24,000 research outputs found
Expression systems for industrial Gram-positive bacteria with low guanine and cytosine content
Recent years have seen an increase in the development of gene expression systems for industrial Gram-positive bacteria with low guanine and cytosine content that belong to the genera Bacillus, Clostridium, Lactococcus, Lactobacillus, Staphylococcus and Streptococcus. In particular, considerable advances have been made in the construction of inducible gene expression systems based on the capacity of these bacteria to utilize specific sugars or to secrete autoinducing peptides that are involved in quorum sensing. These controlled expression systems allow for present and future exploitation of these bacteria as cell factories in medical, agricultural, and food biotechnology.
Extracting the top-quark running mass using +1-jet events produced at the Large Hadron Collider
We present the calculation of the next-to-leading order QCD corrections for
top-quark pair production in association with an additional jet at hadron
colliders, using the modified minimal subtraction scheme to renormalize the
top-quark mass. The results are compared to measurements at the Large Hadron
Collider run I. In particular, we determine the top-quark running mass from a
fit of the theoretical results presented here to the LHC data
Statistical analysis of time-resolved emission from ensembles of semiconductor quantum dots: Interpretation of exponential decay models
We present a statistical analysis of time-resolved spontaneous emission decay curves from ensembles of emitters, such as semiconductor quantum dots, with the aim of interpreting ubiquitous non-single-exponential decay. Contrary to what is widely assumed, the density of excited emitters and the intensity in an emission decay curve are not proportional, but the density is a time integral of the intensity. The integral relation is crucial to correctly interpret non-single-exponential decay. We derive the proper normalization for both a discrete and a continuous distribution of rates, where every decay component is multiplied by its radiative decay rate. A central result of our paper is the derivation of the emission decay curve when both radiative and nonradiative decays are independently distributed. In this case, the well-known emission quantum efficiency can no longer be expressed by a single number, but is also distributed. We derive a practical description of non-single-exponential emission decay curves in terms of a single distribution of decay rates; the resulting distribution is identified as the distribution of total decay rates weighted with the radiative rates. We apply our analysis to recent examples of colloidal quantum dot emission in suspensions and in photonic crystals, and we find that this important class of emitters is well described by a log-normal distribution of decay rates with a narrow and a broad distribution, respectively. Finally, we briefly discuss the Kohlrausch stretched-exponential model, and find that its normalization is ill defined for emitters with a realistic quantum efficiency of less than 100%.\ud
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Limits on Lorentz violation from charged-pion decay
Charged-pion decay offers many opportunities to study Lorentz violation.
Using an effective field theory approach, we study Lorentz violation in the
lepton, W-boson, and quark sectors and derive the differential pion-decay rate,
including muon polarization. Using coordinate redefinitions we are able to
relate the first-generation quark sector, in which no bounds were previously
reported, to the lepton and W-boson sector. This facilitates a tractable
calculation, enabling us to place bounds on the level of on
first-generation quark parameters. Our expression for the pion-decay rate can
be used to constrain Lorentz violation in future experiments.Comment: 12 pages, 1 figure, Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Theory of electron-hole asymmetry in doped {\em CuO} planes
The magnetic phase diagrams, and other physical characteristics, of the hole-
doped {\em LaSrCuO} and electron-doped {\em NdCe
CuO} high-temperature superconductors are profoundly different. Starting
with the model, the spin distortions and the spatial distri-
bution of carriers for the multiply-doped systems will be related to the diffe-
rent ground states' single-hole quasiparticles. The low doping limit of the
hole-doped material corresponds to quasiparticles,
states that generate so-called Shraiman-Siggia long-ranged dipolar spin distor-
tions via backflow. We propose that for the electron-doped materials the
single- hole ground state corresponds to quasiparticles; we
show that the spin distortions generated by such carriers are short-ranged.
Then, we demonstrate the effect of this single-carrier difference in
many-carrier ground states via exact diagonalization results by evaluating
for up to 4 carriers in small clusters. Also, the different
single-carrier quasiparticles generate important differences in the spatial
distributions: for the hole-doped material the quasiparticles tend to stay far
apart from one another, whereas for the electron-doped material we find
tendencies consistent with the clustering of carriers, and possibly of
low-energy fluctuations into an electronic phase separated state. Lastly, we
propose the extrapolation of an approach based on the model to
the hole-doped 123 system.Comment: 27 pages, revtex 3.0, 6 Postscript Figures; to be published in Phys.
Rev. B, Nov. 1, 199
Modulating active sites in MOFs for improved Lewis acid or base catalysis
International audienc
Optimal control of light propagation through multiple-scattering media in the presence of noise
We study the control of coherent light propagation through
multiple-scattering media in the presence of measurement noise. In our
experiments, we use a two-step optimization procedure to find the optimal
incident wavefront. We conclude that the degree of optimal control of coherent
light propagation through a multiple-scattering medium is only determined by
the number of photoelectrons detected per single speckle spot. The prediction
of our model agrees well with the experimental results. Our results offer
opportunities for imaging applications through scattering media such as
biological tissue in the shot noise limit
3D spatially-resolved optical energy density enhanced by wavefront shaping
We study the three-dimensional (3D) spatially-resolved distribution of the
energy density of light in a 3D scattering medium upon the excitation of open
transmission channels. The open transmission channels are excited by spatially
shaping the incident optical wavefronts. To probe the local energy density, we
excite isolated fluorescent nanospheres distributed inside the medium. From the
spatial fluorescent intensity pattern we obtain the position of each
nanosphere, while the total fluorescent intensity gauges the energy density.
Our 3D spatially-resolved measurements reveal that the local energy density
versus depth (z) is enhanced up to 26X at the back surface of the medium, while
it strongly depends on the transverse (x; y) position. We successfully
interpret our results with a newly developed 3D model that considers the
time-reversed diffusion starting from a point source at the back surface. Our
results are relevant for white LEDs, random lasers, solar cells, and biomedical
optics
Growth and trace metal accumulation of two Salix clones on sediment-derived soils with increasing contamination levels
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