77,708 research outputs found
A determinant formula for the Jones polynomial of pretzel knots
This paper presents an algorithm to construct a weighted adjacency matrix of
a plane bipartite graph obtained from a pretzel knot diagram. The determinant
of this matrix after evaluation is shown to be the Jones polynomial of the
pretzel knot by way of perfect matchings (or dimers) of this graph. The weights
are Tutte's activity letters that arise because the Jones polynomial is a
specialization of the signed version of the Tutte polynomial. The relationship
is formalized between the familiar spanning tree setting for the Tait graph and
the perfect matchings of the plane bipartite graph above. Evaluations of these
activity words are related to the chain complex for the Champanerkar-Kofman
spanning tree model of reduced Khovanov homology.Comment: 19 pages, 12 figures, 2 table
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Direct Freeform Fabrication of Spatially Heterogeneous Living Cell-Impregnated Implants
The objectives of this work are the development of the processes, materials, and tooling to
directly “3-D print” living, pre-seeded, patient-specific implants of spatially heterogeneous
compositions. The research presented herein attempts to overcome some of the challenges to
scaffolding, such as the difficulty of producing spatially heterogeneous implants that require
varied seeding densities and/or cell-type distributions. In the proposed approach, living implants
are fabricated by the layer-wise deposition of pre-cell-seeded alginate hydrogel. Although
alginate hydrogels have been previously used to mold living implants, the properties of the
alginate formulations used for molding were not suitable for 3-D printing. In addition to changing
the formulation to make the alginate hydrogels “printable,” we developed a robotic hydrogel
deposition system and supporting CAD software to deposit the gel in arbitrary geometries. We
demonstrated this technology’s capabilities by printing alginate gel implants of multiple materials
with various spatial heterogeneities, including, implants with completely embedded material
clusters. The process was determined to be both viable (94±5% n=15) and sterile (less than one
bacterium per 0.9 µL after 8 days of incubation). Additionally, we demonstrated the printing of a
meniscus cartilage-shaped gel generated directly from a CT Scan. The proposed approach may
hold advantages over other tissue printing efforts [5,9]. This technology has the potential to
overcome challenges to scaffolding and could enable the efficient fabrication of spatially
heterogeneous, patient-specific, living implants.Mechanical Engineerin
Modeling the Internet's Large-Scale Topology
Network generators that capture the Internet's large-scale topology are
crucial for the development of efficient routing protocols and modeling
Internet traffic. Our ability to design realistic generators is limited by the
incomplete understanding of the fundamental driving forces that affect the
Internet's evolution. By combining the most extensive data on the time
evolution, topology and physical layout of the Internet, we identify the
universal mechanisms that shape the Internet's router and autonomous system
level topology. We find that the physical layout of nodes form a fractal set,
determined by population density patterns around the globe. The placement of
links is driven by competition between preferential attachment and linear
distance dependence, a marked departure from the currently employed exponential
laws. The universal parameters that we extract significantly restrict the class
of potentially correct Internet models, and indicate that the networks created
by all available topology generators are significantly different from the
Internet
Adiabatic Elimination in a Lambda System
This paper deals with different ways to extract the effective two-dimensional
lower level dynamics of a lambda system excited by off-resonant laser beams. We
present a commonly used procedure for elimination of the upper level, and we
show that it may lead to ambiguous results. To overcome this problem and better
understand the applicability conditions of this scheme, we review two rigorous
methods which allow us both to derive an unambiguous effective two-level
Hamiltonian of the system and to quantify the accuracy of the approximation
achieved: the first one relies on the exact solution of the Schrodinger
equation, while the second one resorts to the Green's function formalism and
the Feshbach projection operator technique.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figure
Charge Transfer in Partition Theory
The recently proposed Partition Theory (PT) [J.Phys.Chem.A 111, 2229 (2007)]
is illustrated on a simple one-dimensional model of a heteronuclear diatomic
molecule. It is shown that a sharp definition for the charge of molecular
fragments emerges from PT, and that the ensuing population analysis can be used
to study how charge redistributes during dissociation and the implications of
that redistribution for the dipole moment. Interpreting small differences
between the isolated parts' ionization potentials as due to environmental
inhomogeneities, we gain insight into how electron localization takes place in
H2+ as the molecule dissociates. Furthermore, by studying the preservation of
the shapes of the parts as different parameters of the model are varied, we
address the issue of transferability of the parts. We find good transferability
within the chemically meaningful parameter regime, raising hopes that PT will
prove useful in chemical applications.Comment: 12 pages, 16 figure
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