3,957 research outputs found

    A multi-phenotypic cancer model with cell plasticity

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    The conventional cancer stem cell (CSC) theory indicates a hierarchy of CSCs and non-stem cancer cells (NSCCs), that is, CSCs can differentiate into NSCCs but not vice versa. However, an alternative paradigm of CSC theory with reversible cell plasticity among cancer cells has received much attention very recently. Here we present a generalized multi-phenotypic cancer model by integrating cell plasticity with the conventional hierarchical structure of cancer cells. We prove that under very weak assumption, the nonlinear dynamics of multi-phenotypic proportions in our model has only one stable steady state and no stable limit cycle. This result theoretically explains the phenotypic equilibrium phenomena reported in various cancer cell lines. Furthermore, according to the transient analysis of our model, it is found that cancer cell plasticity plays an essential role in maintaining the phenotypic diversity in cancer especially during the transient dynamics. Two biological examples with experimental data show that the phenotypic conversions from NCSSs to CSCs greatly contribute to the transient growth of CSCs proportion shortly after the drastic reduction of it. In particular, an interesting overshooting phenomenon of CSCs proportion arises in three-phenotypic example. Our work may pave the way for modeling and analyzing the multi-phenotypic cell population dynamics with cell plasticity.Comment: 29 pages,6 figure

    Detecting high-zz galaxies in the Near Infrared Background

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    Emission from high-zz galaxies must unquestionably contribute to the near-infrared background (NIRB). However, this contribution has so far proven difficult to isolate even after subtracting the resolved galaxies to deep levels. Remaining NIRB fluctuations are dominated by unresolved low-zz galaxies on small angular scales, and by an unidentified component with unclear origin on large scales (β‰ˆ1000β€²β€²\approx 1000''). In this paper, by analyzing mock maps generated from semi-numerical simulations and empirically determined LUVβˆ’MhL_{\rm UV} - M_{\rm h} relations, we find that fluctuations associated with galaxies at 5<z<105 < z < 10 amount to several percent of the unresolved NIRB flux fluctuations. We investigate the properties of this component for different survey areas and limiting magnitudes. In all cases, we show that this signal can be efficiently, and most easily at small angular scales, isolated by cross-correlating the source-subtracted NIRB with Lyman Break Galaxies (LBGs) detected in the same field by {\tt HST} surveys. This result provides a fresh insight into the properties of reionization sources.Comment: MNRAS in press, 8 pages, 7 figure

    Schwinger boson mean field theory of the Heisenberg Ferrimagnetic Spin Chain

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    The Schwinger boson mean field theory is applied to the quantum ferrimagnetic Heisenberg chain. There is a ferrimagnetic long range order in the ground state. We observe two branches of the low lying excitation and calculate the spin reduction, the gap of the antiferromagnetic branch, and the spin fluctuation at T=0KT=0K. These results agree with the established numerical results quite well. At finite temperatures, the long range order is destroyed because of the disappearance of the Bose condensation. The thermodynamic observables, such as the free energy, magnetic susceptibility, specific heat, and the spin correlation at T>0KT>0K, are calculated. The TΟ‡uniT\chi_{uni} has a minimum at intermediate temperatures and the spin correlation length behaves as Tβˆ’1T^{-1} at low temperatures. These qualitatively agree with the numerical results and the difference is small at low temperatures.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures. Accepted by Phys. Rev.

    Triggering the formation of direct collapse black holes by their congeners

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    Direct collapse black holes (DCBHs) are excellent candidates as seeds of supermassive black holes (SMBHs) observed at z \gsim 6. The formation of a DCBH requires a strong external radiation field to suppress H2\rm H_2 formation and cooling in a collapsing gas cloud. Such strong field is not easily achieved by first stars or normal star-forming galaxies. Here we investigate a scenario in which the previously-formed DCBH can provide the necessary radiation field for the formation of additional ones. Using one-zone model and the simulated DCBH Spectral Energy Distributions (SEDs) filtered through absorbing gas initially having column density NHN_{\rm H}, we derive the critical field intensity, JLWcritJ_{\rm LW}^{\rm crit}, to suppress H2\rm H_2 formation and cooling. For the SED model with NH=1.3Γ—1025N_{\rm H}=1.3\times10^{25} cmβˆ’2^{-2}, 8.0Γ—10248.0\times10^{24} cmβˆ’2^{-2} and 5.0Γ—10245.0\times10^{24} cmβˆ’2^{-2}, we obtain JLWcritβ‰ˆ22J_{\rm LW}^{\rm crit}\approx22, 35 and 54, all much smaller than the critical field intensity for normal star-forming galaxies (J_{\rm LW}^{\rm crit}\simgt 1000). X-ray photons from previously-formed DCBHs build up a high-zz X-ray background (XRB) that may boost the JLWcritJ_{\rm LW}^{\rm crit}. However, we find that in the three SED models JLWcritJ_{\rm LW}^{\rm crit} only increases to β‰ˆ80\approx80, 170 and 390 respectively even when \dt{\rho}_\bullet reaches the maximum value allowed by the present-day XRB level (0.22,0.034,0.006Β MβŠ™0.22, 0.034, 0.006~M_\odotyrβˆ’1^{-1}Mpcβˆ’3^{-3}), still much smaller than the galactic value. Although considering the XRB from first galaxies may further increase JLWcritJ_{\rm LW}^{\rm crit}, we conclude that our investigation supports a scenario in which DCBH may be more abundant than predicted by models only including galaxies as external radiation sources.Comment: 18 pages, 14 figures, 5 tables, ApJ in pres

    Ultra-faint high-redshift galaxies in the Frontier Fields

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    By combining cosmological simulations with Frontier Fields project lens models we find that, in the most optimistic case, galaxies as faint as mβ‰ˆ33βˆ’34m \approx 33 - 34 (AB magnitude at 1.6ΞΌm1.6 \rm \mu m) can be detected in the Frontier Fields. Such faint galaxies are hosted by dark matter halos of mass ∼109MβŠ™\sim10^9 M_\odot and dominate the ionizing photon budget over currently observed bright galaxies, thus allowing for the first time the investigation of the dominant reionization sources. In addition, the observed number of these galaxies can be used to constrain the role of feedback in suppressing star formation in small halos: for example, if galaxy formation is suppressed in halos with circular velocity vc<50v_c < 50 km sβˆ’1^{-1}, galaxies fainter than m=31m=31 should not be detected in the FFs.Comment: 5 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS Letter
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