12,386 research outputs found

    Generalizing Amdahl’s Law for Power and Energy

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    Extending Amdahl\u27s law to identify optimal power-performance configurations requires considering the interactive effects of power, performance, and parallel overhead

    T-Shape Molecular Heat Pump

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    We report on the first molecular device of heat pump modeled by a T-shape Frenkel-Kontorova lattice. The system is a three-terminal device with the important feature that the heat can be pumped from the low-temperature region to the high-temperature region through the third terminal. The pumping action is achieved by applying a stochastic external force that periodically modulates the atomic temperature. The temperature, the frequency and the system size dependence of heat pump are briefly discussed.Comment: 6 figure

    Effective potential for composite operators and for an auxiliary scalar field in a Nambu-Jona-Lasinio model

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    We derive the effective potentials for composite operators in a Nambu-Jona-Lasinio (NJL) model at zero and finite temperature and show that in each case they are equivalent to the corresponding effective potentials based on an auxiliary scalar field. The both effective potentials could lead to the same possible spontaneous breaking and restoration of symmetries including chiral symmetry if the momentum cutoff in the loop integrals is large enough, and can be transformed to each other when the Schwinger-Dyson (SD) equation of the dynamical fermion mass from the fermion-antifermion vacuum (or thermal) condensates is used. The results also generally indicate that two effective potentials with the same single order parameter but rather different mathematical expressions can still be considered physically equivalent if the SD equation corresponding to the extreme value conditions of the two potentials have the same form.Comment: 7 pages, no figur

    Changes in the milk metabolome of the Giant Panda (Ailuropoda melanoleuca) with time after birth: three phases in early lactation and progressive individual differences

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    Ursids (bears) in general, and giant pandas in particular, are highly altricial at birth. The components of bear milks and their changes with time may be uniquely adapted to nourish relatively immature neonates, protect them from pathogens, and support the maturation of neonatal digestive physiology. Serial milk samples collected from three giant pandas in early lactation were subjected to untargeted metabolite profiling and multivariate analysis. Changes in milk metabolites with time after birth were analysed by Principal Component Analysis, Hierarchical Cluster Analysis and further supported by Orthogonal Partial Least Square-Discriminant Analysis, revealing three phases of milk maturation: days 1–6 (Phase 1), days 7–20 (Phase 2), and beyond day 20 (Phase 3). While the compositions of Phase 1 milks were essentially indistinguishable among individuals, divergences emerged during the second week of lactation. OPLS regression analysis positioned against the growth rate of one cub tentatively inferred a correlation with changes in the abundance of a trisaccharide, isoglobotriose, previously observed to be a major oligosaccharide in ursid milks. Three artificial milk formulae used to feed giant panda cubs were also analysed, and were found to differ markedly in component content from natural panda milk. These findings have implications for the dependence of the ontogeny of all species of bears, and potentially other members of the Carnivora and beyond, on the complexity and sequential changes in maternal provision of micrometabolites in the immediate period after birth

    Dynamical properties of the S=12S=\frac{1}{2} random Heisenberg chain

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    We use numerical techniques to study dynamical properties at finite temperature (TT) of the Heisenberg spin chain with random exchange couplings, which realizes the random singlet (RS) fixed point in the low-energy limit. Specifically, we study the dynamic spin structure factor S(q,ω)S(q,\omega), which can be probed directly by inelastic neutron scattering experiments and, in the limit of small ω\omega, in nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) experiments through the spin-lattice relaxation rate 1/T11/T_1. Our work combines three complementary methods: exact diagonalization, matrix-product-state algorithms, and stochastic analytic continuation of quantum Monte Carlo results in imaginary time. Unlike the uniform system, whose low-energy excitations at low TT are restricted to qq close to 00 and π\pi, our study reveals a continuous narrow band of low-energy excitations in S(q,ω)S(q,\omega), extending throughout the Brillouin zone. Close to q=πq=\pi, the scaling properties of these excitations are well captured by the RS theory, but we also see disagreements with some aspects of the predicted qq-dependence further away from q=πq=\pi. Furthermore we find spin diffusion effects close to q=0q=0 that are not contained within the RS theory but give non-negligible contributions to the mean 1/T11/T_1. To compare with NMR experiments, we consider the distribution of the local 1/T11/T_1 values, which is broad, approximately described by a stretched exponential. The mean value first decreases with TT, but starts to increase and diverge below a crossover temperature. Although a similar divergent behavior has been found for the static uniform susceptibility, this divergent behavior of 1/T11/T_1 has never been seen in experiments. Our results show that the divergence of the mean 1/T11/T_1 is due to rare events in the disordered chains and is concealed in experiments, where the typical 1/T11/T_1 value is accessed.Comment: 19 pages, 14 figure

    PowerPack: Energy Profiling and Analysis of High-Performance Systems and Applications

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    Energy efficiency is a major concern in modern high-performance computing system design. In the past few years, there has been mounting evidence that power usage limits system scale and computing density, and thus, ultimately system performance. However, despite the impact of power and energy on the computer systems community, few studies provide insight to where and how power is consumed on high-performance systems and applications. In previous work, we designed a framework called PowerPack that was the first tool to isolate the power consumption of devices including disks, memory, NICs, and processors in a high-performance cluster and correlate these measurements to application functions. In this work, we extend our framework to support systems with multicore, multiprocessor-based nodes, and then provide in-depth analyses of the energy consumption of parallel applications on clusters of these systems. These analyses include the impacts of chip multiprocessing on power and energy efficiency, and its interaction with application executions. In addition, we use PowerPack to study the power dynamics and energy efficiencies of dynamic voltage and frequency scaling (DVFS) techniques on clusters. Our experiments reveal conclusively how intelligent DVFS scheduling can enhance system energy efficiency while maintaining performance

    P2X₃ Knock-Out Mice Reveal a Major Sensory Role for Urothelially Released ATP

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    The present study explores the possible involvement of a purinergic mechanism in mechanosensory transduction in the bladder using P2X₃ receptor knock-out (P2X₃ ⁻⁄⁻) and wild-type control (P2X₃ âș⁄âș) mice. Immunohistochemistry revealed abundant nerve fibers in a suburothelial plexus in the mouse bladder that are immunoreactive to anti-P2X₃. P2X₃ -positive staining was completely absent in the subepithelial plexus of the P2X₃ ⁻⁄⁻ mice, whereas staining for calcitonin gene-related peptide and vanilloid receptor 1 receptors remained. Using a novel superfused mouse bladder–pelvic nerve preparation, we detected a release of ATP proportional to the extent of bladder distension in both P2X₃ ⁻⁄⁻ mice, whereas staining for calcitonin gene-related peptide and vanilloid receptor 1 receptors remained. Using a novel superfused mouse bladder–pelvic nerve preparation, we detected a release of ATP proportional to the extent of bladder distension in both P2X₃ âș⁄âș and P2X₃ ⁻⁄⁻ mice, although P2X₃ ⁻⁄⁻ bladder had an increased capacity compared with that of the P2X₃ âș⁄âș bladder. The activity of multifiber pelvic nerve afferents increased progressively during gradual bladder distension (at a rate of 0.1 ml/min). However, the bladder afferents from P2X₃ ⁻⁄⁻ mice showed an attenuated response to bladder distension. Mouse bladder afferents of P2X₃ âș⁄âș, but not P2X₃ ⁻⁄⁻, were rapidly activated by intravesical injections of P2X agonists (ATP or α,ÎČ-methylene ATP) and subsequently showed an augmented response to bladder distension. By contrast, P2X antagonists [2â€Č,3â€Č-O-(2,4,6-trinitrophenyl)-ATP and pyridoxal 5-phosphate 6-azophenyl-2â€Č,4â€Č-disulfonic acid] and capsaicin attenuated distension-induced discharges in bladder afferents. These data strongly suggest a major sensory role for urothelially released ATP acting via P2X₃ receptors on a subpopulation of pelvic afferent fibers
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