24,966 research outputs found
Finite-Width Bundle is Most Stable in a Solution with Salt
We applied the mean-field approach to a columnar bundle assembled by the
parallel arrangement of stiff polyelectrolyte rods in a salt bath. The
electrostatic potential can be divided into two regions: inside the bundle for
condensed counter-ions, and outside the bundle for free small ions. To
determine the distribution of condensed counter-ions inside the bundle, we use
a local self-consistent condition that depends on the charge density, the
electrostatic potential, and the net polarization. The results showed that,
upon bundle formation, the electric charge of polyelectrolytes, even those
inside the bundle, tend to survive in an inhomogeneous manner, and thus their
width remains finite under thermal equilibrium because of the long-range effect
of charge instability.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
Symbiotic Cell Differentiation and Cooperative Growth in Multicellular Aggregates
As cells grow and divide under a given environment, they become crowded and
resources are limited, as seen in bacterial biofilms and multicellular
aggregates. These cells often show strong interactions through exchanging
chemicals, as in quorum sensing, to achieve mutualism. Here, to achieve stable
division of labor, three properties are required. First, isogenous cells
differentiate into several types. Second, this aggregate of distinct cell types
shows better growth than that of isolated cells, by achieving division of
labor. Third, this cell aggregate is robust in the number distribution of
differentiated cell types. We here address how cells acquire the ability of
cell differentiation and division of labor simultaneously, which is also
connected with the robustness of a cell society. For this purpose, we developed
a dynamical-systems model of cells consisting of chemical components with
intracellular catalytic reaction dynamics. The reactions convert external
nutrients into internal components for cellular growth, and the divided cells
interact via chemical diffusion. We found that cells sharing an identical
catalytic network spontaneously differentiate via induction from cell-cell
interactions, and then achieve division of labor, enabling a higher growth rate
than that in the unicellular case. This symbiotic differentiation emerged for a
class of reaction networks with limited resources and strong cell-cell
interactions. Then, robustness in the cell type distribution was achieved,
while instability of collective growth could emerge even among the cooperative
cells when the internal reserves of products were dominant. The present
mechanism is simple and general as a natural result of interacting cells with
resource limitation, and is consistent with the observed behaviors and forms of
several aggregates of unicellular organisms.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figure
Chirality Selection in Open Flow Systems and in Polymerization
As an attempt to understand the homochirality of organic molecules in life, a
chemical reaction model is proposed where the production of chiral monomers
from achiral substrate is catalyzed by the polymers of the same enatiomeric
type. This system has to be open because in a closed system the enhanced
production of chiral monomers by enzymes is compensated by the associated
enhancement in back reaction, and the chiral symmetry is conserved. Open flow
without cross inhibition is shown to lead to the chirality selection in a
general model. In polymerization, the influx of substrate from the ambience and
the efflux of chiral products for purposes other than the catalyst production
make the system necessarily open. The chiral symmetry is found to be broken if
the influx of substrate lies within a finite interval. As the efficiency of the
enzyme increases, the maximum value of the enantiomeric excess approaches unity
so that the chirality selection becomes complete.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
Exact solution of a Levy walk model for anomalous heat transport
The Levy walk model is studied in the context of the anomalous heat
conduction of one dimensional systems. In this model the heat carriers execute
Levy-walks instead of normal diffusion as expected in systems where Fourier's
law holds. Here we calculate exactly the average heat current, the large
deviation function of its fluctuations and the temperature profile of the
Levy-walk model maintained in a steady state by contact with two heat baths
(the open geometry). We find that the current is non-locally connected to the
temperature gradient. As observed in recent simulations of mechanical models,
all the cumulants of the current fluctuations have the same system-size
dependence in the open geometry. For the ring geometry, we argue that a size
dependent cut-off time is necessary for the Levy walk model to behave as
mechanical models. This modification does not affect the results on transport
in the open geometry for large enough system sizes.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
Probing embedded star clusters in the HII complex NGC 6357 with VVV
NGC 6357 is an active star-forming region located in the Sagittarius arm
displaying several star clusters, which makes it a very interesting target to
investigate star formation and early cluster evolution. We explore NGC 6357
with the "VISTA Variables in the V\'ia a L\'actea" (VVV) photometry of seven
embedded clusters (ECs), and one open cluster (OC) projected in the outskirts
of the complex.Photometric and structural properties (age, reddening, distance,
core and total radii) of the star clusters are derived. VVV saturated stars are
replaced by their 2MASS counterparts. Field-decontaminated VVV photometry is
used to analyse Colour-Magnitude Diagrams (CMDs), stellar radial density
profiles (RDPs) and determine astrophysical parameters. We report the discovery
of four ECs and one intermediate-age cluster in the complex area. We derive a
revised distance estimate for NGC 6357 of 1.780.1 kpc based on the cluster
CMD morphologies. Among the ECs, one contains the binary star the WR 93, while
the remaining ones are dominated by pre-main sequence (PMS) stars,
young-stellar objects (YSO) and/or and have a developed main sequence. These
features reflect a significant age spread among the clusters. Evidence is found
that the relatively populous cluster Pismis 24 hosts two subclusters.Comment: This article will be published in the A&A. 11 pages, 15 figures and 3
table
Enhanced dispersion interaction between quasi-one dimensional conducting collinear structures
Recent investigations have highlighted the failure of a sum of terms
to represent the dispersion interaction in parallel metallic, anisotropic,
linear or planar nanostructures [J. F. Dobson, A. White, and A. Rubio, Phys.
Rev. Lett. 96, 073201 (2006) and references therein]. By applying a simple
coupled plasmon approach and using electron hydrodynamics, we numerically
evaluate the dispersion (non-contact van der Waals) interaction between two
conducting wires in a collinear pointing configuration. This case is compared
to that of two insulating wires in an identical geometry, where the dispersion
interaction is modelled both within a pairwise summation framework, and by
adding a pinning potential to our theory leading to a standard oscillator-type
model of insulating dielectric behavior. Our results provide a further example
of enhanced dispersion interaction between two conducting nanosystems compared
to the case of two insulating ones. Unlike our previous work, this calculation
explores a region of relatively close coupling where, although the electronic
clouds do not overlap, we are still far from the asymptotic region where a
single power law describes the dispersion energy. We find that strong
differences in dispersion attraction between metallic and semiconducting /
insulating cases persist into this non-asymptotic region. While our theory will
need to be supplemented with additional short-ranged terms when the electronic
clouds overlap, it does not suffer from the short-distance divergence exhibited
by purely asymptotic theories, and gives a natural saturation of the dispersion
energy as the wires come into contact.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures. Added new extended numerical calculations, new
figures, extra references and heavily revised tex
Linear response formula for finite frequency thermal conductance of open systems
An exact linear response expression is obtained for the heat current in a
classical Hamiltonian system coupled to heat baths with time-dependent
temperatures. The expression is equally valid at zero and finite frequencies.
We present numerical results on the frequency dependence of the response
function for three different one-dimensional models of coupled oscillators
connected to Langevin baths with oscillating temperatures. For momentum
conserving systems, a low frequency peak is seen that, is higher than the zero
frequency response for large systems. For momentum non-conserving systems,
there is no low frequency peak. The momentum non-conserving system is expected
to satisfy Fourier's law, however, at the single bond level, we do not see any
clear agreement with the predictions of the diffusion equation even at low
frequencies. We also derive an exact analytical expression for the response of
a chain of harmonic oscillators to a (not necessarily small) temperature
difference; the agreement with the linear response simulation results for the
same system is excellent.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure
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