10,509 research outputs found
Density profiles and surface tensions of polymers near colloidal surfaces
The surface tension of interacting polymers in a good solvent is calculated
theoretically and by computer simulations for a planar wall geometry and for
the insertion of a single colloidal hard-sphere. This is achieved for the
planar wall and for the larger spheres by an adsorption method, and for smaller
spheres by a direct insertion technique. Results for the dilute and semi-dilute
regimes are compared to results for ideal polymers, the Asakura-Oosawa
penetrable-sphere model, and to integral equations, scaling and renormalization
group theories. The largest relative changes with density are found in the
dilute regime, so that theories based on non-interacting polymers rapidly break
down. A recently developed ``soft colloid'' approach to polymer-colloid
mixtures is shown to correctly describe the one-body insertion free-energy and
the related surface tension
Coarse-graining polymers as soft colloids
We show how to coarse grain polymers in a good solvent as single particles,
interacting with density-independent or density-dependent interactions. These
interactions can be between the centres of mass, the mid-points or end-points
of the polymers. We also show how to extend these methods to polymers in poor
solvents and mixtures of polymers. Treating polymers as soft colloids can
greatly speed up the simulation of complex many-polymer systems, including
polymer-colloid mixtures.Comment: to appear in Physica A, special STATPHYS 2001 edition. Content of
invited talk by AA
Accurate effective pair potentials for polymer solutions
Dilute or semi-dilute solutions of non-intersecting self-avoiding walk (SAW)
polymer chains are mapped onto a fluid of ``soft'' particles interacting via an
effective pair potential between their centers of mass. This mapping is
achieved by inverting the pair distribution function of the centers of mass of
the original polymer chains, using integral equation techniques from the theory
of simple fluids. The resulting effective pair potential is finite at all
distances, has a range of the order of the radius of gyration, and turns out to
be only moderately concentration-dependent. The dependence of the effective
potential on polymer length is analyzed in an effort to extract the scaling
limit. The effective potential is used to derive the osmotic equation of state,
which is compared to simulation data for the full SAW segment model, and to the
predictions of renormalization group calculations. A similar inversion
procedure is used to derive an effective wall-polymer potential from the center
of mass density profiles near the wall, obtained from simulations of the full
polymer segment model. The resulting wall-polymer potential turns out to depend
strongly on bulk polymer concentration when polymer-polymer correlations are
taken into account, leading to a considerable enhancement of the effective
repulsion with increasing concentration. The effective polymer-polymer and
wall-polymer potentials are combined to calculate the depletion interaction
induced by SAW polymers between two walls. The calculated depletion interaction
agrees well with the ``exact'' results from much more computer-intensive direct
simulation of the full polymer-segment model, and clearly illustrates the
inadequacy -- in the semi-dilute regime -- of the standard Asakura-Oosawa
approximation based on the assumption of non-interacting polymer coils.Comment: 18 pages, 24 figures, ReVTeX, submitted to J. Chem. Phy
Towards F1 Hybrid Seed Potato Breeding
Compared to other major food crops, progress in potato yield as the result of breeding efforts is very slow. Genetic gains cannot be fixed in potato due to obligatory out-breeding. Overcoming inbreeding depression using diploid self-compatible clones should enable to replace the current method of out-breeding and clonal propagation into an F1 hybrid system with true seeds. This idea is not new, but has long been considered unrealistic. Severe inbreeding depression and self-incompatibility in diploid germplasm have hitherto blocked the development of inbred lines. Back-crossing with a homozygous progenitor with the Sli gene which inhibits gametophytic self-incompatibility gave self-compatible offspring from elite material from our diploid breeding programme. We demonstrate that homozygous fixation of donor alleles is possible, with simultaneous improvement of tuber shape and tuber size grading of the recipient inbred line. These results provide proof of principle for F1 hybrid potato breeding. The technical and economic perspectives are unprecedented as these will enable the development of new products with combinations of useful traits for all stakeholders in the potato chain. In addition, the hybrid’s seeds are produced by crossings, rendering the production and voluminous transport of potato seed tubers redundant as it can be replaced by direct sowing or the use of healthy mini-tubers, raised in greenhouses
Trapping of Rb atoms by ac electric fields
We demonstrate trapping of an ultracold gas of neutral atoms in a macroscopic
ac electric trap. Three-dimensional confinement is obtained by switching
between two saddle-point configurations of the electric field. Stable trapping
is observed in a narrow range of switching frequencies around 60 Hz. The
dynamic confinement of the atoms is directly visualized at different phases of
the ac switching cycle. We observe about 10^5 Rb atoms in the 1 mm^3 large and
several microkelvins deep trap with a lifetime of approximately 5 s.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures; updated version, added journal referenc
Activation of M-phase-specific histone H1 kinase by modification of the phosphorylation of its p34cdc2 and cyclin components
An M-phase-specific histone H1 kinase (H1K) has been described in a wide variety of eukaryotic cell types undergoing the G2/M transition in the cell division cycle. We have used p13suc1-Sepharose affinity chromatography to purify H1K to near homogeneity from matured starfish oocytes. A yield of 67% was obtained. Active H1K behaves as a 90- to 100-kD protein and appears to be constituted of equimolar amounts of cyclin and p34cdc2. The p34cdc2 subunit becomes tyrosine-dephosphorylated as the H1K is activated during entry of the oocytes into M phase, whereas the cyclin subunit is reciprocally phosphorylated. Acid phosphatase treatment of inactive p34cdc2/cyclin complex induces p34cdc2 dephosphorylation and three- to eightfold stimulation of the enzyme activity. These results suggest that active M-phase-specific H1K is constituted of both dephosphorylated p34cdc2 and phosphorylated cyclin
Trading interactions for topology in scale-free networks
Scale-free networks with topology-dependent interactions are studied. It is
shown that the universality classes of critical behavior, which conventionally
depend only on topology, can also be explored by tuning the interactions. A
mapping, , describes how a shift of the
standard exponent of the degree distribution can absorb the
effect of degree-dependent pair interactions .
Replica technique, cavity method and Monte Carlo simulation support the
physical picture suggested by Landau theory for the critical exponents and by
the Bethe-Peierls approximation for the critical temperature. The equivalence
of topology and interaction holds for equilibrium and non-equilibrium systems,
and is illustrated with interdisciplinary applications.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
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