13,658 research outputs found
Famous Ohio Engineers
A brief biography of famous engineers from the state of Ohio: Edward Orton, Jr., Henry Howard, Charles F. Kettering, and Charles H. Paul
Control of inhomogeneous atomic ensembles of hyperfine qudits
We study the ability to control d-dimensional quantum systems (qudits)
encoded in the hyperfine spin of alkali-metal atoms through the application of
radio- and microwave-frequency magnetic fields in the presence of
inhomogeneities in amplitude and detuning. Such a capability is essential to
the design of robust pulses that mitigate the effects of experimental
uncertainty and also for application to tomographic addressing of particular
members of an extended ensemble. We study the problem of preparing an arbitrary
state in the Hilbert space from an initial fiducial state. We prove that
inhomogeneous control of qudit ensembles is possible based on a semi-analytic
protocol that synthesizes the target through a sequence of alternating rf and
microwave-driven SU(2) rotations in overlapping irreducible subspaces. Several
examples of robust control are studied, and the semi-analytic protocol is
compared to a brute force, full numerical search. For small inhomogeneities, <
1%, both approaches achieve average fidelities greater than 0.99, but the brute
force approach performs superiorly, reaching high fidelities in shorter times
and capable of handling inhomogeneities well beyond experimental uncertainty.
The full numerical search is also applied to tomographic addressing whereby two
different nonclassical states of the spin are produced in two halves of the
ensemble
Coupling JOREK and STARWALL for Non-linear Resistive-wall Simulations
The implementation of a resistive-wall extension to the non-linear MHD-code
JOREK via a coupling to the vacuum-field code STARWALL is presented along with
first applications and benchmark results. Also, non-linear saturation in the
presence of a resistive wall is demonstrated. After completion of the ongoing
verification process, this code extension will allow to perform non-linear
simulations of MHD instabilities in the presence of three-dimensional resistive
walls with holes for limited and X-point plasmas.Comment: Contribution for "Theory Of Fusion Plasmas, Joint Varenna - Lausanne
International Workshop, Villa Monastero, Varenna, Italy (27.-31.8.2012)",
accepted for publication in Journal of Physics Conference Serie
Periodically driven stochastic un- and refolding transitions of biopolymers
Mechanical single molecule experiments probe the energy profile of
biomolecules. We show that in the case of a profile with two minima (like
folded/unfolded) periodic driving leads to a stochastic resonance-like
phenomenon. We demonstrate that the analysis of such data can be used to
extract four basic parameters of such a transition and discuss the statistical
requirements of the data acquisition. As advantages of the proposed scheme, a
polymeric linker is explicitly included and thermal fluctuations within each
well need not to be resolved.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, submitted to EP
Attractive instability of oppositely charged membranes induced by charge density fluctuations
We predict the conditions under which two oppositely charged membranes show a
dynamic, attractive instability. Two layers with unequal charges of opposite
sign can repel or be stable when in close proximity. However, dynamic charge
density fluctuations can induce an attractive instability and thus facilitate
fusion. We predict the dominant instability modes and timescales and show how
these are controlled by the relative charge and membrane viscosities. These
dynamic instabilities may be the precursors of membrane fusion in systems where
artificial vesicles are engulfed by biological cells of opposite charge
Polycation-siRNA nanoparticles can disassemble at the kidney glomerular basement membrane
Despite being engineered to avoid renal clearance, many cationic polymer (polycation)-based siRNA nanoparticles that are used for systemic delivery are rapidly eliminated from the circulation. Here, we show that a component of the renal filtration barrier—the glomerular basement membrane (GBM)—can disassemble cationic cyclodextrin-containing polymer (CDP)-based siRNA nanoparticles and, thereby, facilitate their rapid elimination from circulation. Using confocal and electron microscopies, positron emission tomography, and compartment modeling, we demonstrate that siRNA nanoparticles, but not free siRNA, accumulate and disassemble in the GBM. We also confirm that the siRNA nanoparticles do not disassemble in blood plasma in vitro and in vivo. This clearance mechanism may affect any nanoparticles that assemble primarily by electrostatic interactions between cationic delivery components and anionic nucleic acids (or other therapeutic entities)
On the relationship of polar mesospheric cloud ice water content, particle radius and mesospheric temperature and its use in multi-dimensional models
The distribution of ice layers in the polar summer mesosphere (called polar mesospheric clouds or PMCs) is sensitive to background atmospheric conditions and therefore affected by global-scale dynamics. To investigate this coupling it is necessary to simulate the global distribution of PMCs within a 3-dimensional (3-D) model that couples large-scale dynamics with cloud microphysics. However, modeling PMC microphysics within 3-D global chemistry climate models (GCCM) is a challenge due to the high computational cost associated with particle following (Lagrangian) or sectional microphysical calculations. By characterizing the relationship between the PMC effective radius, ice water content (<i>iwc</i>), and local temperature (<i>T</i>) from an ensemble of simulations from the sectional microphysical model, the Community Aerosol and Radiation Model for Atmospheres (CARMA), we determined that these variables can be described by a robust empirical formula. The characterized relationship allows an estimate of an altitude distribution of PMC effective radius in terms of local temperature and <i>iwc</i>. For our purposes we use this formula to predict an effective radius as part of a bulk parameterization of PMC microphysics in a 3-D GCCM to simulate growth, sublimation and sedimentation of ice particles without keeping track of the time history of each ice particle size or particle size bin. This allows cost effective decadal scale PMC simulations in a 3-D GCCM to be performed. This approach produces realistic PMC simulations including estimates of the optical properties of PMCs. We validate the relationship with PMC data from the Solar Occultation for Ice Experiment (SOFIE)
Probing molecular free energy landscapes by periodic loading
Single molecule pulling experiments provide information about interactions in
biomolecules that cannot be obtained by any other method. However, the
reconstruction of the molecule's free energy profile from the experimental data
is still a challenge, in particular for the unstable barrier regions. We
propose a new method for obtaining the full profile by introducing a periodic
ramp and using Jarzynski's identity for obtaining equilibrium quantities from
non-equilibrium data. Our simulated experiments show that this method delivers
significant more accurate data than previous methods, under the constraint of
equal experimental effort.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
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