211 research outputs found
Observation of the parallel-magnetic-field-induced superconductor-insulator transition in thin amorphous InO films
We study the response of a thin superconducting amorphous InO film with
variable oxygen content to a parallel magnetic field. A field-induced
superconductor-insulator transition (SIT) is observed that is very similar to
the one in normal magnetic fields. As the boson-vortex duality, which is the
key-stone of the theory of the field-induced SIT, is obviously absent in the
parallel configuration, we have to draw conclusion about the theory
insufficiency.Comment: 3 pages, 4 figure
Transport and Magnetic Properties of R1-xAxCoO3 (R=La, Pr and Nd; A=Ba, Sr and Ca)
Transport and magnetic measurements have been carried out on perovskite
Co-oxides R1-xAxCoO3 (R=La, Pr, and Nd; A=Ba, Sr and Ca; 0<x<0.5: All sets of
the R and A species except Nd1-xBaxCoO3 have been studied.). With increasing
the Sr- or Ba-concentration x, the system becomes metallic ferromagnet with
rather large magnetic moments. For R=Pr and Nd and A=Ca, the system approaches
the metal- insulator phase boundary but does not become metallic. The magnetic
moments of the Ca-doped systems measured with the magnetic field H=0.1 T are
much smaller than those of the Ba- and Sr-doped systems. The thermoelectric
powers of the Ba- and Sr-doped systems decrease from large positive values of
lightly doped samples to negative ones with increasing doping level, while
those of Ca-doped systems remain positive. These results can be understood by
considering the relationship between the average ionic radius of R1-xAx and the
energy difference between the low spin and intermediate spin states. We have
found the resistivity-anomaly in the measurements of Pr1-xCaxCoO3 under
pressure in the wide region of x, which indicates the existence of a phase
transition different from the one reported in the very restricted region of
x~0.5 at ambient pressure [Tsubouchi et al. Phys. Rev. B 66 (2002) 052418.]. No
indication of this kind of transition has been observed in other species of R.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures. J. Phys. Soc. Jpn. 72 (2003) No.
The Goldbeter-Koshland switch in the first-order region and its response to dynamic disorder
In their classical work (Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 1981, 78:6840-6844),
Goldbeter and Koshland mathematically analyzed a reversible covalent
modification system which is highly sensitive to the concentration of
effectors. Its signal-response curve appears sigmoidal, constituting a
biochemical switch. However, the switch behavior only emerges in the
"zero-order region", i.e. when the signal molecule concentration is much lower
than that of the substrate it modifies. In this work we showed that the
switching behavior can also occur under comparable concentrations of signals
and substrates, provided that the signal molecules catalyze the modification
reaction in cooperation. We also studied the effect of dynamic disorders on the
proposed biochemical switch, in which the enzymatic reaction rates, instead of
constant, appear as stochastic functions of time. We showed that the system is
robust to dynamic disorder at bulk concentration. But if the dynamic disorder
is quasi-static, large fluctuations of the switch response behavior may be
observed at low concentrations. Such fluctuation is relevant to many biological
functions. It can be reduced by either increasing the conformation
interconversion rate of the protein, or correlating the enzymatic reaction
rates in the network.Comment: 23 pages, 4 figures, accepted by PLOS ON
Strong negative self regulation of Prokaryotic transcription factors increases the intrinsic noise of protein expression
Background
Many prokaryotic transcription factors repress their own transcription. It is often asserted that such regulation enables a cell to homeostatically maintain protein abundance. We explore the role of negative self regulation of transcription in regulating the variability of protein abundance using a variety of stochastic modeling techniques.
Results
We undertake a novel analysis of a classic model for negative self regulation. We demonstrate that, with standard approximations, protein variance relative to its mean should be independent of repressor strength in a physiological range. Consequently, in that range, the coefficient of variation would increase with repressor strength. However, stochastic computer simulations demonstrate that there is a greater increase in noise associated with strong repressors than predicted by theory. The discrepancies between the mathematical analysis and computer simulations arise because with strong repressors the approximation that leads to Michaelis-Menten-like hyperbolic repression terms ceases to be valid. Because we observe that strong negative feedback increases variability and so is unlikely to be a mechanism for noise control, we suggest instead that negative feedback is evolutionarily favoured because it allows the cell to minimize mRNA usage. To test this, we used in silico evolution to demonstrate that while negative feedback can achieve only a modest improvement in protein noise reduction compared with the unregulated system, it can achieve good improvement in protein response times and very substantial improvement in reducing mRNA levels.
Conclusions
Strong negative self regulation of transcription may not always be a mechanism for homeostatic control of protein abundance, but instead might be evolutionarily favoured as a mechanism to limit the use of mRNA. The use of hyperbolic terms derived from quasi-steady-state approximation should also be avoided in the analysis of stochastic models with strong repressors
Search for H hypernucleus by the Li reaction at = 1.2 GeV/
We have carried out an experiment to search for a neutron-rich hypernucleus,
H, by the Li() reaction at =1.2
GeV/. The obtained missing mass spectrum with an estimated energy resolution
of 3.2 MeV (FWHM) showed no peak structure corresponding to the H
hypernucleus neither below nor above the H particle decay
threshold. An upper limit of the production cross section for the bound
H hypernucleus was estimated to be 1.2 nb/sr at 90% confidence
level.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, published versio
Hydrodynamics and Nonlocal Conductivities in Vortex States of Type II Superconductors
A hydrodynamical description for vortex states in type II superconductors is
presented based on the time-dependent Ginzburg-Landau equation (TDGL). In
contrast to the familiar extension of a single vortex dynamics based on the
force balance, our description is consistent with the known hydrodynamics of a
rotating neutral superfluid and correctly includes informations on the
Goldstone mode. Further it enables one to examine nonlocal conductivities
perpendicular to the magnetic field in terms of Kubo formula. The nonlocal
conductivities deviate from the usual vortex flow expressions typically when
the nonlocality parallel to the field becomes weaker than the perpendicular one
measuring a degree of positional correlations, and, for instance, the
superconducting contribution of dc Hall conductivity nonlocal only in
directions perpendicular to the field becomes vanishingly small in the
situations with large shear viscosity, leading to an experimentally measurable
relation among the total resistivity components.
Other situations are also discussed on the basis of the resulting expressions.Comment: 12 pages, no figures, to appear in J. Phys. Soc. Jpn. in October,
199
Physical properties of misfit-layered (Bi,Pb)-Sr-Co-O system: Effect of hole doping into triangular lattice formed by low-spin Co ions
Pb-doping effect on physical properties of misfit-layered (Bi,Pb)-Sr-Co-O
system, in which Co ions form a two-dimensional triangular lattice, was
investigated in detail by electronic transport, magnetization and specific-heat
measurements. Pb doping enhances the metallic behavior, suggesting that
carriers are doped. Pb doping also enhances the magnetic correlation in this
system and increases the magnetic transition temperature. We found the
existence of the short-range magnetic correlation far above the transition
temperature, which seems to induce the spin-glass state coexisting with the
ferromagnetic long-range order at low temperatures. Specific-heat measurement
suggests that the effective mass of the carrier in (Bi,Pb)-Sr-Co-O is not
enhanced so much as reported in NaCoO. Based on these experimental
results, we propose a two-bands model which consists of narrow and
rather broad bands. The observed magnetic property and
magnetotransport phenomena are explained well by this model
Search for the pentaquark via the reaction at 1.92 GeV/
The pentaquark baryon was searched for via the
reaction in a missing-mass resolution of 1.4 MeV/(FWHM) at J-PARC.
meson beams were incident on the liquid hydrogen target with the beam momentum
of 1.92 GeV/. No peak structure corresponding to the mass was
observed. The upper limit of the production cross section averaged over the
scattering angle of 2 to 15 in the laboratory frame was
obtained to be 0.26 b/sr in the mass region of 1.511.55 GeV/.The
upper limit of the decay width using the effective Lagrangian
approach was obtained to be 0.72 MeV/ and 3.1 MeV/ for
and , respectively.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, 1 tabl
Scaling Behavior of Anomalous Hall Effect and Longitudinal Nonlinear Response in High-Tc Superconductors
Based on existing theoretical model and by considering our longitudinal
nonlinear response function, we derive a nonliear equation in which the mixed
state Hall resistivity can be expressed as an analytical function of magnetic
field, temperature and applied current. This equation enables one to compare
quantitatively the experimental data with theoretical model. We also find some
new scaling relations of the temperature and field dependency of Hall
resistivity. The comparison between our theoretical curves and experimental
data shows a fair agreement.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Structure of isobaric analog states in 91Nb populated by the 90Zr(a,t) reaction
Decay via proton emission of isobaric analog states (IAS's) in
was studied using the reaction at =180 MeV.
This study provides information about the damping mechanism of these states.
Decay to the ground state and low-lying phonon states in was
observed. The experimental data are compared with theoretical predictions
wherein the IAS `single-particle' proton escape widths are calculated in a
continuum RPA approach. The branching ratios for decay to the phonon states are
explained using a simple model.Comment: 3 figures. submitted to Phys. Lett.
- …