17,578 research outputs found
Monte Carlo simulations of liquid crystals near rough walls
The effect of surface roughness on the structure of liquid crystalline fluids near solid substrates is studied by Monte Carlo simulations. The liquid crystal is modeled as a fluid of soft ellipsoidal molecules and the substrate is modeled as a hard wall that excludes the centers of mass of the fluid molecules. Surface roughness is introduced by embedding a number of molecules with random positions and orientations within the wall. It is found that the density and order near the wall are reduced as the wall becomes rougher, i.e., the number of embedded molecules is increased). Anchoring coefficients are determined from fluctuations in the reciprocal space order tensor. It is found that the anchoring strength decreases with increasing surface roughness
Mesoscopic magnetoelectric effect in chaotic quantum dots
The magnitude of the inverse Faraday effect (IFE), a static magnetization due
to an ac electric field, can be strongly increased in a mesoscopic sample,
sensitive to time-reversal symmetry (TRS) breaking. Random rectification of ac
voltages leads to a magnetization flux, which can be detected by an asymmetry
of Hall resistances in a multi-terminal setup. In the absence of applied
magnetic field through a chaotic quantum dot the IFE scale, quadratic in
voltage, is found as an analytic function of the ac frequency, screening, and
coupling to the contacts and floating probes, and numerically it does not show
any effect of spin-orbit interaction. Our results qualitatively agree with a
recent experiment on TRS-breaking in a six-terminal Hall cross.Comment: 4+ pages, 2 figures; v2-published version, small change
Raman Scattered He II 6545 Line in the Symbiotic Star V1016 Cygni
We present a spectrum of the symbiotic star V1016 Cyg observed with the 3.6 m
Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope, in order to illustrate a method to measure the
covering factor of the neutral scattering region around the giant component
with respect to the hot emission region around the white dwarf component. In
the spectrum, we find broad wings around H and a broad emission feature
around 6545 that is blended with the [N II] 6548 line.
These two features are proposed to be formed by Raman scattering by atomic
hydrogen, where the incident radiation is proposed to be UV continuum radiation
around Ly in the former case and He II 1025 emission line
arising from transitions for the latter feature. We remove the
H wings by a template Raman scattering wing profile and subtract the [N
II] 6548 line using the 3 times stronger [N II] 6583
feature in order to isolate the He II Raman scattered 6545 \AA line. We obtain
the flux ratio of the He II 6560 emission
line and the 6545 \AA feature for V1016 Cyg. Under the assumption that the He
II emission from this object is isotropic, this ratio is converted to the ratio
of the number of the incident photons and that
of the scattered photons. This implies that the scattering region with H I
column density covers 17 per cent of the
emission region. By combining the presumed binary period yrs of this
system we infer that a significant fraction of the slow stellar wind from the
Mira component is ionized and that the scattering region around the Mira
extends a few tens of AU, which is closely associated with the mass loss
process of the Mira component.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Toward the Evidence of the Accretion Disk Emission in the Symbiotic Star RR Tel
In this paper, we argue that in the symbiotic star RR Tel the existence of an
accretion disk around the hot companion is strongly implied by the
characteristic features exhibited by the Raman-scattered O VI lines around 6830
\AA and 7088 \AA. High degrees of polarization and double-peaked profiles in
the Raman-scattered lines and single-peak profiles for other emission lines are
interpreted as line-of-sight effects, where the H I scatterers near the giant
see an incident double-peaked profile and an observer with a low inclination
sees single-peak profiles. It is predicted that different mass concentrations
around the accretion disk formed by a dusty wind may lead to the disparate
ratios of the blue peak strength to the red counterpart observed in the 6830
and 7088 features. We discuss the evolutionary links between symbiotic stars
and bipolar protoplanetary nebulae and conclude that the Raman scattering
processes may play an important role in investigation of the physical
properties of these objects.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in the ApJ Letter
Entropic particle transport: higher order corrections to the Fick-Jacobs diffusion equation
Transport of point-size Brownian particles under the influence of a constant
and uniform force field through a three-dimensional channel with smoothly
varying periodic cross-section is investigated. Here, we employ an asymptotic
analysis in the ratio between the difference of the widest and the most narrow
constriction divided through the period length of the channel geometry. We
demonstrate that the leading order term is equivalent to the Fick-Jacobs
approximation. By use of the higher order corrections to the probability
density we derive an expression for the spatially dependent diffusion
coefficient D(x) which substitutes the constant diffusion coefficient present
in the common Fick-Jacobs equation. In addition, we show that in the diffusion
dominated regime the average transport velocity is obtained as the product of
the zeroth-order Fick-Jacobs result and the expectation value of the spatially
dependent diffusion coefficient . The analytic findings are corroborated
with the precise numerical results of a finite element calculation of the
Smoluchowski diffusive particle dynamics occurring in a reflection symmetric
sinusoidal-shaped channel.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figure
Probing of the Kondo peak by the impurity charge measurement
We consider the real-time dynamics of the Kondo system after the local probe
of the charge state of the magnetic impurity. Using the exactly solvable
infinite-degeneracy Anderson model we find explicitly the evolution of the
impurity charge after the measurement.Comment: 4 pages, 1 eps figure, revte
Reply to the Comment on "Enhancement of the Tunneling Density of States in Tomonaga-Luttinger Liquids"
In their comment Fabrizio and Gogolin dispute our result of the enhancement
of the tunneling density of states in a Tomonaga-Luttinger liquid at the
location of a backward scattering defect [Phys. Rev. Lett. 76, 4230(1996);
cond-mat/9601020]. They state that the anticommutativity of the fermion
operators of the left and right moving electrons was not considered properly in
the Letter. We show in the Reply that the result of the Letter can be
reproduced following the Comment when its calculations are performed correctly.
This clearly indicates that the question about the anticommutation relations
was raised by Fabrizio and Gogolin without serious grounds.Comment: Published in PRL as a Reply to the Comment by Fabrizio and Gogolin
(cond-mat/9702080
Ferrotoroidic Moment as a Quantum Geometric Phase
We present a geometric characterization of the ferrotoroidic moment in terms
of a set of Abelian Berry phases. We also introduce a fundamental complex
quantity which provides an alternative way to calculate the ferrotoroidic
moment and its moments, and is derived from a second order tensor. This
geometric framework defines a natural computational approach for density
functional and many-body theories
Mutations in human dynamin block an intermediate stage in coated vesicle formation
The role of human dynamin in receptor-mediated endocytosis was investigated by transient expression of GTP-binding domain mutants in mammalian cells. Using assays which detect intermediates in coated vesicle formation, the dynamin mutants were found to block endocytosis at a stage after the initiation of coat assembly and preceding the sequestration of ligands into deeply invaginated coated pits. Membrane transport from the ER to the Golgi complex was unaffected indicating that dynamin mutants specifically block early events in endocytosis. These results demonstrate that mutations in the GTP-binding domain of dynamin block Tfn-endocytosis in mammalian cells and suggest that a functional dynamin GTPase is required for receptor-mediated endocytosis via clathrin-coated pits
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