274 research outputs found
Generation of strongly chaotic beats
The letter proposes a procedure for generation of strongly chaotic beats that
have been hardly obtainable hitherto. The beats are generated in a nonlinear
optical system governing second-harmonic generation of light. The proposition
is based on the concept of an optical coupler but can be easily adopted to
other nonlinear systems and Chua's circuits.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in Int.J.Bif.Chao
A Variational Principle for Eigenvalue Problems of Hamiltonian Systems
We consider the bifurcation problem with two point
boundary conditions where is a general nonlinear term which may also
depend on the eigenvalue . We give a variational characterization of
the bifurcating branch as a function of the amplitude of the
solution. As an application we show how it can be used to obtain simple
approximate closed formulae for the period of large amplitude oscillations.Comment: 10 pages Revtex, 2 figures include
Relaxation paths for single modes of vibrations in isolated molecules
A numerical simulation of vibrational excitation of molecules was devised,
and used to excite computational models of common molecules into a prescribed,
pure, normal vibration mode in the ground electronic state, with varying,
controlable energy content. The redistribution of this energy (either
non-chaotic or irreversible IVR) within the isolated, free molecule is then
followed in time with a view to determining the coupling strength between
modes. This work was triggered by the need to predict the general characters of
the infrared spectra to be expected from molecules in interstellar space, after
being excited by photon absorption or reaction with a radical. It is found that
IVR from a pure normal mode is very "restricted" indeed at energy contents of
one mode quantum or so. However, as this is increased, or when the excitation
is localized, our approach allows us to isolate, describe and quantify a number
of interesting phenomena, known to chemists and in non-linear mechanics, but
difficult to demonstrate experimentally: frequency dragging, mode locking or
quenching or, still, instability near a potential surface crossing, the first
step to generalized chaos as the energy content per mode is increased.Comment: 25 pages, 15 figures; accepted by J. Atom. Phys.
On the Floquet Theory of Delay Differential Equations
We present an analytical approach to deal with nonlinear delay differential
equations close to instabilities of time periodic reference states. To this end
we start with approximately determining such reference states by extending the
Poincar'e Lindstedt and the Shohat expansions which were originally developed
for ordinary differential equations. Then we systematically elaborate a linear
stability analysis around a time periodic reference state. This allows to
approximately calculate the Floquet eigenvalues and their corresponding
eigensolutions by using matrix valued continued fractions
Rotary bistable and Parametrically Excited Vibration Energy Harvesting
Parametric resonance is a type of nonlinear vibration phenomenon [1], [2] induced from the periodic modulation of at least one of the system parameters and has the potential to exhibit interesting higher order nonlinear behaviour [3]. Parametrically excited vibration energy harvesters have been previously shown to enhance both the power amplitude [4] and the frequency bandwidth [5] when compared to the conventional direct resonant approach. However, to practically activate the more profitable regions of parametric resonance, additional design mechanisms [6], [7] are required to overcome a critical initiation threshold amplitude. One route is to establish an autoparametric system where external direct excitation is internally coupled to parametric excitation [8]. For a coupled two degrees of freedom (DoF) oscillatory system, principal autoparametric resonance can be achieved when the natural frequency of the first DoF f1 is twice that of the second DoF f2 and the external excitation is in the vicinity of f1. This paper looks at combining rotary and translatory motion and use autoparametric resonance phenomena
Parametric resonance for vibration energy harvesting with design techniques to passively reduce the initiation threshold amplitude
A vibration energy harvester designed to access parametric resonance can potentially outperform the conventional direct resonant approach in terms of power output achievable given the same drive acceleration. Although linear damping does not limit the resonant growth of parametric resonance, a damping dependent initiation threshold amplitude exists and limits its onset. Design approaches have been explored in this paper to passively overcome this limitation in order to practically realize and exploit the potential advantages. Two distinct design routes have been explored, namely an intrinsically lower threshold through a pendulum-lever configuration and amplification of base excitation fed into the parametric resonator through a cantilever-initial-spring configuration. Experimental results of the parametric resonant harvesters with these additional enabling designs demonstrated an initiation threshold up to an order of magnitude lower than otherwise, while attaining a much higher power peak than direct resonance
Geometric Resonances in Bose-Einstein Condensates with Two- and Three-Body Interactions
We investigate geometric resonances in Bose-Einstein condensates by solving
the underlying time-dependent Gross-Pitaevskii equation for systems with two-
and three-body interactions in an axially-symmetric harmonic trap. To this end,
we use a recently developed analytical method [Phys. Rev. A 84, 013618 (2011)],
based on both a perturbative expansion and a Poincar\'e-Lindstedt analysis of a
Gaussian variational approach, as well as a detailed numerical study of a set
of ordinary differential equations for variational parameters. By changing the
anisotropy of the confining potential, we numerically observe and analytically
describe strong nonlinear effects: shifts in the frequencies and mode coupling
of collective modes, as well as resonances. Furthermore, we discuss in detail
the stability of a Bose-Einstein condensate in the presence of an attractive
two-body interaction and a repulsive three-body interaction. In particular, we
show that a small repulsive three-body interaction is able to significantly
extend the stability region of the condensate.Comment: 27 pages, 13 figure
Negative Resistance in Brownian Transport
We prove that negative incremental resistance cannot occur on 1D spaces like
the circle or the line; we construct an explicit two-dimensional model on the
cylinder, and its collapse into a branched 1D backbone. We derive an accurate
numerical method for solving our 2D model, and discuss the relevance of the
model to biological ion channels.Comment: 3 separate figure
Arabidopsis thaliana POLYOL/MONOSACCHARIDE TRANSPORTERS 1 and 2: fructose and xylitol/H+ symporters in pollen and young xylem cells
The genome of Arabidopsis thaliana contains six genes, AtPMT1 to AtPMT6 (Arabidopsis thaliana POLYOL/MONOSACCHARIDE TRANSPORTER 1–6), which form a distinct subfamily within the large family of more than 50 monosaccharide transporter-like (MST-like) genes. So far, only AtPMT5 [formerly named AtPLT5 (At3g18830)] has been characterized and was shown to be a plasma membrane-localized H+-symporter with broad substrate specificity. The characterization of AtPMT1 (At2g16120) and AtPMT2 (At2g16130), two other, almost identical, members of this transporter subfamily, are presented here. Expression of the AtPMT1 and AtPMT2 cDNAs in baker's yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) revealed that these proteins catalyse the energy-dependent, high-capacity transport of fructose and xylitol, and the transport of several other compounds with lower rates. Expression of their cRNAs in Xenopus laevis oocytes showed that both proteins are voltage-dependent and catalyse the symport of their substrates with protons. Fusions of AtPMT1 or AtPMT2 with the green fluorescent protein (GFP) localized to Arabidopsis plasma membranes. Analyses of reporter genes performed with AtPMT1 or AtPMT2 promoter sequences showed expression in mature (AtPMT2) or germinating (AtPMT1) pollen grains, as well as in growing pollen tubes, hydathodes, and young xylem cells (both genes). The expression was confirmed with an anti-AtPMT1/AtPMT2 antiserum (αAtPMT1/2) raised against peptides conserved in AtPMT1 and AtPMT2. The physiological roles of the proteins are discussed and related to plant cell wall modifications
The Yin and Yang of Yeast Transcription: Elements of a Global Feedback System between Metabolism and Chromatin
When grown in continuous culture, budding yeast cells tend to synchronize their respiratory activity to form a stable oscillation that percolates throughout cellular physiology and involves the majority of the protein-coding transcriptome. Oscillations in batch culture and at single cell level support the idea that these dynamics constitute a general growth principle. The precise molecular mechanisms and biological functions of the oscillation remain elusive. Fourier analysis of transcriptome time series datasets from two different oscillation periods (0.7 h and 5 h) reveals seven distinct co-expression clusters common to both systems (34% of all yeast ORF), which consolidate into two superclusters when correlated with a compilation of 1,327 unrelated transcriptome datasets. These superclusters encode for cell growth and anabolism during the phase of high, and mitochondrial growth, catabolism and stress response during the phase of low oxygen uptake. The promoters of each cluster are characterized by different nucleotide contents, promoter nucleosome configurations, and dependence on ATP-dependent nucleosome remodeling complexes. We show that the ATP:ADP ratio oscillates, compatible with alternating metabolic activity of the two superclusters and differential feedback on their transcription via activating (RSC) and repressive (Isw2) types of promoter structure remodeling. We propose a novel feedback mechanism, where the energetic state of the cell, reflected in the ATP:ADP ratio, gates the transcription of large, but functionally coherent groups of genes via differential effects of ATP-dependent nucleosome remodeling machineries. Besides providing a mechanistic hypothesis for the delayed negative feedback that results in the oscillatory phenotype, this mechanism may underpin the continuous adaptation of growth to environmental conditions
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