1,388 research outputs found

    Statistical properties of a localization-delocalization transition induced by correlated disorder

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    The exact probability distributions of the resistance, the conductance and the transmission are calculated for the one-dimensional Anderson model with long-range correlated off-diagonal disorder at E=0. It is proved that despite of the Anderson transition in 3D, the functional form of the resistance (and its related variables) distribution function does not change when there exists a Metal-Insulator transition induced by correlation between disorders. Furthermore, we derive analytically all statistical moments of the resistance, the transmission and the Lyapunov Exponent. The growth rate of the average and typical resistance decreases when the Hurst exponent HH tends to its critical value (Hcr=1/2H_{cr}=1/2) from the insulating regime. In the metallic regime H1/2H\geq1/2, the distributions become independent of size. Therefore, the resistance and the transmission fluctuations do not diverge with system size in the thermodynamic limit

    Spin and orbital moments of ultra-thin Fe films on various semiconductor surfaces

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    The magnetic moments of ultrathin Fe films on three different III-V semiconductor substrates, namely GaAs, InAs and In0.2Ga0.8As have been measured with X-ray magnetic circular dichroism at room temperature to assess their relative merits as combinations suitable for next-generation spintronic devices. The results revealed rather similar spin moments and orbital moments for the three systems, suggesting the relationship between film and semiconductor lattice parameters to be less critical to magnetic moments than magnetic anisotropy

    DIFFERENT ENZYMIC EXPRESSIONS OF MUTANTS OF HUMAN GLUCOSE-6-PHOSPHATE DEHYDROGENASE

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    Role of Glycated Proteins in the Diagnosis and Management of Diabetes: Research Gaps and Future Directions

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    Blood oligosaccharides are attached to many proteins after translation, forming glycoproteins. Glycosylation refers to an enzyme-mediated modification that alters protein function, for example, their life span or their interactions with other proteins (1). By contrast, glycation refers to a monosaccharide (usually glucose) attaching nonenzymatically to the amino group of a protein. Glycated hemoglobin is formed by the condensation of glucose with select amino acid residues, commonly lysine, in hemoglobin to form an unstable Schiff base (aldimine, pre-HbA1c) (Fig. 1). The Schiff base may dissociate or may undergo an Amadori rearrangement to form a stable ketoamine. Figure 1 Formation of glycated protein. A reversible interaction between a primary amino group (depicted as NH2) of a protein and the carbonyl group of d-glucose yields a labile intermediate, called a Schiff base. This can undergo a slow and spontaneous Amadori rearrangement to form a stable ketoamine. HbA1c is formed if glucose attaches to the N-terminal valine of the β-chain of hemoglobin. If the glucose attaches to proteins in the plasma, fructosamine or glycated albumin results. RBC, red blood cell. Glycated hemoglobin, particularly HbA1c, has for decades been widely incorporated into the management (and, more recently, the diagnosis) of patients with diabetes. An important attribute is that glycation occurs continuously over the lifetime of the protein, so the concentration of the glycated protein reflects the average blood glucose value over a period of time. This contrasts with the measurement of blood glucose, which reveals the glucose concentration at the instant blood is sampled and which is acutely altered by multiple factors such as hormones, illness, food ingestion, and exercise (2). While HbA1c is by far the most extensively used—and studied—glycated protein (2–4), other glycated proteins that have been evaluated in clinical studies include fructosamine, glycated albumin, and

    Non-Gaussian Features of Transmitted Flux of QSO's Lyα\alpha Absorption: Intermittent Exponent

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    We calculate the structure function and intermittent exponent of the 1.) Keck data, which consists of 29 high resolution, high signal to noise ratio (S/N) QSO Lyα\alpha absorption spectra, and 2.)the Lyα\alpha forest simulation samples produced via the pseudo hydro scheme for the low density cold dark matter (LCDM) model and warm dark matter (WDM) model with particle mass mW=300,600,800m_W=300, 600, 800 and 1000 eV. These two measures detect not only non-gaussianities, but also the type of non-gaussianty in the the field. We find that, 1.) the structure functions of the simulation samples are significantly larger than that of Keck data on scales less than about 100 h1^{-1} kpc, 2.) the intermittent exponent of the simulation samples is more negative than that of Keck data on all redshifts considered, 3.) the order-dependence of the structure functions of simulation samples are closer to the intermittency of hierarchical clustering on all scales, while the Keck data are closer to a lognormal field on small scales. These differences are independent of noise and show that the intermittent evolution modeled by the pseudo-hydro simulation is substantially different from observations, even though they are in good agreement in terms of second and lower order statistics. (Abridged)Comment: 17 pages, 13 figures. Accepted by Ap

    Nonlinear instability in flagellar dynamics: a notel modulation mechanism in sperm migration

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    Throughout biology, cells and organisms use flagella and cilia to propel fluid and achieve motility. The beating of these organelles, and the corresponding ability to sense, respond to and modulate this beat is central to many processes in health and disease. While the mechanics of flagellum–fluid interaction has been the subject of extensive mathematical studies, these models have been restricted to being geometrically linear or weakly nonlinear, despite the high curvatures observed physiologically. We study the effect of geometrical nonlinearity, focusing on the spermatozoon flagellum. For a wide range of physiologically relevant parameters, the nonlinear model predicts that flagellar compression by the internal forces initiates an effective buckling behaviour, leading to a symmetry-breaking bifurcation that causes profound and complicated changes in the waveform and swimming trajectory, as well as the breakdown of the linear theory. The emergent waveform also induces curved swimming in an otherwise symmetric system, with the swimming trajectory being sensitive to head shape—no signalling or asymmetric forces are required. We conclude that nonlinear models are essential in understanding the flagellar waveform in migratory human sperm; these models will also be invaluable in understanding motile flagella and cilia in other systems

    Dynamical approach to chains of scatterers

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    Linear chains of quantum scatterers are studied in the process of lengthening, which is treated and analysed as a discrete dynamical system defined over the manifold of scattering matrices. Elementary properties of such dynamics relate the transport through the chain to the spectral properties of individual scatterers. For a single-scattering channel case some new light is shed on known transport properties of disordered and noisy chains, whereas translationally invariant case can be studied analytically in terms of a simple deterministic dynamical map. The many-channel case was studied numerically by examining the statistical properties of scatterers that correspond to a certain type of transport of the chain i.e. ballistic or (partially) localised.Comment: 16 pages, 7 figure

    FIBONACCI SUPERLATTICES OF NARROW-GAP III-V SEMICONDUCTORS

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    We report theoretical electronic structure of Fibonacci superlattices of narrow-gap III-V semiconductors. Electron dynamics is accurately described within the envelope-function approximation in a two-band model. Quasiperiodicity is introduced by considering two different III-V semiconductor layers and arranging them according to the Fibonacci series along the growth direction. The resulting energy spectrum is then found by solving exactly the corresponding effective-mass (Dirac-like) wave equation using tranfer-matrix techniques. We find that a self-similar electronic spectrum can be seen in the band structure. Electronic transport properties of samples are also studied and related to the degree of spatial localization of electronic envelope-functions via Landauer resistance and Lyapunov coefficient. As a working example, we consider type II InAs/GaSb superlattices and discuss in detail our results in this system.Comment: REVTeX 3.0, 16 pages, 8 figures available upon request. To appear in Semiconductor Science and Technolog
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