338,948 research outputs found
Dimensional Reduction via Noncommutative Spacetime: Bootstrap and Holography
Unlike noncommutative space, when space and time are noncommutative, it seems
necessary to modify the usual scheme of quantum mechanics. We propose in this
paper a simple generalization of the time evolution equation in quantum
mechanics to incorporate the feature of a noncommutative spacetime. This
equation is much more constraining than the usual Schr\"odinger equation in
that the spatial dimension noncommuting with time is effectively reduced to a
point in low energy. We thus call the new evolution equation the spacetime
bootstrap equation, the dimensional reduction called for by this evolution
seems close to what is required by the holographic principle. We will discuss
several examples to demonstrate this point.Comment: 15 pages, harvmac. v2: typos corrected and some changes mad
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Flow measurement inside a zinc-nickel flow cell battery using FBG based sensor system
Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only. A detailed knowledge of the internal flow distribution inside a zinc-nickel flow battery is of critical importance to ensure smooth flow of the electrolyte through the battery cell and better operation of the device. Information of this type can be used as a useful means of early detection of zinc deposition and dendrite formation inside the cell, negative factors which affect the flow and thus which can lead to internal short circuiting, this being a primary failure mode of these types of batteries. This deposition occurs at low pH levels when zinc reacts with the electrolyte to form solid zinc oxide hydroxides. Traditionally, manual inspection is conducted, but this is time consuming and costly, only providing what are often inaccurate results-overall it is an impractical solution especially with the wider use of batteries in the very near future. Fibre Bragg grating (FBG) sensors integrated inside the flow cell offer the advantage of measuring flow changes at multiple locations using a single fibre and that then can be used as an indicator of the correlation between the internal flow distribution and the deposition characteristics. This work presents an initial study, where two networks of FBGs have been installed and used for flow change detection in an active zinc-nickel flow battery. Data have been obtained from the sensor networks and information of battery performance completed and summarized in this paper. The approach shows promising results and thus scope for the future research into the development of this type of sensor system
Interdot Coulomb repulsion effect on the charge transport of parallel double single electron transistors
The charge transport behaviors of parallel double single electron transistors
(SETs) are investigated by the Anderson model with two impurity levels. The
nonequilibrium Keldysh Green's technique is used to calculate the
current-voltage characteristics of system. For SETs implemented by quantum dots
(QDs) embedded into a thin layer, the interdot Coulomb repulsion is
more important than the interdot electron hopping as a result of high potential
barrier height between QDs and . We found that the interdot Coulomb
repulsion not onlyleads to new resonant levels, but also creates negative
differential conductances.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figure
Millet agriculture dispersed from Northeast China to the Russian Far East: integrating archaeology, genetics, and linguistics
Broomcorn and foxtail millets were being cultivated in the West Liao River basin in Northeast China by at least the sixth millennium BCE. However, when and how millet agriculture spread from there to the north and east remains poorly understood. Here, we trace the dispersal of millet agriculture from Northeast China to the Russian Far East and weigh demic against cultural diffusion as mechanisms for that dispersal. We compare two routes for the spread of millet into the Russian Far East discussed in previous researchāan inland route across Manchuria, and a coastal/inland route initially following the Liaodong Peninsula and Yalu Riverāusing an archaeological dataset including millet remains, pottery, stone tools, spindle whorls, jade and figurines. We then integrate the archaeological evidence with linguistic and genetic findings in an approach we term ātriangulationā. We conclude that an expansion of agricultural societies in Northeast China during the Middle to Late Hongshan (4000ā3000 BCE) coincided with the arrival of millet cultivation in eastern Heilongjiang and the Primorye province of the Russian Far East. Our findings support the inland, Manchuria route for the dispersal of millet to the Primorye and suggest that, as well as long-distance cultural exchange, demic diffusion was also involved. Our results are broadly compatible with the farming/language dispersal hypothesis and consistent with a link between the spread of millet farming and proto-Tungusic, the language ancestral to the contemporary Tungusic languages, in late Neolithic Northeast Asia. Ā© 2020 The Author
Regulation of vacuolar H+-ATPase activity by the Cdc42 effector Ste20 in Saccharomyces cerevisiae
In the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the Cdc42 effector Ste20 plays a crucial role in the regulation of filamentous growth, a response to nutrient limitation. Using the split-ubiquitin technique, we found that Ste20 forms a complex with Vma13, an important regulatory subunit of vacuolar H(+)-ATPase (V-ATPase). This protein-protein interaction was confirmed by a pulldown assay and coimmunoprecipitation. We also demonstrate that Ste20 associates with vacuolar membranes and that Ste20 stimulates V-ATPase activity in isolated vacuolar membranes. This activation requires Ste20 kinase activity and does not depend on increased assembly of the V1 and V0 sectors of the V-ATPase, which is a major regulatory mechanism. Furthermore, loss of V-ATPase activity leads to a strong increase in invasive growth, possibly because these cells fail to store and mobilize nutrients efficiently in the vacuole in the absence of the vacuolar proton gradient. In contrast to the wild type, which grows in rather small, isolated colonies on solid medium during filamentation, hyperinvasive vma mutants form much bigger aggregates in which a large number of cells are tightly clustered together. Genetic data suggest that Ste20 and the protein kinase A catalytic subunit Tpk2 are both activated in the vma13Ī strain. We propose that during filamentous growth, Ste20 stimulates V-ATPase activity. This would sustain nutrient mobilization from vacuolar stores, which is beneficial for filamentous growth.The project was supported by Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft grant HO 2098/3 to T.H. and NIH grant R01 GM50322 to P.M.K
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