11,820 research outputs found
Two dimensional fermions in three dimensional YM
Dirac fermions in the fundamental representation of SU(N) live on the surface
of a cylinder embedded in and interact with a three dimensional SU(N)
Yang Mills vector potential preserving a global chiral symmetry at finite .
As the circumference of the cylinder is varied from small to large, the chiral
symmetry gets spontaneously broken in the infinite limit at a typical bulk
scale. Replacing three dimensional YM by four dimensional YM introduces
non-trivial renormalization effects.Comment: 21 pages, 7 figures, 5 table
Luminosity Function of the Perigalactocentric Region
We present H and K photometry of 42,000 stars in an area of 250 arcmin
centered on the Galactic center. We use the photometry to construct a
dereddened K band luminosity function (LF) for this region, excluding the
excessively crowded inner 2' of the Galaxy. This LF is intermediate between the
LF of Baade's window and the LF of inner 2' of the Galactic center. We
speculate that the bright stars in this region have an age which is
intermediate between the starburst population in the Galactic center and the
old bulge population. We present the coordinates and mags for 16 stars with
K_{0} < 5 for spectroscopic follow up.Comment: 25 pages. Tarred, gzipped and uuencoded. Includes LaTex source file,
Figures 3 to 9 and 5 Tables. Figures 1 and 2 are available at
ftp://bessel.mps.ohio-state.edu/pub/vijay . Submitted to Ap
Phosphorylation of the Arp2 subunit relieves auto-inhibitory interactions for Arp2/3 complex activation.
Actin filament assembly by the actin-related protein (Arp) 2/3 complex is necessary to build many cellular structures, including lamellipodia at the leading edge of motile cells and phagocytic cups, and to move endosomes and intracellular pathogens. The crucial role of the Arp2/3 complex in cellular processes requires precise spatiotemporal regulation of its activity. While binding of nucleation-promoting factors (NPFs) has long been considered essential to Arp2/3 complex activity, we recently showed that phosphorylation of the Arp2 subunit is also necessary for Arp2/3 complex activation. Using molecular dynamics simulations and biochemical assays with recombinant Arp2/3 complex, we now show how phosphorylation of Arp2 induces conformational changes permitting activation. The simulations suggest that phosphorylation causes reorientation of Arp2 relative to Arp3 by destabilizing a network of salt-bridge interactions at the interface of the Arp2, Arp3, and ARPC4 subunits. Simulations also suggest a gain-of-function ARPC4 mutant that we show experimentally to have substantial activity in the absence of NPFs. We propose a model in which a network of auto-inhibitory salt-bridge interactions holds the Arp2 subunit in an inactive orientation. These auto-inhibitory interactions are destabilized upon phosphorylation of Arp2, allowing Arp2 to reorient to an activation-competent state
Domain-wall fermions with dynamical gauge fields
We have carried out a numerical simulation of a domain-wall model in
-dimensions, in the presence of a dynamical gauge field only in an extra
dimension, corresponding to the weak coupling limit of a ( 2-dimensional )
physical gauge coupling. Using a quenched approximation we have investigated
this model at 0.5 ( ``symmetric'' phase),
1.0, and 5.0 (``broken'' phase), where is the gauge coupling constant of
the extra dimension. We have found that there exists a critical value of a
domain-wall mass which separates a region with a fermionic zero
mode on the domain-wall from the one without it, in both symmetric and broken
phases. This result suggests that the domain-wall method may work for the
construction of lattice chiral gauge theories.Comment: 27 pages (11 figures), latex (epsf style-file needed
Probing the Region of Massless Quarks in Quenched Lattice QCD using Wilson Fermions
We study the spectrum of with being the
Wilson-Dirac operator on the lattice with bare mass equal to . The
background gauge fields are generated using the SU(3) Wilson action at
on an lattice. We find evidence that the spectrum of
is gapless for , implying that the physical quark is
massless in this whole region.Comment: 22 pages, LaTeX file, uses elsart.sty, includes 11 figures A
typographical error in one reference has been fixe
Numerical computation of the beta function of large N SU(N) gauge theory coupled to an adjoint Dirac fermion
We use a single site lattice in four dimensions to study the scaling of large
N Yang-Mills field coupled to a single massless Dirac fermion in the adjoint
representation. We use the location of the strong to weak coupling transition
defined through the eigenvalues of the folded Wilson loop operator to set a
scale. We do not observe perturbative scaling in the region studied in this
paper. Instead, we observe that the scale changes very slowly with the bare
coupling. The lowest eigenvalue of the overlap Dirac operator is another scale
that shows similar behavior as a function of the lattice coupling. We speculate
that this behavior is due to the beta function appoaching close to a zero.Comment: 16 pages, 9 figures, revised version DOES NOT match the published
version in Physical Review
Chiral Symmetry Restoration in the Schwinger Model with Domain Wall Fermions
Domain Wall Fermions utilize an extra space time dimension to provide a
method for restoring the regularization induced chiral symmetry breaking in
lattice vector gauge theories even at finite lattice spacing. The breaking is
restored at an exponential rate as the size of the extra dimension increases.
Before this method can be used in dynamical simulations of lattice QCD, the
dependence of the restoration rate to the other parameters of the theory and,
in particular, the lattice spacing must be investigated. In this paper such an
investigation is carried out in the context of the two flavor lattice Schwinger
model.Comment: LaTeX, 37 pages including 18 figures. Added comments regarding power
law fitting in sect 7. Also, few changes were made to elucidate the content
in sect. 5.1 and 5.3. To appear in Phys. Rev.
In silico estimates of the free energy rates in growing tumor spheroids
The physics of solid tumor growth can be considered at three distinct size
scales: the tumor scale, the cell-extracellular matrix (ECM) scale and the
sub-cellular scale. In this paper we consider the tumor scale in the interest
of eventually developing a system-level understanding of the progression of
cancer. At this scale, cell populations and chemical species are best treated
as concentration fields that vary with time and space. The cells have
chemo-mechanical interactions with each other and with the ECM, consume glucose
and oxygen that are transported through the tumor, and create chemical
byproducts. We present a continuum mathematical model for the biochemical
dynamics and mechanics that govern tumor growth. The biochemical dynamics and
mechanics also engender free energy changes that serve as universal measures
for comparison of these processes. Within our mathematical framework we
therefore consider the free energy inequality, which arises from the first and
second laws of thermodynamics. With the model we compute preliminary estimates
of the free energy rates of a growing tumor in its pre-vascular stage by using
currently available data from single cells and multicellular tumor spheroids.Comment: 27 pages with 5 figures and 2 tables. Figures and tables appear at
the end of the pape
Perturbative study for domain-wall fermions in 4+1 dimensions
We investigate a U(1) chiral gauge model in 4+1 dimensions formulated on the
lattice via the domain-wall method. We calculate an effective action for smooth
background gauge fields at a fermion one loop level. From this calculation we
discuss properties of the resulting 4 dimensional theory, such as gauge
invariance of 2 point functions, gauge anomalies and an anomaly in the fermion
number current.Comment: 39 pages incl. 9 figures, REVTeX+epsf, uuencoded Z-compressed .tar
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