4,518 research outputs found
How Massless Neutrinos Affect the Cosmic Microwave Background Damping Tail
We explore the physical origin and robustness of constraints on the energy
density in relativistic species prior to and during recombination, often
expressed as constraints on an effective number of neutrino species, Neff.
Constraints from current data combination of Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy
Probe (WMAP) and South Pole Telescope (SPT) are almost entirely due to the
impact of the neutrinos on the expansion rate, and how those changes to the
expansion rate alter the ratio of the photon diffusion scale to the sound
horizon scale at recombination. We demonstrate that very little of the
constraining power comes from the early Integrated Sachs-Wolfe (ISW) effect,
and also provide a first determination of the amplitude of the early ISW
effect. Varying the fraction of baryonic mass in Helium, Yp, also changes the
ratio of damping to sound-horizon scales. We discuss the physical effects that
prevent the resulting near-degeneracy between Neff and Yp from being a complete
one. Examining light element abundance measurements, we see no significant
evidence for evolution of Neff and the baryon-to-photon ratio from the epoch of
big bang nucleosynthesis to decoupling. Finally, we consider measurements of
the distance-redshift relation at low to intermediate redshifts and their
implications for the value of Neff.Comment: 11 pages. Replaced version extends our discussion of origin of
constraints and updates for current data, submitted to PR
Time-Dependent Spin-Polarized Transport Through a Resonant Tunneling Structure with Multi-Terminal
The spin-dependent transport of the electrons tunneling through a resonant
tunneling structure with ferromagnetic multi-terminal under dc and ac fields is
explored by means of the nonequilibrium Green function technique. A general
formulation for the time-dependent current and the time-averaged current is
established. As its application the systems with two and three terminals in
noncollinear configurations of the magnetizations under dc and ac biases are
investigated, respectively. The asymmetric factor of the relaxation times for
the electrons with different spin in the central region is uncovered to bring
about various behaviours of the TMR. The present three-terminal device is
different from that discussed in literature, which is coined as a spin
transistor with source. The current-amplification effect is found. In addition,
the time-dependent spin transport for the two-terminal device is studied. It is
found that the photonic sidebands provide new channels for the electrons
tunneling through the barriers, and give rise to new resonances of the TMR,
which is called as the photon-asisted spin-dependent tunneling. The asymmetric
factor of the relaxation times is observed to lead to additional resonant peaks
besides the photon-asisted resonances.Comment: 32 pages,14 figure
The single t-quark productions via the flavor-changing processes in the topcolor-assisted technicolor model at the hadron colliders
In the framework of topcolor-assisted technicolor(TC2) model, there exist
tree-level flavor-changing (FC) couplings which can result in the loop-level FC
coupling . Such coupling can contribute significant clues at the
forthcoming Large Hadron Collider (LHC) experiments. In this paper, based on
the TC2 model, we study some single t-quark production processes involving
coupling at the Tevatron and LHC: .
We calculate the cross sections of these processes. The results show that the
cross sections at the Tevatron are too small to observe the signal, but at the
LHC it can reach a few pb. With the high luminosity, the LHC has considerable
capability to find the single t-quark signal produced via some FC processes
involving coupling . On the other hand, these processes can also provide
some valuable information of the coupling with detailed study of the
processes and furthermore provide the reliable evidence to test the TC2 model.Comment: 15 pages, 10 figure
Crystal structure of the DNA-binding domain of Myelin-gene Regulatory Factor
Myelin-gene Regulatory Factor (MyRF) is one of the master transcription factors controlling myelin formation and development in oligodendrocytes which is crucial for the powerful brain functions. The N-terminal of MyRF, which contains a proline-rich region and a DNA binding domain (DBD), is auto-cleaved from the ER membrane, and then enters the nucleus to participate in transcription regulation of the myelin genes. Here we report the crystal structure of MyRF DBD. It shows an Ig-fold like architecture which consists of two antiparallel β-sheets with 7 main strands, packing against each other, forming a β-sandwich. Compared to its homolog, Ndt80, MyRF has a smaller and less complex DBD lacking the helices and the big loops outside the core. Structural alignment reveals that MyRF DBD possess less interaction sites with DNA than Ndt80 and may bind only at the major groove of DNA. Moreover, the structure reveals a trimeric assembly, agreeing with the previous report that MyRF DBD functions as a trimer. The mutant that we designed based on the structure disturbed trimer formation, but didn't affect the auto-cleavage reaction. It demonstrates that the activation of self-cleavage reaction of MyRF is independent of the presence of its N-terminal DBD homotrimer. The structure reported here will help to understand the molecular mechanism underlying the important roles of MyRF in myelin formation and development
The production of the new gauge boson via collision in the littlest Higgs model
The new lightest gauge boson with mass of a few hundred GeV is
predicted in the littlest Higgs model. should be accessible in the planed
ILC and the observation of such particle can strongly support the littlest
Higgs model. The realization of and collision will
open a wider window to probe . In this paper, we study the new gauge boson
production processes and
at the ILC. Our results show that the production
cross section of the process is less than one fb
in the most parameter spaces while the production cross section of the process
can reach the level of tens fb and even
hundreds of fb in the sizable parameter spaces allowed by the electroweak
precision data. With the high luminosity, the sufficient typical signals could
be produced, specially via . Because the
final electron and photon beams can be easily identified and the signal can be
easily distinguished from the background produced by and decaying,
should be detectable via collision at the ILC. Therefore, the
processes and
provide a useful way to detect and test the littlest Higgs model.Comment: 15 pages, 3 figures. Some typos have been corrected, we have added
some new references, and there are also some changes in equation 1
Flat Dielectric Grating Reflectors with High Focusing Power
Sub-wavelength dielectric gratings (SWG) have emerged recently as a promising
alternative to distributed-Bragg-reflection (DBR) dielectric stacks for
broadband, high-reflectivity filtering applications. A SWG structure composed
of a single dielectric layer with the appropriate patterning can sometimes
perform as well as thirty or forty dielectric DBR layers, while providing new
functionalities such as polarization control and near-field amplification. In
this paper, we introduce a remarkable property of grating mirrors that cannot
be realized by their DBR counterpart: we show that a non-periodic patterning of
the grating surface can give full control over the phase front of reflected
light while maintaining a high reflectivity. This new feature of dielectric
gratings could have a substantial impact on a number of applications that
depend on low-cost, compact optical components, from laser cavities to CD/DVD
read/write heads.Comment: submitted to Nature Photonic
Spatiotemporal complexity of a ratio-dependent predator-prey system
In this paper, we investigate the emergence of a ratio-dependent
predator-prey system with Michaelis-Menten-type functional response and
reaction-diffusion. We derive the conditions for Hopf, Turing and Wave
bifurcation on a spatial domain. Furthermore, we present a theoretical analysis
of evolutionary processes that involves organisms distribution and their
interaction of spatially distributed population with local diffusion. The
results of numerical simulations reveal that the typical dynamics of population
density variation is the formation of isolated groups, i.e., stripelike or
spotted or coexistence of both. Our study shows that the spatially extended
model has not only more complex dynamic patterns in the space, but also chaos
and spiral waves. It may help us better understand the dynamics of an aquatic
community in a real marine environment.Comment: 6pages, revtex
Neutron star composition in strong magnetic fields
We study the problem of neutron star composition in the presence of a strong
magnetic field. The effects of the anomalous magnetic moments of both nucleons
and electrons are investigated in relativistic mean field calculations for a
-equilibrium system. Since neutrons are fully spin polarized in a large
field, generally speaking, the proton fraction can never exceed the field free
case. An extremely strong magnetic field may lead to a pure neutron matter
instead of a proton-rich matter.Comment: 12 pages, 3 postscript files include
Heterogeneity in ess transcriptional organization and variable contribution of the Ess/Type VII protein secretion system to virulence across closely related <em>Staphylocccus aureus </em>strains
The Type VII protein secretion system, found in Gram-positive bacteria, secretes small proteins, containing a conserved W-x-G amino acid sequence motif, to the growth medium. Staphylococcus aureus has a conserved Type VII secretion system, termed Ess, which is dispensable for laboratory growth but required for virulence. In this study we show that there are unexpected differences in the organization of the ess gene cluster between closely related strains of S. aureus. We further show that in laboratory growth medium different strains of S. aureus secrete the EsxA and EsxC substrate proteins at different growth points, and that the Ess system in strain Newman is inactive under these conditions. Systematic deletion analysis in S. aureus RN6390 is consistent with the EsaA, EsaB, EssA, EssB, EssC and EsxA proteins comprising core components of the secretion machinery in this strain. Finally we demonstrate that the Ess secretion machinery of two S. aureus strains, RN6390 and COL, is important for nasal colonization and virulence in the murine lung pneumonia model. Surprisingly, however, the secretion system plays no role in the virulence of strain SA113 under the same conditions
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