413 research outputs found
Scalar Representation and Conjugation of Set-Valued Functions
To a function with values in the power set of a pre-ordered, separated
locally convex space a family of scalarizations is given which completely
characterizes the original function. A concept of a Legendre-Fenchel conjugate
for set-valued functions is introduced and identified with the conjugates of
the scalarizations. Using this conjugate, weak and strong duality results are
proven.Comment: arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1012.435
Gauge-ball spectrum of the four-dimensional pure U(1) gauge theory
We investigate the continuum limit of the gauge-ball spectrum in the
four-dimensional pure U(1) lattice gauge theory. In the confinement phase we
identify various states scaling with the correlation length exponent . The square root of the string tension also scales with this
exponent, which agrees with the non-Gaussian fixed point exponent recently
found in the finite size studies of this theory. Possible scenarios for
constructing a non-Gaussian continuum theory with the observed gauge-ball
spectrum are discussed. The state, however, scales with a Gaussian
value . This suggests the existence of a second, Gaussian
continuum limit in the confinement phase and also the presence of a light or
possibly massless scalar in the non-Gaussian continuum theory. In the Coulomb
phase we find evidence for a few gauge-balls, being resonances in multi-photon
channels; they seem to approach the continuum limit with as yet unknown
critical exponents. The maximal value of the renormalized coupling in this
phase is determined and its universality confirmed.Comment: 46 pages, 12 figure
Forkhead Transcription Factor Fd3F Cooperates with Rfx to Regulate a Gene Expression Program for Mechanosensory Cilia Specialization
Cilia have evolved hugely diverse structures and functions to participate in a wide variety of developmental and physiological processes. Ciliary specialization requires differences in gene expression, but few transcription factors are known to regulate this, and their molecular function is unclear. Here, we show that the Drosophila Forkhead box (Fox) gene, fd3F, is required for specialization of the mechanosensory cilium of chordotonal (Ch) neurons. fd3F regulates genes for Ch-specific axonemal dyneins and TRPV ion channels, which are required for sensory transduction, and retrograde transport genes, which are required to differentiate their distinct motile and sensory ciliary zones. fd3F is reminiscent of vertebrate Foxj1, a motile cilia regulator, but fd3F regulates motility genes as part of a broader sensory regulation program. Fd3F cooperates with the pan-ciliary transcription factor, Rfx, to regulate its targets directly. This illuminates pathways involved in ciliary specialization and the molecular mechanism of transcription factors that regulate them
Scattering of Glueballs and Mesons in Compact in Dimensions
We study glueball and meson scattering in compact gauge theory in
a Hamiltonian formulation and on a momentum lattice. We compute ground state
energy and mass, and introduce a compact lattice momentum operator for the
computation of dispersion relations. Using a non-perturbative time-dependent
method we compute scattering cross sections for glueballs and mesons. We
compare our results with strong coupling perturbation theory.Comment: figures not included (hard copy only), LAVAL-PHY-94-05,
PARKS-PHY-94-0
Drosophila TRPN( = NOMPC) Channel Localizes to the Distal End of Mechanosensory Cilia
BACKGROUND: A TRPN channel protein is essential for sensory transduction in insect mechanosensory neurons and in vertebrate hair cells. The Drosophila TRPN homolog, NOMPC, is required to generate mechanoreceptor potentials and currents in tactile bristles. NOMPC is also required, together with a TRPV channel, for transduction by chordotonal neurons of the fly's antennal ear, but the TRPN or TRPV channels have distinct roles in transduction and in regulating active antennal mechanics. The evidence suggests that NOMPC is a primary mechanotransducer channel, but its subcellular location-key for understanding its exact role in transduction-has not yet been established. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Here, by immunostaining, we locate NOMPC at the tips of mechanosensory cilia in both external and chordotonal sensory neurons, as predicted for a mechanotransducer channel. In chordotonal neurons, the TRPN and TRPV channels are respectively segregated into distal and proximal ciliary zones. This zonal separation is demarcated by and requires the ciliary dilation, an intraciliary assembly of intraflagellar transport (IFT) proteins. CONCLUSIONS: Our results provide a strong evidence for NOMPC as a primary transduction channel in Drosophila mechansensory organs. The data also reveals a structural basis for the model of auditory chordotonal transduction in which the TRPN and TRPV channels play sequential roles in generating and amplifying the receptor potential, but have opposing roles in regulating active ciliary motility
Dynamic Range Compression in the Honey Bee Auditory System toward Waggle Dance Sounds
Honey bee foragers use a “waggle dance” to inform nestmates about direction and distance to locations of attractive food. The sound and air flows generated by dancer's wing and abdominal vibrations have been implicated as important cues, but the decoding mechanisms for these dance messages are poorly understood. To understand the neural mechanisms of honey bee dance communication, we analyzed the anatomy of antenna and Johnston's organ (JO) in the pedicel of the antenna, as well as the mechanical and neural response characteristics of antenna and JO to acoustic stimuli, respectively. The honey bee JO consists of about 300–320 scolopidia connected with about 48 cuticular “knobs” around the circumference of the pedicel. Each scolopidium contains bipolar sensory neurons with both type I and II cilia. The mechanical sensitivities of the antennal flagellum are specifically high in response to low but not high intensity stimuli of 265–350 Hz frequencies. The structural characteristics of antenna but not JO neurons seem to be responsible for the non-linear responses of the flagellum in contrast to mosquito and fruit fly. The honey bee flagellum is a sensitive movement detector responding to 20 nm tip displacement, which is comparable to female mosquito. Furthermore, the JO neurons have the ability to preserve both frequency and temporal information of acoustic stimuli including the “waggle dance” sound. Intriguingly, the response of JO neurons was found to be age-dependent, demonstrating that the dance communication is only possible between aged foragers. These results suggest that the matured honey bee antennae and JO neurons are best tuned to detect 250–300 Hz sound generated during “waggle dance” from the distance in a dark hive, and that sufficient responses of the JO neurons are obtained by reducing the mechanical sensitivity of the flagellum in a near-field of dancer. This nonlinear effect brings about dynamic range compression in the honey bee auditory system
A lattice study of 3D compact QED at finite temperature
We study the deconfinement phase transition and monopole properties in the
finite temperature 3D compact Abelian gauge model on the lattice. We predict
the critical coupling as function of the lattice size in a simplified model to
describe monopole binding. We demonstrate numerically that the monopoles are
sensitive to the transition. In the deconfinement phase the monopoles appear in
the form of a dilute gas of magnetic dipoles. In the confinement phase both
monopole density and string tension differ from semiclassical estimates if
monopole binding is neglected. However, the analysis of the monopole clusters
shows that the relation between the string tension and the density of monopoles
in charged clusters is in reasonable agreement with those predictions. We study
the cluster structure of the vacuum in both phases of the model.Comment: 18 pages, 14 EPS figures, LaTeX uses epsfig.st
Effective Field Theories
Effective field theories encode the predictions of a quantum field theory at
low energy. The effective theory has a fairly low ultraviolet cutoff. As a
result, loop corrections are small, at least if the effective action contains a
term which is quadratic in the fields, and physical predictions can be read
straight from the effective Lagrangean.
Methods will be discussed how to compute an effective low energy action from
a given fundamental action, either analytically or numerically, or by a
combination of both methods. Basically,the idea is to integrate out the high
frequency components of fields. This requires the choice of a "blockspin",i.e.
the specification of a low frequency field as a function of the fundamental
fields. These blockspins will be the fields of the effective field theory. The
blockspin need not be a field of the same type as one of the fundamental
fields, and it may be composite. Special features of blockspins in nonabelian
gauge theories will be discussed in some detail.
In analytical work and in multigrid updating schemes one needs interpolation
kernels \A from coarse to fine grid in addition to the averaging kernels
which determines the blockspin. A neural net strategy for finding optimal
kernels is presented.
Numerical methods are applicable to obtain actions of effective theories on
lattices of finite volume. The constraint effective potential) is of particular
interest. In a Higgs model it yields the free energy, considered as a function
of a gauge covariant magnetization. Its shape determines the phase structure of
the theory. Its loop expansion with and without gauge fields can be used to
determine finite size corrections to numerical data.Comment: 45 pages, 9 figs., preprint DESY 92-070 (figs. 3-9 added in ps
format
D-Theory: Field Theory via Dimensional Reduction of Discrete Variables
A new non-perturbative approach to quantum field theory --- D-theory --- is
proposed, in which continuous classical fields are replaced by discrete
quantized variables which undergo dimensional reduction. The 2-d classical O(3)
model emerges from the (2+1)-d quantum Heisenberg model formulated in terms of
quantum spins. Dimensional reduction is demonstrated explicitly by simulating
correlation lengths up to 350,000 lattice spacings using a loop cluster
algorithm. In the framework of D-theory, gauge theories are formulated in terms
of quantum links --- the gauge analogs of quantum spins. Quantum links are
parallel transporter matrices whose elements are non-commuting operators. They
can be expressed as bilinears of anticommuting fermion constituents. In quantum
link models dimensional reduction to four dimensions occurs, due to the
presence of a 5-d Coulomb phase, whose existence is confirmed by detailed
simulations using standard lattice gauge theory. Using Shamir's variant of
Kaplan's fermion proposal, in quantum link QCD quarks appear as edge states of
a 5-d slab. This naturally protects their chiral symmetries without
fine-tuning. The first efficient cluster algorithm for a gauge theory with a
continuous gauge group is formulated for the U(1) quantum link model. Improved
estimators for Wilson loops are constructed, and dimensional reduction to
ordinary lattice QED is verified numerically.Comment: 15 pages, LaTeX, including 9 encapsulated postscript figures.
Contribution to Lattice 97 by 5 authors, to appear in Nuclear Physics B
(Proceeding Supplements). Requires psfig.tex and espcrc2.st
Series Expansions for three-dimensional QED
Strong-coupling series expansions are calculated for the Hamiltonian version
of compact lattice electrodynamics in (2+1) dimensions, with 4-component
fermions. Series are calculated for the ground-state energy per site, the
chiral condensate, and the masses of `glueball' and positronium states.
Comparisons are made with results obtained by other techniques.Comment: 13 figure
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