1,113 research outputs found
Falling Toward Charged Black Holes
The growth of the "size" of operators is an important diagnostic of quantum
chaos. In arXiv:1802.01198 [hep-th] it was conjectured that the holographic
dual of the size is proportional to the average radial component of the
momentum of the particle created by the operator. Thus the growth of operators
in the background of a black hole corresponds to the acceleration of the
particle as it falls toward the horizon. In this note we will use the
momentum-size correspondence as a tool to study scrambling in the field of a
near-extremal charged black hole. The agreement with previous work provides a
non-trivial test of the momentum-size relation, as well as an explanation of a
paradoxical feature of scrambling previously discovered by Leichenauer
[arXiv:1405.7365 [hep-th]]. Naively Leichenauer's result says that only the
non-extremal entropy participates in scrambling. The same feature is also
present in the SYK model. In this paper we find a quite different
interpretation of Leichenauer's result which does not have to do with any
decoupling of the extremal degrees of freedom. Instead it has to do with the
buildup of momentum as a particle accelerates through the long throat of the
Reissner-Nordstrom geometry.Comment: v4: typos correcte
A simple low-SAR technique for chemical-shift selection with high-field spin-echo imaging
We have discovered a simple and highly robust method for removal of chemical shift artifact in spin-echo MR images, which simultaneously decreases the radiofrequency power deposition (specific absorption rate). The method is demonstrated in spin-echo echo-planar imaging brain images acquired at 7 T, with complete suppression of scalp fat signal. When excitation and refocusing pulses are sufficiently different in duration, and thus also different in the amplitude of their slice-select gradients, a spatial mismatch is produced between the fat slices excited and refocused, with no overlap. Because no additional radiofrequency pulse is used to suppress fat, the specific absorption rate is significantly reduced compared with conventional approaches. This enables greater volume coverage per unit time, well suited for functional and diffusion studies using spin-echo echo-planar imaging. Moreover, the method can be generally applied to any sequence involving slice-selective excitation and at least one slice-selective refocusing pulse at high magnetic field strengths. The method is more efficient than gradient reversal methods and more robust against inhomogeneities of the static (polarizing) field (B0)
First Application of Pulse-Shape Analysis to Silicon Micro-Strip Detectors
The method of pulse-shape analysis (PSA) for particle identification (PID)
was applied to a double-sided silicon strip detector (DSSD) with a strip pitch
of 300 \{mu}m. We present the results of test measurements with particles from
the reactions of a 70 MeV 12C beam impinging on a mylar target. Good separation
between protons and alpha particles down to 3 MeV has been obtained when
excluding the interstrip events of the DSSD from the analysis.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, submitted to Nuclear Inst. and Methods in Physics
Research
A common theme in extracellular fluids of beetles: extracellular superoxide dismutases crucial for balancing ROS in response to microbial challenge
Extracellular Cu/Zn superoxide dismutases (SODs) are critical for balancing the level of reactive oxygen species in the extracellular matrix of eukaryotes. In the present study we have detected constitutive SOD activity in the haemolymph and defensive secretions of different leaf beetle species. Exemplarily, we have chosen the mustard leaf beetle, Phaedon cochleariae, as representative model organism to investigate the role of extracellular SODs in antimicrobial defence. Qualitative and quantitative proteome analyses resulted in the identification of two extracellular Cu/Zn SODs in the haemolymph and one in the defensive secretions of juvenile P. cochleariae. Furthermore, quantitative expression studies indicated fat body tissue and defensive glands as the main synthesis sites of these SODs. Silencing of the two SODs revealed one of them, PcSOD3.1, as the only relevant enzyme facilitating SOD activity in haemolymph and defensive secretions in vivo. Upon challenge with the entomopathogenic fungus, Metarhizium anisopliae, PcSOD3.1-deficient larvae exhibited a significantly higher mortality compared to other SOD-silenced groups. Hence, our results serve as a basis for further research on SOD regulated host-pathogen interactions. In defensive secretions PcSOD3.1-silencing affected neither deterrent production nor activity against fungal growth. Instead, we propose another antifungal mechanism based on MRJP/yellow proteins in the defensive exudates
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