19 research outputs found
Perturbative quantum gravity with the Immirzi parameter
We study perturbative quantum gravity in the first-order tetrad formalism.
The lowest order action corresponds to Einstein-Cartan plus a parity-odd term,
and is known in the literature as the Holst action. The coupling constant of
the parity-odd term can be identified with the Immirzi parameter of loop
quantum gravity. We compute the quantum effective action in the one-loop
expansion. As in the metric second-order formulation, we find that in the case
of pure gravity the theory is on-shell finite, and the running of Newton's
constant and the Immirzi parameter is inessential. In the presence of fermions,
the situation changes in two fundamental aspects. First, non-renormalizable
logarithmic divergences appear, as usual. Second, the Immirzi parameter becomes
a priori observable, and we find that it is renormalized by a four-fermion
interaction generated by radiative corrections. We compute its beta function
and discuss possible implications. The sign of the beta function depends on
whether the Immirzi parameter is larger or smaller than one in absolute value,
and the values plus or minus one are UV fixed-points (we work in Euclidean
signature). Finally, we find that the Holst action is stable with respect to
radiative corrections in the case of minimal coupling, up to higher order
non-renormalizable interactions.Comment: v2 minor amendment
Quantum Spacetime Phenomenology
I review the current status of phenomenological programs inspired by
quantum-spacetime research. I stress in particular the significance of results
establishing that certain data analyses provide sensitivity to effects
introduced genuinely at the Planck scale. And my main focus is on
phenomenological programs that managed to affect the directions taken by
studies of quantum-spacetime theories.Comment: 125 pages, LaTex. This V2 is updated and more detailed than the V1,
particularly for quantum-spacetime phenomenology. The main text of this V2 is
about 25% more than the main text of the V1. Reference list roughly double
The CouPSTU and TarPQM transporters in Rhodopseudomonas palustris: Redundant, promiscuous uptake systems for lignin-derived aromatic substrates
The biodegradation of lignin, one of the most abundant carbon compounds on Earth, has important biotechnological applications in the derivation of useful products from lignocellulosic wastes. The purple photosynthetic bacterium Rhodopseudomonas palustris is able to grow photoheterotrophically under anaerobic conditions on a range of phenylpropeneoid lignin monomers, including coumarate, ferulate, caffeate, and cinnamate. RPA1789 (CouP) is the periplasmic binding-protein component of an ABC system (CouPSTU; RPA1789, RPA1791–1793), which has previously been implicated in the active transport of this class of aromatic substrate. Here, we show using both intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence and isothermal titration calorimetry that CouP binds a range of phenylpropeneoid ligands with Kd values in the nanomolar range. The crystal structure of CouP with ferulate as the bound ligand shows H-bond interactions between the 4-OH group of the aromatic ring with His309 and Gln305. H-bonds are also made between the carboxyl group on the ferulate side chain and Arg197, Ser222, and Thr102. An additional transport system (TarPQM; RPA1782–1784), a member of the tripartite ATP-independent periplasmic (TRAP) transporter family, is encoded at the same locus as rpa1789 and several other genes involved in coumarate metabolism. We show that the periplasmic binding-protein of this system (TarP; RPA1782) also binds coumarate, ferulate, caffeate, and cinnamate with nanomolar Kd values. Thus, we conclude that R. palustris uses two redundant but energetically distinct primary and secondary transporters that both employ high-affinity periplasmic binding-proteins to maximise the uptake of lignin-derived aromatic substrates from the environment. Our data provide a detailed thermodynamic and structural basis for understanding the interaction of lignin-derived aromatic substrates with proteins and will be of use in the further exploitation of the flexible metabolism of R. palustris for anaerobic aromatic biotransformations
Imaging Metal-on-Metal Hip Replacements:the Norwich Experience
Adverse reaction to metal debris is a relatively recently described and often a silent complication of metal-on-metal (MOM) total hip replacements (THR). The Norfolk & Norwich University Hospital has been performing metal artefact reduction (MARS) MRI for 8 years in a variety of different types of MOM THR