1,110 research outputs found
Pion double charge exchange on 4He
The doubly differential cross sections for the He
reaction were calculated using both a two-nucleon sequential single charge
exchange model and an intranuclear cascade code. Final state interactions
between the two final protons which were the initial neutrons were included in
both methods. At incident pion energies of 240 and 270 MeV the low-energy peak
observed experimentally in the energy spectrum of the final pions can be
understood only if the contribution of pion production is included. The
calculated cross sections are compared with data.Comment: 25 pages, 9 figure
The in vitro effect of nebulised hypertonic saline on human bronchial epithelium
Inhaled hypertonic saline (HS) is an effective therapy for muco-obstructive lung diseases. However, the mechanism of action and principles pertinent to HS administration remain unclear. An in vitro system aerosolised HS to epithelial cells at rates comparable to in vivo conditions. Airway surface liquid (ASL) volume and cell height responses were measured by confocal microscopy under normal and hyperconcentrated mucus states. Aerosolised HS produced a rapid increase in ASL height and decrease in cell height. Added ASL volume was quickly reabsorbed following termination of nebulisation, although cell height did not recover within the same time frame. ASL volume responses to repeated HS administrations were blunted, but could be restored by a hypotonic saline bolus interposed between HS administrations. HS-induced ASL hydration was prolonged with hyperconcentrated mucus on the airway surface, with more modest reductions in cell volume. Aerosolised HS produced osmotically induced increases in ASL height that were limited by active sodium absorption and cell volume-induced reductions in cell water permeability. Mucus on airway surfaces prolonged the effect of HS via mucus-dependent osmotic forces, suggesting that the duration of action of HS is increased in patients with hyperconcentrated mucus
Algorithm engineering for optimal alignment of protein structure distance matrices
Protein structural alignment is an important problem in computational
biology. In this paper, we present first successes on provably optimal pairwise
alignment of protein inter-residue distance matrices, using the popular Dali
scoring function. We introduce the structural alignment problem formally, which
enables us to express a variety of scoring functions used in previous work as
special cases in a unified framework. Further, we propose the first
mathematical model for computing optimal structural alignments based on dense
inter-residue distance matrices. We therefore reformulate the problem as a
special graph problem and give a tight integer linear programming model. We
then present algorithm engineering techniques to handle the huge integer linear
programs of real-life distance matrix alignment problems. Applying these
techniques, we can compute provably optimal Dali alignments for the very first
time
Quasicondensate and superfluid fraction in the 2D charged-boson gas at finite temperature
The Bogoliubov - de Gennes equations are solved for the Coulomb Bose gas
describing a fluid of charged bosons at finite temperature. The approach is
applicable in the weak coupling regime and the extent of its quantitative
usefulness is tested in the three-dimensional fluid, for which diffusion Monte
Carlo data are available on the condensate fraction at zero temperature. The
one-body density matrix is then evaluated by the same approach for the
two-dimensional fluid with e^2/r interactions, to demonstrate the presence of a
quasi-condensate from its power-law decay with increasing distance and to
evaluate the superfluid fraction as a function of temperature at weak coupling.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figure
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Quantitative plant proteomics using hydroponic isotope labeling of entire plants (HILEP)
Energy and Flux Measurements of Ultra-High Energy Cosmic Rays Observed During the First ANITA Flight
The first flight of the Antarctic Impulsive Transient Antenna (ANITA)
experiment recorded 16 radio signals that were emitted by cosmic-ray induced
air showers. For 14 of these events, this radiation was reflected from the ice.
The dominant contribution to the radiation from the deflection of positrons and
electrons in the geomagnetic field, which is beamed in the direction of motion
of the air shower. This radiation is reflected from the ice and subsequently
detected by the ANITA experiment at a flight altitude of 36km. In this paper,
we estimate the energy of the 14 individual events and find that the mean
energy of the cosmic-ray sample is 2.9 EeV. By simulating the ANITA flight, we
calculate its exposure for ultra-high energy cosmic rays. We estimate for the
first time the cosmic-ray flux derived only from radio observations. In
addition, we find that the Monte Carlo simulation of the ANITA data set is in
agreement with the total number of observed events and with the properties of
those events.Comment: Added more explanation of the experimental setup and textual
improvement
A mean-field kinetic lattice gas model of electrochemical cells
We develop Electrochemical Mean-Field Kinetic Equations (EMFKE) to simulate
electrochemical cells. We start from a microscopic lattice-gas model with
charged particles, and build mean-field kinetic equations following the lines
of earlier work for neutral particles. We include the Poisson equation to
account for the influence of the electric field on ion migration, and
oxido-reduction processes on the electrode surfaces to allow for growth and
dissolution. We confirm the viability of our approach by simulating (i) the
electrochemical equilibrium at flat electrodes, which displays the correct
charged double-layer, (ii) the growth kinetics of one-dimensional
electrochemical cells during growth and dissolution, and (iii) electrochemical
dendrites in two dimensions.Comment: 14 pages twocolumn, 17 figure
Peculiar velocity effects in high-resolution microwave background experiments
We investigate the impact of peculiar velocity effects due to the motion of
the solar system relative to the microwave background (CMB) on high resolution
CMB experiments. It is well known that on the largest angular scales the
combined effects of Doppler shifts and aberration are important; the lowest
Legendre multipoles of total intensity receive power from the large CMB
monopole in transforming from the CMB frame. On small angular scales aberration
dominates and is shown here to lead to significant distortions of the total
intensity and polarization multipoles in transforming from the rest frame of
the CMB to the frame of the solar system. We provide convenient analytic
results for the distortions as series expansions in the relative velocity of
the two frames, but at the highest resolutions a numerical quadrature is
required. Although many of the high resolution multipoles themselves are
severely distorted by the frame transformations, we show that their statistical
properties distort by only an insignificant amount. Therefore, cosmological
parameter estimation is insensitive to the transformation from the CMB frame
(where theoretical predictions are calculated) to the rest frame of the
experiment.Comment: 15 pages, 3 figures. Submitted to Phys. Rev.
COVIDâ19, nationalism, and the politics of crisis: A scholarly exchange
In this article, several scholars of nationalism discuss the potential for the COVIDâ19 pandemic to impact the development of nationalism and world politics. To structure the discussion, the contributors respond to three questions: (1) how should we understand the relationship between nationalism and COVIDâ19; (2) will COVIDâ19 fuel ethnic and nationalist conflict; and (3) will COVIDâ19 reinforce or erode the nationâstate in the long run? The contributors formulated their responses to these questions near to the outset of the pandemic, amid intense uncertainty. This made it acutely difficult, if not impossible, to make predictions. Nevertheless, it was felt that a historically and theoretically informed discussion would shed light on the types of political processes that could be triggered by the COVIDâ19 pandemic. In doing so, the aim is to help orient researchers and policyâmakers as they grapple with what has rapidly become the most urgent issue of our times
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