4,391 research outputs found
Algebraic families of subfields in division rings
We describe relations between maximal subfields in a division ring and in its
rational extensions. More precisely, we prove that properties such as being
Galois or purely inseparable over the centre generically carry over from one to
another. We provide an application to enveloping skewfields in positive
characteristics. Namely, there always exist two maximal subfields of the
enveloping skewfield of a solvable Lie algebra, such that one is Galois and the
second purely inseparable of exponent 1 over the centre. This extends results
of Schue in the restricted case. Along the way we provide a description of the
enveloping algebra of the p-envelope of a Lie algebra as a polynomial extension
of the smaller enveloping algebra.Comment: 9 pages, revised according to referee comments, new titl
Competing superconducting instabilities in the one-dimensional p-band degenerate cold fermionic system
The zero-temperature phase diagram of -orbital two-component fermionic
system loaded into a one-dimensional optical lattice is mapped out by means of
analytical and numerical techniques. It is shown that the -band model away
from half-filling hosts various competing superconducting phases for attractive
and repulsive interactions. At quarter filling, we analyze the possible
formation of incompressible Mott phases and in particular for repulsive
interactions, we find the occurrence of a Mott transition with the formation of
fully gapped bond-ordering waves.Comment: published versio
Thermodynamic Analysis of Interacting Nucleic Acid Strands
Motivated by the analysis of natural and engineered DNA and RNA systems, we present the first algorithm for calculating the partition function of an unpseudoknotted complex of multiple interacting nucleic acid strands. This dynamic program is based on a rigorous extension of secondary structure models to the multistranded case, addressing representation and distinguishability issues that do not arise for single-stranded structures. We then derive the form of the partition function for a fixed volume containing a dilute solution of nucleic acid complexes. This expression can be evaluated explicitly for small numbers of strands, allowing the calculation of the equilibrium population distribution for each species of complex. Alternatively, for large systems (e.g., a test tube), we show that the unique complex concentrations corresponding to thermodynamic equilibrium can be obtained by solving a convex programming problem. Partition function and concentration information can then be used to calculate equilibrium base-pairing observables. The underlying physics and mathematical formulation of these problems lead to an interesting blend of approaches, including ideas from graph theory, group theory, dynamic programming, combinatorics, convex optimization, and Lagrange duality
Linear maps on k^I, and homomorphic images of infinite direct product algebras
Let k be an infinite field, I an infinite set, V a k-vector-space, and
g:k^I\to V a k-linear map. It is shown that if dim_k(V) is not too large (under
various hypotheses on card(k) and card(I), if it is finite, respectively
countable, respectively < card(k)), then ker(g) must contain elements
(u_i)_{i\in I} with all but finitely many components u_i nonzero.
These results are used to prove that any homomorphism from a direct product
\prod_I A_i of not-necessarily-associative algebras A_i onto an algebra B,
where dim_k(B) is not too large (in the same senses) must factor through the
projection of \prod_I A_i onto the product of finitely many of the A_i, modulo
a map into the subalgebra \{b\in B | bB=Bb=\{0\}\}\subseteq B.
Detailed consequences are noted in the case where the A_i are Lie algebras.Comment: 14 pages. Lemma 6 has been strengthened, with resulting strengthening
of other results. Some typos etc. have been correcte
Congenital anomalies from a physics perspective. The key role of "manufacturing" volatility
Genetic and environmental factors are traditionally seen as the sole causes
of congenital anomalies. In this paper we introduce a third possible cause,
namely random "manufacturing" discrepancies with respect to ``design'' values.
A clear way to demonstrate the existence of this component is to ``shut'' the
two others and to see whether or not there is remaining variability. Perfect
clones raised under well controlled laboratory conditions fulfill the
conditions for such a test. Carried out for four different species, the test
reveals a variability remainder of the order of 10%-20% in terms of coefficient
of variation. As an example, the CV of the volume of E.coli bacteria
immediately after binary fission is of the order of 10%. In short,
``manufacturing'' discrepancies occur randomly, even when no harmful mutation
or environmental factors are involved. Not surprisingly, there is a strong
connection between congenital defects and infant mortality. In the wake of
birth there is a gradual elimination of defective units and this screening
accounts for the post-natal fall of infant mortality. Apart from this trend,
post-natal death rates also have humps and peaks associated with various
inabilities and defects.\qL In short, infant mortality rates convert the
case-by-case and mostly qualitative problem of congenital malformations into a
global quantitative effect which, so to say, summarizes and registers what goes
wrong in the embryonic phase. Based on the natural assumption that for simple
organisms (e.g. rotifers) the manufacturing processes are shorter than for more
complex organisms (e.g. mammals), fewer congenital anomalies are expected.
Somehow, this feature should be visible on the infant mortality rate. How this
conjecture can be tested is outlined in our conclusion.Comment: 43 pages, 9 figure
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