31 research outputs found
Self-diffusion in a monatomic glassforming liquid embedded in the hyperbolic plane
We study by Molecular Dynamics simulation the slowing down of particle motion
in a two-dimensional monatomic model: a Lennard-Jones liquid on the hyperbolic
plane. The negative curvature of the embedding space frustrates the long-range
extension of the local hexagonal order. As a result, the liquid avoids
crystallization and forms a glass. We show that, as temperature decreases, the
single particle motion displays the canonical features seen in real
glassforming liquids: the emergence of a "plateau" at intermediate times in the
mean square displacement and a decoupling between the local relaxation time and
the (hyperbolic) diffusion constant.Comment: Article for the "11th International Workshop on Complex Systems
Establishment of an in vitro chicken epithelial cell line model to investigate Eimeria tenella gamete development
© 2018 The Author(s). Background: Eimeria tenella infection leads to acute intestinal disorders responsible for important economic losses in poultry farming worldwide. The life-cycle of E. tenella is monoxenous with the chicken as the exclusive host; infection occurs in caecal epithelial cells. However, in vitro, the complete life-cycle of the parasite has only been propagated successfully in primary chicken kidney cells, which comprise undefined mixed cell populations; no cell line model has been able to consistently support the development of the sexual stages of the parasite. We therefore sought to develop a new model to study E. tenella gametogony in vitro using a recently characterised chicken cell line (CLEC-213) exhibiting an epithelial cell phenotype. Methods: CLEC-213 were infected with sporozoites from a precocious strain or with second generation merozoites (merozoites II) from wild type strains. Sexual stages of the parasite were determined both at the gene and protein levels. Results: To our knowledge, we show for the first time in CLEC-213, that sporozoites from a precocious strain of E. tenella were able to develop to gametes, as verified by measuring gene expression and by using antibodies to a microgamete-specific protein (EtFOA1: flagellar outer arm protein 1) and a macrogamete-specific protein (EtGAM-56), but oocysts were not observed. However, both gametes and oocysts were observed when cells were infected with merozoites II from wild type strains, demonstrating that completion of the final steps of the parasite cycle is possible in CLEC-213 cells. Conclusion: The epithelial cell line CLEC-213 constitutes a useful avian tool for studying Eimeria epithelial cell interactions and the effect of drugs on E. tenella invasion, merogony and gametogony
Periodic boundary conditions on the pseudosphere
We provide a framework to build periodic boundary conditions on the
pseudosphere (or hyperbolic plane), the infinite two-dimensional Riemannian
space of constant negative curvature. Starting from the common case of periodic
boundary conditions in the Euclidean plane, we introduce all the needed
mathematical notions and sketch a classification of periodic boundary
conditions on the hyperbolic plane. We stress the possible applications in
statistical mechanics for studying the bulk behavior of physical systems and we
illustrate how to implement such periodic boundary conditions in two examples,
the dynamics of particles on the pseudosphere and the study of classical spins
on hyperbolic lattices.Comment: 30 pages, minor corrections, accepted to J. Phys.
Thermodynamics and structure of simple liquids in the hyperbolic plane
We provide a consistent statistical-mechanical treatment for describing the
thermodynamics and the structure of fluids embedded in the hyperbolic plane. In
particular, we derive a generalization of the virial equation relating the bulk
thermodynamic pressure to the pair correlation function and we develop the
appropriate setting for extending the integral-equation approach of
liquid-state theory in order to describe the fluid structure. We apply the
formalism and study the influence of negative space curvature on two types of
systems that have been recently considered: Coulombic systems, such as the one-
and two-component plasma models, and fluids interacting through short-range
pair potentials, such as the hard-disk and the Lennard-Jones models.Comment: 25 pages, 10 Figure
Phase Transition of the Ising model on a Hyperbolic Lattice
The matrix product structure is considered on a regular lattice in the
hyperbolic plane. The phase transition of the Ising model is observed on the
hyperbolic lattice by means of the corner-transfer-matrix
renormalization group (CTMRG) method. Calculated correlation length is always
finite even at the transition temperature, where mean-field like behavior is
observed. The entanglement entropy is also always finite.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Aging and relaxation near Random Pinning Glass Transitions
Pinning particles at random in supercooled liquids is a promising route to
make substantial progress on the glass transition problem. Here we develop a
mean-field theory by studying the equilibrium and non-equilibrium dynamics of
the spherical p-spin model in presence of a fraction c of pinned spins. Our
study shows the existence of two dynamic critical lines: one corresponding to
usual Mode Coupling transitions and the other one to dynamic spinodal
transitions. Quenches in the portion of the c - T phase diagram delimited by
those two lines leads to aging. By extending our results to finite dimensional
systems we predict non-interrupted aging only for quenches on the ideal glass
transition line and two very different types of equilibrium relaxations for
quenches below and above it.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
Braided racks, Hurwitz actions and Nichols algebras with many cubic relations
We classify Nichols algebras of irreducible Yetter-Drinfeld modules over
groups such that the underlying rack is braided and the homogeneous component
of degree three of the Nichols algebra satisfies a given inequality. This
assumption turns out to be equivalent to a factorization assumption on the
Hilbert series. Besides the known Nichols algebras we obtain a new example. Our
method is based on a combinatorial invariant of the Hurwitz orbits with respect
to the action of the braid group on three strands.Comment: v2: 35 pages, 6 tables, 14 figure
Probabilistic Reconstruction in Compressed Sensing: Algorithms, Phase Diagrams, and Threshold Achieving Matrices
Compressed sensing is a signal processing method that acquires data directly
in a compressed form. This allows one to make less measurements than what was
considered necessary to record a signal, enabling faster or more precise
measurement protocols in a wide range of applications. Using an
interdisciplinary approach, we have recently proposed in [arXiv:1109.4424] a
strategy that allows compressed sensing to be performed at acquisition rates
approaching to the theoretical optimal limits. In this paper, we give a more
thorough presentation of our approach, and introduce many new results. We
present the probabilistic approach to reconstruction and discuss its optimality
and robustness. We detail the derivation of the message passing algorithm for
reconstruction and expectation max- imization learning of signal-model
parameters. We further develop the asymptotic analysis of the corresponding
phase diagrams with and without measurement noise, for different distribution
of signals, and discuss the best possible reconstruction performances
regardless of the algorithm. We also present new efficient seeding matrices,
test them on synthetic data and analyze their performance asymptotically.Comment: 42 pages, 37 figures, 3 appendixe