950 research outputs found
Proteins in solution: Fractal surfaces in solutions
The concept of the surface of a protein in solution, as well of the interface
between protein and 'bulk solution', is introduced. The experimental technique
of small angle X-ray and neutron scattering is introduced and described
briefly. Molecular dynamics simulation, as an appropriate computational tool
for studying the hydration shell of proteins, is also discussed. The concept of
protein surfaces with fractal dimensions is elaborated. We finish by exposing
an experimental (using small angle X-ray scattering) and a computer simulation
case study, which are meant as demonstrations of the possibilities we have at
hand for investigating the delicate interfaces that connect (and divide)
protein molecules and the neighboring electrolyte solution.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
An independent, general method for checking consistency between diffraction data and partial radial distribution functions derived from them: the example of liquid water
There are various routes for deriving partial radial distribution functions
of disordered systems from experimental diffraction (and/or EXAFS) data. Due to
limitations and errors of experimental data, as well as to imperfections of the
evaluation procedures, it is of primary importance to confirm that the end
result (partial radial distribution functions) and the primary information
(diffraction data) are consistent with each other. We introduce a simple
approach, based on Reverse Monte Carlo modelling, that is capable of assessing
this dilemma. As a demonstration, we use the most frequently cited set of
"experimental" partial radial distribution functions on liquid water and
investigate whether the 3 partials (O-O, O-H and H-H) are consistent with the
total structure factor of pure liquid D_2O from neutron diffraction and that of
H_2O from X-ray diffraction. We find that while neutron diffraction on heavy
water is in full agreement with all the 3 partials, the addition of X-ray
diffraction data clearly shows problems with the O-O partial radial
distribution function. We suggest that the approach introduced here may also be
used to establish whether partial radial distribution functions obtained from
statistical theories of the liquid state are consistent with the measured
structure factors.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
Local order and orientational correlations in liquid and crystalline phases of carbon tetrabromide from neutron powder diffraction measurements
The liquid, plastic crystalline and ordered crystalline phases of CBr
were studied using neutron powder diffraction. The measured total scattering
differential cross-sections were modelled by Reverse Monte Carlo simulation
techniques (RMC++ and RMCPOW). Following successful simulations, the single
crystal diffraction pattern of the plastic phase, as well as partial radial
distribution functions and orientational correlations for all the three phases
have been calculated from the atomic coordinates ('particle configurations').
The single crystal pattern, calculated from a configuration that had been
obtained from modelling the powder pattern, shows identical behavior to the
recent single crystal data of Folmer et al. (Phys. Rev. {\bf B77}, 144205
(2008)). The BrBr partial radial distribution functions of the liquid and
plastic crystalline phases are almost the same, while CC correlations clearly
display long range ordering in the latter phase. Orientational correlations
also suggest strong similarities between liquid and plastic crystalline phases,
whereas the monoclinic phase behaves very differently. Orientations of the
molecules are distinct in the ordered phase, whereas in the plastic crystal
their distribution seems to be isotropic.Comment: 19 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in Physical Review B
(http://prb.aps.org/
Generalized spin Sutherland systems revisited
We present generalizations of the spin Sutherland systems obtained earlier by
Blom and Langmann and by Polychronakos in two different ways: from SU(n)
Yang--Mills theory on the cylinder and by constraining geodesic motion on the
N-fold direct product of SU(n) with itself, for any N>1. Our systems are in
correspondence with the Dynkin diagram automorphisms of arbitrary connected and
simply connected compact simple Lie groups. We give a finite-dimensional as
well as an infinite-dimensional derivation and shed light on the mechanism
whereby they lead to the same classical integrable systems. The
infinite-dimensional approach, based on twisted current algebras (alias
Yang--Mills with twisted boundary conditions), was inspired by the derivation
of the spinless Sutherland model due to Gorsky and Nekrasov. The
finite-dimensional method relies on Hamiltonian reduction under twisted
conjugations of N-fold direct product groups, linking the quantum mechanics of
the reduced systems to representation theory similarly as was explored
previously in the N=1 case.Comment: 21 page
Derivations of the trigonometric BC(n) Sutherland model by quantum Hamiltonian reduction
The BC(n) Sutherland Hamiltonian with coupling constants parametrized by
three arbitrary integers is derived by reductions of the Laplace operator of
the group U(N). The reductions are obtained by applying the Laplace operator on
spaces of certain vector valued functions equivariant under suitable symmetric
subgroups of U(N)\times U(N). Three different reduction schemes are considered,
the simplest one being the compact real form of the reduction of the Laplacian
of GL(2n,C) to the complex BC(n) Sutherland Hamiltonian previously studied by
Oblomkov.Comment: 30 pages, LateX; v2: final version with minor stylistic modification
Phase field approach to heterogeneous crystal nucleation in alloys
We extend the phase field model of heterogeneous crystal nucleation developed recently [L. Gránásy, T. Pusztai, D. Saylor, and J. A. Warren, Phys. Rev. Lett. 98, 035703 (2007)] to binary alloys. Three approaches are considered to incorporate foreign walls of tunable wetting properties into phase field simulations: a continuum realization of the classical spherical cap model (called Model A herein), a non-classical approach (Model B) that leads to ordering of the liquid at the wall, and to the appearance of a surface spinodal, and a non-classical model (Model C) that allows for the appearance of local states at the wall that are accessible in the bulk phases only via thermal fluctuations. We illustrate the potential of the presented phase field methods for describing complex polycrystalline solidification morphologies including the shish-kebab structure, columnar to equiaxed transition, and front-particle interaction in binary alloys
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