14,180 research outputs found
Spatial noise correlations of a chain of ultracold fermions - A numerical study
We present a numerical study of noise correlations, i.e., density-density
correlations in momentum space, in the extended fermionic Hubbard model in one
dimension. In experiments with ultracold atoms, these noise correlations can be
extracted from time-of-flight images of the expanding cloud. Using the
density-matrix renormalization group method to investigate the Hubbard model at
various fillings and interactions, we confirm that the shot noise contains full
information on the correlations present in the system. We point out the
importance of the sum rules fulfilled by the noise correlations and show that
they yield nonsingular structures beyond the predictions of bosonization
approaches. Noise correlations can thus serve as a universal probe of order and
can be used to characterize the many-body states of cold atoms in optical
lattices.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figure
Movements of molecular motors: Ratchets, random walks and traffic phenomena
Processive molecular motors which drive the traffic of organelles in cells
move in a directed way along cytoskeletal filaments. On large time scales, they
perform motor walks, i.e., peculiar random walks which arise from the repeated
unbinding from and rebinding to filaments. Unbound motors perform Brownian
motion in the surrounding fluid. In addition, the traffic of molecular motors
exhibits many cooperative phenomena. In particular, it faces similar problems
as the traffic on streets such as the occurrence of traffic jams and the
coordination of (two-way) traffic. These issues are studied here theoretically
using lattice models.Comment: latex, uses elsart.cls and phyeauth.cls (included), 10 pages, 6
figures, to appear in the proceedings of FQMT'04, Pragu
Hybrid plasmonic photoreactors as visible light-mediated bactericides
Photocatalytic compounds and complexes, such as tris(bipyridine)ruthenium(II), [Ru(bpy)3]2+, have recently attracted attention as light-mediated bactericides that can help to address the need for new antibacterial strategies. We demonstrate in this work that the bactericidal efficacy of [Ru(bpy)3]2+ and the control of its antibacterial function can be significantly enhanced through combination with a plasmonic nanoantenna. We report strong, visible light-controlled bacterial inactivation with a nanocomposite design that incorporates [Ru(bpy)3]2+ as a photocatalyst and a Ag nanoparticle (NP) core as a light-concentrating nanoantenna into a plasmonic hybrid photoreactor. The hybrid photoreactor platform is facilitated by a self-assembled lipid membrane that encapsulates the Ag NP and binds the photocatalyst. The lipid membrane renders the nanocomposite biocompatible in the absence of resonant illumination. Upon illumination, the plasmon-enhanced photoexcitation of the metal-to-ligand charge-transfer band of [Ru(bpy)3]2+ prepares the reactive excited state of the complex that oxidizes the nanocomposite membrane and increases its permeability. The photooxidation induces the release of [Ru(bpy)3]2+, Ag+, and peroxidized lipids into the ambient medium, where they interact synergistically to inactivate bacteria. We measured a 7 order of magnitude decrease in Gram-positive Arthrobacter sp. and a 4 order of magnitude decrease in Gram-negative Escherichia coli colony forming units with the photoreactor bactericides after visible light illumination for 1 h. In both cases, the photoreactor exceeds the bactericidal standard of a log reduction value of 3 and surpasses the antibacterial effect of free Ag NPs or [Ru(bpy)3]2+ by >4 orders of magnitude. We also implement the inactivation of a bacterial thin film in a proof-of-concept study.Accepted manuscrip
Numerical simulation and experimental validation of texture in extruded wires of a bcc metal
We present a comparison between a viscoplastic crystal plasticity finite element simulation of the extrusion process applied to a bcc polycrystal and the experimental evaluation of the preferred orientation (texture) in a tungsten wire by monochromatic synchrotron X-ray diffraction with an area detector. We perform a numerical simulation of sample texture evolution during large extrusion deformation with the elongation factor up to the value of fifty. By matching the predicted Orientation Distribution Functions (ODF) and the pole figures generated on the basis of the simulations to the experimental observations, the extrusion strain experienced by the sample during processing can be estimated
Misfits in Skyrme-Hartree-Fock
We address very briefly five critical points in the context of the
Skyrme-Hartree-Fock (SHF) scheme: 1) the impossibility to consider it as an
interaction, 2) a possible inconsistency of correlation corrections as, e.g.,
the center-of-mass correction, 3) problems to describe the giant dipole
resonance (GDR) simultaneously in light and heavy nuclei, 4) deficiencies in
the extrapolation of binding energies to super-heavy elements (SHE), and 5) a
yet inappropriate trend in fission life-times when going to the heaviest SHE.
While the first two points have more a formal bias, the other three points have
practical implications and wait for solution.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure
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