8,817 research outputs found
Microscopic analysis of the octupole phase transition in Th isotopes
A shape phase transition between stable octupole deformation and octupole
vibrations in Th nuclei is analyzed in a microscopic framework based on nuclear
density functional theory. The relativistic functional DD-PC1 is used to
calculate axially-symmetric quadrupole-octupole constrained energy surfaces.
Observables related to order parameters are computed using an interacting-boson
Hamiltonian, with parameters determined by mapping the microscopic energy
surfaces to the expectation value of the Hamiltonian in the boson condensate.
The systematics of constrained energy surfaces and low-energy excitation
spectra point to the occurrence of a phase transition between octupole-deformed
shapes and shapes characterized by octupole-soft potentials.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in Physical Review C,
Rapid Communicatio
Magnetization Plateau of an S=1 Frustrated Spin Ladder
We study the magnetization plateau at 1/4 of the saturation magnetization of
the S=1 antiferromagnetic spin ladder both analytically and numerically, with
the aim of explaining recent experimental results on BIP-TENO by Goto et al. We
propose two mechanisms for the plateau formation and clarify the plateau phase
diagram on the plane of the coupling constants between spins
Warped Supersymmetric Unification with Non-Unified Superparticle Spectrum
We present a new supersymmetric extension of the standard model. The model is
constructed in warped space, with a unified bulk symmetry broken by boundary
conditions on both the Planck and TeV branes. In the supersymmetric limit, the
massless spectrum contains exotic colored particles along with the particle
content of the minimal supersymmetric standard model (MSSM). Nevertheless, the
model still reproduces the MSSM prediction for gauge coupling unification and
does not suffer from a proton decay problem. The exotic states acquire masses
from supersymmetry breaking, making the model completely viable, but there is
still the possibility that these states will be detected at the LHC. The
lightest of these states is most likely A_5^XY, the fifth component of the
gauge field associated with the broken unified symmetry. Because supersymmetry
is broken on the SU(5)-violating TeV brane, the gaugino masses generated at the
TeV scale are completely independent of one another. We explore some of the
unusual features that the superparticle spectrum might have as a consequence.Comment: 21 pages, Latex, version to appear in Phys. Rev.
Modulation of plant growth in vivo and identification of kinase substrates using an analog-sensitive variant of CYCLIN-DEPENDENT KINASE A;1
BACKGROUND: Modulation of protein activity by phosphorylation through kinases and subsequent de-phosphorylation by phosphatases is one of the most prominent cellular control mechanisms. Thus, identification of kinase substrates is pivotal for the understanding of many – if not all – molecular biological processes. Equally, the possibility to deliberately tune kinase activity is of great value to analyze the biological process controlled by a particular kinase. RESULTS: Here we have applied a chemical genetic approach and generated an analog-sensitive version of CDKA;1, the central cell-cycle regulator in Arabidopsis and homolog of the yeast Cdc2/CDC28 kinases. This variant could largely rescue a cdka;1 mutant and is biochemically active, albeit less than the wild type. Applying bulky kinase inhibitors allowed the reduction of kinase activity in an organismic context in vivo and the modulation of plant growth. To isolate CDK substrates, we have adopted a two-dimensional differential gel electrophoresis strategy, and searched for proteins that showed mobility changes in fluorescently labeled extracts from plants expressing the analog-sensitive version of CDKA;1 with and without adding a bulky ATP variant. A pilot set of five proteins involved in a range of different processes could be confirmed in independent kinase assays to be phosphorylated by CDKA;1 approving the applicability of the here-developed method to identify substrates. CONCLUSION: The here presented generation of an analog-sensitive CDKA;1 version is functional and represent a novel tool to modulate kinase activity in vivo and identify kinase substrates. Our here performed pilot screen led to the identification of CDK targets that link cell proliferation control to sugar metabolism, proline proteolysis, and glucosinolate production providing a hint how cell proliferation and growth are integrated with plant development and physiology. ELECTRONIC SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL: The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12870-016-0900-7) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users
Area Law Unification and the Holographic Event Horizon
We prove a new, large family of area laws in general relativity, which apply
to certain classes of untrapped surfaces that we dub generalized holographic
screens. Our family of area laws contains, as special cases, the area laws for
marginally-trapped surfaces (holographic screens) and the event horizon
(Hawking's area theorem). In addition to these results in general relativity,
we show that in the context of holography the geometry of a generalized
holographic screen is related to the outer entropy of the screen. Specifically,
we show for spherically-symmetric spacetimes that the area of the largest HRT
surface consistent with the outer wedge can be computed in terms of the
geometry of the general (not necessarily marginally-trapped) codimension-two
surface defining the wedge. This outer entropy satisfies a second law of
thermodynamics, growing monotonically along the generalized holographic screen.
In particular, this result provides the holographic dual for the geometry of
the event horizon for spherically-symmetric spacetimes.Comment: 41 pages, 8 figure
Field-Induced gap due to four-spin exchange in a spin ladder
The effect of the four-spin cyclic exchange interaction at each plaquette in
the two-leg spin ladder is investigated at T=0, especially focusing on
the field-induced gap. The strong rung coupling approximation suggests that it
yields a plateau at half of the saturation moment () in the
magnetization curve, which corresponds to a field-induced spin gap with a
spontaneous breaking of the translational symmetry. A precise phase diagram at
is also presented based on the level spectroscopy analysis of the
numerical data obtained by Lanczos method. The boundary between the gapless and
plateau phases is confirmed to be of the Kosterlitz-Thouless (KT) universality
class.Comment: 10 pages, 3 eps figures (embedded), to be published in J. Phys.:
Cond. Matte
Shape coexistence in Lead isotopes in the interacting boson model with Gogny energy density functional
We investigate the emergence and evolution of shape coexistence in the
neutron-deficient Lead isotopes within the interacting boson model (IBM) plus
configuration mixing with microscopic input based on the Gogny energy density
functional (EDF). The microscopic potential energy surface obtained from the
constrained self-consistent Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov method employing the
Gogny-D1M EDF is mapped onto the coherent-state expectation value of the
configuration-mixing IBM Hamiltonian. In this way, the parameters of the IBM
Hamiltonian are fixed for each of the three relevant configurations (spherical,
prolate and oblate) associated to the mean field minima. Subsequent
diagonalization of the Hamiltonian provides the excitation energy of the
low-lying states and transition strengths among them. The model predictions for
the level energies and evolving shape coexistence in the considered
Lead chain are consistent both with experiment and with the indications of the
Gogny-EDF energy surfaces.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, 1 tabl
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