905 research outputs found
Quantum censorship in two dimensions
It is pointed out that increasingly attractive interactions, represented by
partially concave local potential in the Lagrangian, may lead to the degeneracy
of the blocked, renormalized action at the gliding cutoff scale by tree-level
renormalization. A quantum counterpart of this mechanism is presented in the
two-dimensional sine-Gordon model. The presence of Quantum Censorship is
conjectured which makes the loop contributions pile up during the
renormalization and thereby realize an approximate semiclassical effect.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures. Final versio
Macroscopic limit cycle via pure noise-induced phase transition
Bistability generated via a pure noise-induced phase transition is reexamined
from the view of bifurcations in macroscopic cumulant dynamics. It allows an
analytical study of the phase diagram in more general cases than previous
methods. In addition using this approach we investigate patially-extended
systems with two degrees of freedom per site. For this system, the analytic
solution of the stationary Fokker-Planck equation is not available and a
standard mean field approach cannot be used to find noise induced phase
transitions. A new approach based on cumulant dynamics predicts a noise-induced
phase transition through a Hopf bifurcation leading to a macroscopic limit
cycle motion, which is confirmed by numerical simulation.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figure
The Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor (EGFR) Inhibitor Gefitinib Reduces but Does Not Prevent Tumorigenesis in Chemical and Hormonal Induced Hepatocarcinogenesis Rat Models
Activation of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) signaling pathway promotes the development of hepatocellular adenoma (HCA) and carcinoma (HCC). The selective EGFR inhibitor Gefitinib was found to prevent hepatocarcinogenesis in rat cirrhotic livers. Thus, Gefitinib might reduce progression of pre-neoplastic liver lesions to HCC. In short-and long-term experiments, administration of N-Nitrosomorpholine (NNM) or intrahepatic transplantation of pancreatic islets in diabetic (PTx), thyroid follicles in thyroidectomized (TTx) and ovarian fragments in ovariectomized (OTx) rats was conducted for the induction of foci of altered hepatocytes (FAH). Gefitinib was administered for two weeks (20 mg/kg) or three and nine months (10 mg/kg). In NNM-treated rats, Gefitinib administration decreased the amount of FAH when compared to controls. The amount of HCA and HCC was decreased, but development was not prevented. Upon all transplantation models, proliferative activity of FAH was lower after administration of Gefitinib in short-term experiments. Nevertheless, the burden of HCA and HCC was not changed in later stages. Thus, EGFR inhibition by Gefitinib diminishes chemical and hormonal also induced hepatocarcinogenesis in the initiation stage in the non-cirrhotic liver. However, progression to malignant hepatocellular tumors was not prevented, indicating only a limited relevance of the EGFR signaling cascade in later stages of hepatocarcinogenesis
Interplay of fixed points in scalar models
We performed the renormalization group analysis of scalar models exhibiting
spontaneous symmetry breaking. It is shown that an infrared fixed point appears
in the broken symmetric phase of the models, which induces a dynamical scale,
that can be identified with the correlation length. This enables one to
identify the type of the phase transition which shows similarity to the one
appearing in the crossover scale. The critical exponent of the
correlation length also proved to be equal in the crossover and the infrared
scaling regimes.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure
Onset of symmetry breaking by the functional RG method
A numerical algorithm is used to solve the bare and the effective potential
for the scalar model in the local potential approximation. An
approximate dynamical Maxwell-cut is found which reveals itself in the
degeneracy of the action for modes at some scale. This result indicates that
the potential develop singular field dependence as far as one can see it by an
lgorithm of limited numerical accuracyComment: 19 pages, 10 figures, accepted version. To appear in International
Journal of Modern Physics
Quantum Hall Resistance Overshoot in 2-Dimensional Electron Gases - Theory and Experiment
We present a systematical experimental investigation of an unusual transport
phenomenon observed in two dimensional electron gases in Si/SiGe
heterostructures under integer quantum Hall effect (IQHE) conditions. This
phenomenon emerges under specific experimental conditions and in different
material systems. It is commonly referred to as Hall resistance overshoot,
however, lacks a consistent explanation so far. Based on our experimental
findings we are able to develop a model that accounts for all of our
observations in the framework of a screening theory for the IQHE. Within this
model the origin of the overshoot is attributed to a transport regime where
current is confined to co-existing evanescent incompressible strips of
different filling factors.Comment: 26 pages, 10 figure
Functional renormalization group approach to the sine-Gordon model
The renormalization group flow is presented for the two-dimensional
sine-Gordon model within the framework of the functional renormalization group
method by including the wave-function renormalization constant. The
Kosterlitz-Thouless-Berezinski type phase structure is recovered as the
interpolating scaling law between two competing IR attractive area of the
global renormalization group flow.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Comparison of renormalization group schemes for sine-Gordon type models
The scheme-dependence of the renormalization group (RG) flow has been
investigated in the local potential approximation for two-dimensional periodic,
sine-Gordon type field-theoric models discussing the applicability of various
functional RG methods in detail. It was shown that scheme-independent
determination of such physical parameters is possible as the critical frequency
(temperature) at which Kosterlitz-Thouless-Berezinskii type phase transition
takes place in the sine-Gordon and the layered sine-Gordon models, and the
critical ratio characterizing the Ising type phase transition of the massive
sine-Gordon model. For the latter case the Maxwell construction represents a
strong constraint on the RG flow which results in a scheme-independent infrared
value for the critical ratio. For the massive sine-Gordon model also the
shrinking of the domain of the phase with spontaneously broken periodicity is
shown to take place due to the quantum fluctuations.Comment: 17 pages, 8 figures, revised version, to be published in Phys. Rev.
Invariant measure in hot gauge theories
We investigate properties of the invariant measure for the gauge field
in finite temperature gauge theories both on the lattice and in the continuum
theory. We have found the cancellation of the naive measure in both cases. The
result is quite general and holds at any finite temperature. We demonstrate,
however, that there is no cancellation at any temperature for the invariant
measure contribution understood as Z(N) symmetrical distribution of gauge field
configurations. The spontaneous breakdown of Z(N) global symmetry is entirely
due to the potential energy term of the gluonic interaction in the effective
potential. The effects of this measure on the effective action, mechanism of
confinement and condensation are discussed.Comment: Latex file, 65.5kB, no figure
Shoulder load during synchronous handcycling and handrim wheelchair propulsion in persons with paraplegia
Objective: To compare the shoulder load during handcycling and wheelchair propulsion under similar conditions of external power in persons with spinal cord injury. Design: Cross-sectional. Subjects: Eight men with spinal cord injury. Methods: Kinetics and kinematics were measured during handbike and wheelchair propulsion at 25, 35, 45 and 55 W on a treadmill. Shoulder load (glenohumeral contact forces, relative muscle forces) was calculated with the Delft Shoulder and Elbow Model. Results: At all power output levels, glenohumeral contact forces were significantly lower during handcycling compared with wheelchair propulsion (p < 0.001). At 55 W, the mean glenohumeral contact force was 345 N for handcycling, whereas it was 585 N for wheelchair propulsion. Also, relative muscle forces were lower during handcycling. The largest differences between handbike and wheelchair propulsion were found in the supraspinatus (4.5% vs. 20.7%), infraspinatus (3.7% vs. 16.5%) and biceps (5.0% vs. 17.7%). Conclusion: Due to continuous force application in handcycling, shoulder load was lower compared with wheelchair propulsion. Furthermore, muscles that are prone to overuse injuries were less stressed during handcycling. Therefore, handcycling may be a good alternative for outdoor mobility and may help prevent overuse injuries of the shoulder complex. © 2012 The Authors
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