3,015 research outputs found
A Comparison of Bimolecular Reaction Models for Stochastic Reaction Diffusion Systems
Stochastic reaction-diffusion models have become an important tool in
studying how both noise in the chemical reaction process and the spatial
movement of molecules influences the behavior of biological systems. There are
two primary spatially-continuous models that have been used in recent studies:
the diffusion limited reaction model of Smoluchowski, and a second approach
popularized by Doi. Both models treat molecules as points undergoing Brownian
motion. The former represents chemical reactions between two reactants through
the use of reactive boundary conditions, with two molecules reacting instantly
upon reaching a fixed separation (called the reaction-radius). The Doi model
uses reaction potentials, whereby two molecules react with a fixed probability
per unit time, , when separated by less than the reaction radius. In
this work we study the rigorous relationship between the two models. For the
special case of a protein diffusing to a fixed DNA binding site, we prove that
the solution to the Doi model converges to the solution of the Smoluchowski
model as , with a rigorous
error bound (for any fixed ). We investigate by numerical
simulation, for biologically relevant parameter values, the difference between
the solutions and associated reaction time statistics of the two models. As the
reaction-radius is decreased, for sufficiently large but fixed values of
, these differences are found to increase like the inverse of the
binding radius.Comment: 21 pages, 3 Figures, Fixed typo in titl
Universal Non-perturbative Functions for SIDIS and Drell-Yan Processes
We update the well-known BLNY fit to the low transverse momentum Drell-Yan
lepton pair productions in hadronic collisions, by considering the constraints
from the semi-inclusive hadron production in deep inelastic scattering (SIDIS)
from HERMES and COMPASS experiments. We follow the Collins-Soper-Sterman (CSS)
formalism with the b_*-prescription. A universal non-perturbative form factor
associated with the transverse momentum dependent quark distributions is found
in the analysis with a new functional form different from that of BLNY. This
releases the tension between the BLNY fit to the Drell-Yan data with the SIDIS
data from HERMES/COMPASS in the CSS resummation formalism.Comment: 19 pages, 11 figures; updated the fit with running effects of
\alpha_{s}, \alpha_{em}, N_f; conclusion remains; more discussions on the
result
Resummation of High Order Corrections in Higgs Boson Plus Jet Production at the LHC
We study the effect of multiple parton radiation to Higgs boson plus jet
production at the LHC, by applying the transverse momentum dependent (TMD)
factorization formalism to resum large logarithmic contributions to all orders
in the expansion of the strong interaction coupling. We show that the
appropriate resummation scale should be the jet transverse momentum, rather
than the partonic center of mass energy which has been normally used in the TMD
resummation formalism. Furthermore, the transverse momentum distribution of the
Higgs boson, particularly near the lower cut-off applied on the jet transverse
momentum, can only be reliably predicted by the resummation calculation which
is free of the so-called Sudakov-shoulder singularity problem, present in
fixed-order calculations.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
The Design and Construction of a Rear Bumper with Incorporated Spare Tire Rack
This senior project outlines the design and construction of a rear bumper with incorporated spare tire and equipment rack for a 1946 Willys CJ2A Jeep. The spare tire rack is capable of swinging out away from the vehicle to allow for the use of the vehicle’s tailgate. The bumper was designed for strength, functionality and aesthetic qualities alike. Additionally, the bumper design considered all vehicle codes and regulations
The application of remotely sensed data in support of emergency rehabilitation of wildfire-damage areas
The depth, texture, and water holding capacity of the soil before the fire in the Bridge Creek area of Deschutes National Forest (1979) were determined from available aerial photography and LANDSAT MSS digital data. Three days after the fire was out, complete coverage of the burned area was acquired on 35 mm color infrared film from a near vertical or low oblique perspective. These photographs were used in assessing the condition of vegetation, and in predicting the likelihood of survival. Negatives from vertical natural photography obtained during the same flight were used to produce 3R prints from which large scale mosaics of the entire burned area were obtained. LANDSAT MSS data obtained on the day the fire was under control were used to evaluate vegetative vigor (by calculating a band 7/band 5 ratio value for each spectral class) and to determine the boundary between altered and unaltered land
Multipole gas thruster design
The development of a low field strength multipole thruster operating on both argon and xenon is described. Experimental results were obtained with a 15-cm diameter multipole thruster and are presented for a wide range of discharge-chamber configurations. Minimum discharge losses were 300-350 eV/ion for argon and 200-250 eV/ion for xenon. Ion beam flatness parameters in the plane of the accelerator grid ranged from 0.85 to 0.93 for both propellants. Thruster performance is correlated for a range of ion chamber sizes and operating conditions as well as propellant type and accelerator system open area. A 30-cm diameter ion source designed and built using the procedure and theory presented here-in is shown capable of low discharge losses and flat ion-beam profiles without optimization. This indicates that by using the low field strength multipole design, as well as general performance correlation information provided herein, it should be possible to rapidly translate initial performance specifications into easily fabricated, high performance prototypes
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