1,488 research outputs found
Interelectronic-interaction effect on the transition probability in high-Z He-like ions
The interelectronic-interaction effect on the transition probabilities in
high-Z He-like ions is investigated within a systematic quantum electrodynamic
approach. The calculation formulas for the interelectronic-interaction
corrections of first order in 1/Z are derived using the two-time Green function
method. These formulas are employed for numerical evaluations of the magnetic
transition probabilities in heliumlike ions. The results of the calculations
are compared with experimental values and previous calculations
Relativistic calculations of isotope shifts in highly charged ions
The isotope shifts of forbidden transitions in Be- and B-like argon ions are
calculated. It is shown that only using the relativistic recoil operator can
provide a proper evaluation of the mass isotope shift, which strongly dominates
over the field isotope shift for the ions under consideration. Comparing the
isotope shifts calculated with the current experimental uncertainties indicates
very good perspectives for a first test of the relativistic theory of the
recoil effect in middle-Z ions
Recoil correction to the ground state energy of hydrogenlike atoms
The recoil correction to the ground state energy of hydrogenlike atoms is
calculated to all orders in \alpha Z in the range Z = 1-110. The nuclear size
corrections to the recoil effect are partially taken into account. In the case
of hydrogen, the relativistic recoil correction beyond the Salpeter
contribution and the nonrelativistic nuclear size correction to the recoil
effect, amounts to -7.2(2) kHz. The total recoil correction to the ground state
energy in hydrogenlike uranium (^{238}U^{91+}) constitutes 0.46 eV.Comment: 16 pages, 1 figure (eps), Latex, submitted to Phys.Rev.
Thermodynamics of Cooperative DNA Recognition at a Replication Origin and Transcription Regulatory Site
Binding cooperativity guides the formation of protein-nucleic acid complexes, in particular those that are highly regulated such as replication origins and transcription sites. Using the DNA binding domain of the origin binding and transcriptional regulator protein E2 from human papillomavirus type 16 as model, and through isothermal titration calorimetry analysis, we determined a positive, entropy-driven cooperativity upon binding of the protein to its cognate tandem double E2 site. This cooperativity is associated with a change in DNA structure, where the overall B conformation is maintained. Two homologous E2 domains, those of HPV18 and HPV11, showed that the enthalpic-entropic components of the reaction and DNA deformation can diverge. Because the DNA binding helix is almost identical in the three domains, the differences must lie dispersed throughout this unique dimeric β-barrel fold. This is in surprising agreement with previous results for this domain, which revealed a strong coupling between global dynamics and DNA recognition.Fil: Dellarole, Mariano. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Oficina de Coordinación Administrativa Parque Centenario. Instituto de Investigaciones Bioquimicas de Buenos Aires; Argentina. Fundación Instituto Leloir; ArgentinaFil: Sánchez Miguel, Ignacio Enrique. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales. Departamento de Química Biológica; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Oficina de Coordinación Administrativa Parque Centenario. Instituto de Investigaciones Bioquimicas de Buenos Aires; Argentina. Fundación Instituto Leloir; ArgentinaFil: de Prat Gay, Gonzalo. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Oficina de Coordinación Administrativa Parque Centenario. Instituto de Investigaciones Bioquimicas de Buenos Aires; Argentina. Fundación Instituto Leloir; Argentin
Evaluation of the two-photon exchange diagrams for the electron configuration in Li-like ions
We present ab initio calculations of the complete gauge-invariant set of
two-photon exchange graphs for the electron configuration in
Li-like ions. These calculations are an important step towards the precise
theoretical determination of the - transition energy in the
framework of QED.Comment: 17 pages, 6 figure
Relativistic nuclear recoil corrections to the energy levels of hydrogen-like and high lithium like atoms in all orders in
The relativistic nuclear recoil corrections to the energy levels of
low-laying states of hydrogen-like and high lithium-like atoms in all
orders in are calculated. The calculations are carried out using the
B-spline method for the Dirac equation.
For low the results of the calculation are in good agreement with the
-expansion results. It is found that the nuclear recoil
contribution, additional to the Salpeter's one, to the Lamb shift () of
hydrogen is . The total nuclear recoil correction to the energy
of the transition in lithium-like uranium
constitutes and is largely made up of QED contributions.Comment: 19 pages, latex, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Modulational Instability in Equations of KdV Type
It is a matter of experience that nonlinear waves in dispersive media,
propagating primarily in one direction, may appear periodic in small space and
time scales, but their characteristics --- amplitude, phase, wave number, etc.
--- slowly vary in large space and time scales. In the 1970's, Whitham
developed an asymptotic (WKB) method to study the effects of small
"modulations" on nonlinear periodic wave trains. Since then, there has been a
great deal of work aiming at rigorously justifying the predictions from
Whitham's formal theory. We discuss recent advances in the mathematical
understanding of the dynamics, in particular, the instability of slowly
modulated wave trains for nonlinear dispersive equations of KdV type.Comment: 40 pages. To appear in upcoming title in Lecture Notes in Physic
Precision Spectroscopy at Heavy Ion Ring Accelerator SIS300
Unique spectroscopic possibilities open up if a laser beam interacts with
relativistic lithium-like ions stored in the heavy ion ring accelerator SIS300
at the future Facility for Antiproton and Ion Research FAIR in Darmstadt,
Germany. At a relativistic factor gamma = 36 the 2P 1/2 level can be excited
from the 2S 1/2 ground state for any element with frequency doubled dye-lasers
in collinear geometry. Precise transition energy measurements can be performed
if the fluorescence photons, boosted in forward direction into the X-ray
region, are energetically analyzed with a single crystal monochromator. The
hyperfine structure can be investigated at the 2P 1/2 - 2S 1/2 transition for
all elements and at the 2P 3/2 - 2S 1/2 transition for elements with Z < 50.
Isotope shifts and nuclear moments can be measured with unprecedented
precision, in principle even for only a few stored radioactive species with
known nuclear spin. A superior relative line width in the order of 5E-7 may be
feasible after laser cooling, and even polarized external beams may be prepared
by optical pumping
Alpha Backgrounds for HPGe Detectors in Neutrinoless Double-Beta Decay Experiments
The Majorana Experiment will use arrays of enriched HPGe detectors to search
for the neutrinoless double-beta decay of 76Ge. Such a decay, if found, would
show lepton-number violation and confirm the Majorana nature of the neutrino.
Searches for such rare events are hindered by obscuring backgrounds which must
be understood and mitigated as much as possible. A potentially important
background contribution to this and other double-beta decay experiments could
come from decays of alpha-emitting isotopes in the 232Th and 238U decay chains
on or near the surfaces of the detectors. An alpha particle emitted external to
an HPGe crystal can lose energy before entering the active region of the
detector, either in some external-bulk material or within the dead region of
the crystal. The measured energy of the event will only correspond to a partial
amount of the total kinetic energy of the alpha and might obscure the signal
from neutrinoless double-beta decay. A test stand was built and measurements
were performed to quantitatively assess this background. We present results
from these measurements and compare them to simulations using Geant4. These
results are then used to measure the alpha backgrounds in an underground
detector in situ. We also make estimates of surface contamination tolerances
for double-beta decay experiments using solid-state detectors.Comment: 10 pages, 11 figures, submitted to NIM
Improving Gas Storage Development Planning Through Simulation-Optimization
This is the first of two papers describing the application of simulator-optimization methods to a natural gas storage field development planning problem. The results presented here illustrate the large gains in cost-effectiveness that can be made by employing the reservoir simulator as the foundation for a wide-ranging search for solutions to management problems. The current paper illustrates the application of these techniques given a deterministic view of the reservoir. A companion paper will illustrate adaptations needed to accommodate uncertainties regarding reservoir properties
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