92,626 research outputs found
Study on the spectrum of the injected relativistic protons
About 10TeV gamma-ray emission within 10 pc region from the Galactic Center
had been reported by 4 independent groups. Considering that this TeV gamma-ray
emission is produced via a hadronic model, and the relativistic protons came
from the tidal disruption of stars by massive black holes, we investigate the
spectral nature of the injected relativistic protons required by the hadronic
model. The calculation was carried on the tidal disruption of the different
types of stars and the different propagation mechanisms of protons in the
interstellar medium. Compared with the observation data from HESS, we find for
the best fitting that the power-law index of the spectrum of the injected
protons is about -1.9, when a red giant star is tidally disrupted, and the
effective confinement of protons diffusion mechanism is adopted.Comment: 2 pages, IAU Symposium 25
Multiple phase slips phenomena in mesoscopic superconducting rings
We investigate the behavior of a mesoscopic one-dimensional ring in an
external magnetic field by simulating the time dependent Ginzburg-Landau
equations with periodic boundary conditions. We analyze the stability and the
different possible evolutions for the phase slip phenomena starting from a
metastable state. We find a stability condition relating the winding number of
the initial solution and the number of flux quanta penetrating the ring. The
analysis of multiple phase slips solutions is based on analytical results and
simulations. The role of the ratio of two characteristic times u is studied for
the case of a multiple phase slips transition. We found out that if u>>1,
consecutive multiple phase slips will be more favorable than simultaneous ones.
If u>1 is often a necessary
condition to reach the ground state. The influence of the Langevin noise on the
kinetics of the phase transition is discussed.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
Self-trapping of a Fermi super-fluid in a double-well potential in the BEC-unitarity crossover
We derive a generalized Gross-Pitaevskii density-functional equation
appropriate to study the Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) of dimers formed of
singlet spin-half Fermi pairs in the BEC-unitarity crossover while the
dimer-dimer scattering length changes from 0 to . Using an
effective one-dimensional form of this equation, we study the phenomenon of
dynamical self-trapping of a cigar-shaped Fermi super-fluid in the entire
BEC-unitarity crossover in a double-well potential. A simple two-mode model is
constructed to provide analytical insights. We also discuss the consequence of
our study on the self-trapping of an atomic BEC in a double-well potential.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figure
Scalable Text and Link Analysis with Mixed-Topic Link Models
Many data sets contain rich information about objects, as well as pairwise
relations between them. For instance, in networks of websites, scientific
papers, and other documents, each node has content consisting of a collection
of words, as well as hyperlinks or citations to other nodes. In order to
perform inference on such data sets, and make predictions and recommendations,
it is useful to have models that are able to capture the processes which
generate the text at each node and the links between them. In this paper, we
combine classic ideas in topic modeling with a variant of the mixed-membership
block model recently developed in the statistical physics community. The
resulting model has the advantage that its parameters, including the mixture of
topics of each document and the resulting overlapping communities, can be
inferred with a simple and scalable expectation-maximization algorithm. We test
our model on three data sets, performing unsupervised topic classification and
link prediction. For both tasks, our model outperforms several existing
state-of-the-art methods, achieving higher accuracy with significantly less
computation, analyzing a data set with 1.3 million words and 44 thousand links
in a few minutes.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure
Generalized Noiseless Quantum Codes utilizing Quantum Enveloping Algebras
A generalization of the results of Rasetti and Zanardi concerning avoiding
errors in quantum computers by using states preserved by evolution is
presented. The concept of dynamical symmetry is generalized from the level of
classical Lie algebras and groups to the level of dynamical symmetry based on
quantum Lie algebras and quantum groups (in the sense of Woronowicz). A natural
connection is proved between states preserved by representations of a quantum
group and states preserved by evolution with dynamical symmetry of the
appropriate universal enveloping algebra. Illustrative examples are discussed.Comment: 10 pages, LaTeX, 2 figures Postscrip
Dynamical Response of Nanomechanical Oscillators in Immiscible Viscous Fluid for in vitro Biomolecular Recognition
Dynamical response of nanomechanical cantilever structures immersed in a
viscous fluid is important to in vitro single-molecule force spectroscopy,
biomolecular recognition of disease-specific proteins, and the detection of
microscopic dynamics of proteins. Here we study the stochastic response of
biofunctionalized nanomechanical cantilevers beam in a viscous fluid. Using the
fluctuation-dissipation theorem we derive an exact expression for the spectral
density of the displacement and a linear approximation for the resonance
frequency shift. We find that in a viscous solution the frequency shift of the
nanoscale cantilever is determined by surface stress generated by biomolecular
interaction with negligible contributions from mass loading.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, RevTex4. See http://nano.bu.edu/ for related
paper
The PPARγ Agonist Rosiglitazone Suppresses Syngeneic Mouse SCC (Squamous Cell Carcinoma) Tumor Growth through an Immune-Mediated Mechanism
Recent evidence suggests that PPARγ agonists may promote anti-tumor immunity. We show that immunogenic PDV cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (CSCC) tumors are rejected when injected intradermally at a low cell number (1 × 106) into immune competent syngeneic hosts, but not immune deficient mice. At higher cell numbers (5 × 106 PDV cells), progressively growing tumors were established in 14 of 15 vehicle treated mice while treatment of mice with the PPARγ agonist rosiglitazone resulted in increased tumor rejection (5 of 14 tumors), a significant decrease in PDV tumor size, and a significant decrease in tumor cell Ki67 labeling. Rosiglitazone treatment had no effect on tumor rejection, tumor volume or PDV tumor cell proliferation in immune deficient NOD.CB17-PrkdcSCID/J mice. Rosiglitazone treatment also promoted an increase in tumor infiltrating CD3+ T-cells at both early and late time points. In contrast, rosiglitazone treatment had no significant effect on myeloid cells expressing either CD11b or Gr-1 but suppressed a late accumulation of myeloid cells expressing both CD11b and Gr-1, suggesting a potential role for CD11b+Gr-1+ myeloid cells in the late anti-tumor immune response. Overall, our data provides evidence that the PPARγ agonist rosiglitazone promotes immune-mediated anti-neoplastic activity against tumors derived from this immunogenic CSCC cell line
Fano Effect through Parallel-coupled Double Coulomb Islands
By means of the non-equilibrium Green function and equation of motion method,
the electronic transport is theoretically studied through a parallel-coupled
double quantum dots(DQD) in the presence of the on-dot Coulomb correlation,
with an emphasis put on the quantum interference. It has been found that in the
Coulomb blockage regime, the quantum interference between the bonding and
antiboding DQD states or that between their Coulomb blockade counterparts may
result in the Fano resonance in the conductance spectra, and the Fano peak
doublet may be observed under certain non-equilibrium condition. The
possibility of manipulating the Fano lineshape is predicted by tuning the
dot-lead coupling and magnetic flux threading the ring connecting the dots and
leads. Similar to the case without Coulomb interaction, the direction of the
asymmetric tail of Fano lineshape can be flipped by the external field. Most
importantly, by tuning the magnetic flux, the function of four relevant states
can be interchanged, giving rise to the swap effect, which might play a key
role as a qubit in the quantum computation.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
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