44,650 research outputs found
Probing the environment of emerin by Enhanced ascorbate peroxidase 2 (APEX2)-mediated proximity labeling.
Emerin is one of the best characterized proteins of the inner nuclear membrane, but can also occur at the level of the endoplasmic reticulum. We now use enhanced ascorbate peroxidase 2 (APEX2) to probe the environment of emerin. APEX2 can be used as a genetic tag that produces short-lived yet highly reactive biotin species, allowing the modification of proteins that interact with or are in very close proximity to the tagged protein. Biotinylated proteins can be isolated using immobilized streptavidin and analyzed by mass spectrometry. As an alternative to the standard approach with a genetic fusion of APEX2 to emerin, we also used RAPIDS (rapamycin- and APEX-dependent identification of proteins by SILAC), a method with improved specificity, where the peroxidase interacts with the protein of interest (i.e., emerin) only upon addition of rapamycin to the cells. We compare these different approaches, which, together, identify well-known interaction partners of emerin like lamin A and the lamina associated polypeptide 1 (LAP1), as well as novel proximity partners
Thermal breakdown of coherent backscattering: a case study of quantum duality
We investigate coherent backscattering of light by two harmonically trapped
atoms in the light of quantitative quantum duality. Including recoil and
Doppler shift close to an optical resonance, we calculate the interference
visibility as well as the amount of which-path information, both for zero and
finite temperature.Comment: published version with minor changes and an added figur
Geometric phases in electric dipole searches with trapped spin-1/2 particles in general fields and measurement cells of arbitrary shape with smooth or rough walls
The important role of geometric phases in searches for a permanent electric
dipole moment of the neutron, using Ramsey separated oscillatory field nuclear
magnetic resonance, was first noted by Commins and investigated in detail by
Pendlebury et al. Their analysis was based on the Bloch equations. In
subsequent work using the spin density matrix Lamoreaux and Golub showed the
relation between the frequency shifts and the correlation functions of the
fields seen by trapped particles in general fields (Redfield theory). More
recently we presented a solution of the Schr\"odinger equation for spin-
particles in circular cylindrical traps with smooth walls and exposed to
arbitrary fields [Steyerl et al.] Here we extend this work to show how the
Redfield theory follows directly from the Schr\"odinger equation solution. This
serves to highlight the conditions of validity of the Redfield theory, a
subject of considerable discussion in the literature [e.g., Nicholas et al.]
Our results can be applied where the Redfield result no longer holds, such as
observation times on the order of or shorter than the correlation time and
non-stochastic systems and thus we can illustrate the transient spin dynamics,
i.e. the gradual development of the shift with increasing time subsequent to
the start of the free precession. We consider systems with rough, diffuse
reflecting walls, cylindrical trap geometry with arbitrary cross section, and
field perturbations that do not, in the frame of the moving particles, average
to zero in time. We show by direct, detailed, calculation the agreement of the
results from the Schr\"odinger equation with the Redfield theory for the cases
of a rectangular cell with specular walls and of a circular cell with diffuse
reflecting walls.Comment: 20 pages, 8 figure
Convex Trace Functions on Quantum Channels and the Additivity Conjecture
We study a natural generalization of the additivity problem in quantum
information theory: given a pair of quantum channels, then what is the set of
convex trace functions that attain their maximum on unentangled inputs, if they
are applied to the corresponding output state?
We prove several results on the structure of the set of those convex
functions that are "additive" in this more general sense. In particular, we
show that all operator convex functions are additive for the Werner-Holevo
channel in 3x3 dimensions, which contains the well-known additivity results for
this channel as special cases.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figure. Published versio
Crustal structure and rift flank uplift of the Adare Trough, Antarctica
The Adare Trough, located 100 km northeast of Cape Adare, Antarctica, represents the extinct third arm of a Tertiary spreading ridge between East and West Antarctica. It is characterized by pronounced asymmetric rift flanks elevated up to over 2 km above the trough's basement, accompanied by a large positive mantle Bouguer anomaly. On the basis of recently acquired seismic reflection and ship gravity data, we invert mantle Bouguer anomalies from the Adare Trough and obtain an unexpectedly large oceanic crustal thickness maximum of 9–10.5 km underneath the extinct ridge. A regional positive residual basement depth anomaly between 1 and 2.5 km in amplitude characterizes ocean crust from offshore Victoria Land to the Balleny Islands and north of Iselin Bank. The observations and models indicate that the mid/late Tertiary episode of slow spreading between East and West Antarctica was associated with a mantle thermal anomaly. The increasing crustal thickness toward the extinct ridge indicates that this thermal mantle anomaly may have increased in amplitude through time during the Adare spreading episode. This scenario is supported by a mantle convection model, which indicates the formation and strengthening of a major regional negative upper mantle density anomaly in the southwest Pacific in the last 50 million years. The total amount of post-26 Ma extension associated with Adare Trough normal faulting was about 7.5 km, in anomalously thick oceanic crust with a lithospheric effective elastic thickness (EET) between 3.5 and 5 km. This corresponds to an age between 3 and 5 million years based on a thermal boundary layer model and supports a scenario in which the Adare Trough formed soon after spreading between East and West Antarctica ceased, confined to relatively weak lithosphere with anomalously thick oceanic crust. There is little evidence for major subsequent structural activity in the Adare trough area from the available seismic data, indicating that this part of the West Antarctic Rift system became largely inactive in the early Miocene, with the exception of minor structural reactivation which is visible in the seismic data as offsets up to end of the early Pliocene
Lagrangian Statistics of Navier-Stokes- and MHD-Turbulence
We report on a comparison of high-resolution numerical simulations of
Lagrangian particles advected by incompressible turbulent hydro- and
magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) flows. Numerical simulations were performed with up
to collocation points and 10 million particles in the Navier-Stokes
case and collocation points and 1 million particles in the MHD case. In
the hydrodynamics case our findings compare with recent experiments from
Mordant et al. [1] and Xu et al. [2]. They differ from the simulations of
Biferale et al. [3] due to differences of the ranges choosen for evaluating the
structure functions. In Navier-Stokes turbulence intermittency is stronger than
predicted by a multifractal approach of [3] whereas in MHD turbulence the
predictions from the multifractal approach are more intermittent than observed
in our simulations. In addition, our simulations reveal that Lagrangian
Navier-Stokes turbulence is more intermittent than MHD turbulence, whereas the
situation is reversed in the Eulerian case. Those findings can not consistently
be described by the multifractal modeling. The crucial point is that the
geometry of the dissipative structures have different implications for
Lagrangian and Eulerian intermittency. Application of the multifractal approach
for the modeling of the acceleration PDFs works well for the Navier-Stokes case
but in the MHD case just the tails are well described.Comment: to appear in J. Plasma Phy
Mesoscopic scattering of spin s particles
Quantum effects in weakly disordered systems are governed by the properties
of the elementary interaction between propagating particles and impurities.
Long range mesoscopic effects due to multiple scattering are derived by
iterating the single scattering vertex, which has to be appropriately
diagonalized. In the present contribution, we present a systematic and detailed
diagonalisation of the diffuson and cooperon vertices responsible for weak
localisation effects. We obtain general expressions for eigenvalues and
projectors onto eigenmodes, for any spin and arbitrary elementary interaction
with impurities. This description provides a common frame for a unified theory
of mesoscopic spin physics for electrons, photons, and other quantum particles.
We treat in detail the case of spin-flip scattering of electrons by freely
orientable magnetic impurities and briefly review the case of photon scattering
from degenerate dipole transitions in cold atomic gases.Comment: published version, with a new figure and new section
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