10,347 research outputs found
Radiative and Electroweak Rare B Decays
This report summarizes the latest experimental results on radiative and
electroweak rare B meson decays. These rare decay processes proceed through the
flavor changing neutral current processes, and thus sensitive to the postulated
new particles in the theories beyond the Standard Model. Experiments at e+ e-
colliders, Belle, BaBar and CLEO, have been playing the dominant role, while
the CDF and D0 experiments have just started to provide new results from
Tevatron Run-II. The most significant achievement is the first observation of
the decay B --> K* l+ l-, which opens a new window to search for new physics in
B meson decays.Comment: To appear in Proceedings of the XXI International Symposium on Lepton
and Photon Interactions at High Energies, Fermilab, August 200
Noise-Induced Synchronization and Clustering in Ensembles of Uncoupled Limit-Cycle Oscillators
We study synchronization properties of general uncoupled limit-cycle
oscillators driven by common and independent Gaussian white noises. Using phase
reduction and averaging methods, we analytically derive the stationary
distribution of the phase difference between oscillators for weak noise
intensity. We demonstrate that in addition to synchronization, clustering, or
more generally coherence, always results from arbitrary initial conditions,
irrespective of the details of the oscillators.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figure
Black Strings in Our World
The brane world scenario is a new approach to resolve the problem on how to
compactify the higher dimensional spacetime to our 4-dimensional world. One of
the remarkable features of this scenario is the higher dimensional effects in
classical gravitational interactions at short distances. Due to this feature,
there are black string solutions in our 4-dimensional world. In this paper,
assuming the simplest model of complex minimally coupled scalar field with the
local U(1) symmetry, we show a possibility of black-string formation by merging
processes of type I long cosmic strings in our 4-dimensional world. No fine
tuning for the parameters in the model might be necessary.Comment: 11pages, no figur
On the enhancement of nuclear reaction rates in high-temperature plasma
We argue that the Maxwellian approximation can essentially underestimate the
rates of some nuclear reactions in hot plasma under conditions very close to
thermal equilibrium. This phenomenon is demonstrated explicitly on the example
of reactions in self-sustained DT fusion plasma with admixture of light
elements X = Li, Be, C. A kinetic analysis shows that the reactivity
enhancement results from non-Maxwellian knock-on perturbations of ion
distributions caused by close collisions with energetic fusion products. It is
found that although the fraction of the knock-on ions is small, these particles
appreciably affect the D+X and T+X reaction rates. The phenomenon discussed is
likely to have general nature and can play role in other laboratory and
probably astrophysical plasma processes.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures, to be published in Phys. Lett.
Novel Orbital Ordering induced by Anisotropic Stress in a Manganite Thin Film
We performed resonant and nonresonant x-ray diffraction studies of a
Nd0.5Sr0.5MnO3 thin film that exhibits a clear first-order transition. Lattice
parameters vary drastically at the metal-insulator transition at 170K (=T_MI),
and superlattice reflections appear below 140K (=T_CO). The electronic
structure between T_MI and T_CO is identified as A-type antiferromagnetic with
the d_{x2-y2} ferroorbital ordering. Below T_CO, a new type of antiferroorbital
ordering emerges. The accommodation of the large lattice distortion at the
first-order phase transition and the appearance of the novel orbital ordering
are brought about by the anisotropy in the substrate, a new parameter for the
phase control.Comment: 4pages, 4figure
Magneto-optical properties of multilayer graphenes
The magneto-optical absorption properties of graphene multilayers are
theoretically studied. It is shown that the spectrum can be decomposed into
sub-components effectively identical to the monolayer or bilayer graphene,
allowing us to understand the spectrum systematically as a function of the
layer number. Odd-layered graphenes always exhibit absorption peaks which
shifts in proportion to sqrt(B), with B being the magnetic field, due to the
existence of an effective monolayer-like subband. We propose a possibility of
observing the monolayer-like spectrum even in a mixture of multilayer graphene
films with various layers numbers.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figure
Large-scale analysis of human alternative protein isoforms: pattern classification and correlation with subcellular localization signals
We investigated human alternative protein isoforms of >2600 genes based on full-length cDNA clones and SwissProt. We classified the isoforms and examined their co-occurrence for each gene. Further, we investigated potential relationships between these changes and differential subcellular localization. The two most abundant patterns were the one with different C-terminal regions and the one with an internal insertion, which together account for 43% of the total. Although changes of the N-terminal region are less common than those of the C-terminal region, extension of the C-terminal region is much less common than that of the N-terminal region, probably because of the difficulty of removing stop codons in one isoform. We also found that there are some frequently used combinations of co-occurrence in alternative isoforms. We interpret this as evidence that there is some structural relationship which produces a repertoire of isoformal patterns. Finally, many terminal changes are predicted to cause differential subcellular localization, especially in targeting either peroxisomes or mitochondria. Our study sheds new light on the enrichment of the human proteome through alternative splicing and related events. Our database of alternative protein isoforms is available through the internet
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