20,150 research outputs found
Is Accurate Understanding of Global Warming Necessary to Promote Willingness to Sacrifice?
Although not definitive, the authors\u27 study suggests potential benefits from having a general public better informed about global climate change. They find, e.g., that accurate information appears to increase willingness to accept personal sacrifice
Poly(ADP-Ribose) Polymerase 1 Accelerates Single-Strand Break Repair in Concert with Poly(ADP-Ribose) Glycohydrolase
Single-strand breaks are the commonest lesions arising in cells, and defects in their repair are implicated in neurodegenerative disease. One of the earliest events during single-strand break repair (SSBR) is the rapid synthesis of poly(ADP-ribose) (PAR) by poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP), followed by its rapid degradation by poly(ADP-ribose) glycohydrolase (PARG). While the synthesis of poly(ADP-ribose) is important for rapid rates of chromosomal SSBR, the relative importance of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase 1 (PARP-1) and PARP-2 and of the subsequent degradation of PAR by PARG is unclear. Here we have quantified SSBR rates in human A549 cells depleted of PARP-1, PARP-2, and PARG, both separately and in combination. We report that whereas PARP-1 is critical for rapid global rates of SSBR in human A549 cells, depletion of PARP-2 has only a minor impact, even in the presence of depleted levels of PARP-1. Moreover, we identify PARG as a novel and critical component of SSBR that accelerates this process in concert with PARP-1
Coupled Fluctuations near Critical Wetting
Recent work on the complete wetting transition has emphasized the role played
by the coupling of fluctuations of the order parameter at the wall and at the
depinning fluid interface. Extending this approach to the wetting transition
itself we predict a novel crossover effect associated with the decoupling of
fluctuations as the temperature is lowered towards the transition temperature
T_W. Using this we are able to reanalyse recent Monte-Carlo simulation studies
and extract a value \omega(T_W)=0.8 at T_W=0.9T_C in very good agreement with
long standing theoretical predictions.Comment: 4 pages, LaTex, 1 postscript figur
Gas-liquid critical point in ionic fluids
Based on the method of collective variables we develop the statistical field
theory for the study of a simple charge-asymmetric primitive model (SPM).
It is shown that the well-known approximations for the free energy, in
particular DHLL and ORPA, can be obtained within the framework of this theory.
In order to study the gas-liquid critical point of SPM we propose the method
for the calculation of chemical potential conjugate to the total number density
which allows us to take into account the higher order fluctuation effects. As a
result, the gas-liquid phase diagrams are calculated for . The results
demonstrate the qualitative agreement with MC simulation data: critical
temperature decreases when increases and critical density increases rapidly
with .Comment: 18 pages, 1 figur
Possible effects of charge frustration in NaCoO: bandwidth suppression, charge orders and resurrected RVB superconductivity
Charge frustration due to further neighbor Coulomb repulsion can have
dramatic effects on the electronic properties of NaCoO in the full
doping range. It can significantly reduce the effective mobility of the charge
carriers, leading to a low degeneracy temperature . Such
strongly renormalized Fermi liquid has rather unusual properties--from the
point of view of the ordinary metals with --but similar to
the properties that are actually observed in the NaCoO system. For
example, we show that the anomalous thermopower and Hall effect observed in
NaCoO may be interpreted along these lines. If the repulsion is
strong, it can also lead to charge order; nevertheless, away from the
commensurate dopings, the configurational constraints allow some mobility for
the charge carriers, i.e., there remains some ``metallic'' component. Finally,
the particularly strong bandwidth suppression around the commensurate
can help resurrect the RVB superconductivity, which would otherwise not be
expected near this high doping. These suggestions are demonstrated specifically
for a -like model with an additional nearest neighbor repulsion.Comment: 15 pages, 17 figure
Thermodynamic properties of spin-1/2 transverse XY chain with Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction: Exact solution for correlated Lorentzian disorder
We extend the consideration of the spin-1/2 transverse XY chain with
correlated Lorentzian disorder (Phys. Rev. B {\bf 55,} 14298 (1997)) for the
case of additional Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interspin interaction. It is shown how
the averaged density of states can be calculated exactly. Results are presented
for the density of states and the transverse magnetization.Comment: 2 figure
Expansion dynamics of Lennard-Jones systems
The dynamics of the expansion of a Lennard-Jones system, initially confined
at high density and subsequently expanding freely in the vacuum, is confronted
to an expanding statistical ensemble, derived in the diluted quasi-ideal
Boltzmann approximation. The description proves to be fairly accurate at
predicting average one-body global observables, but important deviations are
observed in the configuration-space structure of the events. Possible
implications for finite expanding physical systems are outlined
Mapping the phase diagram of strongly interacting matter
We employ a conformal mapping to explore the thermodynamics of strongly
interacting matter at finite values of the baryon chemical potential .
This method allows us to identify the singularity corresponding to the critical
point of a second-order phase transition at finite , given information
only at . The scheme is potentially useful for computing thermodynamic
properties of strongly interacting hot and dense matter in lattice gauge
theory. The technique is illustrated by an application to a chiral effective
model.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures; published versio
Ionic fluids: charge and density correlations near gas-liquid criticality
The correlation functions of an ionic fluid with charge and size asymmetry
are studied within the framework of the random phase approximation. The results
obtained for the charge-charge correlation function demonstrate that the
second-moment Stillinger-Lovett (SL) rule is satisfied away from the gas-liquid
critical point (CP) but not, in general, at the CP. However in the special case
of a model without size assymetry the SL rules are satisfied even at the CP.
The expressions for the density-density and charge-density correlation
functions valid far and close to the CP are obtained explicitely
Mary From Tipperary
https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/mmb-vp/5194/thumbnail.jp
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