45 research outputs found
Dynamic behavior of stochastic gene expression models in the presence of bursting
This paper considers the behavior of discrete and continuous mathematical
models for gene expression in the presence of transcriptional/translational
bursting. We treat this problem in generality with respect to the distribution
of the burst size as well as the frequency of bursting, and our results are
applicable to both inducible and repressible expression patterns in prokaryotes
and eukaryotes. We have given numerous examples of the applicability of our
results, especially in the experimentally observed situation that burst size is
geometrically or exponentially distributed.Comment: 22 page
Ornstein-Zernike equation and Percus-Yevick theory for molecular crystals
We derive the Ornstein-Zernike equation for molecular crystals of axially
symmetric particles and apply the Percus-Yevick approximation to this system.
The one-particle orientational distribution function has a nontrivial
dependence on the orientation and is needed as an input. Despite some
differences, the Ornstein-Zernike equation for molecular crystals has a similar
structure as for liquids. We solve both equations for hard ellipsoids on a sc
lattice. Compared to molecular liquids, the tensorial orientational correlators
exhibit less structure. However, depending on the lengths a and b of the
rotation axis and the perpendicular axes of the ellipsoids, different behavior
is found. For oblate and prolate ellipsoids with b >= 0.35 (units of the
lattice constant), damped oscillations in distinct directions of direct space
occur for some correlators. They manifest themselves in some correlators in
reciprocal space as a maximum at the Brillouin zone edge, accompanied by maxima
at the zone center for other correlators. The oscillations indicate alternating
orientational fluctuations, while the maxima at the zone center originate from
nematic-like orientational fluctuations. For a <= 2.5 and b <= 0.35, the
oscillations are weaker. For a >= 3.0 and b <= 0.35, no oscillations occur any
longer. For many of the correlators in reciprocal space, an increase of a at
fixed b leads to a divergence at the zone center q = 0, consistent with
nematic-like long range fluctuations, and for some oblate and prolate systems
with b ~< 1.0 a simultaneous tendency to divergence of few other correlators at
the zone edge is observed. Comparison with correlators from MC simulations
shows satisfactory agreement. We also obtain a phase boundary for
order-disorder transitions.Comment: 20 pages, 13 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Microscopic theory of glassy dynamics and glass transition for molecular crystals
We derive a microscopic equation of motion for the dynamical orientational
correlators of molecular crystals. Our approach is based upon mode coupling
theory. Compared to liquids we find four main differences: (i) the memory
kernel contains Umklapp processes, (ii) besides the static two-molecule
orientational correlators one also needs the static one-molecule orientational
density as an input, where the latter is nontrivial, (iii) the static
orientational current density correlator does contribute an anisotropic,
inertia-independent part to the memory kernel, (iv) if the molecules are
assumed to be fixed on a rigid lattice, the tensorial orientational correlators
and the memory kernel have vanishing l,l'=0 components. The resulting mode
coupling equations are solved for hard ellipsoids of revolution on a rigid
sc-lattice. Using the static orientational correlators from Percus-Yevick
theory we find an ideal glass transition generated due to precursors of
orientational order which depend on X and p, the aspect ratio and packing
fraction of the ellipsoids. The glass formation of oblate ellipsoids is
enhanced compared to that for prolate ones. For oblate ellipsoids with X <~ 0.7
and prolate ellipsoids with X >~ 4, the critical diagonal nonergodicity
parameters in reciprocal space exhibit more or less sharp maxima at the zone
center with very small values elsewhere, while for prolate ellipsoids with 2 <~
X <~ 2.5 we have maxima at the zone edge. The off-diagonal nonergodicity
parameters are not restricted to positive values and show similar behavior. For
0.7 <~ X <~ 2, no glass transition is found. In the glass phase, the
nonergodicity parameters show a pronounced q-dependence.Comment: 17 pages, 12 figures, accepted at Phys. Rev. E. v4 is almost
identical to the final paper version. It includes, compared to former
versions v2/v3, no new physical content, but only some corrected formulas in
the appendices and corrected typos in text. In comparison to version v1, in
v2-v4 some new results have been included and text has been change
Evaluating Signs of Determinants Using Single-Precision Arithmetic
We propose a method of evaluating signs of 2Ă2 and 3Ă3 determinants with b-bit integer entries using only b and (b + 1)-bit arithmetic, respectively. This algorithm has numerous applications in geometric computation and provides a general and practical approach to robustness. The algorithm has been implemented and compared with other exact computation methods
A molecular dynamics simulation for a 2d odic phase
The importance of the translation-rotation coupling effect on the dynamics of some ODIC crystal is shown through the study of a two dimensional model which can be viewed as a schematisation of real alkali cyanide. The molecular dynamics simulation of this model enabled us to study namely the structural aspects of the disorder, the individual rotational dynamics (librations and reorientations) and the influence of translation-rotation coupling effect on the collective excitations (phonon lattice mode and reorientational processes) of the crystal
Orientational disorder in plastic molecular crystals II. â Neutron scattering and orientational dynamics
In this paper, it is shown how the formalism of the canonical symmetry adapted functions can be used to analyse neutron scattering data related to orientationally disordered molecular crystals when the rotational dynamics of the molecule is assumed to be independent of the lattice dynamics. In this approximation, the rotational contribution to the intermediate scattering function is expanded in terms of correlations between the symmetry adapted functions of the molecular orientations. The site and molecular symmetry are taken into account to derive the complete set of independent correlation functions and to find which of them can be measured through neutron coherent and incoherent scattering experiments performed on single crystals or powder sample. Besides, it is shown that the orientational probability density function can be fully determined from the elastic part of incoherent neutron scattering.La diffusion des neutrons par les cristaux molĂ©culaires en phase dĂ©sordonnĂ©e est analysĂ©e Ă l'aide d'une base canonique de fonctions adaptĂ©e Ă la symĂ©trie du site et des molĂ©cules. Les mouvements rotationnels des molĂ©cules sont supposĂ©s indĂ©pendants de la dynamique du rĂ©seau cristallin. Dans cette approximation, la contribution rotationnelle aux spectres de neutrons est explicitĂ©e en termes de corrĂ©lations des fonctions canoniques des orientations molĂ©culaires. En tenant compte de la symĂ©trie du site et de la molĂ©cule, on prĂ©cise quelles sont les fonctions de corrĂ©lations indĂ©pendantes, et lesquelles peuvent ĂȘtre mesurĂ©es par des expĂ©riences de diffusion cohĂ©rente ou incohĂ©rente de neutrons effectuĂ©es sur monocristaux ou sur poudres. En outre, on montre que la densitĂ© de probabilitĂ© des orientations molĂ©culaires peut ĂȘtre dĂ©terminĂ©e complĂštement Ă partir de la partie Ă©lastique des spectres de diffusion incohĂ©rente
Orientational disorder in plastic molecular crystals I. â Group theory and ODIC description
A group theory method for deriving a complete and non redundant canonical set of basis functions adapted to the description of Orientational Disorder In (plastic molecular) Crystal (ODIC) is developed. The method takes full advantage of the properties of the site and molecular symmetry groups. In particular, it is shown that, when both groups contain improper rotations, the canonical basis includes functions which have not been previously considered.Cet article présente une méthode de théorie des groupes pour construire une base canonique (complÚte et non redondante) de fonctions adaptée à la description du désordre orientationnel dans les cristaux moléculaires plastiques (ODIC). Cette méthode prend complÚtement en compte les propriétés des groupes de symétrie du site et de la molécule. En particulier, on montre que lorsque les deux groupes contiennent des rotations impropres, la base canonique comporte certaines fonctions qui jusqu'alors n'ont pas été prises en considération
Orientational disorder in plastic molecular crystals - III. â Infrared and Raman spectroscopy of internal modes
The formalism of symmetry adapted functions for molecular orientations introduced previously [5, 6] is here applied to the analysis of the Raman and infrared spectroscopy of internal modes in orientationally disordered molecular crystals. In some favorable cases, the contribution to the Raman and infrared lineshapes arising from the rotational dynamics of the molecules can be disentangled from other contributions arising from the vibrational lifetime or various coupling effects. Here, the rotational lineshapes are analysed in terms of independent, symmetry adapted rotational self-correlation functions. Furthermore, it is shown that the integrated intensity of internal modes provides a measurement of the first symmetry independent coefficients in the development of the orientational probability density function.La spectroscopie Raman et infrarouge des modes internes dans les cristaux molĂ©culaires Ă dĂ©sordre d'orientation est analysĂ©e dans le formalisme, prĂ©cĂ©demment dĂ©veloppĂ© [5, 6], des fonctions de base adaptĂ©es aux symĂ©tries du site et de la molĂ©cule. Dans certains cas la contribution rotationnelle aux profils Raman et infrarouge des modes internes peut ĂȘtre dĂ©convoluĂ©e de la largeur purement vibrationnelle ou d'autres effets dus Ă des couplages variĂ©s. La partie purement rotationnelle du profil spectral est ici analysĂ©e Ă l'aide d'un petit nombre de fonctions d'autocorrĂ©lations rotationnelles indĂ©pendantes du point de vue de la symĂ©trie. On montre de plus que l'intensitĂ© intĂ©grĂ©e des raies internes permet de dĂ©terminer expĂ©rimentalement les premiers coefficients indĂ©pendants de la densitĂ© de probabilitĂ© d'orientation des molĂ©cules