474 research outputs found
Short-distance atomic beam deceleration with a stimulated light force.
We have decelerated a cesium atomic beam from thermal velocities down to several tens of m/s within only a 10 cm slowing distance. A bichromatic standing light wave was used to generate a stimulated force exceeding the spontaneous force limit by a factor of ∼10 and extending over a large, saturation-broadened velocity range. Because of the short slowing distance this method allows production of very intense, continuous beams of slow atoms
What do experimental data "say" about growth of hadronic total cross-section?
We reanalyse and high energy data of the elastic scattering
above GeV on the total cross-section and on the
forward -ratio for various models of Pomeron, utilizing two methods. The
first one is based on analytic amplitudes, the other one relies on assumptions
for and on dispersion relation for . We argue that it is
not possible, from fitting only existing data for forward scattering, to select
a definite asymptotic growth with the energy of . We find
equivalent fits to the data together with a logarithmic Pomeron giving a
behavior , and with
a supercritical Pomeron giving a behavior ,
.Comment: LaTeX, 18 pages, 5 eps figures included, to be published in Il Nuovo
Ciment
Vortex lattices in a stirred Bose-Einstein condensate
We stir with a focused laser beam a Bose-Einstein condensate of Rb
atoms confined in a magnetic trap. We observe the formation of a single vortex
for a stirring frequency exceeding a critical value. At larger rotation
frequencies we produce states of the condensate for which up to eleven vortices
are simultaneously present. We present measurements of the decay of a vortex
array once the stirring laser beam is removed
Radial and latitudinal dependencies of discontinuities in the solar wind between 0.3 and 19 AU and ?80° and +10°
International audienceDirectional discontinuities (DD) from 5 missions at 7 different locations between 0.3 and 19 AU and ?80° and +10° in the 3D heliosphere are investigated during minimum solar activity. The data are surveyed using the identification criteria of Burlaga (1969) (B) and Tsurutani and Smith (1979) (TS). The rate of occurrence depends linearly on the solar wind velocity caused by the geometric effect of investigating a larger plasma volume if the solar wind velocity ?sw increases. The radial dependence is proportional to r?0.78 (TS criterion) and r?1.28 (B criterion), respectively. This dependence is not only due to an increasing miss rate with increasing distance. The DDs must be unstable or some other physical effect must exist. After normalization of the daily rates to 400 km/s and 1 AU, no dependence on heliographic latitude or on solar wind structures is observable. This means that the DDs are uniformly distributed on a spherical shell. Normalized 64 DD per day are identified with both criteria. But large variations of the daily rate still occur, indicating that other influences must exist. The ratio of the rates of rotational (RDs) and tangential discontinuities (TDs) depends on the solar wind structures. In high speed streams, relatively more RDs exist than in low speed streams. In the inner heliosphere (r r ? over the transition evolves to an increase of smaller ? with increasing distance from the sun. The evolution is yielded by the anisotropic RDs with small ?. The spatial thickness dkm in kilometers increases with distance. The thickness drg normalized to the proton gyro radius decreases by a factor of 50 between 0.3 and 19 AU, from 201.3 rg down to 4.3 rg. In the middle heliosphere, the orientation of the normals relative to the local magnetic field is essentially uniform except for the parallel direction where no DDs occur. This indicates that RDs propagating parallel to B play a special role. In addition, in only a few cases is [?] parallel to [B / ?], which is required by the MHD theory for RDs. The DDs have strongly enhanced values of proton gyro radius rg for ? ~ 90°. In contrast, in the inner heliosphere, only a small increase in rg with ? is observed
Evidence for additive and synergistic action of mammalian enhancers during cell fate determination
Enhancer activity drives cell differentiation and cell fate determination, but it remains unclear how enhancers cooperate during these processes. Here we investigate enhancer cooperation during transdifferentiation of human leukemia B-cells to macrophages. Putative enhancers are established by binding of the pioneer factor C/EBPα followed by chromatin opening and enhancer RNA (eRNA) synthesis from H3K4-monomethylated regions. Using eRNA synthesis as a proxy for enhancer activity, we find that most putative enhancers cooperate in an additive way to regulate transcription of assigned target genes. However, transcription from 136 target genes depends exponentially on the summed activity of its putative paired enhancers, indicating that these enhancers cooperate synergistically. The target genes are cell type-specific, suggesting that enhancer synergy can contribute to cell fate determination. Enhancer synergy appears to depend on cell type-specific transcription factors, and such interacting enhancers are not predicted from occupancy or accessibility data that are used to detect superenhancers
Modulations of DNA contacts by linker histones and post-translational modifications determine the mobility and modifiability of nucleosomal H3 tails.
Post-translational histone modifications and linker histone incorporation regulate chromatin structure and genome activity. How these systems interface on a molecular level is unclear. Using biochemistry and NMR spectroscopy, we deduced mechanistic insights into the modification behavior of N-terminal histone H3 tails in different nucleosomal contexts. We find that linker histones generally inhibit modifications of different H3 sites and reduce H3 tail dynamics in nucleosomes. These effects are caused by modulations of electrostatic interactions of H3 tails with linker DNA and largely depend on the C-terminal domains of linker histones. In agreement, linker histone occupancy and H3 tail modifications segregate on a genome-wide level. Charge-modulating modifications such as phosphorylation and acetylation weaken transient H3 tail-linker DNA interactions, increase H3 tail dynamics, and, concomitantly, enhance general modifiability. We propose that alterations of H3 tail-linker DNA interactions by linker histones and charge-modulating modifications execute basal control mechanisms of chromatin function
Genome-wide analysis of RNA polymerase II termination at protein-coding genes.
At the end of protein-coding genes, RNA polymerase (Pol) II undergoes a concerted transition that involves 3′-processing of the pre-mRNA and transcription termination. Here, we present a genome-wide analysis of the 3′-transition in budding yeast. We find that the 3′-transition globally requires the Pol II elongation factor Spt5 and factors involved in the recognition of the polyadenylation (pA) site and in endonucleolytic RNA cleavage. Pol II release from DNA occurs in a narrow termination window downstream of the pA site and requires the “torpedo” exonuclease Rat1 (XRN2 in human). The Rat1-interacting factor Rai1 contributes to RNA degradation downstream of the pA site. Defects in the 3′-transition can result in increased transcription at downstream genes
Excitation-assisted inelastic processes in trapped Bose-Einstein condensates
We find that inelastic collisional processes in Bose-Einstein condensates
induce local variations of the mean-field interparticle interaction and are
accompanied by the creation/annihilation of elementary excitation. The physical
picture is demonstrated for the case of three body recombination in a trapped
condensate. For a high trap barrier the production of high energy trapped
single particle excitations results in a strong increase of the loss rate of
atoms from the condensate.Comment: 4 pages, no figure
High resolution amplitude and phase gratings in atom optics
An atom-field geometry is chosen in which an atomic beam traverses a field
interaction zone consisting of three fields, one having frequency propagating in the direction and the other two having
frequencies and propagating in the
- direction. For and , where and are positive integers and
is the pulse duration in the atomic rest frame, the atom-field interaction
results in the creation of atom amplitude and phase gratings having period . In this manner, one can use optical fields having
wavelength to produce atom gratings having periodicity much less
than .Comment: 11 pages, 14 figure
Stabilization of the number of Bose-Einstein condensed atoms in evaporative cooling via three-body recombination loss
The dynamics of evaporative cooling of magnetically trapped Rb atoms
is studied on the basis of the quantum kinetic theory of a Bose gas. We carried
out the quantitative calculations of the time evolution of conventional
evaporative cooling where the frequency of the radio-frequency magnetic field
is swept exponentially. This "exponential-sweep cooling" is known to become
inefficient at the final stage of the cooling process due to a serious
three-body recombination loss. We precisely examine how the growth of a
Bose-Einstein condensate depends on the experimental parameters of evaporative
cooling, such as the initial number of trapped atoms, the initial temperature,
and the bias field of a magnetic trap. It is shown that three-body
recombination drastically depletes the trapped Rb atoms as the system
approaches the quantum degenerate region and the number of condensed atoms
finally becomes insensitive to these experimental parameters. This result
indicates that the final number of condensed atoms is well stabilized by a
large nonlinear three-body loss against the fluctuations of experimental
conditions in evaporative cooling.Comment: 7 pages, REVTeX4, 8 eps figures, Phys. Rev A in pres
- …