4,065 research outputs found
Coulomb Drag between One-Dimensional Wigner Crystal Rings
We consider the Coulomb drag between two metal rings in which the long range
Coulomb interaction leads to the formation of a Wigner crystal. The first ring
is threaded by an Ahranov Bohm flux creating a persistent current J_0. The
second ring is brought in close proximity to the second and due to the Coulomb
interaction between the two rings a drag current J_D is produced in the second.
We investigate this system at zero temperature for perfect rings as well as the
effects of impurities. We show that the Wigner crystal state can in principle
lead to a higher ratio of drag current to drive current J_D/J_0 than in weakly
interacting electron systems.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figure
Towards small x resummed DIS phenomenology
We report on recent progress towards quantitative phenomenology of small x
resummation of deep-inelastic structure functions. We compute small x resummed
K-factors with realistic PDFs and estimate their impact in the HERA kinematical
region. These K-factors, which match smoothly to the fixed order NLO results,
approximately reproduce the effect of a small x resummed PDF analysis. Typical
corrections are found to be of the same order as the NNLO ones, that is, a few
percent, but with opposite sign. These results imply that resummation
corrections could be relevant for a global PDF analysis, especially with the
very precise combined HERA dataset.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figures, proceedings of 17th International Workshop on
Deep Inelastic Scattering (DIS 2009), Madrid, 26-30 Apr 200
A first unbiased global determination of polarized PDFs and their uncertainties
We present a first global determination of spin-dependent parton distribution
functions (PDFs) and their uncertainties using the NNPDF methodology:
NNPDFpol1.1. Longitudinally polarized deep-inelastic scattering data, already
used for the previous NNPDFpol1.0 PDF set, are supplemented with the most
recent polarized hadron collider data for inclusive jet and boson
production from the STAR and PHENIX experiments at RHIC, and with open-charm
production data from the COMPASS experiment, thereby allowing for a separate
determination of the polarized quark and anti-quark PDFs, and an improved
determination of the medium- and large- polarized gluon PDF. We study the
phenomenological implications of the NNPDFpol1.1 set, and we provide
predictions for the longitudinal double-spin asymmetry for semi-inclusive pion
production at RHIC.Comment: 36 pages, 16 figures. Final version to be published in Nucl. Phys. B.
Small textual improvements and minor typos correcte
Mechanical Unfolding of a Simple Model Protein Goes Beyond the Reach of One-Dimensional Descriptions
We study the mechanical unfolding of a simple model protein. The Langevin
dynamics results are analyzed using Markov-model methods which allow to
describe completely the configurational space of the system. Using transition
path theory we also provide a quantitative description of the unfolding
pathways followed by the system. Our study shows a complex dynamical scenario.
In particular, we see that the usual one-dimensional picture: free-energy vs
end-to-end distance representation, gives a misleading description of the
process. Unfolding can occur following different pathways and configurations
which seem to play a central role in one-dimensional pictures are not the
intermediate states of the unfolding dynamics.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figure
Ultrasound for improving the preservation of chicken meat
<div><p>Abstract The objective of this study was to evaluate the effect of power ultrasound on the microbiota of chicken meat. Samples were treated under the following conditions of frequency and power: 20 kHz and 27.6 W/cm2; 40 kHz and 10.3 W/cm2; 850 kHz and 24.1 W/cm 2. Microbial counts were done before the ultrasound treatment, immediately after and following 7 days of aerobic storage at 4 °C. The results indicate that high intensity ultrasound helps inhibit the growth of lactic acid, mesophilic and psychrophilic bacteria present in chicken meat at the ultrasound frequency levels used in this study. The number of mesophilic bacteria decreased with the ultrasound probe at 20 kHz and 27.6 W/cm2 in relation to the treatment with higher frequency and less intensity. In conclusion, high-intensity ultrasound has a bactericidal effect. Therefore, it can be useful in the preservation of meat products and thus play an important role in the food industry.</p></div
Intrinsic charm in a matched general-mass scheme
The FONLL general-mass variable-flavour number scheme provides a framework
for the matching of a calculation in which a heavy quark is treated as a
massless parton to one in which the mass dependence is retained throughout. We
describe how the usual formulation of FONLL can be extended in such a way that
the heavy quark parton distribution functions are freely parameterized at some
initial scale, rather than being generated entirely perturbatively. We
specifically consider the case of deep-inelastic scattering, in view of
applications to PDF determination, and the possible impact of a fitted charm
quark distribution on is assessed.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figures. Final version, to be published in Physics
Letters B. Typo in eq 13 corrected, minor clarifications adde
A library of near-infrared integral field spectra of young M-L dwarfs
We present a library of near-infrared (1.1-2.45 microns) medium-resolution
(R~1500-2000) integral field spectra of 15 young M6-L0 dwarfs, composed of
companions with known ages and of isolated objects. We use it to (re)derive the
NIR spectral types, luminosities and physical parameters of the targets, and to
test (BT-SETTL, DRIFT-PHOENIX) atmospheric models. We derive infrared spectral
types L0+-1, L0+-1, M9.5+-0.5, M9.5+-0.5, M9.25+-0.25, M8+0.5-0.75, and
M8.5+-0.5 for AB Pic b, Cha J110913-773444, USco CTIO 108B, GSC 08047-00232 B,
DH Tau B, CT Cha b, and HR7329B, respectively. BT-SETTL and DRIFT-PHOENIX
models yield close Teff and log g estimates for each sources. The models seem
to evidence a 600-300+600 K drop of the effective temperature at the M-L
transition. Assuming the former temperatures are correct, we derive new mass
estimates which confirm that DH Tau B, USco CTIO 108B, AB Pic b, KPNO Tau 4,
OTS 44, and Cha1109 lay inside or at the boundary of the planetary mass range.
We combine the empirical luminosities of the M9.5-L0 sources to the Teff to
derive semi-empirical radii estimates that do not match "hot-start"
evolutionary models predictions at 1-3 Myr. We use complementary data to
demonstrate that atmospheric models are able to reproduce the combined optical
and infrared spectral energy distribution, together with the near-infrared
spectra of these sources simultaneously. But the models still fail to represent
the dominant features in the optical. This issue casts doubts on the ability of
these models to predict correct effective temperatures from near-infrared
spectra alone. We advocate the use of photometric and spectroscopic data
covering a broad range of wavelengths to study the properties of very low mass
young companions to be detected with the planet imagers (Subaru/SCExAO,
LBT/LMIRCam, Gemini/GPI, VLT/SPHERE).Comment: 27 pages, 14 tables, 19 figures, accepted for publication in
Astronomy & Astrophysic
Polarized Parton Distributions at an Electron-Ion Collider
We study the potential impact of inclusive deep-inelastic scattering data
from a future electron-ion collider (EIC) on longitudinally polarized parton
distribution (PDFs). We perform a PDF determination using the NNPDF
methodology, based on sets of deep-inelastic EIC pseudodata, for different
realistic choices of the electron and proton beam energies. We compare the
results to our current polarized PDF set, NNPDFpol1.0, based on a fit to
fixed-target inclusive DIS data. We show that the uncertainties on the first
moments of the polarized quark singlet and gluon distributions are
substantially reduced in comparison to NNPDFpol1.0, but also that more
measurements may be needed to ultimately pin down the size of the gluon
contribution to the nucleon spin.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures. Two plots in Fig.5 added and discussion of
extrapolation uncertainties expanded. Final version, published in Phys. Lett.
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