54 research outputs found
Operating a quantum pump in a closed circuit
During an adiabatic pumping cycle a conventional two barrier quantum device
takes an electron from the left lead and ejects it to the right lead. Hence the
pumped charge per cycle is naively expected to be . This zero order
adiabatic point of view is in fact misleading. For a closed device we can get
and even . In this paper a detailed analysis of the
quantum pump operation is presented. Using the Kubo formula for the geometric
conductance, and applying the Dirac chains picture, we derive practical
estimates for~.Comment: 19 pages, 8 figs, minor textual corretions, to be published in JP
Quantum dynamics and transport in a double well system
The simplest one-dimensional model for the studying of non-trivial
geometrical effects is a ring shaped device which is formed by joining two
arms. We explore the possibility to model such a system as a two level system
(TLS). Of particular interest is the analysis of quantum stirring, where it is
not evident that the topology is properly reflected within the framework of the
TLS modeling. On the technical side we provide a practical "neighboring level"
approximation for the analysis of such quantum devices, which remains valid
even if the TLS modeling does not apply.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, version to be published in PR
Disentangling Scaling Properties in Anisotropic Fracture
Structure functions of rough fracture surfaces in isotropic materials exhibit
complicated scaling properties due to the broken isotropy in the fracture plane
generated by a preferred propagation direction. Decomposing the structure
functions into the even order irreducible representations of the SO(2) symmetry
group (indexed by ) results in a lucid and quickly convergent
description. The scaling exponent of the isotropic sector () dominates at
small length scales. One can reconstruct the anisotropic structure functions
using only the isotropic and the first non vanishing anisotropic sector ()
(or at most the next one ()). The scaling exponent of the isotropic sector
should be observed in a proposed, yet unperformed, experiment.Comment: 5 pages, 8 figure
Quantum Stirring in low dimensional devices
A circulating current can be induced in the Fermi sea by displacing a
scatterer, or more generally by integrating a quantum pump into a closed
circuit. The induced current may have either the same or the opposite sense
with respect to the "pushing" direction of the pump. We work out explicit
expressions for the associated geometric conductance using the Kubo-Dirac
monopoles picture, and illuminate the connection with the theory of adiabatic
passage in multiple path geometry.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, improved versio
Nonspecific Transcription-Factor-DNA Binding Influences Nucleosome Occupancy in Yeast
AbstractQuantitative understanding of the principles regulating nucleosome occupancy on a genome-wide level is a central issue in eukaryotic genomics. Here, we address this question using budding yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, as a model organism. We perform a genome-wide computational analysis of the nonspecific transcription factor (TF)-DNA binding free-energy landscape and compare this landscape with experimentally determined nucleosome-binding preferences. We show that DNA regions with enhanced nonspecific TF-DNA binding are statistically significantly depleted of nucleosomes. We suggest therefore that the competition between TFs with histones for nonspecific binding to genomic sequences might be an important mechanism influencing nucleosome-binding preferences in vivo. We also predict that poly(dA:dT) and poly(dC:dG) tracts represent genomic elements with the strongest propensity for nonspecific TF-DNA binding, thus allowing TFs to outcompete nucleosomes at these elements. Our results suggest that nonspecific TF-DNA binding might provide a barrier for statistical positioning of nucleosomes throughout the yeast genome. We predict that the strength of this barrier increases with the concentration of DNA binding proteins in a cell. We discuss the connection of the proposed mechanism with the recently discovered pathway of active nucleosome reconstitution
Anomalous decay of a prepared state due to non-Ohmic coupling to the continuum
We study the decay of a prepared state into a continuum {E_k} in the
case of non-Ohmic models. This means that the coupling is with . We find that irrespective of model details
there is a universal generalized Wigner time that characterizes the
evolution of the survival probability . The generic decay behavior
which is implied by rate equation phenomenology is a slowing down stretched
exponential, reflecting the gradual resolution of the bandprofile. But
depending on non-universal features of the model a power-law decay might take
over: it is only for an Ohmic coupling to the continuum that we get a robust
exponential decay that is insensitive to the nature of the intra-continuum
couplings. The analysis highlights the co-existence of perturbative and
non-perturbative features in the dynamics. It turns out that there are special
circumstances in which is reflected in the spreading process and not only
in the survival probability, contrary to the naive linear response theory
expectation.Comment: 13 pages, 11 figure
Quantum anomalies and linear response theory
The analysis of diffusive energy spreading in quantized chaotic driven
systems, leads to a universal paradigm for the emergence of a quantum anomaly.
In the classical approximation a driven chaotic system exhibits stochastic-like
diffusion in energy space with a coefficient that is proportional to the
intensity of the driving. In the corresponding quantized problem
the coherent transitions are characterized by a generalized Wigner time
, and a self-generated (intrinsic) dephasing process leads to
non-linear dependence of on .Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, textual improvements (as in published version
Quantum decay into a non-flat continuum
We study the decay of a prepared state into non-flat continuum. We find that
the survival probability might exhibit either stretched-exponential or
power-law decay, depending on non-universal features of the model. Still there
is a universal characteristic time that does not depend on the functional
form. It is only for a flat continuum that we get a robust exponential decay
that is insensitive to the nature of the intra-continuum couplings. The
analysis highlights the co-existence of perturbative and non-perturbative
features in the local density of states, and the non-linear dependence of
on the strength of the coupling.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
DNA sequence correlations shape nonspecific transcription factor-DNA binding affinity
Transcription factors (TFs) are regulatory proteins that bind DNA in promoter
regions of the genome and either promote or repress gene expression. Here we
predict analytically that enhanced homo-oligonucleotide sequence correlations,
such as poly(dA:dT) and poly(dC:dG) tracts, statistically enhance non-specific
TF-DNA binding affinity. This prediction is generic and qualitatively
independent of microscopic parameters of the model. We show that non-specific
TF binding affinity is universally controlled by the strength and symmetry of
DNA sequence correlations. We perform correlation analysis of the yeast genome
and show that DNA regions highly occupied by TFs exhibit stronger
homo-oligonucleotide sequence correlations, and thus higher propensity for
non-specific binding, as compared with poorly occupied regions. We suggest that
this effect plays the role of an effective localization potential enhancing the
quasi-one-dimensional diffusion of TFs in the vicinity of DNA, speeding up the
stochastic search process for specific TF binding sites. The predicted effect
also imposes an upper bound on the size of TF-DNA binding motifs
Statistical Physics of Fracture Surfaces Morphology
Experiments on fracture surface morphologies offer increasing amounts of data
that can be analyzed using methods of statistical physics. One finds scaling
exponents associated with correlation and structure functions, indicating a
rich phenomenology of anomalous scaling. We argue that traditional models of
fracture fail to reproduce this rich phenomenology and new ideas and concepts
are called for. We present some recent models that introduce the effects of
deviations from homogeneous linear elasticity theory on the morphology of
fracture surfaces, succeeding to reproduce the multiscaling phenomenology at
least in 1+1 dimensions. For surfaces in 2+1 dimensions we introduce novel
methods of analysis based on projecting the data on the irreducible
representations of the SO(2) symmetry group. It appears that this approach
organizes effectively the rich scaling properties. We end up with the
proposition of new experiments in which the rotational symmetry is not broken,
such that the scaling properties should be particularly simple.Comment: A review paper submitted to J. Stat. Phy
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