1,020 research outputs found
Calcium-independent exo-endocytosis coupling at small central synapses
At presynaptic terminals, neurotransmitters are released by synaptic vesicle exocytosis at the active zone. In order to maintain efficient neurotransmission and proper synaptic structure, sites of vesicle fusion must be cleared rapidly by endocytosis. Therefore, the coupling of exo- and endocytosis is crucial. Despite many years of research, the exact molecular and biophysical requirements for the coupling of exo- and endocytosis remain unclear. We investigate whether endocytosis can be triggered in a calcium-independent fashion by evoking calcium-independent exocytosis using a hypertonic sucrose solution. We demonstrate that endocytosis can be triggered, in the absence of calcium influx, in a clathrin-independent manner that relies on actin polymerization. Our findings point to a central role of membrane tension dependent on actin for efficient coupling of exo- and endocytosis
Superconducting and structural properties of plasma sprayed YBaCuO layers deposited on metallic substrates
The properties of plasma sprayed Y-Ba-Cu-O coatings deposited on metallic substrates are studied. Stainless steel, nickel steels and pure nickel are used as substrate. Y-Ba-Cu-O deposited on stainless steel and nickel steel reacts with the substrate. This interaction can be suppressed by using an yttria-stabilized zirconia (YsZ) diffusion barrier. However, after heat treatment the Y-Ba-Cu-O layers on YsZ show cracks perpendicular to the surface. As a result the critical current density is very low. The best results are obtained for Y-Ba-Cu-O deposited on pure nickel; here no cracks perpendicular to the surface are observed. The critical current increases with the anneal temperature but annealing for longer than 10 h does not seem to improve the superconducting properties any further
Uniform semiclassical wave function for coherent 2D electron flow
We find a uniform semiclassical (SC) wave function describing coherent
branched flow through a two-dimensional electron gas (2DEG), a phenomenon
recently discovered by direct imaging of the current using scanned probed
microscopy. The formation of branches has been explained by classical
arguments, but the SC simulations necessary to account for the coherence are
made difficult by the proliferation of catastrophes in the phase space. In this
paper, expansion in terms of "replacement manifolds" is used to find a uniform
SC wave function for a cusp singularity. The method is then generalized and
applied to calculate uniform wave functions for a quantum-map model of coherent
flow through a 2DEG. Finally, the quantum-map approximation is dropped and the
method is shown to work for a continuous-time model as well.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figure
Numerical simulations of the full ink-jet printing processes: From jetting to evaporation
Ink-jet printing requires to perfectly control both the jetting of droplets and the subsequent droplet evaporation and absorption dynamics. Considerable complexity arises due to the fact that ink is constituted of a mixture of different liquids, surfactants and pigments. Using a sharp-interface ALE finite element method, we numerically investigate the main aspects of ink-jet printing, both on the jetting side and on the drying side. We show how a short pause in jetting can result in clogged nozzles due to solvent evaporation and discuss approaches how to prevent this undesired phenomenon. Once the droplets have been jetted on paper and is evaporating, the print quality can be deteriorated by the well-known coffee-stain effect, i.e. the preferential deposition of particles near the rim of the droplet. This can be prevented in several ways, e.g. employing controlled Marangoni flow via surfactants or co-solvents or printing on a primer layer jetted in beforehand, thus creating a homogeneous deposition pattern for a perfect final printout
Ferromagnetism and Canted Spin Phase in AlAs/GaMnAs Single Quantum Wells: Monte Carlo Simulation
The magnetic order resulting from a confinement-adapted
Ruderman-Kittel-Kasuya-Yosida indirect exchange between magnetic moments in the
metallic phase of a AlAs/Ga(1-x)Mn(x)As quantum well is studied by Monte Carlo
simulation. This coupling mechanism involves magnetic moments and carriers
(holes), both coming from the same Mn(2+) ions. It leads to a paramagnetic, a
ferromagnetic, or a canted spin phase, depending on the carrier concentration,
and on the magnetic layer width. It is shown that high transition temperatures
may be obtained.Comment: 7 figure
Thermal diffusion of supersonic solitons in an anharmonic chain of atoms
We study the non-equilibrium diffusion dynamics of supersonic lattice
solitons in a classical chain of atoms with nearest-neighbor interactions
coupled to a heat bath. As a specific example we choose an interaction with
cubic anharmonicity. The coupling between the system and a thermal bath with a
given temperature is made by adding noise, delta-correlated in time and space,
and damping to the set of discrete equations of motion. Working in the
continuum limit and changing to the sound velocity frame we derive a
Korteweg-de Vries equation with noise and damping. We apply a collective
coordinate approach which yields two stochastic ODEs which are solved
approximately by a perturbation analysis. This finally yields analytical
expressions for the variances of the soliton position and velocity. We perform
Langevin dynamics simulations for the original discrete system which fully
confirm the predictions of our analytical calculations, namely noise-induced
superdiffusive behavior which scales with the temperature and depends strongly
on the initial soliton velocity. A normal diffusion behavior is observed for
very low-energy solitons where the noise-induced phonons also make a
significant contribution to the soliton diffusion.Comment: Submitted to PRE. Changes made: New simulations with a different
method of soliton detection. The results and conclusions are not different
from previous version. New appendixes containing information about the system
energy and soliton profile
N=8 superconformal gauge theories and M2 branes
Based on recent developments, in this letter we find 2+1 dimensional gauge
theories with scale invariance and N=8 supersymmetry. The gauge theories are
defined by a Lagrangian and are based on an infinite set of 3-algebras,
constructed as an extension of ordinary Lie algebras. Recent no-go theorems on
the existence of 3-algebras are circumvented by relaxing the assumption that
the invariant metric is positive definite. The gauge group is non compact, and
its maximally compact subgroup can be chosen to be any ordinary Lie group,
under which the matter fields are adjoints or singlets. The theories are parity
invariant and do not admit any tunable coupling constant. In the case of SU(N)
the moduli space of vacua contains a branch of the form (R^8)^N/S_N. These
properties are expected for the field theory living on a stack of M2 branes.Comment: 14 pages, no figure
Heat kernel and number theory on NC-torus
The heat trace asymptotics on the noncommutative torus, where generalized
Laplacians are made out of left and right regular representations, is fully
determined. It turns out that this question is very sensitive to the
number-theoretical aspect of the deformation parameters. The central condition
we use is of a Diophantine type. More generally, the importance of number
theory is made explicit on a few examples. We apply the results to the spectral
action computation and revisit the UV/IR mixing phenomenon for a scalar theory.
Although we find non-local counterterms in the NC theory on \T^4, we
show that this theory can be made renormalizable at least at one loop, and may
be even beyond
- …