41 research outputs found

    The self-organizing fractal theory as a universal discovery method: the phenomenon of life

    Get PDF
    A universal discovery method potentially applicable to all disciplines studying organizational phenomena has been developed. This method takes advantage of a new form of global symmetry, namely, scale-invariance of self-organizational dynamics of energy/matter at all levels of organizational hierarchy, from elementary particles through cells and organisms to the Universe as a whole. The method is based on an alternative conceptualization of physical reality postulating that the energy/matter comprising the Universe is far from equilibrium, that it exists as a flow, and that it develops via self-organization in accordance with the empirical laws of nonequilibrium thermodynamics. It is postulated that the energy/matter flowing through and comprising the Universe evolves as a multiscale, self-similar structure-process, i.e., as a self-organizing fractal. This means that certain organizational structures and processes are scale-invariant and are reproduced at all levels of the organizational hierarchy. Being a form of symmetry, scale-invariance naturally lends itself to a new discovery method that allows for the deduction of missing information by comparing scale-invariant organizational patterns across different levels of the organizational hierarchy

    Discriminant Isometric Mapping for Face Recognition

    No full text

    Electronic energy delocalization and dissipation in single- and double-stranded DNA

    No full text
    The mechanism that nature applies to dissipate excess energy from solar UV light absorption in DNA is fundamental, because its efficiency determines the vulnerability of all genetic material to photodamage and subsequent mutations. Using femtosecond time-resolved broadband spectroscopy, we have traced the electronic excitation in both time and space along the base stack in a series of single-stranded and double-stranded DNA oligonucleotides. The obtained results demonstrate not only the presence of delocalized electronic domains (excitons) as a result of UV light absorption, but also reveal the spatial extent of the excitons

    Base pair motions control the rates and distance dependencies of reductive and oxidative DNA charge transfer

    No full text
    In 1999, Wan et al. [Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 96, 6014–6019] published a pioneering paper that established the entanglement between DNA base pair motions and the transfer time of the charge carrier. The DNA assemblies contained an ethidium covalently bound via a flexible alkyl chain to the 5′ hydroxyl group of the DNA backbone. Although covalently attached, the loose way in which the ethidium was linked to DNA allowed for large degrees of conformational freedom and thus raised some concern with respect to conformational inhomogeneity. In this letter, we report studies on a different set of ethidium DNA conjugates. In contrast to the “Caltech systems,” these conjugates contain ethidium tightly incorporated (as a base pair surrogate) into the DNA base stack, opposite to an abasic site analog. Despite the tight binding, we found that charge transfer from the photoexcited ethidium base pair surrogate across two or more base pairs is several orders of magnitude slower than in case of the DNA systems bearing the tethered ethidium. To further broaden the scope of this account, we compared (oxidative) electron hole transfer and (reductive) electron transfer using the same ethidium chromophore as a charge donor in combination with two different charge acceptors. We found that both electron and hole transfer are characterized by similar rates and distance dependencies. The results demonstrate the importance of nuclear motions and conformational flexibility and underline the presence of a base gating mechanism, which appears to be generic to electronic transfer processes through π-stacked nucleic acids
    corecore