3,881 research outputs found
Irrational mode locking in quasiperiodic systems
A model for ac-driven systems, based on the
Tang-Wiesenfeld-Bak-Coppersmith-Littlewood automaton for an elastic medium,
exhibits mode-locked steps with frequencies that are irrational multiples of
the drive frequency, when the pinning is spatially quasiperiodic. Detailed
numerical evidence is presented for the large-system-size convergence of such a
mode-locked step. The irrational mode locking is stable to small thermal noise
and weak disorder. Continuous time models with irrational mode locking and
possible experimental realizations are discussed.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, 1 table; revision: 2 figures modified, reference
added, minor clarification
A model for the accidental catalysis of protein unfolding in vivo
Activated processes such as protein unfolding are highly sensitive to
heterogeneity in the environment. We study a highly simplified model of a
protein in a random heterogeneous environment, a model of the in vivo
environment. It is found that if the heterogeneity is sufficiently large the
total rate of the process is essentially a random variable; this may be the
cause of the species-to-species variability in the rate of prion protein
conversion found by Deleault et al. [Nature, 425 (2003) 717].Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
Proteins and polymers
Proteins, chain molecules of amino acids, behave in ways which are similar to
each other yet quite distinct from standard compact polymers. We demonstrate
that the Flory theorem, derived for polymer melts, holds for compact protein
native state structures and is not incompatible with the existence of
structured building blocks such as -helices and -strands. We
present a discussion on how the notion of the thickness of a polymer chain,
besides being useful in describing a chain molecule in the continuum limit,
plays a vital role in interpolating between conventional polymer physics and
the phase of matter associated with protein structures.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure
Peopling polite landscapes: community and heritage at Poltimore, Devon
© 2013 The Author(s). Published by Routledge. This is an Open Access article distributed under the
terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution,
and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. The moral rights of the named author(s) have been asserted.Poltimore House, near Exeter, Devon, was the seat of
the Bampfylde family from the mid-sixteenth century
until the 1920s. The AHRC-funded knowledge transfer
project âCommunity and Landscape: Transforming Access
to the Heritage of the Poltimore Estateâ researched the
changing relationship between house and setting through
a public heritage initiative that promoted the co-creation
of knowledge with local groups. Research techniques
included analysis of maps, estate records and pictorial
sources; geophysical and earthwork survey; test-pitting;
and fieldwalking. The designed landscape around the house
went through a series of previously unknown iterations
as the park was enlarged and gardens re-designed, while
accompanying changes saw roads diverted and farms and
estate buildings variously moved, re-built and abandoned.
Visual experiences of the house and its surroundings
were manipulated in complex ways as different elements
of the estate landscape were exhibited to certain audiences
but secluded from others at different points in time. The
case study demonstrates how the design of a post-medieval
estate landscape could be moulded by the âpersonalityâ of a
local dynasty and mediated by local circumstances. It also
shows how integrated archaeological and historical analysis
of polite landscapes can reveal antecedent activity and
illuminate layers of re-use to these settings.The Arts and Humanities Research Counci
Paper Session IV-B - Payload Processing Study For ELV Launches
A NASA-KSC study on payload ground processing activities in support of Expendable Launch Vehicle (ELV) launches at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station from January 1977 through February 1988, showed that nearly half of the payloads experienced schedule delays. While about 10 per cent of the delays were weather-related, over 65 per cent were caused by payload/launch vehicle problems. The planned processing time was exceeded by more than 2 weeks in most cases. Nearly 30 per cent of the payloads required some storage time
Star formation in the giant HII regions of M101
The molecular components of three giant HII regions (NGC 5461, NGC 5462, NGC
5471) in the galaxy M101 are investigated with new observations from the James
Clerk Maxwell Telescope, the NRAO 12-meter, and the Owens Valley millimeter
array. Of the three HII regions, only NGC 5461 had previously been detected in
CO emission.
We calculate preliminary values for the molecular mass of the GMCs in NGC
5461 by assuming a CO-to-H_2 factor (X factor) and then compare these values
with the virial masses. We conclude that the data in this paper demonstrate for
the first time that the value of X may decrease in regions with intense star
formation.
The molecular mass for the association of clouds in NGC 5461 is approximately
3x10^7 Mo and is accompanied by 1-2 times as much atomic mass. The observed CO
emission in NGC 5461 is an order of magnitude stronger than in NGC 5462, while
it was not possible to detect molecular gas toward NGC 5471 with the JCMT. An
even larger ratio of atomic to molecular gas in NGC 5471 was observed, which
might be attributed to efficient conversion of molecular to atomic gas.
The masses of the individual clouds in NGC 5461, which are gravitationally
bound, cover a range of (2-8) x 10^5 Mo, comparable with the masses of Galactic
giant molecular clouds (GMCs). Higher star forming efficiencies, and not
massive clouds, appear to be the prerequisite for the formation of the large
number of stars whose radiation is required to produce the giant HII regions in
M101.Comment: 32 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journa
Bubble Raft Model for a Paraboloidal Crystal
We investigate crystalline order on a two-dimensional paraboloid of
revolution by assembling a single layer of millimeter-sized soap bubbles on the
surface of a rotating liquid, thus extending the classic work of Bragg and Nye
on planar soap bubble rafts. Topological constraints require crystalline
configurations to contain a certain minimum number of topological defects such
as disclinations or grain boundary scars whose structure is analyzed as a
function of the aspect ratio of the paraboloid. We find the defect structure to
agree with theoretical predictions and propose a mechanism for scar nucleation
in the presence of large Gaussian curvature.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Accelerated soil carbon loss does not explain warming related increases in soil CO2 efflux
The universally observed exponential increase in soil-surface CO2 efflux (âsoil respirationâ; FS) with increasing temperature has led to speculation that global warming will accelerate soil-organic-carbon (SOC) decomposition, reduce SOC storage, and drive a positive feedback to future warming. However, interpreting temperatureâFS relationships, and so modelling terrestrial carbon balance in a warmer world, is complicated by the many sources of respired carbon that contribute to FS (ref. 3) and a poor understanding of how temperature influences SOC decomposition rates. Here we quantified FS, litterfall, bulk SOC and SOC fraction size and turnover, and total below-ground carbon flux (TBCF) across a highly constrained 5.2 °C mean annual temperature (MAT) gradient in tropical montane wet forest. From these, we determined that: increases in TBCF and litterfall explain >90% of the increase in FS with MAT; bulk SOC and SOC fraction size and turnover rate do not vary with MAT; and increases in TBCF and litterfall do not influence SOC storage or turnover on century to millennial timescales. This gradient study shows that for tropical montane wet forest, long-term and whole-ecosystem warming accelerates below-ground carbon processes with no apparent impact on SOC storage
The Loudest Event Statistic: General Formulation, Properties and Applications
The use of the loudest observed event to generate statistical statements
about rate and strength has become standard in searches for gravitational waves
from compact binaries and pulsars. The Bayesian formulation of the method is
generalized in this paper to allow for uncertainties both in the background
estimate and in the properties of the population being constrained. The method
is also extended to allow rate interval construction. Finally, it is shown how
to combine the results from multiple experiments and a comparison is drawn
between the upper limit obtained in a single search and the upper limit
obtained by combining the results of two experiments each of half the original
duration. To illustrate this, we look at an example case, motivated by the
search for gravitational waves from binary inspiral.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figure
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