441 research outputs found

    Instability and Periodic Deformation in Bilayer Membranes Induced by Freezing

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    The instability and periodic deformation of bilayer membranes during freezing processes are studied as a function of the difference of the shape energy between the high and the low temperature membrane states. It is shown that there exists a threshold stability condition, bellow which a planar configuration will be deformed. Among the deformed shapes, the periodic curved square textures are shown being one kind of the solutions of the associated shape equation. In consistency with recent expe rimental observations, the optimal ratio of period and amplitude for such a texture is found to be approximately equal to (2)^{1/2}\pi.Comment: 8 pages in Latex form, 1 Postscript figure. To be appear in Mod. Phys. Lett. B. 199

    Simulating the collapse transition of a two-dimensional semiflexible lattice polymer

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    It has been revealed by mean-field theories and computer simulations that the nature of the collapse transition of a polymer is influenced by its bending stiffness ϵb\epsilon_{\rm b}. In two dimensions, a recent analytical work demonstrated that the collapse transition of a partially directed lattice polymer is always first-order as long as ϵb\epsilon_{\rm b} is positive [H. Zhou {\em et al.}, Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 97}, 158302 (2006)]. Here we employ Monte Carlo simulation to investigate systematically the effect of bending stiffness on the static properties of a 2D lattice polymer. The system's phase-diagram at zero force is obtained. Depending on ϵb\epsilon_{\rm b} and the temperature TT, the polymer can be in one of three phases: crystal, disordered globule, or swollen coil. The crystal-globule transition is discontinuous, the globule-coil transition is continuous. At moderate or high values of ϵb\epsilon_{\rm b} the intermediate globular phase disappears and the polymer has only a discontinuous crystal-coil transition. When an external force is applied, the force-induced collapse transition will either be continuous or discontinuous, depending on whether the polymer is originally in the globular or the crystal phase at zero force. The simulation results also demonstrate an interesting scaling behavior of the polymer at the force-induced globule-coil transition.Comment: 16 page

    High-precision realization of robust quantum anomalous Hall state in a hard ferromagnetic topological insulator

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    The discovery of the quantum Hall (QH) effect led to the realization of a topological electronic state with dissipationless currents circulating in one direction along the edge of a two dimensional electron layer under a strong magnetic field. The quantum anomalous Hall (QAH) effect shares a similar physical phenomenon as the QH effect, whereas its physical origin relies on the intrinsic spin-orbit coupling and ferromagnetism.Here we report the experimental observation of the QAH state in V-doped (Bi,Sb)2Te3 films with the zero-field longitudinal resistance down to 0.00013+-0.00007h/e2 (~3.35+-1.76 ohm), Hall conductance reaching 0.9998+-0.0006e2/h and the Hall angle becoming as high as 89.993+-0.004degree at T=25mK. Further advantage of this system comes from the fact that it is a hard ferromagnet with a large coercive field (Hc>1.0T) and a relative high Curie temperature. This realization of robust QAH state in hard FMTIs is a major step towards dissipationless electronic applications without external fields.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figures, this is the final version, accepted by Nature Materials, forthcomin

    Reconstruct gene regulatory network using slice pattern model

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Gene expression time series array data has become a useful resource for investigating gene functions and the interactions between genes. However, the gene expression arrays are always mixed with noise, and many nonlinear regulatory relationships have been omitted in many linear models. Because of those practical limitations, inference of gene regulatory model from expression data is still far from satisfactory.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>In this study, we present a model-based computational approach, Slice Pattern Model (SPM), to identify gene regulatory network from time series gene expression array data. In order to estimate performances of stability and reliability of our model, an artificial gene network is tested by the traditional linear model and SPM. SPM can handle the multiple transcriptional time lags and more accurately reconstruct the gene network. Using SPM, a 17 time-series gene expression data in yeast cell cycle is retrieved to reconstruct the regulatory network. Under the reliability threshold, <it>θ </it>= 55%, 18 relationships between genes are identified and transcriptional regulatory network is reconstructed. Results from previous studies demonstrate that most of gene relationships identified by SPM are correct.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>With the help of pattern recognition and similarity analysis, the effect of noise has been limited in SPM method. At the same time, genetic algorithm is introduced to optimize parameters of gene network model, which is performed based on a statistic method in our experiments. The results of experiments demonstrate that the gene regulatory model reconstructed using SPM is more stable and reliable than those models coming from traditional linear model.</p

    DNA hybridization to mismatched templates: a chip study

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    High-density oligonucleotide arrays are among the most rapidly expanding technologies in biology today. In the {\sl GeneChip} system, the reconstruction of the target concentration depends upon the differential signal generated from hybridizing the target RNA to two nearly identical templates: a perfect match (PM) and a single mismatch (MM) probe. It has been observed that a large fraction of MM probes repeatably bind targets better than the PMs, against the usual expectation from sequence-specific hybridization; this is difficult to interpret in terms of the underlying physics. We examine this problem via a statistical analysis of a large set of microarray experiments. We classify the probes according to their signal to noise (S/NS/N) ratio, defined as the eccentricity of a (PM, MM) pair's `trajectory' across many experiments. Of those probes having large S/NS/N (>3>3) only a fraction behave consistently with the commonly assumed hybridization model. Our results imply that the physics of DNA hybridization in microarrays is more complex than expected, and they suggest new ways of constructing estimators for the target RNA concentration.Comment: 3 figures 1 tabl

    Depression Involved in the Chemotherapy Induced Event-based Prospective Memory Impairment in Breast Cancer Survivors

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    The aim of this study was to investigate the relationships between depression and occurrence of chemotherapy induced prospective memory impairment in patients with breast cancer (BC).The 63 BC patients before and after chemotherapy were administered with the self-rating depression scale (SDS) and a battery of cognitive neuropsychological tests including event-based and time-based prospective memory (EBPM and TBPM, respectively) tasks. The changes in their prospective memory and cognitive neuropsychological characteristics before and after chemotherapy were compared. Compared with the scores before chemotherapy, the EBPM score exhibited a statistically significant difference after chemotherapy (t = 6.069, P 0.05). Further, compared with the patients without depression, the patients with depression exhibited a statistically significant difference in the EBPM score (t = -4.348, P 0.05). Post-chemotherapy, EBPM and overall cognitive functions in BC patients merged with depression were found to decline, while TBPM did not show a significant change, suggesting that the combination of chemotherapy and depression might be related with the occurrence of post-chemotherapy EBPM impairment

    Stability analysis on the finite-temperature replica-symmetric and first-step replica-symmetry-broken cavity solutions of the random vertex cover problem

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    The vertex-cover problem is a prototypical hard combinatorial optimization problem. It was studied in recent years by physicists using the cavity method of statistical mechanics. In this paper, the stability of the finite-temperature replica-symmetric (RS) and the first-step replica-symmetry-broken (1RSB) cavity solutions of the vertex cover problem on random regular graphs of finite vertex-degree KK are analyzed by population dynamics simulations. We found that (1) the lowest temperature for the RS solution to be stable, TRS(K)T_{RS}(K), is not a monotonic function of KK, and (2) at relatively large connectivity KK and temperature TT slightly below the dynamic transition temperature Td(K)T_d(K), the 1RSB solutions with small but non-negative complexity values are stable. Similar results are obtained on random Poissonian graphs.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figure

    Seesaw mechanism in three flavors

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    We advance a method used to analyse the neutrino properties (masses and mixing) in the seesaw mechanism. Assuming the hierarchical Dirac and light neutrino masses we establish rather simple relations between the light and the heavy neutrino parameters in the favored region of the solar and the atmospheric neutrino experiments. A empirical condition satisfied by the RH mixing angles is obtained.Comment: 19 pages. Acceptted by Phys. Rev. D The part about the neutrino experiments is selected as a single section. The mistakes in spelling and grammer are corrected. Also, some equations are neewly numbere

    On the Munn-Silbey approach to polaron transport with off-diagonal coupling

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    Improved results using a method similar to the Munn-Silbey approach have been obtained on the temperature dependence of transport properties of an extended Holstein model incorporating simultaneous diagonal and off-diagonal exciton-phonon coupling. The Hamiltonian is partially diagonalized by a canonical transformation, and optimal transformation coefficients are determined in a self-consistent manner. Calculated transport properties exhibit substantial corrections on those obtained previously by Munn and Silbey for a wide range of temperatures thanks to a numerically exact evaluation and an added momentum-dependence of the transformation matrix. Results on the diffusion coefficient in the moderate and weak coupling regime show distinct band-like and hopping-like transport features as a function of temperature.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, accpeted in Journal of Physical Chemistry B: Shaul Mukamel Festschrift (2011
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