14,204 research outputs found

    Anyons as spinning particles

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    A model-independent formulation of anyons as spinning particles is presented. The general properties of the classical theory of (2+1)-dimensional relativistic fractional spin particles and some properties of their quantum theory are investigated. The relationship between all the known approaches to anyons as spinning particles is established. Some widespread misleading notions on the general properties of (2+1)-dimensional anyons are removed.Comment: 29 pages, LaTeX, a few corrections and references added; to appear in Int. J. Mod. Phys.

    Linear Differential Equations for a Fractional Spin Field

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    The vector system of linear differential equations for a field with arbitrary fractional spin is proposed using infinite-dimensional half-bounded unitary representations of the SL(2,R)‾\overline{SL(2,R)} group. In the case of (2j+1)(2j+1)-dimensional nonunitary representations of that group, 0<2j∈Z0<2j\in Z, they are transformed into equations for spin-jj fields. A local gauge symmetry associated to the vector system of equations is identified and the simplest gauge invariant field action, leading to these equations, is constructed.Comment: 15 pages, LATEX, revised version of the preprint DFTUZ/92/24 (to be published in J. Math. Phys.

    Quantitative Analysis of the Effective Functional Structure in Yeast Glycolysis

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    Yeast glycolysis is considered the prototype of dissipative biochemical oscillators. In cellular conditions, under sinusoidal source of glucose, the activity of glycolytic enzymes can display either periodic, quasiperiodic or chaotic behavior. In order to quantify the functional connectivity for the glycolytic enzymes in dissipative conditions we have analyzed different catalytic patterns using the non-linear statistical tool of Transfer Entropy. The data were obtained by means of a yeast glycolytic model formed by three delay differential equations where the enzymatic speed functions of the irreversible stages have been explicitly considered. These enzymatic activity functions were previously modeled and tested experimentally by other different groups. In agreement with experimental conditions, the studied time series corresponded to a quasi-periodic route to chaos. The results of the analysis are three-fold: first, in addition to the classical topological structure characterized by the specific location of enzymes, substrates, products and feedback regulatory metabolites, an effective functional structure emerges in the modeled glycolytic system, which is dynamical and characterized by notable variations of the functional interactions. Second, the dynamical structure exhibits a metabolic invariant which constrains the functional attributes of the enzymes. Finally, in accordance with the classical biochemical studies, our numerical analysis reveals in a quantitative manner that the enzyme phosphofructokinase is the key-core of the metabolic system, behaving for all conditions as the main source of the effective causal flows in yeast glycolysis.Comment: Biologically improve
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