2,848 research outputs found
Vibrations in glasses and Euclidean Random Matrix theory
We study numerically and analytically a simple off-lattice model of scalar
harmonic vibrations by means of Euclidean random matrix theory. Since the
spectrum of this model shares the most puzzling spectral features with the
high-frequency domain of glasses (non-Rayleigh broadening of the Brillouin
peak, boson peak and secondary peak), the Euclidean random matrix theory
provide a single and fairly simple theoretical framework to their explanation.Comment: 11 pages, 7 postscript figures, Proceedings of Statphys 2
Vibrational spectra in glasses
The findings of X-ray and neutron scattering experiments on amorphous systems
are interpreted within the framework of the theory of Euclidean random
matrices. This allows to take into account the topological nature of the
disorder, a key ingredient which strongly affects the vibrational spectra of
those systems. We present a resummation scheme for a perturbative expansion in
the inverse particle density, allowing an accurate analytical computation of
the dynamical structure factor within the range of densities encountered in
real systems.Comment: Talk given at the '8th International Workshop on Disordered Systems'
Andalo, Trento, 12-15 March 200
The Boson peak and the phonons in glasses
Despite the presence of topological disorder, phonons seem to exist also in
glasses at very high frequencies (THz) and they remarkably persist into the
supercooled liquid. A universal feature of such a systems is the Boson peak, an
excess of states over the standard Debye contribution at the vibrational
density of states. Exploiting the euclidean random matrix theory of vibrations
in amorphous systems we show that this peak is the signature of a phase
transition in the space of the stationary points of the energy, from a
minima-dominated phase (with phonons) at low energy to a saddle-point dominated
phase (without phonons). The theoretical predictions are checked by means of
numeric simulations.Comment: to appear in the proceedings of the conference "Slow dynamics in
complex sistems", Sendai (Japan) 200
Comprehensive study of the critical behavior in the diluted antiferromagnet in a field
We study the critical behavior of the Diluted Antiferromagnet in a Field with
the Tethered Monte Carlo formalism. We compute the critical exponents
(including the elusive hyperscaling violations exponent ). Our results
provide a comprehensive description of the phase transition and clarify the
inconsistencies between previous experimental and theoretical work. To do so,
our method addresses the usual problems of numerical work (large tunneling
barriers and self-averaging violations).Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Analysis of polyubiquitin conjugates reveals that the Rpn10 substrate receptor contributes to the turnover of multiple proteasome targets
The polyubiquitin receptor Rpn10 targets ubiquitylated Sic1 to the 26S proteasome for degradation. In contrast, turnover of at least one ubiquitin-proteasome system (UPS) substrate, CPY*, is impervious to deletion of RPN10. To distinguish whether RPN10 is involved in the turnover of only a small set of cell cycle regulators that includes Sic1 or plays a more general role in the UPS, we sought to develop a general method that would allow us to survey the spectrum of ubiquitylated proteins that selectively accumulate in rpn10 cells. Polyubiquitin conjugates from yeast cells that express hexahistidine-tagged ubiquitin (H6-ubiquitin) were first enriched on a polyubiquitin binding protein affinity resin. This material was then denatured and subjected to IMAC to retrieve H6-ubiquitin and proteins to which it may be covalently linked. Using this approach, we identified 127 proteins that are candidate substrates for the 26S proteasome. We then sequenced ubiquitin conjugates from cells lacking Rpn10 (rpn10) and identified 54 proteins that were uniquely recovered from rpn10 cells. These include two known targets of the UPS, the cell cycle regulator Sic1 and the transcriptional activator Gcn4. Our approach of comparing the ubiquitin conjugate proteome in wild-type and mutant cells has the resolving power to identify even an extremely inabundant transcriptional regulatory protein and should be generally applicable to mapping enzyme substrate networks in the UPS
Characterization of the hot Neptune GJ 436b with Spitzer and ground-based observations
We present Spitzer Space Telescope infrared photometry of a secondary eclipse
of the hot Neptune GJ436b. The observations were obtained using the 8-micron
band of the InfraRed Array Camera (IRAC). The data spanning the predicted time
of secondary eclipse show a clear flux decrement with the expected shape and
duration. The observed eclipse depth of 0.58 mmag allows us to estimate a
blackbody brightness temperature of T_p = 717 +- 35 K at 8 microns. We compare
this infrared flux measurement to a model of the planetary thermal emission,
and show that this model reproduces properly the observed flux decrement. The
timing of the secondary eclipse confirms the non-zero orbital eccentricity of
the planet, while also increasing its precision (e = 0.14 +- 0.01). Additional
new spectroscopic and photometric observations allow us to estimate the
rotational period of the star and to assess the potential presence of another
planet.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A on 11/09/2007; 7 pages, 6 figure
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