344 research outputs found
Equivalence between local Fermi gas and shell models in inclusive muon capture from nuclei
Motivated by recent studies of inclusive neutrino nucleus processes and muon
capture within a correlated local Fermi gas model (LFG), we discuss the
relevance of nuclear finite size effects in these reactions at low energy, in
particular for muon capture. To disentangle these effects from others coming
from the reaction dynamics we employ here a simple uncorrelated shell model
that embodies the typical finite size content of the problem. The integrated
decay widths of muon atoms calculated with this shell model are then compared
for several nuclei with those obtained within the uncorrelated LFG, using in
both models exactly the same theoretical ingredients and parameters. We find
that the two predictions are in quite good agreement, within 1--7%, when the
shell model density and the correct energy balance is used as input in the LFG
calculation. The present study indicates that, despite the low excitation
energies involved in the reaction, integrated inclusive observables, like the
total muon capture width, are quite independent of the fine details of the
nuclear wave functions.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures. Final version to be published in EPJ
The hyperfine transition in light muonic atoms of odd Z
The hyperfine (hf) transition rates for muonic atoms have been re-measured
for select light nuclei, using neutron detectors to evaluate the time
dependence of muon capture. For F = 5.6 (2)
s for the hf transition rate, a value which is considerably more
accurate than previous measurements. Results are also reported for Na, Al, P,
Cl, and K; that result for P is the first positive identification.Comment: 12 pages including 5 tables and 4 figures, RevTex, submitted to Phys.
Rev.
Ybp2 Associates with the Central Kinetochore of Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Mediates Proper Mitotic Progression
The spindle checkpoint ensures the accurate segregation of chromosomes by monitoring the status of kinetochore attachment to microtubules. Simultaneous mutations in one of several kinetochore and cohesion genes and a spindle checkpoint gene cause a synthetic-lethal or synthetic-sick phenotype. A synthetic genetic array (SGA) analysis using a mad2Î query mutant strain of yeast identified YBP2, a gene whose product shares sequence similarity with the product of YBP1, which is required for H2O2-induced oxidation of the transcription factor Yap1. ybp2Î was sensitive to benomyl and accumulated at the mitotic stage of the cell cycle. Ybp2 physically associates with proteins of the COMA complex (Ctf19, Okp1, Mcm21, and Ame1) and 3 components of the Ndc80 complex (Ndc80, Nuf2, and Spc25 but not Spc24) in the central kinetochore and with Cse4 (the centromeric histone and CENP-A homolog). Chromatin-immunoprecipitation analyses revealed that Ybp2 associates specifically with CEN DNA. Furthermore, ybp2Î showed synthetic-sick interactions with mutants of the genes that encode the COMA complex components. Ybp2 seems to be part of a macromolecular kinetochore complex and appears to contribute to the proper associations among the central kinetochore subcomplexes and the kinetochore-specific nucleosome
Three-Nucleon Electroweak Capture Reactions
Recent advances in the study of the p-d radiative and mu-3he weak capture
processes are presented and discussed. The three-nucleon bound and scattering
states are obtained using the correlated-hyperspherical-harmonics method, with
realistic Hamiltonians consisting of the Argonne v14 or Argonne v18 two-nucleon
and Tucson-Melbourne or Urbana IX three-nucleon interactions. The
electromagnetic and weak transition operators include one- and two-body
contributions. The theoretical accuracy achieved in these calculations allows
for interesting comparisons with experimental data.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures, invited talk at the CFIF Fall Workshop: Nuclear
Dynamics, from Quarks to Nuclei, Lisbon, 31st of October - 1st of November
200
Laser-induced nonresonant nuclear excitation in muonic atoms
Coherent nuclear excitation in strongly laser-driven muonic atoms is
calculated. The nuclear transition is caused by the time-dependent Coulomb
field of the oscillating charge density of the bound muon. A closed-form
analytical expression for electric multipole transitions is derived and applied
to various isotopes; the excitation probabilities are in general very small. We
compare the process with other nuclear excitation mechanisms through coupling
with atomic shells and discuss the prospects to observe it in experiment.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
Functional improvement of Saccharomyces cerevisiae to reduce volatile acidity in wine
Abstract Control of volatile acidity (VA) is a major issue for wine quality. In this study, we investigated the production of VA by a deletion mutant of the fermentation stress response gene AAF1 in the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Fermentations were carried out in commercial Chardonnay grape must to mimic industrial wine-making conditions. We demonstrated that a wine yeast strain deleted for AAF1 reduced acetic acid levels in wine by up to 39.2% without increasing the acetaldehyde levels, revealing a potential for industrial application. Deletion of the cytosolic aldehyde dehydrogenase gene ALD6 also reduced acetic acid levels dramatically, but increased the acetaldehyde levels by 41.4%, which is not desired by the wine industry. By comparison, ALD4 and the AAF1 paralog RSF2 had no effects on acetic acid production in wine. Deletion of AAF1 was detrimental to the growth of ald6D and ald4Dald6D mutants, but had no effect on acetic acid production. Overexpression of AAF1 dramatically increased acetic acid levels in wine in an Ald6p-dependent manner, indicating that Aaf1p regulates acetic acid production mainly via Ald6p. Overexpression of AAF1 in an ald4Dald6D strain produced significantly more acetic acid in wine than the ald4Dald6D mutant, suggesting that Aaf1p may also regulate acetic acid synthesis independently of Ald4p and Ald6p
Activation of a Plasmodium falciparum cdc2-related kinase by heterologous p25 and cyclin H - Functional characterization of a P. falciparum cyclin homologue
Several Plasmodium falciparum genes encoding cdc2-related protein kinases have been identified, but the modalities of their regulation remains largely unexplored. Zn the present study, we investigated the regulation in vitro of PfPK5, a putative homologue of Cdk1 (cdc2) in P. falciparum. We show that (i) PfPK5 is efficiently activated by heterologous (human) cyclin H and p25, a cyclin-like molecule that specifically activates human Cdk5; (ii) the activated enzyme can be inhibited by chemical Cdk inhibitors; (iii) Pfmrk, a putative P. falciparum homologue of the Cdk-activating kinase, does neither activate nor phosphorylate PfPK5; and (iv) PfPK5 is able to autophosphorylate in the presence of a cyclin, Taken together, these results suggest that the regulation of Plasmodium Cdks may differ in important aspects from that of their human counterparts. Furthermore, we cloned an open reading frame encoding a novel P. falciparum protein possessing maximal homology to cyclin H from various organisms, and we show that this protein, called Pfcyc-1, is able to activate recombinant PfPK5 in vitro with an efficiency similar to that of human cyclin H and p25, This work opens the way to the development of screening procedures aimed at identifying compounds that specifically target the parasite Cdks
Quasi-Elastic Scattering in the Inclusive (He, t) Reaction
The triton energy spectra of the charge-exchange C(He,t) reaction
at 2 GeV beam energy are analyzed in the quasi-elastic nucleon knock-out
region. Considering that this region is mainly populated by the charge-exchange
of a proton in He with a neutron in the target nucleus and the final proton
going in the continuum, the cross-sections are written in the distorted-wave
impulse approximation. The t-matrix for the elementary exchange process is
constructed in the DWBA, using one pion- plus rho-exchange potential for the
spin-isospin nucleon- nucleon potential. This t-matrix reproduces the
experimental data on the elementary pn np process. The calculated
cross-sections for the C(He,t) reaction at to triton
emission angle are compared with the corresponding experimental data, and are
found in reasonable overall accord.Comment: 19 pages, latex, 11 postscript figures available at
[email protected], submitted to Phy.Rev.
Muon capture by 3He nuclei followed by proton and deuteron production
The paper describes an experiment aimed at studying muon capture by
nuclei in pure and mixtures at various densities. Energy distributions of
protons and deuterons produced via and are measured for the
energy intervals MeV and MeV, respectively. Muon capture
rates, and are obtained using two different analysis methods. The
least--squares methods gives , . The Bayes theorem
gives ,
. The experimental
differential capture rates, and , are compared with theoretical
calculations performed using the plane--wave impulse approximation (PWIA) with
the realistic NN interaction Bonn B potential. Extrapolation to the full energy
range yields total proton and deuteron capture rates in good agreement with
former results.Comment: 17 pages, 13 figures, accepted for publication in PR
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