2,639 research outputs found
An Independent Calibration of Stellar Ages: HST Observations of White Dwarfs at V=25
The white dwarf luminosity function of a stellar cluster will have a sharp
truncation at a luminosity which is determined by the time since formation of
the first white dwarfs in that cluster. Calculation of the dependence of this
limiting luminosity on age requires relatively well-understood physics and is
independent of stellar evolutionary models. Thus, measurement of the
termination of the white dwarf luminosity function provides an independent
method to determine the age of a cluster, and thereby to calibrate stellar
evolutionary ages. We have obtained HST WFPC2 data in two open clusters,
identified the white dwarf sequence, and proved the feasibility of this
approach, by detecting white dwarfs to V=25. Much deeper data are feasible.
From our present limited data, we show that degenerate cooling ages are not
consistent with some published isochrone ages for clusters with ages of order
1Gyr.Comment: 5 pages plus 3 figures ps format, paper in press in MNRAS: previous
attempt lost the tex
Transcription factor search for a DNA promoter in a three-states model
To ensure fast gene activation, Transcription Factors (TF) use a mechanism
known as facilitated diffusion to find their DNA promoter site. Here we analyze
such a process where a TF alternates between 3D and 1D diffusion. In the latter
(TF bound to the DNA), the TF further switches between a fast translocation
state dominated by interaction with the DNA backbone, and a slow examination
state where interaction with DNA base pairs is predominant. We derive a new
formula for the mean search time, and show that it is faster and less sensitive
to the binding energy fluctuations compared to the case of a single sliding
state. We find that for an optimal search, the time spent bound to the DNA is
larger compared to the 3D time in the nucleus, in agreement with recent
experimental data. Our results further suggest that modifying switching via
phosphorylation or methylation of the TF or the DNA can efficiently regulate
transcription.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
DNA-Protein Binding Rates: Bending Fluctuation and Hydrodynamic Coupling Effects
We investigate diffusion-limited reactions between a diffusing particle and a
target site on a semiflexible polymer, a key factor determining the kinetics of
DNA-protein binding and polymerization of cytoskeletal filaments. Our theory
focuses on two competing effects: polymer shape fluctuations, which speed up
association, and the hydrodynamic coupling between the diffusing particle and
the chain, which slows down association. Polymer bending fluctuations are
described using a mean field dynamical theory, while the hydrodynamic coupling
between polymer and particle is incorporated through a simple heuristic
approximation. Both of these we validate through comparison with Brownian
dynamics simulations. Neither of the effects has been fully considered before
in the biophysical context, and we show they are necessary to form accurate
estimates of reaction processes. The association rate depends on the stiffness
of the polymer and the particle size, exhibiting a maximum for intermediate
persistence length and a minimum for intermediate particle radius. In the
parameter range relevant to DNA-protein binding, the rate increase is up to
100% compared to the Smoluchowski result for simple center-of-mass motion. The
quantitative predictions made by the theory can be tested experimentally.Comment: 21 pages, 11 figures, 1 tabl
Modelling diffusional transport in the interphase cell nucleus
In this paper a lattice model for diffusional transport of particles in the
interphase cell nucleus is proposed. Dense networks of chromatin fibers are
created by three different methods: randomly distributed, non-interconnected
obstacles, a random walk chain model, and a self avoiding random walk chain
model with persistence length. By comparing a discrete and a continuous version
of the random walk chain model, we demonstrate that lattice discretization does
not alter particle diffusion. The influence of the 3D geometry of the fiber
network on the particle diffusion is investigated in detail, while varying
occupation volume, chain length, persistence length and walker size. It is
shown that adjacency of the monomers, the excluded volume effect incorporated
in the self avoiding random walk model, and, to a lesser extent, the
persistence length, affect particle diffusion. It is demonstrated how the
introduction of the effective chain occupancy, which is a convolution of the
geometric chain volume with the walker size, eliminates the conformational
effects of the network on the diffusion, i.e., when plotting the diffusion
coefficient as a function of the effective chain volume, the data fall onto a
master curve.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figure
The White Dwarf Cooling Age of M67
A deep imaging survey covering the entire 23\arcmin diameter of the old
open cluster M67 to has been carried out using the mosaic imager
(UHCam) on the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope. The cluster color-magnitude
diagram (CMD) can be traced from stars on its giant branch at down
through main sequence stars at least as faint as . Stars this low
in luminosity have masses below . A modest white dwarf (WD)
cooling sequence is also observed commencing slightly fainter than
and, after correction for background galaxy and stellar field contamination,
terminating near . The observed WDs follow quite closely a
theoretical cooling sequence for pure carbon core WDs with
hydrogen-rich atmospheres (DA WDs). The cooling time to an of 14.6 for
such WDs is 4.3 Gyr which we take as the WD cooling age of the cluster. A fit
of a set of isochrones to the cluster CMD indicates a turnoff age of 4.0 Gyr.
The excellent agreement between these results suggests that ages derived from
white dwarf cooling should be considered as reliable as those from other dating
techniques. The WDs currently contribute about 9% of the total cluster mass but
the number seen appears to be somewhat low when compared with the number of
giants observed in the cluster.Comment: 15 pages plus 3 diagrams, minor corrections, Accepted for publication
in the Astrophysical Journal Letters, to be published September 10, 199
WIYN Open Cluster Study 1: Deep Photometry of NGC 188
We have employed precise V and I photometry of NGC 188 at WIYN to explore the
cluster luminosity function (LF) and study the cluster white dwarfs (WDs). Our
photometry is offset by V = 0.052 (fainter) from Sandage (1962) and Eggen &
Sandage (1969). All published photometry for the past three decades have been
based on these two calibrations, which are in error by 0.05 +- 0.01. We employ
the Pinsonneault etal (1998) fiducial main sequence to derive a cluster
distance modulus of 11.43 +- 0.08. We report observations that are >= 50%
complete to V = 24.6 and find that the cluster central-field LF peaks at M_I ~
3 to 4. This is unlike the solar neighborhood LF and unlike the LFs of
dynamically unevolved portions of open and globular clusters, which rise
continuously until M_I ~ 9.5. Although we find that >= 50% of the unresolved
cluster objects are multiple systems, their presence cannot account for the
shape of the NGC 188 LF. For theoretical reasons (Terlevich 1987; Vesperini &
Heggie 1997) having to do with the survivability of NGC 188 we believe the
cluster is highly dynamically evolved and that the missing low luminosity stars
are either in the cluster outskirts or have left the cluster altogether. We
identify nine candidate WDs, of which we expect three to six are bona fide
cluster WDs. The luminosities of the faintest likely WD indicates an age
(Bergeron, Wesemael, & Beauchamp 1995) of 1.14 +- 0.09 Gyrs. This is a lower
limit to the cluster age and observations probing to V = 27 or 28 will be
necessary to find the faintest cluster WDs and independently determine the
cluster age. While our age limit is not surprising for this ~6 Gyr old cluster,
our result demonstrates the value of the WD age technique with its very low
internal errors. (abridged)Comment: 26 pages, uuencoded gunzip'ed latex + 16 postscrip figures, to be
published in A
Description of non-specific DNA-protein interaction and facilitated diffusion with a dynamical model
We propose a dynamical model for non-specific DNA-protein interaction, which
is based on the 'bead-spring' model previously developed by other groups, and
investigate its properties using Brownian Dynamics simulations. We show that
the model successfully reproduces some of the observed properties of real
systems and predictions of kinetic models. For example, sampling of the DNA
sequence by the protein proceeds via a succession of 3d motion in the solvent,
1d sliding along the sequence, short hops between neighboring sites, and
intersegmental transfers. Moreover, facilitated diffusion takes place in a
certain range of values of the protein effective charge, that is, the
combination of 1d sliding and 3d motion leads to faster DNA sampling than pure
3d motion. At last, the number of base pairs visited during a sliding event is
comparable to the values deduced from single-molecule experiments. We also
point out and discuss some discrepancies between the predictions of this model
and some recent experimental results as well as some hypotheses and predictions
of kinetic models
Comparing Business and Household Sector Innovation in Consumer Products: Findings from a Representative Study in the United Kingdom
In a first survey of its type, we measure development and modification of consumer products by product users in a representative sample of 1,173 UK consumers age 18 and older. We estimate this previously unmeasured type of household sector innovation to be quite large: 6.1% of UK consumers—nearly 2.9 million individuals—have engaged in consumer product innovation during the prior three years. In aggregate, consumers' annual product development expenditures are more than 1.4 times larger than the annual consumer product R&D expenditures of all firms in the United Kingdom combined. Consumers engage in many small projects that seem complementary to the innovation efforts of incumbent producers. Consumer innovators very seldom protect their innovations via intellectual property, and 17% diffuse to others. These results imply that, at the country level, productivity studies yield inflated effect sizes for producer innovation in consumer goods. They also imply that existing companies should reconfigure their product development systems to find and build on prototypes developed by consumers
Charge transport-mediated recruitment of DNA repair enzymes
Damaged or mismatched bases in DNA can be repaired by Base Excision Repair
(BER) enzymes that replace the defective base. Although the detailed molecular
structures of many BER enzymes are known, how they colocalize to lesions
remains unclear. One hypothesis involves charge transport (CT) along DNA
[Yavin, {\it et al.}, PNAS, {\bf 102}, 3546, (2005)]. In this CT mechanism,
electrons are released by recently adsorbed BER enzymes and travel along the
DNA. The electrons can scatter (by heterogeneities along the DNA) back to the
enzyme, destabilizing and knocking it off the DNA, or, they can be absorbed by
nearby lesions and guanine radicals. We develop a stochastic model to describe
the electron dynamics, and compute probabilities of electron capture by guanine
radicals and repair enzymes. We also calculate first passage times of electron
return, and ensemble-average these results over guanine radical distributions.
Our statistical results provide the rules that enable us to perform
implicit-electron Monte-Carlo simulations of repair enzyme binding and
redistribution near lesions. When lesions are electron absorbing, we show that
the CT mechanism suppresses wasteful buildup of enzymes along intact portions
of the DNA, maximizing enzyme concentration near lesions.Comment: 9 Figures, Accepted to J. Chem. Phy
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