy matrix which generates the non-local
charges. From examining the general behaviour of the eigen values of the
monodromy matrix we determine the set of integral equations which constrain
them. These equations imply that each classical solution is characterized by a
density function in the complex plane. For classical solutions which correspond
to geodesics and winding strings we solve for the eigen values of the monodromy
matrix explicitly and show that geodesics correspond to zero density in the
complex plane. We solve the integral equations for BMN and magnon like
solutions and obtain their dispersion relation. Finally we show that the set of
integral equations which constrain the eigen values of the monodromy matrix can
be identified with the continuum limit of the Bethe equations of a twisted
SL(2, R) spin chain at one loop.Comment: 45 pages, Reference added, typos corrected, discussion on geodesics
improved to include all geodesic
Organic waste as a sustainable feedstock for platform chemicals
Biorefineries have been established since the 1980s for biofuel production, and there has been a switch lately from first to second generation feedstocks in order to avoid the food versus fuel dilemma. To a lesser extent, many opportunities have been investigated for producing chemicals from biomass using by-products of the present biorefineries, simple waste streams. Current facilities apply intensive pre-treatments to deal with single substrate types such as carbohydrates. However, most organic streams such as municipal solid waste or algal blooms present a high complexity and variable mixture of molecules, which makes specific compound production and separation difficult. Here we focus on flexible anaerobic fermentation and hydrothermal processes that can treat complex biomass as a whole to obtain a range of products within an integrated biorefinery concept
Khesari (Lathyrus sativus L.), an ancient legume for future gain: An expedition collection from parts of West Bengal state of Eastern India
395-403Grasspea is one of the staple foods of the local people living in the eastern parts of India. An expedition was undertaken during March, 2020 to collect germplasm of grasspea in the lower-Gangetic riverine belt and coastal areas of West Bengal of eastern India lying between latitude 21.43-24.44°N and longitude 87.23-88.90°E. From the results of a structured questionnaire administered to grasspea farmers in 57 villages located in 96 local government areas, it appeared that grasspea is the primary winter pulse cultivated in this region. Large variability of germplasm exist, ranging from small to bold seed, early to late maturing types, moderate to the high biomass type of grasspea. Most of these landraces have been adopted over the years from neighbouring communities, but in a few instances, the varietal replacement was noted, which came either through the involvement of government departments or local seed dealers. The highest proportion of the accessions (52.38%) was collected from the Purba Medinipur district, and the lowest (19.05%) was from Paschim Medinipur. On-spot evaluation of morphological traits, variations was detected in the descriptor characteristics across the locations. A total of 21 accessions was collected and assessed on-spot for different characters, viz., the seed's size, shape, seed colour, taste and texture revealed significant variation. The implications of this survey results for grasspea improvement in India are discussed in the present study
Kinetic modeling studies of heterogeneously catalyzed biodiesel synthesis reactions
The heterogeneously catalyzed transesterification reaction for the production of biodiesel from triglycerides was investigated for reaction mechanism and kinetic constants. Three elementary reaction mechanisms Eley-Rideal (ER), Langmuir-Hinshelwood-Hougen-Watson (LHHW), and Hattori with assumptions, such as quasi-steady-state conditions for the surface species and methanol adsorption, and surface reactions as the rate-determining steps were applied to predict the catalyst surface coverage and the bulk concentration using a multiscale simulation framework. The rate expression based on methanol adsorption as the rate limiting in LHHW elementary mechanism has been found to be statistically the most reliable representation of the experimental data using hydrotalcite catalyst with different formulations
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