3,185 research outputs found
A model for effective interactions in binary colloidal systems of soft particles
While the density functional theory with integral equations techniques are
very efficient tools in numerical analysis of complex fluids, an analytical
insight into the phenomenon of effective interactions is still limited. In this
paper we propose a theory of binary systems which results in a relatively
simple analytical expression combining arbitrary microscopic potentials into
the effective interaction. The derivation is based on translating many particle
Hamiltonian including particle-depletant and depletant-depletant interactions
into the occupation field language. Such transformation turns the partition
function into multiple Gaussian integrals, regardless of what microscopic
potentials are chosen. In result, we calculate the effective Hamiltonian and
discuss when our formula is a dominant contribution to the effective
interactions. Our theory allows us to analytically reproduce several important
characteristics of systems under scrutiny. In particular, we analyze the
effective attraction as a demixing factor in the binary systems of Gaussian
particles, effective interactions in the binary mixtures of Yukawa particles
and the system of particles consisting of both repulsive core and
attractive/repulsive Yukawa interaction tail, for which we reproduce the
'attraction-through-repulsion' and 'repulsion-through-attraction' effects.Comment: Second version of article, after major revision due to the comments
from reviewers. Includes overhauled introductory section, new, more compact
derivation and more elaborate examples than previousl
Thermodynamically consistent Langevin dynamics with spatially correlated noise predicts frictionless regime and transient attraction effect
While the origin of temporal correlations in Langevin dynamics have been
thoroughly researched, the understanding of Spatially Correlated Noise (SCN) is
rather incomplete. In particular, very little is known about the relation
between friction and SCN. In this article, we derive the formal formula for the
spatial correlation function in the particle-bath interactions. This expression
shows that SCN is the inherent component of binary mixtures, originating from
the effective (entropic) interactions. Further, employing this spatial
correlation function, we postulate the thermodynamically consistent Langevin
equation driven by SCN and the adequate Fluctuation-Dissipation Relation. The
thermodynamical consistency is achieved by introducing the spatially variant
friction coefficient, which can be also derived analytically. This coefficient
exhibits a number of intriguing properties, e.g. the singular behavior for
certain interaction types. Eventually, we apply this new theory to the system
of two charged particles in the presence of counter-ions. Such particles
interact via the screened-charge Yukawa potential and the inclusion of SCN
leads to the emergence of the anomalous frictionless regime. In this regime the
particles can experience active propulsion leading to the transient attraction
effect. This effect suggests a non-equilibrium mechanism facilitating the
molecular binding of the like-charged particles.Comment: expanded and revised version resubmitted to Phys. Rev.
Non-Gaussian polymers described by alpha-stable chain statistics: model, applications and effective interactions in binary mixtures
The Gaussian chain model is the classical description of a polymeric chain,
which provides the analytical results regarding end-to-end distance, the
distribution of segments around the mass center of a chain, coarse grained
interactions between two chains and effective interactions in binary mixtures.
This hierarchy of results can be calculated thanks to the alpha stability of
the Gaussian distribution. In this paper we show that it is possible to
generalize the model of Gaussian chain to the entire class of alpha stable
distributions, obtaining the analogous hierarchy of results expressed by the
analytical closed-form formulas in the Fourier space. This allows us to
establish the alpha-stable chain model. We begin with reviewing the
applications of Levy flights in the context of polymer sciences, which include:
chains with heavy-tailed distributions of persistence length, polymers adsorbed
to the surface and the chains driven by a noise with power-law spatial
correlations. Further, we derive the distribution of segments around the mass
center of the alpha-stable chain and the coarse-grained interaction potential
between two chains is constructed. These results are employed to discuss the
model of binary mixture consisting of the alpha-stable chains. On what follows,
we establish the spinodal decomposition condition generalized to the particles
described by the shape of alpha-stable distributions. This condition is finally
applied to analyze the on-surface phase separation of adsorbed polymers, which
are known to be described with heavy tailed statistics.Comment: Complete version prepared for submission to Phys. Rev.
Beam Performance of Tracking Detectors with Industrially Produced GEM Foils
Three Gas-Electron-Multiplier tracking detectors with an active area of 10 cm
x 10 cm and a two-dimensional, laser-etched orthogonal strip readout have been
tested extensively in particle beams at the Meson Test Beam Facility at
Fermilab. These detectors used GEM foils produced by Tech-Etch, Inc. They
showed an efficiency in excess of 95% and spatial resolution better than 70 um.
The influence of the angle of incidence of particles on efficiency and spatial
resolution was studied in detail.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figures, accepted by Nuclear Instruments and Methods in
Physics Research
Self-Assembly of \u3cem\u3eEscherichia coli\u3c/em\u3e MutL and Its Complexes with DNA
The Escherichia coli MutL protein regulates the activity of several enzymes, including MutS, MutH, and UvrD, during methyl-directed mismatch repair of DNA. We have investigated the self-association properties of MutL and its binding to DNA using analytical sedimentation velocity and equilibrium. Self-association of MutL is quite sensitive to solution conditions. At 25 °C in Tris at pH 8.3, MutL assembles into a heterogeneous mixture of large multimers. In the presence of potassium phosphate at pH 7.4, MutL forms primarily stable dimers, with the higher-order assembly states suppressed. The weight-average sedimentation coefficient of the MutL dimer in this buffer (s̅20,w) is equal to 5.20 ± 0.08 S, suggesting a highly asymmetric dimer (f/fo = 1.58 ± 0.02). Upon binding the nonhydrolyzable ATP analogue, AMPPNP/Mg2+, the MutL dimer becomes more compact (s̅20,w = 5.71 ± 0.08 S; f/fo = 1.45 ± 0.02), probably reflecting reorganization of the N-terminal ATPase domains. A MutL dimer binds to an 18 bp duplex with a 3′-(dT20) single-stranded flanking region, with apparent affinity in the micromolar range. AMPPNP binding to MutL increases its affinity for DNA by a factor of ∼10. These results indicate that the presence of phosphate minimizes further MutL oligomerization beyond a dimer and that differences in solution conditions likely explain apparent discrepancies in previous studies of MutL assembly
Towards ultra-high resolution 3D reconstruction of a whole rat brain from 3D-PLI data
3D reconstruction of the fiber connectivity of the rat brain at microscopic
scale enables gaining detailed insight about the complex structural
organization of the brain. We introduce a new method for registration and 3D
reconstruction of high- and ultra-high resolution (64 m and 1.3 m
pixel size) histological images of a Wistar rat brain acquired by 3D polarized
light imaging (3D-PLI). Our method exploits multi-scale and multi-modal 3D-PLI
data up to cellular resolution. We propose a new feature transform-based
similarity measure and a weighted regularization scheme for accurate and robust
non-rigid registration. To transform the 1.3 m ultra-high resolution data
to the reference blockface images a feature-based registration method followed
by a non-rigid registration is proposed. Our approach has been successfully
applied to 278 histological sections of a rat brain and the performance has
been quantitatively evaluated using manually placed landmarks by an expert.Comment: 9 pages, Accepted at 2nd International Workshop on Connectomics in
NeuroImaging (CNI), MICCAI'201
Sustainable Water Management in the Southwestern United States: Reality or Rhetoric?
Background: While freshwater sustainability is generally defined as the provisioning of water for both people and the environment, in practice it is largely focused only on supplying water to furnish human population growth. Symptomatic of this is the state of Arizona, where rapid growth outside of the metropolitan Phoenix-Tucson corridor relies on the same groundwater that supplies year-round flow in rivers. Using Arizona as a case study, we present the first study in the southwestern United States that evaluates the potential impact of future population growth and water demand on streamflow depletion across multiple watersheds. Methodology/Principal Findings: We modeled population growth and water demand through 2050 and used four scenarios to explore the potential effects of alternative growth and water management strategies on river flows. Under the base population projection, we found that rivers in seven of the 18 study watersheds could be dewatered due to municipal demand. Implementing alternative growth and water management strategies, however, could prevent four of these rivers from being dewatered. Conclusions/Significance: The window of opportunity to implement water management strategies is narrowing. Because impacts from groundwater extraction are cumulative and cannot be immediately reversed, proactive water management strategies should be implemented where groundwater will be used to support new municipal demand. Our approach provides a low-cost method to identify where alternative water and growth management strategies may have the most impact, and demonstrates that such strategies can maintain a continued water supply for both people and the environment
The presence of B7-H4+ macrophages and CD25+CD4+ and FOXP3+ regulatory T cells in the microenvironment of nasal polyps - a preliminary report.
The nasal polyp (NP) seems to represent the end-stage of longstanding inflammation in patients with chronic rhinosinusitis. The aim of our study has been to evaluate the presence of two regulatory cell populations in the microenvironment of NP: CD4+CD25high Foxp3+ (Treg) cells and B7-H4-expressing macrophages. Treg cells are actively able to inhibit T lymphocytes, while the population of B7-H4-expressing macrophages has recently been described as characterized by a regulatory function similar to that of Treg cells. For our study, we evaluated 14 NP tissue samples. The samples were divided into two main groups, eosinophilic (NP) and lymphocytic (NP), according to the predominant type of immune cell infiltration. The presence of Treg cells and B7-H4 positive macrophages in the samples was analyzed by FACS. Treg cells and B7-H4-expressing macrophages were identified in all the examined nasal polyps. The percentages of both Treg cells and of B7H4 positive cells found in the eosinophilic nasal polyps were higher than those found in the lymphocytic nasal polyps. Treg cells and B7H4+ macrophage subpopulations were present in the NP microenvironment and the alterations in their percentages were related to a distinct pattern of immune cell infiltration
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