29,474 research outputs found

    Interactions between Membrane Inclusions on Fluctuating Membranes

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    We model membrane proteins as anisotropic objects characterized by symmetric-traceless tensors and determine the coupling between these order-parameters and membrane curvature. We consider the interactions between transmembrane proteins that respect up-down (reflection) symmetry of bilayer membranes and that have circular or non-circular cross-sectional areas in the tangent-plane of membranes. Using a field theoretic approach, we find non-entropic 1/R41/R^{4} interactions between reflection-symmetry-breaking transmembrane proteins with circular cross-sectional area and entropic 1/R41/R^{4} interactions between transmembrane proteins with circular cross-section that do not break up-down symmetry in agreement with previous calculations. We also find anisotropic 1/R41/R^{4} interactions between reflection-symmetry-conserving transmembrane proteins with non-circular cross-section, anisotropic 1/R21/R^{2} interactions between reflection-symmetry-breaking transmembrane proteins with non-circular cross-section, and non-entropic 1/R41/R^{4} many-particle interactions among non-transmembrane proteins. For large RR, these interactions might provide the dominant force inducing aggregation of the membrane proteins.Comment: REVTEX, 29 pages with 4 postscript figures compressed using uufiles. Introduction and Discussion sections revised. To appear in J. Phys. France I (September

    Disclination Asymmetry in Deformable Hexatic Membranes and the Kosterlitz-Thouless Transitions

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    A disclination in a hexatic membrane favors the development of Gaussian curvature localized near its core. The resulting global structure of the membrane has mean curvature, which is disfavored by curvature energy. Thus a membrane with an isolated disclination undergoes a buckling transition from a flat to a buckled state as the ratio κ/KA\kappa/K_{A} of the bending rigidity κ\kappa to the hexatic rigidity KAK_{A} is decreased. In this paper we calculate the buckling transition and the energy of both a positive and a negative disclination. A negative disclination has a larger energy and a smaller critical value of κ/KA\kappa/K_{A} at buckling than does a positive disclination. We use our results to obtain a crude estimate of the Kosterlitz-Thouless transition temperature in a membrane. This estimate is higher than the transition temperature recently obtained by the authors in a renormalization calculation.Comment: REVTEX, 16 pages with 5 postscript figures compressed using uufiles. Accepted for publication in J. Phys. France

    General polygamy inequality of multi-party quantum entanglement

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    Using entanglement of assistance, we establish a general polygamy inequality of multi-party entanglement in arbitrary dimensional quantum systems. For multi-party closed quantum systems, we relate our result with the monogamy of entanglement to show that the entropy of entanglement is an universal entanglement measure that bounds both monogamy and polygamy of multi-party quantum entanglement.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur

    Violation of Bell's inequality using classical measurements and non-linear local operations

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    We find that Bell's inequality can be significantly violated (up to Tsirelson's bound) with two-mode entangled coherent states using only homodyne measurements. This requires Kerr nonlinear interactions for local operations on the entangled coherent states. Our example is a demonstration of Bell-inequality violations using classical measurements. We conclude that entangled coherent states with coherent amplitudes as small as 0.842 are sufficient to produce such violations.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, to be published in Phys. Rev.

    Disruption of Molecular Clouds by Expansion of Dusty H II Regions

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    Dynamical expansion of H II regions around star clusters plays a key role in dispersing the surrounding dense gas and therefore in limiting the efficiency of star formation in molecular clouds. We use a semi-analytic method and numerical simulations to explore expansion of spherical dusty H II regions and surrounding neutral shells and the resulting cloud disruption. Our model for shell expansion adopts the static solutions of Draine (2011) for dusty H II regions and considers the contact outward forces on the shell due to radiation and thermal pressures as well as the inward gravity from the central star and the shell itself. We show that the internal structure we adopt and the shell evolution from the semi-analytic approach are in good agreement with the results of numerical simulations. Strong radiation pressure in the interior controls the shell expansion indirectly by enhancing the density and pressure at the ionization front. We calculate the minimum star formation efficiency ϵmin\epsilon_{min} required for cloud disruption as a function of the cloud's total mass and mean surface density. Within the adopted spherical geometry, we find that typical giant molecular clouds in normal disk galaxies have ϵmin≲10\epsilon_{min} \lesssim 10%, with comparable gas and radiation pressure effects on shell expansion. Massive cluster-forming clumps require a significantly higher efficiency of ϵmin≳50\epsilon_{min} \gtrsim 50% for disruption, produced mainly by radiation-driven expansion. The disruption time is typically of the order of a free-fall timescale, suggesting that the cloud disruption occurs rapidly once a sufficiently luminous H II region is formed. We also discuss limitations of the spherical idealization.Comment: 23 pages, 14 figures; Accepted for publication in Ap
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