256 research outputs found
Momentum Spectra for Dynamically Assisted Schwinger Pair Production
Recently the dynamically assisted Schwinger mechanism, i.e.,
electron-positron pair production from vacuum by a combination of laser pulses
with different time scales has been proposed. The corresponding results, which
suggest that the rate of produced pairs is significantly enhanced by dynamical
effects, are verified. Employing the framework of quantum kinetic theory
intrinsically enables us to additionally provide momentum space information on
the generated positron spectrum.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figure
Pair Production Beyond the Schwinger Formula in Time-Dependent Electric Fields
We investigate electron-positron pair production in pulse-shaped electric
background fields using a non-Markovian quantum kinetic equation. We identify a
pulse-length range for subcritical fields still in the nonperturbative regime
where the number of produced pairs significantly exceeds that of a naive
expectation based on the Schwinger formula. From a conceptual viewpoint, we
find a remarkable quantitative agreement between the (real-time) quantum
kinetic approach and the (imaginary-time) effective action approach.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. Typos corrected and references added, PRD Versio
Resource analysis: Water and energy as linked resources
Energy and water are linked resources. This pilot study examines the relationship between energy and water from a direction opposite to that of studies. We are concerned here with evaluating the energy required to supply and treat water, rather than with the water requirements of energy production. The primary energy requirements for three sectors of water management--municipal water supply, municipal sewage treatment, and water for irrigation--are evaluated. Six major cities, Chicago, Denver, Los Angeles, New Orleans, San Antonio, and St. Louis, are used as indicators of the national trend in energy requirements to supply water to municipalities. Nationwide data provided by the federal Environmental Protection Agency for 1977 and 1990 are used to determine the rate of change of energy required to treat municipal sewage over this period. The energy required to supply water for irrigation is estimated for three regions in the Southwest: Kern County, California; the Texas high plains; and San Carlos, Arizona. Historic trends and prospects for future development are used to estimate future energy requirements for each of these water sectors. The projections are compared to expected increases in national energy consumption. The results indicate that: 1. Regional differences in the amount of energy needed to supply water are very large, increasing in some places and decreasing in others. 2. Significant nationwide increases are likely for the energy required to treat sewage. 3. Noncritical short-term increases will occur in the total energy requirement to supply irrigation water, but after the year 2003, the Southwest faces an extremely difficult choice in balancing its resources of energy, water, and agricultural land, particularly in light of its growing urban demands.U.S. Department of the InteriorU.S. Geological SurveyOpe
Molecular and immunological characterization of profilin from mugwort pollen
In late summer in Europe, pollen of mugwort is one of the major sources of atopic allergens. No information about the complete molecular structure of any mugwort allergen has been published so far. Here we report the isolation and characterization of mugwort pollen cDNA clones coding for two isoforms of the panallergen profilin. Thirtysix percent of the mugwort allergic patients tested displayed IgE antibodies against natural and recombinant profilin, and no significant differences were observed in the IgEbinding properties of the isoforms. One profilin isoform was purified to homogeneity and detailed structural analysis indicated that the protein exists in solution as dimers and tetramers stabilized by sulfydryl and/or ionic interactions. Profilin monomers were detectable only after exposure of multimers to harsh denaturing conditions. Dimers and tetramers did not significantly differ in their ability to bind serum IgE from mugwort pollenallergic patients. However, oligomeric forms might have a higher allergenic potential than monomers because larger molecules would have additional epitopes for IgEmediated histamine release. Profilin isolated from mugwort pollen also formed multimers. Thus, oligomerization is not an artifact resulting from the recombinant production of the allergen. Inhibition experiments showed extensive IgE crossreactivity of recombinant mugwort profilin and profilin from various pollen and food extracts
Momentum signatures for Schwinger pair production in short laser pulses with a sub-cycle structure
We investigate electron-positron pair production from vacuum for short laser
pulses with sub-cycle structure, in the nonperturbative regime (Schwinger pair
production). We use the non-equilibrium quantum kinetic approach, and show that
the momentum spectrum of the created electron-positron pairs is extremely
sensitive to the sub-cycle dynamics -- depending on the laser frequency
, the pulse length , and the carrier phase -- and shows
several distinctive new signatures. This observation could help not only in the
design of laser pulses to optimize the experimental signature of Schwinger pair
production, but also ultimately lead to new probes of light pulses at extremely
short time scales.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures. Revised version: Minor changes and typos
corrected. PRL Versio
Bayesian inference on stochastic gene transcription from flow cytometry data
Motivation
Transcription in single cells is an inherently stochastic process as mRNA levels vary greatly between cells, even for genetically identical cells under the same experimental and environmental conditions. We present a stochastic two-state switch model for the population of mRNA molecules in single cells where genes stochastically alternate between a more active ON state and a less active OFF state. We derive the stationary solution of such a model and prove that it can be written as a mixture of a Poisson and a Poisson-beta probability distribution. This finding facilitates inference for single cell data, observed at a single time point, from flow cytometry experiments such as FACS or FISH as it allows one to sample directly from the equilibrium distribution of the mRNA population. We hence propose a Bayesian inferential methodology using a pseudo-marginal approach and a recent approximation to integrate over unobserved states associated with measurement error.
Results
We provide a general inferential framework which can be widely used to study transcription in single cells from the kind of data arising in flow cytometry experiments. The approach allows us to separate between the intrinsic stochasticity of the molecular dynamics and the measurement noise. The methodology is tested in simulation studies and results are obtained for experimental multiple single cell data from in situ hybridization (FISH) flow cytometry experiment
Localized Excitons and Breaking of Chemical Bonds at III-V (110) Surfaces
Electron-hole excitations in the surface bands of GaAs(110) are analyzed
using constrained density-functional theory calculations. The results show that
Frenkel-type autolocalized excitons are formed. The excitons induce a local
surface unrelaxation which results in a strong exciton-exciton attraction and
makes complexes of two or three electron-hole pairs more favorable than
separate excitons. In such microscopic exciton "droplets" the
electron density is mainly concentrated in the dangling orbital of a surface Ga
atom whereas the holes are distributed over the bonds of this atom to its As
neighbors thus weakening the bonding to the substrate. This finding suggests
the microscopic mechanism of a laser-induced emission of neutral Ga atoms from
GaAs and GaP (110) surfaces.Comment: submitted to PRL, 10 pages, 4 figures available upon request from:
[email protected]
Electronic properties of metal induced gap states at insulator/metal interfaces -- dependence on the alkali halide and the possibility of excitonic mechanism of superconductivity
Motivated from the experimental observation of metal induced gap states
(MIGS) at insulator/metal interfaces by Kiguchi {\it et al.} [Phys. Rev. Lett.
{\bf 90}, 196803 (2003)], we have theoretically investigated the electronic
properties of MIGS at interfaces between various alkali halides and a metal
represented by a jellium with the first-principles density functional method.
We have found that, on top of the usual evanescent state, MIGS generally have a
long tail on halogen sites with a -like character, whose penetration depth
() is as large as half the lattice constant of bulk alkali halides.
This implies that , while little dependent on the carrier density in
the jellium, is dominated by the lattice constant (hence by energy gap) of the
alkali halide, where . We also propose a possibility of the MIGS working favorably for the
exciton-mediated superconductivity.Comment: 7 pages, 9 figure
Effective Electromagnetic Lagrangian at Finite Temperature and Density in the Electroweak Model
Using the exact propagators in a constant magnetic field, the effective
electromagnetic Lagrangian at finite temperature and density is calculated to
all orders in the field strength B within the framework of the complete
electroweak model, in the weak coupling limit. The partition function and free
energy are obtained explicitly and the finite temperature effective coupling is
derived in closed form. Some implications of this result, potentially
interesting to astrophysics and cosmology, are discussed.Comment: 14 pages, Revtex
- …