5,166 research outputs found
Improved generating technique for D=5 supergravities and squashed Kaluza-Klein Black Holes
Recently we suggested a solution generating technique for five-dimensional
supergravity with three Abelian vector fields based on the hidden SO(4,4)
symmetry of the three-dimensionally reduced theory. This technique generalizes
the generating technique developed earlier for minimal 5D
supergravity (A. Bouchareb, G. Cl\'ement, C-M. Chen, D. V. Gal'tsov, N. G.
Scherbluk, and Th. Wolf, Phys. Rev. D {\bf 76}, 104032 (2007)) and provides a
new matrix representation for cosets forming the corresponding sigma-models in
both cases. Here we further improve these methods introducing a matrix-valued
dualisation procedure which helps to avoid difficulties associated with solving
the dualisation equations in the component form. This new approach is used to
generate a five-parametric rotating charged Kaluza-Klein black hole with the
squashed horizon adding one parameter more to the recent solution by Tomizawa,
Yasui and Morisawa which was constructed using the previous version of the
generating technique.Comment: 20 pages, revtex
Systematic Field-Theory for the Hard-Core One-Component Plasma
An accurate and systematic equation of state for the hard-core one-component
plasma (HCOCP) is obtained. The result is based on the Hubbard-Schofield
transformation which yields the field-theoretical Hamiltonian, with
coefficients expressed in terms of equilibrium correlation functions of the
reference hard-core fluid. Explicit calculations were performed using the
Gaussian approximation for the effective Hamiltonian and known thermodynamic
and structural properties of the reference hard-core fluid. For small values of
the plasma parameter G and packing fraction the Debye-Huckel result is
recovered, while for G>>1, the excess free energy F_ex and internal U_{ex}
energy depend linearly on G. The obtained expression for U_ex is in a good
agreement with the available Monte Carlo data for the HCOCP. We also analyse
the validity of the widely used approximation, which represents the free energy
as a sum of the hard-core and electrostatic part.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figure
Interfacial friction between semiflexible polymers and crystalline surfaces
The results obtained from molecular dynamics simulations of the friction at
an interface between polymer melts and weakly attractive crystalline surfaces
are reported. We consider a coarse-grained bead-spring model of linear chains
with adjustable intrinsic stiffness. The structure and relaxation dynamics of
polymer chains near interfaces are quantified by the radius of gyration and
decay of the time autocorrelation function of the first normal mode. We found
that the friction coefficient at small slip velocities exhibits a distinct
maximum which appears due to shear-induced alignment of semiflexible chain
segments in contact with solid walls. At large slip velocities the decay of the
friction coefficient is independent of the chain stiffness. The data for the
friction coefficient and shear viscosity are used to elucidate main trends in
the nonlinear shear rate dependence of the slip length. The influence of chain
stiffness on the relationship between the friction coefficient and the
structure factor in the first fluid layer is discussed.Comment: 31 pages, 12 figure
Effects of the CDK-inhibitor CYC202 on p38 MAPK, ERK1/2 and c-Myc activities in papillomavirus type 16 E6- and E7-transformed human keratinocytes
In the present study, we have investigated the effect of the chemical CDK-inhibitor CYC202 on E6 and E7-transformed keratinocytes, in which the function of the cellular cell cycle inhibitor p21Cip1 is abrogated by the viral genes. The cyto-toxicity and the inhibition of the cell growth were analysed by MTT assay and analysis of DNA synthesis respectively. The effect on some signalling molecules was tested by Western blot analysis. CYC202 effectively inhibited the proliferation of E6 and E7 keratinocytes in a dose-dependent manner. Treatment with CYC202 strongly increased the activity of p38 MAP kinase. Furthermore, it inhibited ERK1/2 at the highest concentration used and had no effect on the activity of JNK1/2. CYC202 also increased the phosphorylation of HSP27 and decreased the phosphorylation and DNA-binding activity of the transcriptional regulator c-Myc, in correlation with the corresponding upstream kinases p38 MAPK and ERK1/2. Our results provide additional data for the anti-proliferative actions and potency of the chemical CDK-inhibitor CYC202
The relationship between induced fluid structure and boundary slip in nanoscale polymer films
The molecular mechanism of slip at the interface between polymer melts and
weakly attractive smooth surfaces is investigated using molecular dynamics
simulations. In agreement with our previous studies on slip flow of
shear-thinning fluids, it is shown that the slip length passes through a local
minimum at low shear rates and then increases rapidly at higher shear rates. We
found that at sufficiently high shear rates, the slip flow over atomically flat
crystalline surfaces is anisotropic. It is demonstrated numerically that the
friction coefficient at the liquid-solid interface (the ratio of viscosity and
slip length) undergoes a transition from a constant value to the power-law
decay as a function of the slip velocity. The characteristic velocity of the
transition correlates well with the diffusion velocity of fluid monomers in the
first fluid layer near the solid wall at equilibrium. We also show that in the
linear regime, the friction coefficient is well described by a function of a
single variable, which is a product of the magnitude of surface-induced peak in
the structure factor and the contact density of the adjacent fluid layer. The
universal relationship between the friction coefficient and induced fluid
structure holds for a number of material parameters of the interface: fluid
density, chain length, wall-fluid interaction energy, wall density, lattice
type and orientation, thermal or solid walls.Comment: 33 pages, 14 figure
Common Sense or World Knowledge? Investigating Adapter-Based Knowledge Injection into Pretrained Transformers
Following the major success of neural language models (LMs) such as BERT or
GPT-2 on a variety of language understanding tasks, recent work focused on
injecting (structured) knowledge from external resources into these models.
While on the one hand, joint pretraining (i.e., training from scratch, adding
objectives based on external knowledge to the primary LM objective) may be
prohibitively computationally expensive, post-hoc fine-tuning on external
knowledge, on the other hand, may lead to the catastrophic forgetting of
distributional knowledge. In this work, we investigate models for complementing
the distributional knowledge of BERT with conceptual knowledge from ConceptNet
and its corresponding Open Mind Common Sense (OMCS) corpus, respectively, using
adapter training. While overall results on the GLUE benchmark paint an
inconclusive picture, a deeper analysis reveals that our adapter-based models
substantially outperform BERT (up to 15-20 performance points) on inference
tasks that require the type of conceptual knowledge explicitly present in
ConceptNet and OMCS
Quantization and Fractional Quantization of Currents in Periodically Driven Stochastic Systems I: Average Currents
This article studies Markovian stochastic motion of a particle on a graph
with finite number of nodes and periodically time-dependent transition rates
that satisfy the detailed balance condition at any time. We show that under
general conditions, the currents in the system on average become quantized or
fractionally quantized for adiabatic driving at sufficiently low temperature.
We develop the quantitative theory of this quantization and interpret it in
terms of topological invariants. By implementing the celebrated Kirchhoff
theorem we derive a general and explicit formula for the average generated
current that plays a role of an efficient tool for treating the current
quantization effects.Comment: 22 pages, 7 figure
The Chin as a Domain Widener in American Sign Language (ASL)
In this paper, we investigate a grammaticalized facial expression in American Sign Language (ASL) called flat chin, which we propose functions as a general-purpose domain widener, targeting both quantificational domains as well as the scales used by gradable predicates. Our analysis allows for flat chin to target nearly any expression involving a domain, and is based on Morzycki's (2012) analysis of extreme degree modifiers. Such an analysis both expands our understanding of ASL as well Language more broadly, as few general-purpose domain wideners have yet been reported and fewer still are reported to occur as a non-manual (non-hand) markers in a sign language
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