298 research outputs found
Thermophysical and chemical characterization of charring ablative materials Final report
Thermophysical and chemical properties of charring ablative material
Disclination Asymmetry in Two-Dimensional Nematic Liquid Crystals with Unequal Frank Constants
The behavior of a thin film of nematic liquid crystal with unequal Frank
constants is discussed. Distinct Frank constants are found to imply unequal
core energies for and disclinations. Even so, a topological
constraint is shown to ensure that the bulk densities of the two types of
disclinations are the same. For a system with free boundary conditions, such as
a liquid membrane, unequal core energies simply renormalize the Gaussian
rigidity and line tension.Comment: RevTex forma
Multicanonical molecular dynamics by variable-temperature thermostats and variable-pressure barostats
Sampling from flat energy or density distributions has proven useful in equilibrating complex systems
with large energy barriers. Several thermostats and barostats are presented to sample these
flat distributions by molecular dynamics. These methods use a variable temperature or pressure
that is updated on the fly in the thermodynamic controller. These methods are illustrated on a
Lennard-Jones system and a structure-based model of proteins
A Multi-Scale Model for Correlation in B Cell VDJ Usage of Zebrafish
The zebrafish (\emph{Danio rerio}) is one of the model animals for study of
immunology because the dynamics in the adaptive immune system of zebrafish are
similar to that in higher animals. In this work, we built a multi-scale model
to simulate the dynamics of B cells in the primary and secondary immune
responses of zebrafish. We use this model to explain the reported correlation
between VDJ usage of B cell repertoires in individual zebrafish. We use a delay
ordinary differential equation (ODE) system to model the immune responses in
the 6-month lifespan of a zebrafish. This mean field theory gives the number of
high affinity B cells as a function of time during an infection. The sequences
of those B cells are then taken from a distribution calculated by a
"microscopic" random energy model. This generalized model shows that
mature B cells specific to one antigen largely possess a single VDJ
recombination. The model allows first-principles calculation of the
probability, , that two zebrafish responding to the same antigen will select
the same VDJ recombination. This probability increases with the B cell
population size and the B cell selection intensity. The probability
decreases with the B cell hypermutation rate. The multi-scale model predicts
correlations in the immune system of the zebrafish that are highly similar to
that from experiment.Comment: 29 pages, 10 figures, 1 tabl
Evolutionary processes in finite populations
We consider the evolution of large but finite populations on arbitrary fitness landscapes. We describe the
evolutionary process by a Markov-Moran process.We show that toO(1/N), the time-averaged fitness is lower for
the finite population than it is for the infinite population.We also showthat fluctuations in the number of individuals
for a given genotype can be proportional to a power of the inverse of the mutation rate. Finally, we show that the
probability for the system to take a given path through the fitness landscape can be nonmonotonic in system size
Dispersion Coefficients by a Field-Theoretic Renormalization of Fluid Mechanics
We consider subtle correlations in the scattering of fluid by randomly placed
obstacles, which have been suggested to lead to a diverging dispersion
coefficient at long times for high Peclet numbers, in contrast to finite
mean-field predictions. We develop a new master equation description of the
fluid mechanics that incorporates the physically relevant fluctuations, and we
treat those fluctuations by a renormalization group procedure. We find a finite
dispersion coefficient at low volume fraction of disorder and high Peclet
numbers.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure; to appear in Phys. Rev. Let
Shape Changes of Self-Assembled Actin Bilayer Composite Membranes
We report the self-assembly of thin actin shells beneath the membranes of
giant vesicles. Ion-carrier mediated influx of Mg2+ induces actin
polymerization in the initially spherical vesicles. Buckling of the vesicles
and the formation of blisters after thermally induced bilayer expansion is
demonstrated. Bilayer flickering is dominated by tension generated by its
coupling to the actin cortex. Quantitative flicker analysis suggests the
bilayer and the actin cortex are separated by 0.4 \mum to 0.5 \mum due to
undulation forces.Comment: pdf-file, has been accepted by PR
Two-Dimensional Diffusion in the Presence of Topological Disorder
How topological defects affect the dynamics of particles hopping between
lattice sites of a distorted, two-dimensional crystal is addressed.
Perturbation theory and numerical simulations show that weak, short-ranged
topological disorder leads to a finite reduction of the diffusion coefficient.
Renormalization group theory and numerical simulations suggest that
longer-ranged disorder, such as that from randomly placed dislocations or
random disclinations with no net disclinicity, leads to subdiffusion at long
times.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figure
Renormalization of Drift and Diffusivity in Random Gradient Flows
We investigate the relationship between the effective diffusivity and
effective drift of a particle moving in a random medium. The velocity of the
particle combines a white noise diffusion process with a local drift term that
depends linearly on the gradient of a gaussian random field with homogeneous
statistics. The theoretical analysis is confirmed by numerical simulation. For
the purely isotropic case the simulation, which measures the effective drift
directly in a constant gradient background field, confirms the result
previously obtained theoretically, that the effective diffusivity and effective
drift are renormalized by the same factor from their local values. For this
isotropic case we provide an intuitive explanation, based on a {\it spatial}
average of local drift, for the renormalization of the effective drift
parameter relative to its local value. We also investigate situations in which
the isotropy is broken by the tensorial relationship of the local drift to the
gradient of the random field. We find that the numerical simulation confirms a
relatively simple renormalization group calculation for the effective
diffusivity and drift tensors.Comment: Latex 16 pages, 5 figures ep
Free Energies of Isolated 5- and 7-fold Disclinations in Hexatic Membranes
We examine the shapes and energies of 5- and 7-fold disclinations in
low-temperature hexatic membranes. These defects buckle at different values of
the ratio of the bending rigidity, , to the hexatic stiffness constant,
, suggesting {\em two} distinct Kosterlitz-Thouless defect proliferation
temperatures. Seven-fold disclinations are studied in detail numerically for
arbitrary . We argue that thermal fluctuations always drive
into an ``unbuckled'' regime at long wavelengths, so that
disclinations should, in fact, proliferate at the {\em same} critical
temperature. We show analytically that both types of defects have power law
shapes with continuously variable exponents in the ``unbuckled'' regime.
Thermal fluctuations then lock in specific power laws at long wavelengths,
which we calculate for 5- and 7-fold defects at low temperatures.Comment: LaTeX format. 17 pages. To appear in Phys. Rev.
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