3,938 research outputs found
Optomechanical control of molecular motors
The majority of mechanisms that can be deployed for optical micromanipulation are not especially amenable for extension into the nanoscale. At the molecular level, the rich variety of schemes that have been proposed to achieve mechanical effect using light commonly exploit specific chemical structures; familiar examples are compounds that can fold by cis-trans isomerization, or the mechanically interlocked architectures of rotaxanes. However, such systems are synthetically highly challenging, and few of them can realistically form the basis for a true molecular motor. Developing the basis for a very different strategy based on programmed electronic excitation, this paper explores the possibility of producing controlled mechanical motion through optically induced modifications of intermolecular force fields, not involving the limitations associated with using photochemical change, nor the high intensities required to produce and manipulate optical binding forces between molecules. Calculations reveal that significant, rapidly responsive effects can be achieved in relatively simple systems. By the use of suitable laser pulse sequences, the possibilities include the generation of continuous rotary motion, the ultimate aim of molecular motor design
A note on a modification of Moser's method
We use a recurrence technique to obtain semilocal convergence results for Ulm's iterative method to approximate a solution of a nonlinear equation F (x) = 0fenced((x n + 1 = x n - B n F (x n),, n 0,; B n + 1 = 2 B n - B n F (x n + 1) B n,, n 0 .))This method does not contain inverse operators in its expression and we prove it converges with the Newton rate. We also use this method to approximate a solution of integral equations of Fredholm-type. © 2007 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved
Surface and capillary transitions in an associating binary mixture model
We investigate the phase diagram of a two-component associating fluid mixture
in the presence of selectively adsorbing substrates. The mixture is
characterized by a bulk phase diagram which displays peculiar features such as
closed loops of immiscibility. The presence of the substrates may interfere the
physical mechanism involved in the appearance of these phase diagrams, leading
to an enhanced tendency to phase separate below the lower critical solution
point. Three different cases are considered: a planar solid surface in contact
with a bulk fluid, while the other two represent two models of porous systems,
namely a slit and an array on infinitely long parallel cylinders. We confirm
that surface transitions, as well as capillary transitions for a large
area/volume ratio, are stabilized in the one-phase region. Applicability of our
results to experiments reported in the literature is discussed.Comment: 12 two-column pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in Physical
Review E; corrected versio
Reducing gaps in quantitative association rules: A genetic programming free-parameter algorithm
The extraction of useful information for decision making is a challenge in many different domains. Association rule mining is one of the most important techniques in this field, discovering relationships of interest among patterns. Despite the mining of association rules being an area of great interest for many researchers, the search for well-grouped continuous values is still a challenge, discovering rules that do not comprise patterns which represent unnecessary ranges of values. Existing algorithms for mining association rules in continuous domains are mainly based on a non-deterministic search, requiring a high number of parameters to be optimised. These parameters hinder the mining process, and the algorithms themselves must be known to those data mining experts that want to use them. We therefore present a grammar guided genetic programming algorithm that does not require as many parameters as other existing approaches and enables the discovery of quantitative association rules comprising small-size gaps. The algorithm is verified over a varied set of data, comparing the results to other association rule mining algorithms from several paradigms. Additionally, some resulting rules from different paradigms are analysed, demonstrating the effectiveness of our model for reducing gaps in numerical features
El Año Ritual en la España de los siglos XVI y XVII
Este artículo estudia los intentos de reforma tridentina del calendario en
España durante los siglos XVI y XVII: reducción del número de fiestas, introducción de
nuevos santos, errradicación de las supersticiones, etc. Al mismo tiempo trata de explicar
las razones de la pervivencia del calendario: la tradición y la costumbre, la estrecha
relación entre santoral, año litúrgico y año agrícola, y, por último, la importancia de los
factores estéticos
Modeling the thermal evolution of enzyme-created bubbles in DNA
The formation of bubbles in nucleic acids (NAs) is fundamental in many biological processes
such as DNA replication, recombination, telomere formation and nucleotide excision repair,
as well as RNA transcription and splicing. These processes are carried out by assembled
complexes with enzymes that separate selected regions of NAs. Within the frame of a
nonlinear dynamics approach, we model the structure of the DNA duplex by a nonlinear
network of coupled oscillators. We show that, in fact, from certain local structural
distortions, there originate oscillating localized patterns, that is, radial and torsional
breathers, which are associated with localized H-bond deformations, reminiscent of the
replication bubble. We further study the temperature dependence of these oscillating
bubbles. To this aim, the underlying nonlinear oscillator network of the DNA duplex is
brought into contact with a heat bath using the Nose´–Hoover method. Special attention
is paid to the stability of the oscillating bubbles under the imposed thermal perturbations. It
is demonstrated that the radial and torsional breathers sustain the impact of thermal
perturbations even at temperatures as high as room temperature. Generally, for non-zero
temperature, the H-bond breathers move coherently along the double chain, whereas at TZ0
standing radial and torsional breathers result
Noncommutative Quantum Cosmology
We consider noncommutative quantum cosmology in the case of the low-energy
string effective theory. Exacts solutions are found and compared with the
commutative case.The Noncommutative quantum cosmology is considered in the case
of the low-energy string effective theory. Exacts solutions are found and
compared with the commutative case.Comment: Revtex4, 3 pages, 2 figures, to appear in Gen.Rel.Gra
Exploring the association of Fermi sources with Young Stellar Objects
Massive protostars have associated bipolar outflows which can produce strong shocks when interact with the surrounding medium. Some theoretical models predict that particle acceleration at relativistic velocities can occur leading to gamma ray emission. In order to identify young stellar objects (YSO) that might emit gamma rays, we have crossed the Fermi First Year Catalog with catalogs of known YSOs, obtaining a set of candidates by spatial correlation. We have conducted Montecarlo simulations to find the probability of chance coincidence. Our results indicate that ∼70% of the candidates should be gamma-ray sources with a confidence of ∼5ρ. σ International Astronomical Union 2011.Instituto Argentino de Radioastronomí
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