199 research outputs found
Pressure seal Patent
Pressure seals suitable for use in environmental test chamber
Exotic torus manifolds and equivariant smooth structures on quasitoric manifolds
In 2006 Masuda and Suh asked if two compact non-singular toric varieties
having isomorphic cohomology rings are homeomorphic. In the first part of this
paper we discuss this question for topological generalizations of toric
varieties, so-called torus manifolds. For example we show that there are
homotopy equivalent torus manifolds which are not homeomorphic. Moreover, we
characterize those groups which appear as the fundamental groups of locally
standard torus manifolds.
In the second part we give a classification of quasitoric manifolds and
certain six-dimensional torus manifolds up to equivariant diffeomorphism.
In the third part we enumerate the number of conjugacy classes of tori in the
diffeomorphism group of torus manifolds. For torus manifolds of dimension
greater than six there are always infinitely many conjugacy classes. We give
examples which show that this does not hold for six-dimensional torus
manifolds.Comment: 21 pages, 2 figures, results about quasitoric manifolds adde
First steps to understand heat tolerance of temperate maize at adult stage: identification of QTL across multiple environments with connected segregating populations
KEY MESSAGE: Dents were more heat tolerant than Flints. QTL for heat tolerance with respect to grain yield at field conditions were identified considering multiple populations and environments. ABSTRACT: High temperatures have the potential to cause severe damages to maize production. This study aims to elucidate the genetic mechanisms of heat tolerance under field conditions in maize and the genome regions contributing to natural variation. In our study, heat tolerance was assessed on a multi-environment level under non-controlled field conditions for a set of connected intra- and interpool Dent and Flint populations. Our findings indicate that Dent are more heat tolerant during adult stage than Flint genotypes. We identified 11 quantitative trait loci (QTL) including 2 loci for heat tolerance with respect to grain yield. Furthermore, we identified six heat-tolerance and 112 heat-responsive candidate genes colocating with the previously mentioned QTL. To investigate their contribution to the response to heat stress and heat tolerance, differential expression and sequence variation of the identified candidate genes should be subjected to further research. ELECTRONIC SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL: The online version of this article (doi:10.1007/s00122-016-2674-6) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users
Plaquette operators used in the rigorous study of ground-states of the Periodic Anderson Model in dimensions
The derivation procedure of exact ground-states for the periodic Anderson
model (PAM) in restricted regions of the parameter space and D=2 dimensions
using plaquette operators is presented in detail. Using this procedure, we are
reporting for the first time exact ground-states for PAM in 2D and finite value
of the interaction, whose presence do not require the next to nearest neighbor
extension terms in the Hamiltonian. In order to do this, a completely new type
of plaquette operator is introduced for PAM, based on which a new localized
phase is deduced whose physical properties are analyzed in detail. The obtained
results provide exact theoretical data which can be used for the understanding
of system properties leading to metal-insulator transitions, strongly debated
in recent publications in the frame of PAM. In the described case, the lost of
the localization character is connected to the break-down of the long-range
density-density correlations rather than Kondo physics.Comment: 34 pages, 5 figure
Monte Carlo study of tunable negative-zero-positive index of refraction in nanosphere dispersed liquid crystals
Khoo et al.1, 2 have shown that nanosphere dispersed nematic liquid crystal (NDLC) constitutes a new type of metamaterial with index of refraction tunable from negative to positive values. Recently3 we have combined this approach with Monte Carlo simulations of inhomogeneous molecular order in planar NLC cells. Lebwohl - Lasher effective hamiltonian with Rapini - Papoular term for anchoring forces was used. Electric field and amplitude of anchoring forces are control parameters which determine the profiles of order parameter. In this paper we study, using the same approach, local spatial distribution of refractive index in NDLC planar cell. We show that NDLC material consists of layers with negative-zero-positive index of refraction. The spatial organization of those layers strongly depends on incident light wavelength. The role of spatially modulated external electric field for tuning of refractive index of NDLC is briefly discussed
Surgery groups of the fundamental groups of hyperplane arrangement complements
Using a recent result of Bartels and Lueck (arXiv:0901.0442) we deduce that
the Farrell-Jones Fibered Isomorphism conjecture in L-theory is true for any
group which contains a finite index strongly poly-free normal subgroup, in
particular, for the Artin full braid groups. As a consequence we explicitly
compute the surgery groups of the Artin pure braid groups. This is obtained as
a corollary to a computation of the surgery groups of a more general class of
groups, namely for the fundamental group of the complement of any fiber-type
hyperplane arrangement in the complex n-space.Comment: 11 pages, AMSLATEX file, revised following referee's comments and
suggestions, to appear in Archiv der Mathemati
Nanopores: maltoporin channel as a sensor for maltodextrin and lambda-phage
BACKGROUND: To harvest nutrition from the outside bacteria e.g. E. coli developed in the outer cell wall a number of sophisticated channels called porins. One of them, maltoporin, is a passive specific channel for the maltodextrin uptake. This channel was also named LamB as the bacterial virus phage Lambda mis-uses this channel to recognise the bacteria. The first step is a reversible binding followed after a lag phase by DNA injection. To date little is known about the binding capacity and less on the DNA injection mechanism. To elucidate the mechanism and to show the sensitivity of our method we reconstituted maltoporin in planar lipid membranes. Application of an external transmembrane electric field causes an ion current across the channel. Maltoporin channel diameter is around a few Angstroem. At this size the ion current is extremely sensitive to any modification of the channels surface. Protein conformational changes, substrate binding etc will cause fluctuations reflecting the molecular interactions with the channel wall. The recent improvement in ion current fluctuation analysis allows now studying the interaction of solutes with the channel on a single molecular level. RESULTS: We could demonstrate the asymmetry of the bacterial phage Lambda binding to its natural receptor maltoporin. CONCLUSION: We suggest that this type of measurement can be used as a new type of biosensors
A low-cost time-hopping impulse radio system for high data rate transmission
We present an efficient, low-cost implementation of time-hopping impulse
radio that fulfills the spectral mask mandated by the FCC and is suitable for
high-data-rate, short-range communications. Key features are: (i) all-baseband
implementation that obviates the need for passband components, (ii) symbol-rate
(not chip rate) sampling, A/D conversion, and digital signal processing, (iii)
fast acquisition due to novel search algorithms, (iv) spectral shaping that can
be adapted to accommodate different spectrum regulations and interference
environments. Computer simulations show that this system can provide 110Mbit/s
at 7-10m distance, as well as higher data rates at shorter distances under FCC
emissions limits. Due to the spreading concept of time-hopping impulse radio,
the system can sustain multiple simultaneous users, and can suppress narrowband
interference effectively.Comment: To appear in EURASIP Journal on Applied Signal Processing (Special
Issue on UWB - State of the Art
Further restrictions on the topology of stationary black holes in five dimensions
We place further restriction on the possible topology of stationary
asymptotically flat vacuum black holes in 5 spacetime dimensions. We prove that
the horizon manifold can be either a connected sum of Lens spaces and "handles"
, or the quotient of by certain finite groups of
isometries (with no "handles"). The resulting horizon topologies include Prism
manifolds and quotients of the Poincare homology sphere. We also show that the
topology of the domain of outer communication is a cartesian product of the
time direction with a finite connected sum of 's
and 's, minus the black hole itself. We do not assume the existence of
any Killing vector beside the asymptotically timelike one required by
definition for stationarity.Comment: LaTex, 22 pages, 9 figure
5-dimensional contact SO(3)-manifolds and Dehn twists
In this paper the 5-dimensional contact SO(3)-manifolds are classified up to
equivariant contactomorphisms. The construction of such manifolds with singular
orbits requires the use of generalized Dehn twists.
We show as an application that all simply connected 5-manifoldswith singular
orbits are realized by a Brieskorn manifold with exponents (k,2,2,2). The
standard contact structure on such a manifold gives right-handed Dehn twists,
and a second contact structure defined in the article gives left-handed twists.Comment: 16 pages, 1 figure; simplification of arguments by restricting
classification to coorientation preserving contactomorphism
- …