453 research outputs found
Re II and Other Exotic Spectra in HD 65949
Powerful astronomical spectra reveal an urgent need for additional work on
atomic lines, levels, and oscillator strengths. The star HD 65949 provides some
excellent examples of species rarely identified in stellar spectra. For
example, the Re II spectrum is well developed, with 17 lines between 3731 and
4904 [A], attributed wholly or partially to Re II. Classifications and
oscillator strengths are lacking for a number of these lines. The spectrum of
Os II is well identified. Of 14 lines attributed wholly or partially to Os II,
only one has an entry in the VALD database. We find strong evidence that Te II
is present. There are NO Te II lines in the VALD database. Ru II is clearly
present, but oscillator strengths for lines in the visual are lacking. There is
excellent to marginal evidence for a number of less commonly identified
species, including Kr II, Nb II, Sb II, Xe II, Pr III, Ho III, Au II, and Pt II
(probably Pt-198), to be present in the spectrum of HD 65949. The line Hg II at
3984 [A] is of outstanding strength, and all three lines of Multiplet 1 of Hg I
are present, even though the surface temperature of HD 65949 is relatively
high. Finally, we present the case of an unidentified, 24 [mA], line at 3859.63
[A], which could be the same feature seen in magnetic CP stars. It is typically
blended with a putative U II line used in cosmochronology.Comment: ASOS9 Poster (Lund, Sweden, August 2007), to be published in Journal
of Physics: Conference Series (JPCS), 6 pages 1 figur
Quantum transport through a DNA wire in a dissipative environment
Electronic transport through DNA wires in the presence of a strong
dissipative environment is investigated. We show that new bath-induced
electronic states are formed within the bandgap. These states show up in the
linear conductance spectrum as a temperature dependent background and lead to a
crossover from tunneling to thermal activated behavior with increasing
temperature. Depending on the strength of the electron-bath coupling, the
conductance at the Fermi level can show a weak exponential or even an algebraic
length dependence. Our results suggest a new environmental-induced transport
mechanism. This might be relevant for the understanding of molecular conduction
experiments in liquid solution, like those recently performed on poly(GC)
oligomers in a water buffer (B. Xu et al., Nano Lett 4, 1105 (2004)).Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Ab-initio study of model guanine assemblies: The role of pi-pi coupling and band transport
Several assemblies of guanine molecules are investigated by means of
first-principle calculations. Such structures include stacked and
hydrogen-bonded dimers, as well as vertical columns and planar ribbons,
respectively, obtained by periodically replicating the dimers. Our results are
in good agreement with experimental data for isolated molecules, isolated
dimers, and periodic ribbons. For stacked dimers and columns, the stability is
affected by the relative charge distribution of the pi orbitals in adjacent
guanine molecules. pi-pi coupling in some stacked columns induces dispersive
energy bands, while no dispersion is identified in the planar ribbons along the
connections of hydrogen bonds. The implications for different materials
comprised of guanine aggregates are discussed. The bandstructure of dispersive
configurations may justify a contribution of band transport (Bloch type) in the
conduction mechanism of deoxyguanosine fibres, while in DNA-like configurations
band transport should be negligible.Comment: 21 pages, 6 figures, 3 tables, to be published in Phys. Rev.
The diastereoselective Meth-Cohn epoxidation of camphor-derived vinyl sulfones
Some camphor-derived vinyl sulfones bearing oxygen functionality at the allylic position have been synthesized and their nucleophilic epoxidation reactions under Meth-Cohn conditions have been explored. The γ-oxygenated camphor-derived vinyl sulfones underwent mildly diastereoselective nucleophilic epoxidation reactions, affording the derived sulfonyloxiranes in up to 5.8:1 dr. The observed diastereoselectivities were sensitive to the reaction conditions employed. In contrast, no stereoselectivity was observed in the nucleophilic epoxidation of the corresponding γ-oxygenated isobornyl vinyl sulfone. A tentative mechanism has been proposed to explain the origins of the diastereoselectivit
Crystal Structure of the PIM2 Kinase in Complex with an Organoruthenium Inhibitor
BACKGROUND: The serine/threonine kinase PIM2 is highly expressed in human leukemia and lymphomas and has been shown to positively regulate survival and proliferation of tumor cells. Its diverse ATP site makes PIM2 a promising target for the development of anticancer agents. To date our knowledge of catalytic domain structures of the PIM kinase family is limited to PIM1 which has been extensively studied and which shares about 50% sequence identity with PIM2. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Here we determined the crystal structure of PIM2 in complex with an organoruthenium complex (inhibition in sub-nanomolar level). Due to its extraordinary shape complementarity this stable organometallic compound is a highly potent inhibitor of PIM kinases. SIGNIFICANCE: The structure of PIM2 revealed several differences to PIM1 which may be explored further to generate isoform selective inhibitors. It has also demonstrated how an organometallic inhibitor can be adapted to the binding site of protein kinases to generate highly potent inhibitors. ENHANCED VERSION: This article can also be viewed as an enhanced version in which the text of the article is integrated with interactive 3D representations and animated transitions. Please note that a web plugin is required to access this enhanced functionality. Instructions for the installation and use of the web plugin are available in Text S1
Tight-binding parameters for charge transfer along DNA
We systematically examine all the tight-binding parameters pertinent to
charge transfer along DNA. The molecular structure of the four DNA bases
(adenine, thymine, cytosine, and guanine) is investigated by using the linear
combination of atomic orbitals method with a recently introduced
parametrization. The HOMO and LUMO wavefunctions and energies of DNA bases are
discussed and then used for calculating the corresponding wavefunctions of the
two B-DNA base-pairs (adenine-thymine and guanine-cytosine). The obtained HOMO
and LUMO energies of the bases are in good agreement with available
experimental values. Our results are then used for estimating the complete set
of charge transfer parameters between neighboring bases and also between
successive base-pairs, considering all possible combinations between them, for
both electrons and holes. The calculated microscopic quantities can be used in
mesoscopic theoretical models of electron or hole transfer along the DNA double
helix, as they provide the necessary parameters for a tight-binding
phenomenological description based on the molecular overlap. We find that
usually the hopping parameters for holes are higher in magnitude compared to
the ones for electrons, which probably indicates that hole transport along DNA
is more favorable than electron transport. Our findings are also compared with
existing calculations from first principles.Comment: 15 pages, 3 figures, 7 table
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Historical ecology, human niche construction and landscape in pre-Columbian Amazonia: a case study of the geoglyph builders of Acre, Brazil
This paper applies concepts from the fields of historical ecology and human niche construction theory to interpret archaeological and palaeoecological data from the Brazilian state of Acre, southwest Amazonia, where modern deforestation has revealed hundreds of pre-Columbian monumental earthworks called 'geoglyphs', largely built between ca. 2000–650 cal. BP (calibrated years before present). Our main objective was to move away from the debate which currently dominates Amazonian archaeology over large- vs. small-scale pre-Columbian environmental impacts, and instead offer a more nuanced interpretation of human-environment interactions in our specific study area. Despite the difficulties presented by working with an incomplete regional archaeological dataset, interpreting our findings in light of these theoretical frameworks allowed us to re-think landscape history and ask new questions about a possible relationship between anthropogenic forests, symbolic capital and monument building in our particular study area
Green function techniques in the treatment of quantum transport at the molecular scale
The theoretical investigation of charge (and spin) transport at nanometer
length scales requires the use of advanced and powerful techniques able to deal
with the dynamical properties of the relevant physical systems, to explicitly
include out-of-equilibrium situations typical for electrical/heat transport as
well as to take into account interaction effects in a systematic way.
Equilibrium Green function techniques and their extension to non-equilibrium
situations via the Keldysh formalism build one of the pillars of current
state-of-the-art approaches to quantum transport which have been implemented in
both model Hamiltonian formulations and first-principle methodologies. We offer
a tutorial overview of the applications of Green functions to deal with some
fundamental aspects of charge transport at the nanoscale, mainly focusing on
applications to model Hamiltonian formulations.Comment: Tutorial review, LaTeX, 129 pages, 41 figures, 300 references,
submitted to Springer series "Lecture Notes in Physics
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