764 research outputs found
Infrared spectroscopy of solid CO-CO2 mixtures and layers
The spectra of pure, mixed and layered CO and CO2 ices have been studied
systematically under laboratory conditions using infrared spectroscopy. This
work provides improved resolution spectra (0.5 cm-1) of the CO2 bending and
asymmetric stretching mode, as well as the CO stretching mode, extending the
existing Leiden database of laboratory spectra to match the spectral resolution
reached by modern telescopes and to support the interpretation of the most
recent data from Spitzer. It is shown that mixed and layered CO and CO2 ices
exhibit very different spectral characteristics, which depend critically on
thermal annealing and can be used to distinguish between mixed, layered and
thermally annealed CO-CO2 ices. CO only affects the CO2 bending mode spectra in
mixed ices below 50K under the current experimental conditions, where it
exhibits a single asymmetric band profile in intimate mixtures. In all other
ice morphologies the CO2 bending mode shows a double peaked profile, similar to
that observed for pure solid CO2. Conversely, CO2 induces a blue-shift in the
peak-position of the CO stretching vibration, to a maximum of 2142 cm-1 in
mixed ices, and 2140-2146 cm-1 in layered ices. As such, the CO2 bending mode
puts clear constraints on the ice morphology below 50K, whereas beyond this
temperature the CO2 stretching vibration can distinguish between initially
mixed and layered ices. This is illustrated for the low-mass YSO HH46, where
the laboratory spectra are used to analyse the observed CO and CO2 band
profiles and try to constrain the formation scenarios of CO2.Comment: Accepted in A&
Remarks on Screening in a Gauge-Invariant Formalism
In this paper we display a direct and physically attractive derivation of the
screening contribution to the interaction potential in the Chiral Schwinger
model and generalized Maxwell-Chern-Simons gauge theory. It is shown that these
results emerge naturally when a correct separation between gauge-invariant and
gauge degrees of freedom is made. Explicit expressions for gauge-invariant
fields are found.Comment: 13 pages, 1 figure, to appear in PR
The Electron-Phonon Interaction in the Presence of Strong Correlations
We investigate the effect of strong electron-electron repulsion on the
electron-phonon interaction from a Fermi-liquid point of view: the strong
interaction is responsible for vertex corrections, which are strongly dependent
on the ratio. These corrections generically lead to a strong
suppression of the effective coupling between quasiparticles mediated by a
single phonon exchange in the limit. However, such effect
is not present when . Analyzing the Landau stability
criterion, we show that a sizable electron-phonon interaction can push the
system towards a phase-separation instability. A detailed analysis is then
carried out using a slave-boson approach for the infinite-U three-band Hubbard
model. In the presence of a coupling between the local hole density and a
dispersionless optical phonon, we explicitly confirm the strong dependence of
the hole-phonon coupling on the transferred momentum versus frequency ratio. We
also find that the exchange of phonons leads to an unstable phase with negative
compressibility already at small values of the bare hole-phonon coupling. Close
to the unstable region, we detect Cooper instabilities both in s- and d-wave
channels supporting a possible connection between phase separation and
superconductivity in strongly correlated systems.Comment: LateX 3.14, 04.11.1994 Preprint no.101
Screening by symmetry of long-range hydrodynamic interactions of polymers confined in sheets
Hydrodynamic forces may significantly affect the motion of polymers. In
sheet-like cavities, such as the cell's cytoplasm and microfluidic channels,
the hydrodynamic forces are long-range. It is therefore expected that that
hydrodynamic interactions will dominate the motion of polymers in sheets and
will be manifested by Zimm-like scaling. Quite the opposite, we note here that
although the hydrodynamic forces are long-range their overall effect on the
motion of polymers vanishes due to the symmetry of the two-dimensional flow. As
a result, the predicted scaling of experimental observables such as the
diffusion coefficient or the rotational diffusion time is Rouse-like, in accord
with recent experiments. The effective screening validates the use of the
non-interacting blobs picture for polymers confined in a sheet.Comment: http://www.weizmann.ac.il/complex/tlusty/papers/Macromolecules2006.pdf
http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/ma060251
Inverting the Supersymmetric Standard Model Spectrum: from Physical to Lagrangian Ino Parameters
We examine the possibility of recovering the supersymmetric (and soft
supersymmetry breaking) Lagrangian parameters as direct {\em analytical}
expressions of appropriate physical masses, for the unconstrained (but CP and
R-parity conserving) minimal supersymmetric standard model. We concentrate
mainly on the algebraically non-trivial "inversion" for the ino parameters, and
obtain, for given values of , simple analytical expressions for the
, and parameters in terms of three arbitrary input physical
masses, namely either two chargino and one neutralino masses, or alternatively
one chargino and two neutralino masses. We illustrate and discuss in detail the
possible occurrence of ambiguities in this reconstruction. The dependence of
the resulting ino Lagrangian parameters upon physical masses is illustrated,
and some simple generic behaviour uncovered in this way. We finally briefly
sketch generalizing such an inversion to the full set of MSSM Lagrangian
parameters.Comment: Latex, 28 pages, 6 figures, 1 table, some typos corrected, one
paragraph extended in section 4.2. Version to appear in Phys. Rev.
Residential Proximity to Agricultural Pesticide Use and Incidence of Breast Cancer in California, 1988–1997
California is the largest agricultural state in the United States and home to some of the world’s highest breast cancer rates. The objective of our study was to evaluate whether California breast cancer rates were elevated in areas with recent high agricultural pesticide use. We identified population-based invasive breast cancer cases from the California Cancer Registry for 1988–1997. We used California’s pesticide use reporting data to select pesticides for analysis based on use volume, carcinogenic potential, and exposure potential. Using 1990 and 2000 U.S. Census data, we derived age- and race-specific population counts for the time period of interest. We used a geographic information system to aggregate cases, population counts, and pesticide use data for all block groups in the state. To evaluate whether breast cancer rates were related to recent agricultural pesticide use, we computed rate ratios and 95% confidence intervals using Poisson regression models, adjusting for age, race/ethnicity, and neighborhood socioeconomic status and urbanization. This ecologic (aggregative) analysis included 176,302 invasive breast cancer cases and 70,968,598 person-years of observation. The rate ratios did not significantly differ from 1 for any of the selected pesticide categories or individual agents. The results from this study provide no evidence that California women living in areas of recent, high agricultural pesticide use experience higher rates of breast cancer
Optical properties of an effective one-band Hubbard model for the cuprates
We study the Cu and O spectral density of states and the optical conductivity
of CuO_2 planes using an effective generalized one-band Hubbard model derived
from the extended three-band Hubbard model. We solve exactly a square cluster
of 10 unit cells and average the results over all possible boundary conditions,
what leads to smooth functions of frequency. Upon doping, the Fermi energy
jumps to Zhang-Rice states which are connected to the rest of the valence band
(in contrast to an isolated new band in the middle of the gap). The transfer of
spectral weight depends on the parameters of the original three-band model not
only through the one-band effective parameters but also through the relevant
matrix elements. We discuss the evolution of the gap upon doping. The optical
conductivity of the doped system shows a mid-infrared peak due to intraband
transitions, a pseudogap and a high frequency part related to interband
transitions. Its shape and integrated weight up to a given frequency (including
the Drude weight) agree qualitatively with experiments in the cuprates for low
to moderate doping levels, but significant deviations exist for doping .Comment: 11 pages (tex), 14 figures (ps
Involution and Constrained Dynamics I: The Dirac Approach
We study the theory of systems with constraints from the point of view of the
formal theory of partial differential equations. For finite-dimensional systems
we show that the Dirac algorithm completes the equations of motion to an
involutive system. We discuss the implications of this identification for field
theories and argue that the involution analysis is more general and flexible
than the Dirac approach. We also derive intrinsic expressions for the number of
degrees of freedom.Comment: 28 pages, latex, no figure
Degradation of Cdc25A by \u3b2-TrCP during S phase and in response to DNA damage
The Cdc25A phosphatase is essential for cell-cycle progression because of its function in dephosphorylating cyclin-dependent kinases. In response to DNA damage or stalled replication, the ATM and ATR protein kinases activate the checkpoint kinases Chk1 and Chk2, which leads to hyperphosphorylation of Cdc25A1\u20133. These events stimulate the ubiquitin-mediated pro- teolysis of Cdc25A1,4,5 and contribute to delaying cell-cycle progression, thereby preventing genomic instability1\u20137. Here we report that b-TrCP is the F-box protein that targets phosphory- lated Cdc25A for degradation by the Skp1/Cul1/F-box protein complex. Downregulation of b-TrCP1 and b-TrCP2 expression by short interfering RNAs causes an accumulation of Cdc25A in cells progressing through S phase and prevents the degradation of Cdc25A induced by ionizing radiation, indicating that b-TrCP may function in the intra-S-phase checkpoint. Consistent with this hypothesis, suppression of b-TrCP expression results in radioresistant DNA synthesis in response to DNA damage\u2014a phenotype indicative of a defect in the intra-S-phase checkpoint that is associated with an inability to regulate Cdc25A properly. Our results show that b-TrCP has a crucial role in mediating the response to DNA damage through Cdc25A degradation
Gauging the SU(2) Skyrme model
In this paper the SU(2) Skyrme model will be reformulated as a gauge theory
and the hidden symmetry will be investigated and explored in the energy
spectrum computation. To this end we purpose a new constraint conversion
scheme, based on the symplectic framework with the introduction of Wess-Zumino
(WZ) terms in an unambiguous way. It is a positive feature not present on the
BFFT constraint conversion. The Dirac's procedure for the first-class
constraints is employed to quantize this gauge invariant nonlinear system and
the energy spectrum is computed. The finding out shows the power of the
symplectic gauge-invariant formalism when compared with another constraint
conversion procedures present on the literature.Comment: revised version, to appear in Phys.Rev.
- …