1,990 research outputs found
Mapping Monte Carlo to Langevin dynamics: A Fokker-Planck approach
We propose a general method of using the Fokker-Planck equation (FPE) to link
the Monte-Carlo (MC) and the Langevin micromagnetic schemes. We derive the
drift and disusion FPE terms corresponding to the MC method and show that it is
analytically equivalent to the stochastic Landau-Lifshitz-Gilbert (LLG)
equation of Langevin-based micromagnetics. Subsequent results such as the time
quantification factor for the Metropolis MC method can be rigorously derived
from this mapping equivalence. The validity of the mapping is shown by the
close numerical convergence between the MC method and the LLG equation for the
case of a single magnetic particle as well as interacting arrays of particles.
We also found that our Metropolis MC is accurate for a large range of damping
factors , unlike previous time-quantified MC methods which break down
at low , where precessional motion dominates.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures. Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. Let
Non-Markovian entanglement dynamics of quantum continuous variable systems in thermal environments
We study two continuous variable systems (or two harmonic oscillators) and
investigate their entanglement evolution under the influence of non-Markovian
thermal environments. The continuous variable systems could be two modes of
electromagnetic fields or two nanomechanical oscillators in the quantum domain.
We use quantum open system method to derive the non-Markovian master equations
of the reduced density matrix for two different but related models of the
continuous variable systems. The two models both consist of two interacting
harmonic oscillators. In model A, each of the two oscillators is coupled to its
own independent thermal reservoir, while in model B the two oscillators are
coupled to a common reservoir. To quantify the degrees of entanglement for the
bipartite continuous variable systems in Gaussian states, logarithmic
negativity is used. We find that the dynamics of the quantum entanglement is
sensitive to the initial states, the oscillator-oscillator interaction, the
oscillator-environment interaction and the coupling to a common bath or to
different, independent baths.Comment: 10 two-column pages, 8 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Patchy Amphiphilic Dendrimers Bind Adenovirus and Control Its Host Interactions and in Vivo Distribution
The surface of proteins is heterogeneous with sophisticated but precise hydrophobic and hydrophilic patches, which is essential for their diverse biological functions. To emulate such distinct surface patterns on macromolecules, we used rigid spherical synthetic dendrimers (polyphenylene dendrimers) to provide controlled amphiphilic surface patches with molecular precision. We identified an,. I optimal spatial arrangement of these patches on certain dendrimers that enabled their interaction with human adenovirus 5 (Ads). Patchy dendrimers bound to the surface of Ads formed a synthetic polymer corona that greatly altered various host interactions of Ads as well as in vivo distribution. The dendrimer corona (1) improved the ability of Ad5-derived gene transfer vectors to transduce cells deficient for the primary Ad5 cell membrane receptor and (2) modulated the binding of Ads to blood coagulation factor X, one of the most critical virus host interactions in the bloodstream. It significantly enhanced the transduction efficiency of Ad5 while also protecting it from neutralization by natural antibodies and the complement system in human whole blood. Ads with a synthetic dendrimer corona revealed profoundly altered in vivo distribution, improved transduction of heart, and dampened vector sequestration by liver and spleen. We propose the design of bioactive polymers that bind protein surfaces solely based on their amphiphilic surface patches and protect against a naturally occurring protein corona, which is highly attractive to improve Ad5-based in vivo gene therapy applications
Angular position of nodes in the superconducting gap of YBCO
The thermal conductivity of a YBCO single crystal has been studied as a
function of the relative orientation of the crystal axes and a magnetic field
rotating in the Cu-O planes. Measurements were carried out at several
temperatures below T_c and at a fixed field of 30 kOe. A four-fold symmetry
characteristic of a superconducting gap with nodes at odd multiples of 45
degrees in k-space was resolved. Experiments were performed to exclude a
possible macroscopic origin for such a four-fold symmetry such as sample shape
or anisotropic pinning. Our results impose an upper limit of 10% on the weight
of the s-wave component of the essentially d-wave superconducting order
parameter of YBCO.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Submillimeter emission from the hot molecular jet HH 211
We observed the HH 211 jet in the submillimeter continuum and the CO(3-2) and
SiO(8-7) transitions with the Submillimeter Array. The continuum source
detected at the center of the outflow shows an elongated morphology,
perpendicular to the direction of the outflow axis. The high-velocity emission
of both molecules shows a knotty and highly collimated structure. The SiO(8-7)
emission at the base of the outflow, close to the driving source, spans a wide
range of velocities, from -20 up to 40 km s^{-1}. This suggests that a
wide-angle wind may be the driving mechanism of the HH 211 outflow. For
distances greater than 5" (1500 AU) from the driving source, emission from both
transitions follows a Hubble-law behavior, with SiO(8-7) reaching higher
velocities than CO(3-2), and being located upstream of the CO(3-2) knots. This
indicates that the SiO(8-7) emission is likely tracing entrained gas very close
to the primary jet, while the CO(3-2) is tracing less dense entrained gas. From
the SiO(5-4) data of Hirano et al. we find that the SiO(8-7)/SiO(5-4)
brightness temperature ratio along the jet decreases for knots far from the
driving source. This is consistent with the density decreasing along the jet,
from (3-10)x10^6 cm^{-3} at 500 AU to (0.8-4)x10^6 cm^{-3} at 5000 AU from the
driving source.Comment: 3 pages, 3 figures. Accepted by Astrophysical Journal Letter
Fenton-Like Oxidation of 4−Chlorophenol: Homogeneous or Heterogeneous?
Heterogeneous Fenton-like catalysts have received considerable research attention because they could potentially be attractive for oxidative removal of organic contaminants from tertiary wastewater. However, process design is still hampered by insufficient understanding of the chemical pathways involved, and especially whether oxidation activity stems from heterogeneous surface chemistry or minute concentrations of dissolved metal ions in the homogeneous phase. Using inductively coupled plasma-optical emission spectroscopy (ICP-OES) in combination with pH monitoring and ultraviolet–visible spectroscopy (UV–vis) we have monitored the degradation of 4-chlorophenol (4-CP) over two Fenton-like heterogeneous systems, namely FeOx supported on TiO2 and CuFe2O4. We show conclusively that these systems proceed predominantly through a homogeneous route via dissolved metal ions from the solid phase catalysts. Control experiments with homogeneous Fe3+ or Cu2+ systems reveal that even minute concentrations (μM/subppm) of dissolved metal ions leached from the solid phases account for the observed 4-CP degradation rates in the heterogeneous systems. ICP-OES revealed that metal leaching was time-dependent and variable because of pH variations associated with changing acid release rates. Buffering solutions at pH 7.4 suppressed metal leaching (and hence 4-CP degradation) in the FeOx/TiO2 system, but not in others. For example, pH buffering did not entirely suppress metal leaching from CuFe2O4, for which 4-CP degradation was retained through small concentrations of Fe and Cu ions in solution. Our results highlight the importance of careful monitoring of metal content in the aqueous phase, certainly with analytical sensitivity below ppm concentrations of the dissolved metals, and also the crucial influence of time-dependent pH variations on the reaction process. Recyclability of catalysts, pH buffering of solutions or monitoring of metal content in the solid phase by less sensitive analytical methods, for example, chemical analysis, gravimetry, X-ray fluorescence, or energy dispersive X-ray analysis in electron microscopes, cannot exclude the homogeneous Fenton route in the presence of solid catalysts
Aspects of Scalar Field Dynamics in Gauss-Bonnet Brane Worlds
The Einstein-Gauss-Bonnet equations projected from the bulk to brane lead to
a complicated Friedmann equation which simplifies to in the
asymptotic regimes. The Randall-Sundrum (RS) scenario corresponds to
whereas & give rise to high energy Gauss-Bonnet (GB) regime and
the standard GR respectively. Amazingly, while evolving from RS regime to high
energy GB limit, one passes through a GR like region which has important
implications for brane world inflation. For tachyon GB inflation with
potentials investigated in this paper, the scalar to
tensor ratio of perturbations is maximum around the RS region and is
generally suppressed in the high energy regime for the positive values of .
The ratio is very low for at all energy scales relative to GB inflation
with ordinary scalar field. The models based upon tachyon inflation with
polynomial type of potentials with generic positive values of turn out to
be in the observational contour bound at all energy scales varying
from GR to high energy GB limit. The spectral index improves for the
lower values of and approaches its scale invariant limit for in the
high energy GB regime. The ratio also remains small for large negative
values of , however, difference arises for models close to scale invariance
limit. In this case, the tensor to scale ratio is large in the GB regime
whereas it is suppressed in the intermediate region between RS and GB. Within
the frame work of patch cosmologies governed by , the behavior
of ordinary scalar field near cosmological singularity and the nature of
scaling solutions are distinguished for the values of .Comment: 15 pages, 10 eps figures; appendix on various scales in GB brane
world included and references updated; final version to appear in PR
Origin of Life
The evolution of life has been a big enigma despite rapid advancements in the
fields of biochemistry, astrobiology, and astrophysics in recent years. The
answer to this puzzle has been as mind-boggling as the riddle relating to
evolution of Universe itself. Despite the fact that panspermia has gained
considerable support as a viable explanation for origin of life on the Earth
and elsewhere in the Universe, the issue remains far from a tangible solution.
This paper examines the various prevailing hypotheses regarding origin of life
like abiogenesis, RNA World, Iron-sulphur World, and panspermia; and concludes
that delivery of life-bearing organic molecules by the comets in the early
epoch of the Earth alone possibly was not responsible for kick-starting the
process of evolution of life on our planet.Comment: 32 pages, 8 figures,invited review article, minor additio
Theory of Transmission through disordered superlattices
We derive a theory for transmission through disordered finite superlattices
in which the interface roughness scattering is treated by disorder averaging.
This procedure permits efficient calculation of the transmission thr ough
samples with large cross-sections. These calculations can be performed
utilizing either the Keldysh or the Landauer-B\"uttiker transmission
formalisms, both of which yield identical equations. For energies close to the
lowest miniband, we demonstrate the accuracy of the computationally efficient
Wannier-function approximation. Our calculations indicate that the transmission
is strongly affected by interface roughness and that information about scale
and size of the imperfections can be obtained from transmission data.Comment: 12 pages, 6 Figures included into the text. Final version with minor
changes. Accepted by Physical Review
Epigenetic meta-analysis across three civilian cohorts identifies NRG1 and HGS as blood-based biomarkers for post-traumatic stress disorder
Aim: Trauma exposure is a necessary, but not deterministic, contributor to post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Epigenetic factors may distinguish between trauma-exposed individuals with versus without PTSD. Materials & methods: We conducted a meta-analysis of PTSD epigenome-wide association studies in trauma-exposed cohorts drawn from civilian contexts. Whole blood-derived DNA methylation levels were analyzed in 545 study participants, drawn from the three civilian cohorts participating in the PTSD working group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium. Results: Two CpG sites significantly associated with current PTSD in NRG1 (cg23637605) and in HGS (cg19577098). Conclusion: PTSD is associated with differential methylation, measured in blood, within HGS and NRG1 across three civilian cohorts
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