40,103 research outputs found
Hydrodynamic noise and Bjorken expansion
Using the Bjorken expansion model we study the effect of intrinsic
hydrodynamic noise on the correlations observed in heavy-ion collisions.Comment: Proceedings of Quark Matter 2012, (August 13-18, 2012, Washington
DC), 4 pages, 3 figure
Properties of tug-of-war model for cargo transport by molecular motors
Molecular motors are essential components for the biophysical functions of
the cell. Our current quantitative understanding of how multiple motors move
along a single track is not complete; even though models and theories for
single motor chemomechanics abound. Recently, M.J.I. Mller {\em
et al.} have developed a tug-of-war model to describe the bidirectional
movement of the cargo (PNAS(2008) 105(12) P4609-4614). Through Monte Carlo
simulations, they discovered that the tug-of-war model exhibits several
qualitative different motility regimes, which depend on the precise value of
single motor parameters, and they suggested the sensitivity can be used by a
cell to regulate its cargo traffic. In the present paper, we carry out a
thorough analysis of the tug-of-war model. All the stable, i.e., biophysically
observable, steady states are obtained. Depending on several parameters, the
system exhibits either uni-, bi- or tristability. Based on the separating
boundary of the different stable states and the initial numbers of the
different motor species that are bound to the track, the steady state of the
cargo movement can be predicted, and consequently the steady state velocity can
be obtained. It is found that, the velocity, even the direction, of the cargo
movement change with the initial numbers of the motors which are bound to the
track and several other parameters
Tug-of-war as a cooperative mechanism for bidirectional cargo transport by molecular motors
Intracellular transport is based on molecular motors that pull cargos along
cytoskeletal filaments. One motor species always moves in one direction, e.g.
conventional kinesin moves to the microtubule plus end, while cytoplasmic
dynein moves to the microtubule minus end. However, many cellular cargos are
observed to move bidirectionally, involving both plus-end and minus-end
directed motors. The presumably simplest mechanism for such bidirectional
transport is provided by a tug-of-war between the two motor species. This
mechanism is studied theoretically using the load-dependent transport
properties of individual motors as measured in single-molecule experiments. In
contrast to previous expectations, such a tug-of-war is found to be highly
cooperative and to exhibit seven different motility regimes depending on the
precise values of the single motor parameters. The sensitivity of the transport
process to small parameter changes can be used by the cell to regulate its
cargo traffic.Comment: 17 pages, latex, 11 figures, 4 tables, includes Supporting
Informatio
JPEG2000 Image Compression on Solar EUV Images
For future solar missions as well as ground-based telescopes, efficient ways
to return and process data have become increasingly important. Solar Orbiter,
e.g., which is the next ESA/NASA mission to explore the Sun and the
heliosphere, is a deep-space mission, which implies a limited telemetry rate
that makes efficient onboard data compression a necessity to achieve the
mission science goals. Missions like the Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) and
future ground-based telescopes such as the Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope, on
the other hand, face the challenge of making petabyte-sized solar data archives
accessible to the solar community. New image compression standards address
these challenges by implementing efficient and flexible compression algorithms
that can be tailored to user requirements. We analyse solar images from the
Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (AIA) instrument onboard SDO to study the effect
of lossy JPEG2000 (from the Joint Photographic Experts Group 2000) image
compression at different bit rates. To assess the quality of compressed images,
we use the mean structural similarity (MSSIM) index as well as the widely used
peak signal-to-noise ratio (PSNR) as metrics and compare the two in the context
of solar EUV images. In addition, we perform tests to validate the scientific
use of the lossily compressed images by analysing examples of an on-disk and
off-limb coronal-loop oscillation time-series observed by AIA/SDO.Comment: 25 pages, published in Solar Physic
Hadron Mass Spectrum from Lattice QCD
Finite temperature lattice simulations of quantum chromodynamics (QCD) are
sensitive to the hadronic mass spectrum for temperatures below the "critical"
temperature T_c ~ 160 MeV. We show that a recent precision determination of the
QCD trace anomaly shows evidence for the existence of a large number of hadron
states beyond those known from experiment. The lattice results are well
represented by an exponentially growing hadron mass spectrum up to a
temperature T = 155 MeV. Using simple parametrizations we show how one may
estimate the total spectral weight in these yet undermined states
Microscopic formula for transport coefficients of causal hydrodynamics
The Green-Kubo-Nakano formula should be modified in relativistic
hydrodynamics because of the problem of acausality and the breaking of sum
rules. In this work, we propose a formula to calculate the transport
coefficients of causal hydrodynamics based on the projection operator method.
As concrete examples, we derive the expressions for the diffusion coefficient,
the shear viscosity coefficient, and corresponding relaxation times.Comment: 4 pages, title was modified, final version published in Phys. Rev.
The not so 'borderless' internet:Does it still give rise to private international law issues?
Geometric quantum gates with superconducting qubits
We suggest a scheme to implement a universal set of non-Abelian geometric
transformations for a single logical qubit composed of three superconducting
transmon qubits coupled to a single cavity. The scheme utilizes an adiabatic
evolution in a rotating frame induced by the effective tripod Hamiltonian which
is achieved by longitudinal driving of the transmons. The proposal is
experimentally feasible with the current state of the art and could serve as a
first proof of principle for geometric quantum computing.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
Probing the Yb spin relaxation in YYbBaCuO by Electron Paramagnetic Resonance
The relaxation of Yb in YBaCuO () was studied
using Electron Paramagnetic Resonance (EPR). It was found that both electronic
and phononic processes contribute to the Yb relaxation. The phononic
part of the relaxation has an exponential temperature dependence, which can be
explained by a Raman process via the coupling to high-energy (500 K)
optical phonons or an Orbach-like process via the excited vibronic levels of
the Cu ions (localized Slonczewski-modes). In a sample with a maximum
oxygen doping =6.98, the electronic part of the relaxation follows a
Korringa law in the normal state and strongly decreases below .
Comparison of the samples with and without Zn doping proved that the
superconducting gap opening is responsible for the sharp decrease of Yb
relaxation in YBaCuO. It was shown that the electronic
part of the Yb relaxation in the superconducting state follows the same
temperature dependence as Cu and O nuclear relaxations despite
the huge difference between the corresponding electronic and nuclear relaxation
rates.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
Butterfly hysteresis loop and dissipative spin reversal in the S=1/2, V15 molecular complex
Time resolved magnetization measurements have been performed on a spin 1/2
molecular complex, so called V. Despite the absence of a barrier,
magnetic hysteresis is observed over a timescale of several seconds. A detailed
analysis in terms of a dissipative two level model is given, in which
fluctuations and splittings are of same energy. Spin-phonon coupling leads to
long relaxation times and to a particular "butterfly" hysteresis loop.Comment: LaTeX/RevTeX, 3 figures.Approved for publication in PR
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