5,041 research outputs found
Anomalous character of the axion-photon coupling in a magnetic field distorted by a pp-wave gravitational background
We study the problem of axion-photon coupling in the magnetic field
influenced by gravitational radiation. We focus on exact solutions to the
equations for axion electrodynamics in the pp-wave gravitational background for
two models with initially constant magnetic field. The first model describes
the response of an initially constant magnetic field in a gravitational-wave
vacuum with unit refraction index; the second model is characterized by a
non-unit refraction index prescribed to the presence of ordinary and/or dark
matter. We show that both models demonstrate anomalous behavior of the
electromagnetic field generated by the axion-photon coupling in the presence of
magnetic field, evolving in the gravitational wave background. The role of
axionic dark matter in the formation of the anomalous response of this
electrodynamic system is discussed.Comment: 26 pages, no figure
Exceptional points in topological edge spectrum of PT symmetric domain walls
We demonstrate that the non-Hermitian parity-time (PT) symmetric interfaces
formed between amplifying and lossy crystals support dissipationless edge
states. These PT edge states exhibit gapless spectra in the complex band
structure interconnecting complex-valued bulk bands as long as exceptional
points (EPs) of edge states exist. As a result, regimes exist where the edge
states can spectrally overlap with the bulk continuum without hybridization,
and leakage into the bulk states is suppressed due to the PT symmetry. Two
exemplary PT symmetric systems, based on valley and quantum hall topological
phases, are investigated, and the connection with the corresponding Hermitian
systems is established. We find that the edge states smoothly transit to the
valley edge states found in Hermitian systems if the magnitude of gain/loss
vanishes. The topological nature of the PT edge states can be established
within the non-Hermitian Haldane model, where the topological invariance is
found to be unaffected by gain or loss. Nonreciprocal PT edge states are
discovered at the interfaces between PT-Haldane phases, indicating the
interplay between the gain/loss and the magnetic flux. The proposed systems are
experimentally feasible to realize in photonics. This has been verified by our
rigorous full-wave simulations of edge states in PT-symmetric silicon-based
photonic graphene.Comment: 24 pages, 9 figures, 2 table
Single molecule fluorescent in situ hybridization (smFISH) of C. elegans worms and embryos
In C. elegans, the expression pattern of a gene provides important clues to understanding its biological function. To accurately depict endogenous transcriptional activity, a highly sensitive method is required to measure transcript levels in the intact tissue across various developmental stages. Conventional RNA in situ hybridization methods using hapten- (biotin or digoxygenin) labeled RNA probes rely on antibody binding for visualization, and are thus only semi-quantitative at best (Raap et al. 1995; Levsky et al. 2003). Additionally, hapten-labeled probes are prone to diffuse localization (when conjugated with alkaline phosphatase), low sensitivity (when conjugated with fluorescent molecules), and non-specific probe binding. Here, we introduce a recently developed mRNA in situ hybridization method (Raj et al. 2008) that circumvents the above difficulties to give single molecule resolution of transcript detection
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