690 research outputs found

    Damped finite-time-singularity driven by noise

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    We consider the combined influence of linear damping and noise on a dynamical finite-time-singularity model for a single degree of freedom. We find that the noise effectively resolves the finite-time-singularity and replaces it by a first-passage-time or absorbing state distribution with a peak at the singularity and a long time tail. The damping introduces a characteristic cross-over time. In the early time regime the probability distribution and first-passage-time distribution show a power law behavior with scaling exponent depending on the ratio of the non linear coupling strength to the noise strength. In the late time regime the behavior is controlled by the damping. The study might be of relevance in the context of hydrodynamics on a nanometer scale, in material physics, and in biophysics.Comment: 9 pages, 4 eps-figures, revtex4 fil

    Generalized contact process on random environments

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    Spreading from a seed is studied by Monte Carlo simulation on a square lattice with two types of sites affecting the rates of birth and death. These systems exhibit a critical transition between survival and extinction. For time- dependent background, this transition is equivalent to those found in homogeneous systems (i.e. to directed percolation). For frozen backgrounds, the appearance of Griffiths phase prevents the accurate analysis of this transition. For long times in the subcritical region, spreading remains localized in compact (rather than ramified) patches, and the average number of occupied sites increases logarithmically in the surviving trials.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figure

    The reaction Δ+NN+N+ϕ\Delta+N\to N+N+\phi in ion-ion collisions

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    We study the threshold ϕ\phi-meson production in the process Δ+NN+N+ϕ\Delta+N\to N+N+\phi, which appears as a possible important mechanism in high energy nuclei-nuclei collisions. The isotopic invariance of the strong interaction and the selection rules due to P-parity and total angular momentum result in a general and model independent parametrization of the spin structure of the matrix element in terms of three partial amplitudes. In the framework of one-pion exchange model these amplitudes can be derived in terms of the two threshold partial amplitudes for the process π+NN+ϕ\pi+N\to N+\phi. We predict the ratio of cross sections for ϕ\phi-meson production in pppp- and ΔN\Delta N-collisions and the polarization properties of the ϕ\phi-meson, in Δ+NN+N+ϕ\Delta+N\to N+N+\phi, as a function of a single parameter, which characterizes the relative role of transversal and longitudinal ϕ\phi-meson polarizations in the process π+NN+ϕ\pi+N\to N+\phi.Comment: 10 pages 3 figure

    Novel universality class of absorbing transitions with continuously varying critical exponents

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    The well-established universality classes of absorbing critical phenomena are directed percolation (DP) and directed Ising (DI) classes. Recently, the pair contact process with diffusion (PCPD) has been investigated extensively and claimed to exhibit a new type of critical phenomena distinct from both DP and DI classes. Noticing that the PCPD possesses a long-term memory effect, we introduce a generalized version of the PCPD (GPCPD) with a parameter controlling the memory effect. The GPCPD connects the DP fixed point to the PCPD point continuously. Monte Carlo simulations show that the GPCPD displays novel type critical phenomena which are characterized by continuously varying critical exponents. The same critical behaviors are also observed in models where two species of particles are coupled cyclically. We suggest that the long-term memory may serve as a marginal perturbation to the ordinary DP fixed point.Comment: 13 pages + 10 figures (Full paper version

    Spin-phonon coupled modes in the incommensurate phases of doped CuGeO3_{3}

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    The doping effect of the folded phonon mode at 98 cm1^{-1} was investigated on the Si-doped CuGeO3_3 by magneto-optical measurements in far-infrared (FIR) region under high magnetic field. The folded phonon mode at 98 cm1^{-1} appears not only in the dimerized (D) phase but also in the dimerized-anitiferromagnetic (DAF) phase on the doped CuGeO3_3. The splitting was observed in the incommensurate (IC) phase and the antiferromagnetically ordered incommensurate (IAF) phase above HCH_C. The split-off branches exhibit different field dependence from that of the pure CuGeO3_3 in the vicinity of HCH_C, and the discrepancy in the IAF phase is larger than that in the IC phase. It is caused by the interaction between the solitons and the impurities.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, resubmitted to Phys. Rev.

    Heat kernel regularization of the effective action for stochastic reaction-diffusion equations

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    The presence of fluctuations and non-linear interactions can lead to scale dependence in the parameters appearing in stochastic differential equations. Stochastic dynamics can be formulated in terms of functional integrals. In this paper we apply the heat kernel method to study the short distance renormalizability of a stochastic (polynomial) reaction-diffusion equation with real additive noise. We calculate the one-loop {\emph{effective action}} and its ultraviolet scale dependent divergences. We show that for white noise a polynomial reaction-diffusion equation is one-loop {\emph{finite}} in d=0d=0 and d=1d=1, and is one-loop renormalizable in d=2d=2 and d=3d=3 space dimensions. We obtain the one-loop renormalization group equations and find they run with scale only in d=2d=2.Comment: 21 pages, uses ReV-TeX 3.

    Retina-arrestin specific CD8+ T cells are not implicated in HLA-A29-positive birdshot chorioretinitis

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    Background: HLA-A29-positive birdshot chorioretinitis (BCR) is an inflammatory eye disorder that is generally assumed to be caused by an autoimmune response to HLA-A29-presented peptides from retinal arrestin (SAG), yet the epitopes recognized by CD8+ T cells from patients remain to be identified. Objectives: The identification of natural ligands of SAG presented by HLA-A29. To quantify CD8+ T cells reactive to antigenic SAG peptides presented by HLA-A29 in patients and controls. Methods: We performed mass-spectrometry based immunopeptidomics of HLA-A29 of antigen-presenting cell lines from patients engineered to express SAG. MHC-I Dextramer technology was utilised to determine expansion of antigen-specific CD8+ T cells reactive to SAG peptides in complex with HLA-A29 in a cohort of BCR patients, HLA-A29-positive controls, and HLA-A29-negative controls. Results: We report on the naturally presented antigenic SAG peptides identified by sequencing the HLA-A29 immunopeptidome of antigen-presenting cells of patients. We show that the N-terminally extended SAG peptide precursors can be trimmed in vitro by the antigen-processing aminopeptidases ERAP1 and ERAP2. Unexpectedly, no enhanced antigen engagement by CD8+ T cells upon stimulation with SAG peptides was observed in patients or HLA-A29-positive controls. Multiplexed HLA-A29-peptide dextramer profiling of a case-control cohort revealed that CD8+ T cells specific for these SAG peptides were neither detectable in peripheral blood nor in eye biopsies of patients. Conclusions: Collectively, these findings demonstrate that SAG is not a CD8+ T cell autoantigen and sharply contrast the paradigm in the pathogenesis of BCR. Therefore, the mechanism by which HLA-A29 is associated with BCR does not involve SAG

    Velocity-force characteristics of an interface driven through a periodic potential

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    We study the creep dynamics of a two-dimensional interface driven through a periodic potential using dynamical renormalization group methods. We find that the nature of weak-drive transport depends qualitatively on whether the temperature TT is above or below the equilibrium roughening transition temperature TcT_c. Above TcT_c, the velocity-force characteristics is Ohmic, with linear mobility exhibiting a jump discontinuity across the transition. For TTcT \le T_c, the transport is highly nonlinear, exhibiting an interesting crossover in temperature and weak external force FF. For intermediate drive, F>FF>F_*, we find near TcT_c^{-} a power-law velocity-force characteristics v(F)Fσv(F)\sim F^\sigma, with σ1t~\sigma-1\propto \tilde{t}, and well-below TcT_c, v(F)e(F/F)2t~v(F)\sim e^{-(F_*/F)^{2\tilde{t}}}, with t~=(1T/Tc)\tilde{t}=(1-T/T_c). In the limit of vanishing drive (FFF\ll F_*) the velocity-force characteristics crosses over to v(F)e(F0/F)v(F)\sim e^{-(F_0/F)}, and is controlled by soliton nucleation.Comment: 18 pages, submitted to Phys. Rev.

    Forward pi^0 Production and Associated Transverse Energy Flow in Deep-Inelastic Scattering at HERA

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    Deep-inelastic positron-proton interactions at low values of Bjorken-x down to x \approx 4.10^-5 which give rise to high transverse momentum pi^0 mesons are studied with the H1 experiment at HERA. The inclusive cross section for pi^0 mesons produced at small angles with respect to the proton remnant (the forward region) is presented as a function of the transverse momentum and energy of the pi^0 and of the four-momentum transfer Q^2 and Bjorken-x. Measurements are also presented of the transverse energy flow in events containing a forward pi^0 meson. Hadronic final state calculations based on QCD models implementing different parton evolution schemes are confronted with the data.Comment: 27 pages, 8 figures and 3 table
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