11,598 research outputs found
Min-oscillations in Escherichia coli induced by interactions of membrane-bound proteins
During division it is of primary importance for a cell to correctly determine
the site of cleavage. The bacterium Escherichia coli divides in the center,
producing two daughter cells of equal size. Selection of the center as the
correct division site is in part achieved by the Min-proteins. They oscillate
between the two cell poles and thereby prevent division at these locations.
Here, a phenomenological description for these oscillations is presented, where
lateral interactions between proteins on the cell membrane play a key role.
Solutions to the dynamic equations are compared to experimental findings. In
particular, the temporal period of the oscillations is measured as a function
of the cell length and found to be compatible with the theoretical prediction.Comment: 17 pages, 5 figures. Submitted to Physical Biolog
On the particle paths and the stagnation points in small-amplitude deep-water waves
In order to obtain quite precise information about the shape of the particle
paths below small-amplitude gravity waves travelling on irrotational deep
water, analytic solutions of the nonlinear differential equation system
describing the particle motion are provided. All these solutions are not closed
curves. Some particle trajectories are peakon-like, others can be expressed
with the aid of the Jacobi elliptic functions or with the aid of the
hyperelliptic functions. Remarks on the stagnation points of the
small-amplitude irrotational deep-water waves are also made.Comment: to appear in J. Math. Fluid Mech. arXiv admin note: text overlap with
arXiv:1106.382
Mississippi River Research Conclusions Executive Summary
Briefing paper requested by Senator Bond detailing the conclusions from the Mississippi River research to date.Agricultural and Food Policy, Environmental Economics and Policy,
Persistent quantum interfering electron trajectories
The emission of above-ionization-threshold harmonics results from the
recombination of two electron wavepackets moving along a "short" and a "long"
trajectory in the atomic continuum. Attosecond pulse train generation has so
far been attributed to the short trajectory, attempted to be isolated through
targeted trajectory-selective phase matching conditions. Here, we provide
experimental evidence for the contribution of both trajectories to the harmonic
emission, even under phase matching conditions unfavorable for the long
trajectory. This is finger printed in the interference modulation of the
harmonic yield as a function of the driving laser intensity. The effect is also
observable in the sidebands yield resulting from the frequency mixing of the
harmonics and the driving laser field, an effect with consequences in
cross-correlation pulse metrology approaches.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figure
Polariton lasing in high-quality Selenide-based micropillars in the strong coupling regime
We have designed and fabricated all-epitaxial ZnSe-based optical micropillars
exhibiting the strong coupling regime between the excitonic transition and the
confined optical cavity modes. At cryogenic temperatures, under non-resonant
pulsed optical excitation, we demonstrate single transverse mode polariton
lasing operation in the micropillars. Owing to the high quality factors of
these microstructures, the lasing threshold remains low even in micropillars of
the smallest diameter. We show that this feature can be traced back to a
sidewall roughness grain size below 3 nm, and to suppressed in-plane polariton
escape.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Universality in escape from a modulated potential well
We show that the rate of activated escape from a periodically modulated
potential displays scaling behavior versus modulation amplitude . For
adiabatic modulation of an optically trapped Brownian particle, measurements
yield with . The theory gives
in the adiabatic limit and predicts a crossover to scaling as
approaches the bifurcation point where the metastable state disappears.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
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