1,165 research outputs found
Hydrodynamics of Spatially Ordered Superfluids
We derive the hydrodynamic equations for the supersolid and superhexatic
phases of a neutral two-dimensional Bose fluid. We find, assuming that the
normal part of the fluid is clamped to an underlying substrate, that both
phases can sustain third-sound modes and that in the supersolid phase there are
additional modes due to the superfluid motion of point defects (vacancies and
interstitials).Comment: 24 pages of ReVTeX and 7 uuencoded figures. Submitted for publication
in Phys. Rev.
The nature of slow dynamics in a minimal model of frustration-limited domains
We present simulation results for the dynamics of a schematic model based on
the frustration-limited domain picture of glass-forming liquids. These results
are compared with approximate theoretical predictions analogous to those
commonly used for supercooled liquid dynamics. Although model relaxation times
increase by several orders of magnitude in a non-Arrhenius manner as a
microphase separation transition is approached, the slow relaxation is in many
ways dissimilar to that of a liquid. In particular, structural relaxation is
nearly exponential in time at each wave vector, indicating that the mode
coupling effects dominating liquid relaxation are comparatively weak within
this model. Relaxation properties of the model are instead well reproduced by
the simplest dynamical extension of a static Hartree approximation. This
approach is qualitatively accurate even for temperatures at which the mode
coupling approximation predicts loss of ergodicity. These results suggest that
the thermodynamically disordered phase of such a minimal model poorly
caricatures the slow dynamics of a liquid near its glass transition
Evidence for "fragile" glass-forming behavior in the relaxation of Coulomb frustrated three-dimensional systems
We show by means of a Monte Carlo simulation study that three-dimensional
models with long-range frustration display the generic phenomena seen in
fragile glassforming liquids. Due to their properties (absence of quenched
disorder, physical motivation in terms of structural frustration, and tunable
fragility), these systems appear as promising minimal theoretical models for
describing the glass transition of supercooled liquids.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Enhancement of Rabi Splitting in a Microcavity with an Embedded Superlattice
We have observed a large coupling between the excitonic and photonic modes of
an AlAs/AlGaAs microcavity filled with an 84-({\rm {\AA}})/20({\rm {\AA}})
GaAs/AlGaAs superlattice. Reflectivity measurements on the coupled
cavity-superlattice system in the presence of a moderate electric field yielded
a Rabi splitting of 9.5 meV at T = 238 K. This splitting is almost 50% larger
than that found in comparable microcavities with quantum wells placed at the
antinodes only. We explain the enhancement by the larger density of optical
absorbers in the superlattice, combined with the quasi-two-dimensional binding
energy of field-localized excitons.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, submitted to PR
Tilt Modulus and Angle-Dependent Flux Lattice Melting in the Lowest Landau Level Approximation
For a clean high-T superconductor, we analyze the Lawrence-Doniach free
energy in a tilted magnetic field within the lowest Landau level (LLL)
approximation. The free energy maps onto that of a strictly -axis field, but
with a reduced interlayer coupling. We use this result to calculate the tilt
modulus of a vortex lattice and vortex liquid. The vortex contribution
to can be expressed in terms of the squared -axis Josephson plasmon
frequency . The transverse component of the field has very
little effect on the position of the melting curve.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in Physical Review B
(Rapid Communications
Modeling DNA Structure, Elasticity and Deformations at the Base-pair Level
We present a generic model for DNA at the base-pair level. We use a variant
of the Gay-Berne potential to represent the stacking energy between neighboring
base-pairs. The sugar-phosphate backbones are taken into account by semi-rigid
harmonic springs with a non-zero spring length. The competition of these two
interactions and the introduction of a simple geometrical constraint leads to a
stacked right-handed B-DNA-like conformation. The mapping of the presented
model to the Marko-Siggia and the Stack-of-Plates model enables us to optimize
the free model parameters so as to reproduce the experimentally known
observables such as persistence lengths, mean and mean squared base-pair step
parameters. For the optimized model parameters we measured the critical force
where the transition from B- to S-DNA occurs to be approximately . We
observe an overstretched S-DNA conformation with highly inclined bases that
partially preserves the stacking of successive base-pairs.Comment: 15 pages, 25 figures. submitted to PR
Integration of genetics into a systems model of electrocardiographic traits using humanCVD BeadChip
<p>Background—Electrocardiographic traits are important, substantially heritable determinants of risk of arrhythmias and sudden cardiac death.</p>
<p>Methods and Results—In this study, 3 population-based cohorts (n=10 526) genotyped with the Illumina HumanCVD Beadchip and 4 quantitative electrocardiographic traits (PR interval, QRS axis, QRS duration, and QTc interval) were evaluated for single-nucleotide polymorphism associations. Six gene regions contained single nucleotide polymorphisms associated with these traits at P<10−6, including SCN5A (PR interval and QRS duration), CAV1-CAV2 locus (PR interval), CDKN1A (QRS duration), NOS1AP, KCNH2, and KCNQ1 (QTc interval). Expression quantitative trait loci analyses of top associated single-nucleotide polymorphisms were undertaken in human heart and aortic tissues. NOS1AP, SCN5A, IGFBP3, CYP2C9, and CAV1 showed evidence of differential allelic expression. We modeled the effects of ion channel activity on electrocardiographic parameters, estimating the change in gene expression that would account for our observed associations, thus relating epidemiological observations and expression quantitative trait loci data to a systems model of the ECG.</p>
<p>Conclusions—These association results replicate and refine the mapping of previous genome-wide association study findings for electrocardiographic traits, while the expression analysis and modeling approaches offer supporting evidence for a functional role of some of these loci in cardiac excitation/conduction.</p>
Fluctuating Filaments I: Statistical Mechanics of Helices
We examine the effects of thermal fluctuations on thin elastic filaments with
non-circular cross-section and arbitrary spontaneous curvature and torsion.
Analytical expressions for orientational correlation functions and for the
persistence length of helices are derived, and it is found that this length
varies non-monotonically with the strength of thermal fluctuations. In the weak
fluctuation regime, the local helical structure is preserved and the
statistical properties are dominated by long wavelength bending and torsion
modes. As the amplitude of fluctuations is increased, the helix ``melts'' and
all memory of intrinsic helical structure is lost. Spontaneous twist of the
cross--section leads to resonant dependence of the persistence length on the
twist rate.Comment: 5 figure
Renormalization group improved gravitational actions: a Brans-Dicke approach
A new framework for exploiting information about the renormalization group
(RG) behavior of gravity in a dynamical context is discussed. The
Einstein-Hilbert action is RG-improved by replacing Newton's constant and the
cosmological constant by scalar functions in the corresponding Lagrangian
density. The position dependence of and is governed by a RG
equation together with an appropriate identification of RG scales with points
in spacetime. The dynamics of the fields and does not admit a
Lagrangian description in general. Within the Lagrangian formalism for the
gravitational field they have the status of externally prescribed
``background'' fields. The metric satisfies an effective Einstein equation
similar to that of Brans-Dicke theory. Its consistency imposes severe
constraints on allowed backgrounds. In the new RG-framework, and
carry energy and momentum. It is tested in the setting of homogeneous-isotropic
cosmology and is compared to alternative approaches where the fields and
do not carry gravitating 4-momentum. The fixed point regime of the
underlying RG flow is studied in detail.Comment: LaTeX, 72 pages, no figure
Measurement of the ttbar Production Cross Section in ppbar Collisions at sqrt(s)=1.96 TeV using Lepton + Jets Events with Lifetime b-tagging
We present a measurement of the top quark pair () production cross
section () in collisions at TeV
using 230 pb of data collected by the D0 experiment at the Fermilab
Tevatron Collider. We select events with one charged lepton (electron or muon),
missing transverse energy, and jets in the final state. We employ
lifetime-based b-jet identification techniques to further enhance the
purity of the selected sample. For a top quark mass of 175 GeV, we
measure pb, in
agreement with the standard model expectation.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures, 3 tables Submitted to Phys.Rev.Let
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