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Band-collision gel electrophoresis.
Electrophoretic mobility shift assays are widely used in gel electrophoresis to study binding interactions between different molecular species loaded into the same well. However, shift assays can access only a subset of reaction possibilities that could be otherwise seen if separate bands of reagent species might instead be collisionally reacted. Here, we adapt gel electrophoresis by fabricating two or more wells in the same lane, loading these wells with different reagent species, and applying an electric field, thereby producing collisional reactions between propagating pulse-like bands of these species, which we image optically. For certain pairs of anionic and cationic dyes, propagating bands pass through each other unperturbed; yet, for other pairs, we observe complexing and precipitation reactions, indicating strong attractive interactions. We generalize this band-collision gel electrophoresis (BCGE) approach to other reaction types, including acid-base, ligand exchange, and redox, as well as to colloidal species in passivated large-pore gels
Partial twisting for scalar mesons
The possibility of imposing partially twisted boundary conditions is
investigated for the scalar sector of lattice QCD. According to the commonly
shared belief, the presence of quark-antiquark annihilation diagrams in the
intermediate state generally hinders the use of the partial twisting. Using
effective field theory techniques in a finite volume, and studying the scalar
sector of QCD with total isospin I=1, we however demonstrate that partial
twisting can still be performed, despite the fact that annihilation diagrams
are present. The reason for this are delicate cancellations, which emerge due
to the graded symmetry in partially quenched QCD with valence, sea and ghost
quarks. The modified Luescher equation in case of partial twisting is given.Comment: 35 pages, 4 figure
Evaluation and Verification of Bottom Acoustic Reverberation Statistics Predicted by the Point Scattering Model
The point scatteringmodel offers a parameterization of the reverberation probability density function (pdf) in terms of the coefficient of excess (kurtosis) and a coherent component represented by a harmonic process with random phase. In this paper the potential utility of this parametrization is investigated in the context of seafloor characterization. The problem of separating out the effect of each parameter is discussed. Computer simulations are used to verify model predictions on the reverberation quadrature, envelope, and phase pdf. As part of the verification study, the scatterer density was determined from the kurtosis of the reverberation quadrature pdf. A statistical analysis of this procedure points to reduced estimate accuracy with decreasing kurtosis. Additional computer simulations show that the chosen pdf family, developed under the assumption of a Poissonscatterer distribution, is flexible enough to fit reverberation data generated by non‐Poisson scatterer distributions exhibiting a degree of clustering or regularity. A computer experiment demonstrates how this parametrization can be used in conjunction with a simple sonar geometry to generate acoustic signatures for seafloor classification. In addition, real reverberation data collected by a Sea Beam sonar system in two different seafloor areas are interpreted according to the chosen parametrization
The Optical Potential on the Lattice
The extraction of hadron-hadron scattering parameters from lattice data by
using the L\"uscher approach becomes increasingly complicated in the presence
of inelastic channels. We propose a method for the direct extraction of the
complex hadron-hadron optical potential on the lattice, which does not require
the use of the multi-channel L\"uscher formalism. Moreover, this method is
applicable without modifications if some inelastic channels contain three or
more particles.Comment: 26 pages, 12 figure
Phenomenological Aspects of No-Scale Inflation Models
We discuss phenomenological aspects of no-scale supergravity inflationary
models motivated by compactified string models, in which the inflaton may be
identified either as a K\"ahler modulus or an untwisted matter field, focusing
on models that make predictions for the scalar spectral index and the
tensor-to-scalar ratio that are similar to the Starobinsky model. We
discuss possible patterns of soft supersymmetry breaking, exhibiting examples
of the pure no-scale type , of the CMSSM type with
universal and at a high scale, and of the mSUGRA type with
boundary conditions at the high input scale. These may be
combined with a non-trivial gauge kinetic function that generates gaugino
masses , or one may have a pure gravity mediation scenario where
trilinear terms and gaugino masses are generated through anomalies. We also
discuss inflaton decays and reheating, showing possible decay channels for the
inflaton when it is either an untwisted matter field or a K\"ahler modulus.
Reheating is very efficient if a matter field inflaton is directly coupled to
MSSM fields, and both candidates lead to sufficient reheating in the presence
of a non-trivial gauge kinetic function.Comment: 41 pages, 6 figure
No-Scale Inflation
Supersymmetry is the most natural framework for physics above the TeV scale,
and the corresponding framework for early-Universe cosmology, including
inflation, is supergravity. No-scale supergravity emerges from generic string
compactifications and yields a non-negative potential, and is therefore a
plausible framework for constructing models of inflation. No-scale inflation
yields naturally predictions similar to those of the Starobinsky model based on
gravity, with a tilted spectrum of scalar perturbations: , and small values of the tensor-to-scalar perturbation ratio ,
as favoured by Planck and other data on the cosmic microwave background (CMB).
Detailed measurements of the CMB may provide insights into the embedding of
inflation within string theory as well as its links to collider physics.Comment: Invited contribution to the forthcoming Classical and Quantum Gravity
focus issue on "Planck and the fundamentals of cosmology". 22 pages, 7
figures, uses psfra
A No-Scale Inflationary Model to Fit Them All
The magnitude of B-mode polarization in the cosmic microwave background as
measured by BICEP2 favours models of chaotic inflation with a quadratic potential, whereas data from the Planck satellite favour a small
value of the tensor-to-scalar perturbation ratio that is highly consistent
with the Starobinsky model. Reality may lie somewhere between these
two scenarios. In this paper we propose a minimal two-field no-scale
supergravity model that interpolates between quadratic and Starobinsky-like
inflation as limiting cases, while retaining the successful prediction .Comment: 25 pages, 12 figure
Calculations of Inflaton Decays and Reheating: with Applications to No-Scale Inflation Models
We discuss inflaton decays and reheating in no-scale Starobinsky-like models
of inflation, calculating the effective equation-of-state parameter, ,
during the epoch of inflaton decay, the reheating temperature, ,
and the number of inflationary e-folds, , comparing analytical
approximations with numerical calculations. We then illustrate these results
with applications to models based on no-scale supergravity and motivated by
generic string compactifications, including scenarios where the inflaton is
identified as an untwisted-sector matter field with direct Yukawa couplings to
MSSM fields, and where the inflaton decays via gravitational-strength
interactions. Finally, we use our results to discuss the constraints on these
models imposed by present measurements of the scalar spectral index and
the tensor-to-scalar perturbation ratio , converting them into constraints
on , the inflaton decay rate and other parameters of specific no-scale
inflationary models.Comment: 33 pages, 14 figure
Continuous families of solitary waves in non-symmetric complex potentials: A Melnikov theory approach
The existence of stationary solitary waves in symmetric and non-symmetric complex potentials
is studied by means of Melnikov’s perturbation method. The latter provides analytical conditions
for the existence of such waves that bifurcate from the homogeneous nonlinear modes of the system
and are located at specific positions with respect to the underlying potential. It is shown that the
necessary conditions for the existence of continuous families of stationary solitary waves, as they arise
from Melnikov theory, provide general constraints for the real and imaginary part of the potential,
that are not restricted to symmetry conditions or specific types of potentials. Direct simulations
are used to compare numerical results with the analytical predictions, as well as to investigate the
propagation dynamics of the solitary waves.European Union project AEI/FEDER MAT2016-79866-
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