2,321 research outputs found
Non-destructive imaging of an individual protein
The mode of action of proteins is to a large extent given by their ability to
adopt different conformations. This is why imaging single biomolecules at
atomic resolution is one of the ultimate goals of biophysics and structural
biology. The existing protein database has emerged from X-ray crystallography,
NMR or cryo-TEM investigations. However, these tools all require averaging over
a large number of proteins and thus over different conformations. This of
course results in the loss of structural information. Likewise it has been
shown that even the emergent X-FEL technique will not get away without
averaging over a large quantity of molecules. Here we report the first
recordings of a protein at sub-nanometer resolution obtained from one
individual ferritin by means of low-energy electron holography. One single
protein could be imaged for an extended period of time without any sign of
radiation damage. Since ferritin exhibits an iron core, the holographic
reconstructions could also be cross-validated against TEM images of the very
same molecule by imaging the iron cluster inside the molecule while the protein
shell is decomposed
A preliminary systems-engineering study of an advanced nuclear-electrolytic hydrogen-production facility
An advanced nuclear-electrolytic hydrogen-production facility concept was synthesized at a conceptual level with the objective of minimizing estimated hydrogen-production costs. The concept is a closely-integrated, fully-dedicated (only hydrogen energy is produced) system whose components and subsystems are predicted on ''1985 technology.'' The principal components are: (1) a high-temperature gas-cooled reactor (HTGR) operating a helium-Brayton/ammonia-Rankine binary cycle with a helium reactor-core exit temperature of 980 C, (2) acyclic d-c generators, (3) high-pressure, high-current-density electrolyzers based on solid-polymer electrolyte technology. Based on an assumed 3,000 MWt HTGR the facility is capable of producing 8.7 million std cu m/day of hydrogen at pipeline conditions, 6,900 kPa. Coproduct oxygen is also available at pipeline conditions at one-half this volume. It has further been shown that the incorporation of advanced technology provides an overall efficiency of about 43 percent, as compared with 25 percent for a contemporary nuclear-electric plant powering close-coupled contemporary industrial electrolyzers
The geometry of a vorticity model equation
We provide rigorous evidence of the fact that the modified
Constantin-Lax-Majda equation modeling vortex and quasi-geostrophic dynamics
describes the geodesic flow on the subgroup of orientation-preserving
diffeomorphisms fixing one point, with respect to right-invariant metric
induced by the homogeneous Sobolev norm and show the local existence
of the geodesics in the extended group of diffeomorphisms of Sobolev class
with .Comment: 24 page
Structure prediction of (BaO)n nanoclusters for n⩽24 using an evolutionary algorithm
Knowing the structure of nanoclusters is relevant to gaining insight into their properties for materials design. Computational studies predicting their structure should aim to reproduce experimental results. Here, barium oxide was chosen for its suitability for both computational structure prediction and experimental structure determination. An evolutionary algorithm implemented within the KLMC structure prediction package was employed to find the thermodynamically most stable structures of barium oxide nanoclusters (BaO)n with n=4-18and24. Evolutionary algorithm runs were performed to locate local minima on the potential energy landscape defined using interatomic potentials, the structures of which were then refined using density functional theory. BaO clusters show greater preference than MgO for adopting cuts from its bulk phase, thus more closely resemble clusters of KF. (BaO)4, (BaO)6, (BaO)8, (BaO)10 and (BaO)16 should be magic number clusters and each are at least 0.03Â eV/BaO more stable than all other PBEsol local minima clusters found for the same size
Synthesis target structures for alkaline earth oxide clusters
Knowing the possible structures of individual clusters in nanostructured materials is an important first step in their design. With previous structure prediction data for BaO nanoclusters as a basis, data mining techniques were used to investigate candidate structures for magnesium oxide, calcium oxide and strontium oxide clusters. The lowest-energy structures and analysis of some of their structural properties are presented here. Clusters that are predicted to be ideal targets for synthesis, based on being both the only thermally accessible minimum for their size, and a size that is thermally accessible with respect to neighbouring sizes, include global minima for: sizes n = 9, 15, 16, 18 and 24 for (MgO)n; sizes n = 8, 9, 12, 16, 18 and 24 for (CaO) n ; the greatest number of sizes of (SrO) n clusters (n = 8, 9, 10, 12, 13, 15, 16, 18 and 24); and for (BaO) n sizes of n = 8, 10 and 16
Many-body approach to proton emission and the role of spectroscopic factors
The process of proton emission from nuclei is studied by utilizing the
two-potential approach of Gurvitz and Kalbermann in the context of the full
many-body problem. A time-dependent approach is used for calculating the decay
width. Starting from an initial many-body quasi-stationary state, we employ the
Feshbach projection operator approach and reduce the formalism to an effective
one-body problem. We show that the decay width can be expressed in terms of a
one-body matrix element multiplied by a normalization factor. We demonstrate
that the traditional interpretation of this normalization as the square root of
a spectroscopic factor is only valid for one particular choice of projection
operator. This causes no problem for the calculation of the decay width in a
consistent microscopic approach, but it leads to ambiguities in the
interpretation of experimental results. In particular, spectroscopic factors
extracted from a comparison of the measured decay width with a calculated
single-particle width may be affected.Comment: 17 pages, Revte
A structural evaluation of the tungsten isotopes via thermal neutron capture
Total radiative thermal neutron-capture -ray cross sections for the
W isotopes were measured using guided neutron beams from
the Budapest Research Reactor to induce prompt and delayed rays from
elemental and isotopically-enriched tungsten targets. These cross sections were
determined from the sum of measured -ray cross sections feeding the
ground state from low-lying levels below a cutoff energy, E, where
the level scheme is completely known, and continuum rays from levels
above E, calculated using the Monte Carlo statistical-decay code
DICEBOX. The new cross sections determined in this work for the tungsten
nuclides are: b and
b;
b and b; b and
b; and,
b and b. These results are consistent with
earlier measurements in the literature. The W cross section was also
independently confirmed from an activation measurement, following the decay of
W, yielding values for that are consistent
with our prompt -ray measurement. The cross-section measurements were
found to be insensitive to choice of level density or photon strength model,
and only weakly dependent on E. Total radiative-capture widths
calculated with DICEBOX showed much greater model dependence, however, the
recommended values could be reproduced with selected model choices. The decay
schemes for all tungsten isotopes were improved in these analyses.Comment: 25 pages, 15 figures, 15 table
Partial Dynamical Symmetry in the Symplectic Shell Model
We present an example of a partial dynamical symmetry (PDS) in an interacting
fermion system and demonstrate the close relationship of the associated
Hamiltonians with a realistic quadrupole-quadrupole interaction, thus shedding
new light on this important interaction. Specifically, in the framework of the
symplectic shell model of nuclei, we prove the existence of a family of
fermionic Hamiltonians with partial SU(3) symmetry. We outline the construction
process for the PDS eigenstates with good symmetry and give analytic
expressions for the energies of these states and E2 transition strengths
between them. Characteristics of both pure and mixed-symmetry PDS eigenstates
are discussed and the resulting spectra and transition strengths are compared
to those of real nuclei. The PDS concept is shown to be relevant to the
description of prolate, oblate, as well as triaxially deformed nuclei.
Similarities and differences between the fermion case and the previously
established partial SU(3) symmetry in the Interacting Boson Model are
considered.Comment: 9 figure
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Universal Upper End of the Stellar Initial Mass Function in the Young and Compact LEGUS Clusters
We investigate the variation in the upper end of the stellar initial mass function (uIMF) in 375 young and compact star clusters in five nearby galaxies within ∼5 Mpc. All the young stellar clusters (YSCs) in the sample have ages ≲ 4 Myr and masses above 500 M⊙, according to standard stellar models. The YSC catalogs were produced from Hubble Space Telescope images obtained as part of the Legacy ExtraGalactic UV Survey (LEGUS) Hubble treasury program. They are used here to test whether the uIMF is universal or changes as a function of the cluster\u27s stellar mass. We perform this test by measuring the Hα luminosity of the star clusters as a proxy for their ionizing photon rate, and charting its trend as a function of cluster mass. Large cluster numbers allow us to mitigate the stochastic sampling of the uIMF. The advantage of our approach relative to previous similar attempts is the use of cluster catalogs that have been selected independently of the presence of Hα emission, thus removing a potential sample bias. We find that the uIMF, as traced by the Hα emission, shows no dependence on cluster mass, suggesting that the maximum stellar mass that can be produced in star clusters is universal, in agreement with previous findings
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