176 research outputs found

    Transport and Dissipation in Quantum Pumps

    Full text link
    This paper is about adiabatic transport in quantum pumps. The notion of ``energy shift'', a self-adjoint operator dual to the Wigner time delay, plays a role in our approach: It determines the current, the dissipation, the noise and the entropy currents in quantum pumps. We discuss the geometric and topological content of adiabatic transport and show that the mechanism of Thouless and Niu for quantized transport via Chern numbers cannot be realized in quantum pumps where Chern numbers necessarily vanish.Comment: 31 pages, 10 figure

    Dynamics of a classical Hall system driven by a time-dependent Aharonov--Bohm flux

    Full text link
    We study the dynamics of a classical particle moving in a punctured plane under the influence of a strong homogeneous magnetic field, an electrical background, and driven by a time-dependent singular flux tube through the hole. We exhibit a striking classical (de)localization effect: in the far past the trajectories are spirals around a bound center; the particle moves inward towards the flux tube loosing kinetic energy. After hitting the puncture it becomes ``conducting'': the motion is a cycloid around a center whose drift is outgoing, orthogonal to the electric field, diffusive, and without energy loss

    Connecting protein and mRNA burst distributions for stochastic models of gene expression

    Full text link
    The intrinsic stochasticity of gene expression can lead to large variability in protein levels for genetically identical cells. Such variability in protein levels can arise from infrequent synthesis of mRNAs which in turn give rise to bursts of protein expression. Protein expression occurring in bursts has indeed been observed experimentally and recent studies have also found evidence for transcriptional bursting, i.e. production of mRNAs in bursts. Given that there are distinct experimental techniques for quantifying the noise at different stages of gene expression, it is of interest to derive analytical results connecting experimental observations at different levels. In this work, we consider stochastic models of gene expression for which mRNA and protein production occurs in independent bursts. For such models, we derive analytical expressions connecting protein and mRNA burst distributions which show how the functional form of the mRNA burst distribution can be inferred from the protein burst distribution. Additionally, if gene expression is repressed such that observed protein bursts arise only from single mRNAs, we show how observations of protein burst distributions (repressed and unrepressed) can be used to completely determine the mRNA burst distribution. Assuming independent contributions from individual bursts, we derive analytical expressions connecting means and variances for burst and steady-state protein distributions. Finally, we validate our general analytical results by considering a specific reaction scheme involving regulation of protein bursts by small RNAs. For a range of parameters, we derive analytical expressions for regulated protein distributions that are validated using stochastic simulations. The analytical results obtained in this work can thus serve as useful inputs for a broad range of studies focusing on stochasticity in gene expression

    Extinction Rates for Fluctuation-Induced Metastabilities : A Real-Space WKB Approach

    Full text link
    The extinction of a single species due to demographic stochasticity is analyzed. The discrete nature of the individual agents and the Poissonian noise related to the birth-death processes result in local extinction of a metastable population, as the system hits the absorbing state. The Fokker-Planck formulation of that problem fails to capture the statistics of large deviations from the metastable state, while approximations appropriate close to the absorbing state become, in general, invalid as the population becomes large. To connect these two regimes, a master equation based on a real space WKB method is presented, and is shown to yield an excellent approximation for the decay rate and the extreme events statistics all the way down to the absorbing state. The details of the underlying microscopic process, smeared out in a mean field treatment, are shown to be crucial for an exact determination of the extinction exponent. This general scheme is shown to reproduce the known results in the field, to yield new corollaries and to fit quite precisely the numerical solutions. Moreover it allows for systematic improvement via a series expansion where the small parameter is the inverse of the number of individuals in the metastable state

    Estimación del rendimiento de trigo en el departamento capital - La Pampa- basado en variables climáticas

    Get PDF
    El presente trabajo se realizó con el objeto de estimar el rendimiento de trigo, con anterioridad a la cosecha, en el Departamento Capital - La Pampa, República Argentina- a través de ciertas variables climáticas. Se analizó un periodo de catorce años (campaña 77/78-90/91), utilizando un análisis de correlación simple para seleccionar las variables más ligadas al rendimiento y posteriormente una regresión múltiple. Se encontraron como variables climáticas significativas la precipitación acumulada de octubre (pa 1), la tensión de vapor promedio de julio (tv2) y el viento máximo promedio de setiembre (vi3). La ecuación que liga dichas variables con el rendimiento de trigo (Y) es: Y=2576,732 + 7,022 pal - 104,614 tv2 - 38,992 vi3 (r2=0,91746), la cual permite estimar el rendimiento a corto plazo, si nos movemos dentro del rango de las variables independientes. Palabras claves: trigo, rendimiento, variables climáticas, regresión múltiple.Director: Lic. Laura Antón de Ferramola. Cátedra de Estadística

    Anderson localization for a class of models with a sign-indefinite single-site potential via fractional moment method

    Full text link
    A technically convenient signature of Anderson localization is exponential decay of the fractional moments of the Green function within appropriate energy ranges. We consider a random Hamiltonian on a lattice whose randomness is generated by the sign-indefinite single-site potential, which is however sign-definite at the boundary of its support. For this class of Anderson operators we establish a finite-volume criterion which implies that above mentioned the fractional moment decay property holds. This constructive criterion is satisfied at typical perturbative regimes, e. g. at spectral boundaries which satisfy 'Lifshitz tail estimates' on the density of states and for sufficiently strong disorder. We also show how the fractional moment method facilitates the proof of exponential (spectral) localization for such random potentials.Comment: 29 pages, 1 figure, to appear in AH

    Time-Energy coherent states and adiabatic scattering

    Full text link
    Coherent states in the time-energy plane provide a natural basis to study adiabatic scattering. We relate the (diagonal) matrix elements of the scattering matrix in this basis with the frozen on-shell scattering data. We describe an exactly solvable model, and show that the error in the frozen data cannot be estimated by the Wigner time delay alone. We introduce the notion of energy shift, a conjugate of Wigner time delay, and show that for incoming state ρ(H0)\rho(H_0) the energy shift determines the outgoing state.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figur

    Smooth adiabatic evolutions with leaky power tails

    Get PDF
    Adiabatic evolutions with a gap condition have, under a range of circumstances, exponentially small tails that describe the leaking out of the spectral subspace. Adiabatic evolutions without a gap condition do not seem to have this feature in general. This is a known fact for eigenvalue crossing. We show that this is also the case for eigenvalues at the threshold of the continuous spectrum by considering the Friedrichs model.Comment: Final form, to appear in J. Phys. A; 11 pages, no figure

    Localization via fractional moments for models on Z\mathbb{Z} with single-site potentials of finite support

    Full text link
    One of the fundamental results in the theory of localization for discrete Schr\"odinger operators with random potentials is the exponential decay of Green's function and the absence of continuous spectrum. In this paper we provide a new variant of these results for one-dimensional alloy-type potentials with finitely supported sign-changing single-site potentials using the fractional moment method.Comment: LaTeX-file, 26 pages with 2 LaTeX figure
    corecore