29,136 research outputs found
Global dispersive solutions for the Gross-Pitaevskii equation in two and three dimensions
We study asymptotic behaviour at time infinity of solutions close to the
non-zero constant equilibrium for the Gross-Pitaevskii equation in two and
three spatial dimensions. We construct a class of global solutions with
prescribed dispersive asymptotic behavior, which is given in terms of the
linearized evolution
Phonon-mediated tuning of instabilities in the Hubbard model at half-filling
We obtain the phase diagram of the half-filled two-dimensional Hubbard model
on a square lattice in the presence of Einstein phonons. We find that the
interplay between the instantaneous electron-electron repulsion and
electron-phonon interaction leads to new phases. In particular, a
d-wave superconducting phase emerges when both anisotropic phonons
and repulsive Hubbard interaction are present. For large electron-phonon
couplings, charge-density-wave and s-wave superconducting regions also appear
in the phase diagram, and the widths of these regions are strongly dependent on
the phonon frequency, indicating that retardation effects play an important
role. Since at half-filling the Fermi surface is nested, spin-density-wave is
recovered when the repulsive interaction dominates. We employ a functional
multiscale renormalization-group method that includes both electron-electron
and electron-phonon interactions, and take retardation effects fully into
account.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
Investigation of radar backscattering from second-year sea ice
The scattering properties of second-year ice were studied in an experiment at Mould Bay in April 1983. Radar backscattering measurements were made at frequencies of 5.2, 9.6, 13.6, and 16.6 GHz for vertical polarization, horizontal polarization and cross polarizations, with incidence angles ranging from 15 to 70 deg. The results indicate that the second-year ice scattering characteristics were different from first-year ice and also different from multiyear ice. The fading properties of radar signals were studied and compared with experimental data. The influence of snow cover on sea ice can be evaluated by accounting for the increase in the number of independent samples from snow volume with respect to that for bare ice surface. A technique for calculating the snow depth was established by this principle and a reasonable agreement has been observed. It appears that this is a usable way to measure depth in snow or other snow-like media using radar
Dynamical Properties of a Growing Surface on a Random Substrate
The dynamics of the discrete Gaussian model for the surface of a crystal
deposited on a disordered substrate is investigated by Monte Carlo simulations.
The mobility of the growing surface was studied as a function of a small
driving force and temperature . A continuous transition is found from
high-temperature phase characterized by linear response to a low-temperature
phase with nonlinear, temperature dependent response. In the simulated regime
of driving force the numerical results are in general agreement with recent
dynamic renormalization group predictions.Comment: 10 pages, latex, 3 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev. E (RC
Exotic Superconducting Phases of Ultracold Atom Mixtures on Triangular Lattices
We study the phase diagram of two-dimensional Bose-Fermi mixtures of
ultracold atoms on a triangular optical lattice, in the limit when the velocity
of bosonic condensate fluctuations is much larger than the Fermi velocity.
We contrast this work with our previous results for a square lattice system
in Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 97}, 030601 (2006).
Using functional renormalization group techniques we show that the phase
diagrams for a triangular lattice contain exotic superconducting phases. For
spin-1/2 fermions on an isotropic lattice we find a competition of -, -,
extended -, and -wave symmetry, as well as antiferromagnetic order. For
an anisotropic lattice, we further find an extended p-wave phase. A Bose-Fermi
mixture with spinless fermions on an isotropic lattice shows a competition
between - and -wave symmetry.
These phases can be traced back to the geometric shapes of the Fermi surfaces
in various regimes, as well as the intrinsic frustration of a triangular
lattice.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, extended version, slight modification
Stable directions for small nonlinear Dirac standing waves
We prove that for a Dirac operator with no resonance at thresholds nor
eigenvalue at thresholds the propagator satisfies propagation and dispersive
estimates. When this linear operator has only two simple eigenvalues close
enough, we study an associated class of nonlinear Dirac equations which have
stationary solutions. As an application of our decay estimates, we show that
these solutions have stable directions which are tangent to the subspaces
associated with the continuous spectrum of the Dirac operator. This result is
the analogue, in the Dirac case, of a theorem by Tsai and Yau about the
Schr\"{o}dinger equation. To our knowledge, the present work is the first
mathematical study of the stability problem for a nonlinear Dirac equation.Comment: 62 page
Unconventional Spin Density Waves in Dipolar Fermi Gases
The conventional spin density wave (SDW) phase (Overhauser, 1962), as found
in antiferromagnetic metal for example (Fawcett 1988), can be described as a
condensate of particle-hole pairs with zero angular momentum, ,
analogous to a condensate of particle-particle pairs in conventional
superconductors. While many unconventional superconductors with Cooper pairs of
finite have been discovered, their counterparts, density waves with
non-zero angular momenta, have only been hypothesized in two-dimensional
electron systems (Nayak, 2000). Using an unbiased functional renormalization
group analysis, we here show that spin-triplet particle-hole condensates with
emerge generically in dipolar Fermi gases of atoms (Lu, Burdick, and
Lev, 2012) or molecules (Ospelkaus et al., 2008; Wu et al.) on optical lattice.
The order parameter of these exotic SDWs is a vector quantity in spin space,
and, moreover, is defined on lattice bonds rather than on lattice sites. We
determine the rich quantum phase diagram of dipolar fermions at half-filling as
a function of the dipolar orientation, and discuss how these SDWs arise amidst
competition with superfluid and charge density wave phases.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
TagF-mediated repression of bacterial type VI secretion systems involves a direct interaction with the cytoplasmic protein Fha
The bacterial type VI secretion system (T6SS) delivers effectors into eukaryotic host cells or toxins into bacterial competitor for survival and fitness. The T6SS is positively regulated by the threonine phosphorylation pathway (TPP) and negatively by the T6SS-accessory protein TagF. Here, we studied the mechanisms underlying TagF-mediated T6SS repression in two distinct bacterial pathogens, Agrobacterium tumefaciens and Pseudomonas aeruginosa. We found that in A. tumefaciens, T6SS toxin secretion and T6SS-dependent antibacterial activity are suppressed by a two-domain chimeric protein consisting of TagF and PppA, a putative phosphatase. Remarkably, this TagF domain is sufficient to post-translationally repress the T6SS, and this inhibition is independent of TPP. This repression requires interaction with a cytoplasmic protein, Fha, critical for activating T6SS assembly. In P. aeruginosa, PppA and TagF are two distinct proteins that repress T6SS in a TPP-dependent and -independent pathways, respectively. P. aeruginosa TagF interacts with Fha1, suggesting that formation of this complex represents a conserved TagF-mediated regulatory mechanism. Using TagF variants with substitutions of conserved amino acid residues at predicted protein-protein interaction interfaces, we uncovered evidence that the TagF-Fha interaction is critical for TagF-mediated T6SS repression in both bacteria. TagF inhibits T6SS without affecting T6SS protein abundance in A. tumefaciens, but TagF overexpression reduces the protein levels of all analyzed T6SS components in P. aeruginosa. Our results indicate that TagF interacts with Fha, which in turn could impact different stages of T6SS assembly in different bacteria, possibly reflecting an evolutionary divergence in T6SS control
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