32,142 research outputs found
Clustering in a model with repulsive long-range interactions
A striking clustering phenomenon in the antiferromagnetic Hamiltonian
Mean-Field model has been previously reported. The numerically observed
bicluster formation and stabilization is here fully explained by a non linear
analysis of the Vlasov equation.Comment: 8 pages, 5 Fig
A Hamiltonian functional for the linearized Einstein vacuum field equations
By considering the Einstein vacuum field equations linearized about the
Minkowski metric, the evolution equations for the gauge-invariant quantities
characterizing the gravitational field are written in a Hamiltonian form by
using a conserved functional as Hamiltonian; this Hamiltonian is not the analog
of the energy of the field. A Poisson bracket between functionals of the field,
compatible with the constraints satisfied by the field variables, is obtained.
The generator of spatial translations associated with such bracket is also
obtained.Comment: 5 pages, accepted in J. Phys.: Conf. Serie
Constants of motion associated with alternative Hamiltonians
It is shown that if a non-autonomous system of first-order ordinary
differential equations is expressed in the form of the Hamilton equations in
terms of two different sets of coordinates, and , then the determinant and the trace of any power of a certain matrix
formed by the Poisson brackets of the with respect to , are constants of motion
Metagenomics for Bacteriology
The study of bacteria, or bacteriology, has gone through transformative waves since its inception in the 1600s. It all started by the visualization of bacteria using light microscopy by Antonie van Leeuwenhoek, when he first described “animalcules.” Direct cellular observation then evolved into utilizing different wavelengths on novel platforms such as electron, fluorescence, and even near-infrared microscopy. Understanding the link between microbes and disease (pathogenicity) began with the ability to isolate and cultivate organisms through aseptic methodologies starting in the 1700s. These techniques became more prevalent in the following centuries with the work of famous scientists such as Louis Pasteur and Robert Koch, and many others since then. The relationship between bacteria and the host’s immune system was first inferred in the 1800s, and to date is continuing to unveil its mysteries. During the last century, researchers initiated the era of molecular genetics. The discovery of the first-generation sequencing technology, the Sanger method, and, later, the polymerase chain reaction technology propelled the molecular genetics field by exponentially expanding the knowledge of relationship between gene structure and function. The rise of commercially available next-generation sequencing methodologies, in the beginning of this century, is drastically allowing larger amount of information to be acquired, in a manner open to the democratization of the approach
Hamilton-Jacobi theory for Hamiltonian systems with non-canonical symplectic structures
A proposal for the Hamilton-Jacobi theory in the context of the covariant
formulation of Hamiltonian systems is done. The current approach consists in
applying Dirac's method to the corresponding action which implies the inclusion
of second-class constraints in the formalism which are handled using the
procedure of Rothe and Scholtz recently reported. The current method is applied
to the nonrelativistic two-dimensional isotropic harmonic oscillator employing
the various symplectic structures for this dynamical system recently reported.Comment: 17 pages, no figure
Local continuity laws on the phase space of Einstein equations with sources
Local continuity equations involving background fields and variantions of the
fields, are obtained for a restricted class of solutions of the
Einstein-Maxwell and Einstein-Weyl theories using a new approach based on the
concept of the adjoint of a differential operator. Such covariant conservation
laws are generated by means of decoupled equations and their adjoints in such a
way that the corresponding covariantly conserved currents possess some
gauge-invariant properties and are expressed in terms of Debye potentials.
These continuity laws lead to both a covariant description of bilinear forms on
the phase space and the existence of conserved quantities. Differences and
similarities with other approaches and extensions of our results are discussed.Comment: LaTeX, 13 page
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