3,401 research outputs found
Origin of translocation barriers for polyelectrolyte chains
For single-file translocations of a charged macromolecule through a narrow
pore, the crucial step of arrival of an end at the pore suffers from free
energy barriers, arising from changes in intrachain electrostatic interaction,
distribution of ionic clouds and solvent molecules, and conformational entropy
of the chain. All contributing factors to the barrier in the initial stage of
translocation are evaluated by using the self-consistent field theory for the
polyelectrolyte and the coupled Poisson-Boltzmann description for ions, without
radial symmetry. The barrier is found to be essentially entropic, due to
conformational changes. For moderate and high salt concentrations, the barriers
for the polyelectrolyte chain are quantitatively equivalent to that of
uncharged self-avoiding walks. Electrostatic effects are shown to increase the
free energy barriers, but only slightly. The degree of ionization,
electrostatic interaction strength, decreasing salt concentration and the
solvent quality all result in increases in the barrier.Comment: J.Chem. Phys. 131, 21 (2009) - to be appeare
Elliptical flow and isospin effects in heavy-ion collisions at intermediate energies
The elliptical flow of fragments is studied for different systems at incident
energies between 50 and 1000 MeV/nucleon using the isospin-dependent quantum
molecular dynamics (IQMD) model. Our findings reveal that elliptical flow shows
a transition from positive (in-plane) to negative (out-of-plane) values in the
midrapidity region at a certain incident energy known as the transition energy.
This transition energy is found to depend on the model ingredients, size of the
fragments, and composite mass of the reacting system as well as on the impact
parameter of the reaction. A reasonable agreement is observed for the
excitation function of elliptical flow between the data and our calculations.
Interestingly, the transition energy is found to exhibit a power-law mass
dependence.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figure
Generation of scale invariant magnetic fields in bouncing universes
We consider the generation of primordial magnetic fields in a class of
bouncing models when the electromagnetic action is coupled non-minimally to a
scalar field that, say, drives the background evolution. For scale factors that
have the power law form at very early times and non-minimal couplings which are
simple powers of the scale factor, one can easily show that scale invariant
spectra for the magnetic field can arise before the bounce for certain values
of the indices involved. It will be interesting to examine if these power
spectra retain their shape after the bounce. However, analytical solutions for
the Fourier modes of the electromagnetic vector potential across the bounce are
difficult to obtain. In this work, with the help of a new time variable that we
introduce, which we refer to as the --fold, we investigate
these scenarios numerically. Imposing the initial conditions on the modes in
the contracting phase, we numerically evolve the modes across the bounce and
evaluate the spectra of the electric and magnetic fields at a suitable time
after the bounce. As one could have intuitively expected, though the complete
spectra depend on the details of the bounce, we find that, under the original
conditions, scale invariant spectra of the magnetic fields do arise for
wavenumbers much smaller than the scale associated with the bounce. We also
show that magnetic fields which correspond to observed strengths today can be
generated for specific values of the parameters. But, we find that, at the
bounce, the backreaction due to the electromagnetic modes that have been
generated can be significantly large calling into question the viability of the
model. We briefly discuss the implications of our results.Comment: v1: 19 pages, 5 figures; v2: 20 pages, 5 figures, minor revisions, to
appear in JCA
Leading Gravitational Corrections and a Unified Universe
Leading order gravitational corrections to the Einstein-Hilbert action can
lead to a consistent picture of the universe by unifying the epochs of
inflation and dark energy in a single framework. While the leading local
correction induces an inflationary phase in the early universe, the leading
non-local term leads to an accelerated expansion of the universe at the present
epoch. We argue that both the leading UV and IR terms can be obtained within
the framework of a covariant effective field theory of gravity. The
perturbative gravitational corrections therefore provide a fundamental basis
for understanding a possible connection between the two epochs.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures. This essay received "Honorable Mention" in the
2016 Gravity Research Foundation Awards for Essays on Gravitation. arXiv
admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1603.0002
On the non-Gaussian correlation of the primordial curvature perturbation with vector fields
We compute the three-point cross-correlation function of the primordial
curvature perturbation generated during inflation with two powers of a vector
field in a model where conformal invariance is broken by a direct coupling of
the vector field with the inflaton. If the vector field is identified with the
electromagnetic field, this correlation would be a non-Gaussian signature of
primordial magnetic fields generated during inflation. We find that the signal
is maximized for the flattened configuration where the wave number of the
curvature perturbation is twice that of the vector field and in this limit, the
magnetic non-linear parameter becomes as large as |b_{NL}| ~ 10^3. In the
squeezed limit where the wave number of the curvature perturbation vanishes,
our results agree with the magnetic consistency relation derived in
arXiv:1207.4187.Comment: 18 pages. V3: some typos fixed, matches version published in JCA
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