19,118 research outputs found
Screening-Limited Response of NanoBiosensors
Despite tremendous potential of highly sensitive electronic detection of
bio-molecules by nanoscale biosensors for genomics and proteomic applications,
many aspects of experimentally observed sensor response (S) are unexplained
within consistent theoretical frameworks of kinetic response or electrical
screening. In this paper, we combine analytic solutions of Poisson-Boltzmann
and reaction-diffusion equations to show that the electrical response of
nanobiosensor varies logarithmically with the concentration of target
molecules, time, the salt concentration, and inversely with the fractal
dimension of sensor surface. Our analysis provides a coherent theoretical
interpretation of wide variety of puzzling experimental data that have so far
defied intuitive explanation.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figure
Mapping General System Characteristics to Non- Functional Requirements
The Function point analysis (FPA) method is the preferred scheme of
estimation for project managers to determine the size, effort, schedule,
resource loading and other such parameters. The FPA method by International
Function Point Users Group (IFPUG) has captured the critical implementation
features of an application through fourteen general system characteristics.
However, Non- functional requirements (NFRs) such as functionality,
reliability, efficiency, usability, maintainability, portability, etc. have not
been included in the FPA estimation method. This paper discusses some of the
NFRs and tries to determine a degree of influence for each of them. An attempt
to factor the NFRs into estimation has been made. This approach needs to be
validated with data collection and analysis.Comment: 5 page
Plasmon interactions in the quark-gluon plasma
Yang-Mills theory at finite temperature is rewritten as a theory of plasmons
which provides a Hamiltonian framework for perturbation theory with resummation
of hard thermal loops.Comment: 12 pages, LaTeX, minor typos corrected, discussion adde
Changes in the measured image separation of the gravitational lens system, PKS 1830-211
We present eight epochs of 43 GHz, dual-polarisation VLBA observations of the
gravitational lens system PKS 1830-211, made over fourteen weeks. A bright,
compact ``core'' and a faint extended ``jet'' are clearly seen in maps of both
lensed images at all eight epochs.
The relative separation of the radio centroid of the cores (as measured on
the sky) changes by up to 87 micro arcsec between subsequent epochs.
A comparison with the previous 43 GHz VLBA observations (Garrett et al. 1997)
made 8 months earlier show even larger deviations in the separation of up to
201 micro arcsec. The measured changes are most likely produced by changes in
the brightness distribution of the background source, enhanced by the
magnification of the lens. A relative magnification matrix that is applicable
on the milliarcsecond scale has been determined by relating two vectors (the
``core-jet'' separations and the offsets of the polarised and total intensity
emission) in the two lensed images. The determinant of this matrix,
-1.13 +/-0.61, is in good agreement with the measured flux density ratio of
the two images. The matrix predicts that the 10 mas long jet, that is clearly
seen in previous 15 and 8.4 GHz VLBA observations (Garrett et al. 1997,
Guirado et al. 1999), should correspond to a 4 mas long jet trailing to the
south-east of the SW image. The clear non-detection of this trailing jet is a
strong evidence for sub-structure in the lens and may require more realistic
lens models to be invoked, e.g. Nair & Garrett (2000).Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
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