1,989 research outputs found
Quantitative insights into the cyanobacterial cell economy
© Zavřel et al. Phototrophic microorganisms are promising resources for green biotechnology. Compared to heterotrophic microorganisms, however, the cellular economy of phototrophic growth is still insufficiently understood. We provide a quantitative analysis of light-limited, light-saturated, and light-inhibited growth of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 using a reproducible cultivation setup. We report key physiological parameters, including growth rate, cell size, and photosynthetic activity over a wide range of light intensities. Intracellular proteins were quantified to monitor proteome allocation as a function of growth rate. Among other physiological acclimations, we identify an upregulation of the translational machinery and downregulation of light harvesting components with increasing light intensity and growth rate. The resulting growth laws are discussed in the context of a coarse-grained model of phototrophic growth and available data obtained by a comprehensive literature search. Our insights into quantitative aspects of cyanobacterial acclimations to different growth rates have implications to understand and optimize photosynthetic productivity
Quasiperiodic time dependent current in driven superlattices: distorted Poincare maps and strange attractors
Intriguing routes to chaos have been experimentally observed in semiconductor
superlattices driven by an ac field. In this work, a theoretical model of time
dependent transport in ac driven superlattices is numerically solved. In
agreement with experiments, distorted Poincare maps in the quasiperiodic regime
are found. They indicate the appearance of very complex attractors and routes
to chaos as the amplitude of the AC signal increases. Distorted maps are caused
by the discrete well-to-well jump motion of a domain wall during spiky
high-frequency self-sustained oscillations of the current.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Complementarity in classical dynamical systems
The concept of complementarity, originally defined for non-commuting
observables of quantum systems with states of non-vanishing dispersion, is
extended to classical dynamical systems with a partitioned phase space.
Interpreting partitions in terms of ensembles of epistemic states (symbols)
with corresponding classical observables, it is shown that such observables are
complementary to each other with respect to particular partitions unless those
partitions are generating. This explains why symbolic descriptions based on an
\emph{ad hoc} partition of an underlying phase space description should
generally be expected to be incompatible. Related approaches with different
background and different objectives are discussed.Comment: 18 pages, no figure
Observation and Characterization of a Cosmic Muon Neutrino Flux from the Northern Hemisphere using six years of IceCube data
The IceCube Collaboration has previously discovered a high-energy
astrophysical neutrino flux using neutrino events with interaction vertices
contained within the instrumented volume of the IceCube detector. We present a
complementary measurement using charged current muon neutrino events where the
interaction vertex can be outside this volume. As a consequence of the large
muon range the effective area is significantly larger but the field of view is
restricted to the Northern Hemisphere. IceCube data from 2009 through 2015 have
been analyzed using a likelihood approach based on the reconstructed muon
energy and zenith angle. At the highest neutrino energies between 191 TeV and
8.3 PeV a significant astrophysical contribution is observed, excluding a
purely atmospheric origin of these events at significance. The
data are well described by an isotropic, unbroken power law flux with a
normalization at 100 TeV neutrino energy of
and a hard spectral index of . The observed spectrum is
harder in comparison to previous IceCube analyses with lower energy thresholds
which may indicate a break in the astrophysical neutrino spectrum of unknown
origin. The highest energy event observed has a reconstructed muon energy of
which implies a probability of less than 0.005% for
this event to be of atmospheric origin. Analyzing the arrival directions of all
events with reconstructed muon energies above 200 TeV no correlation with known
-ray sources was found. Using the high statistics of atmospheric
neutrinos we report the currently best constraints on a prompt atmospheric muon
neutrino flux originating from charmed meson decays which is below in
units of the flux normalization of the model in Enberg et al. (2008).Comment: 20 pages, 21 figure
Lowering IceCube’s energy threshold for point source searches in the southern sky
Observation of a point source of astrophysical neutrinos would be a "smoking gun" signature of a cosmic-ray accelerator. While IceCube has recently discovered a diffuse flux of astrophysical neutrinos, no localized point source has been observed. Previous IceCube searches for point sources in the southern sky were restricted by either an energy threshold above a few hundred TeV or poor neutrino angular resolution. Here we present a search for southern sky point sources with greatly improved sensitivities to neutrinos with energies below 100 TeV. By selecting charged-current nu(mu) interacting inside the detector, we reduce the atmospheric background while retaining efficiency for astrophysical neutrino-induced events reconstructed with sub-degree angular resolution. The new event sample covers three years of detector data and leads to a factor of 10 improvement in sensitivity to point sources emitting below 100 TeV in the southern sky. No statistically significant evidence of point sources was found, and upper limits are set on neutrino emission from individual sources. A posteriori analysis of the highest-energy (similar to 100 TeV) starting event in the sample found that this event alone represents a 2.8 sigma deviation from the hypothesis that the data consists only of atmospheric background
All-sky search for time-integrated neutrino emission from astrophysical sources with 7 years of IceCube data
Since the recent detection of an astrophysical flux of high energy neutrinos,
the question of its origin has not yet fully been answered. Much of what is
known about this flux comes from a small event sample of high neutrino purity,
good energy resolution, but large angular uncertainties. In searches for
point-like sources, on the other hand, the best performance is given by using
large statistics and good angular reconstructions. Track-like muon events
produced in neutrino interactions satisfy these requirements. We present here
the results of searches for point-like sources with neutrinos using data
acquired by the IceCube detector over seven years from 2008--2015. The
discovery potential of the analysis in the northern sky is now significantly
below , on average
lower than the sensitivity of the previously published analysis of four
years exposure. No significant clustering of neutrinos above background
expectation was observed, and implications for prominent neutrino source
candidates are discussed.Comment: 19 pages, 17 figures, 3 tables; ; submitted to The Astrophysical
Journa
The contribution of Fermi-2LAC blazars to the diffuse TeV-PeV neutrino flux
The recent discovery of a diffuse cosmic neutrino flux extending up to PeV
energies raises the question of which astrophysical sources generate this
signal. One class of extragalactic sources which may produce such high-energy
neutrinos are blazars. We present a likelihood analysis searching for
cumulative neutrino emission from blazars in the 2nd Fermi-LAT AGN catalogue
(2LAC) using an IceCube neutrino dataset 2009-12 which was optimised for the
detection of individual sources. In contrast to previous searches with IceCube,
the populations investigated contain up to hundreds of sources, the largest one
being the entire blazar sample in the 2LAC catalogue. No significant excess is
observed and upper limits for the cumulative flux from these populations are
obtained. These constrain the maximum contribution of the 2LAC blazars to the
observed astrophysical neutrino flux to be or less between around 10
TeV and 2 PeV, assuming equipartition of flavours at Earth and a single
power-law spectrum with a spectral index of . We can still exclude that
the 2LAC blazars (and sub-populations) emit more than of the observed
neutrinos up to a spectral index as hard as in the same energy range.
Our result takes into account that the neutrino source count distribution is
unknown, and it does not assume strict proportionality of the neutrino flux to
the measured 2LAC -ray signal for each source. Additionally, we
constrain recent models for neutrino emission by blazars.Comment: 18 pages, 22 figure
An All-Sky Search for Three Flavors of Neutrinos from Gamma-Ray Bursts with the IceCube Neutrino Observatory
We present the results and methodology of a search for neutrinos produced in
the decay of charged pions created in interactions between protons and
gamma-rays during the prompt emission of 807 gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) over the
entire sky. This three-year search is the first in IceCube for shower-like
Cherenkov light patterns from electron, muon, and tau neutrinos correlated with
GRBs. We detect five low-significance events correlated with five GRBs. These
events are consistent with the background expectation from atmospheric muons
and neutrinos. The results of this search in combination with those of
IceCube's four years of searches for track-like Cherenkov light patterns from
muon neutrinos correlated with Northern-Hemisphere GRBs produce limits that
tightly constrain current models of neutrino and ultra high energy cosmic ray
production in GRB fireballs.Comment: 33 pages, 14 figures; minor changes made to match published version
in the Astrophysical Journal, 2016 June 2
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