12,916 research outputs found
Characterization of dual mixed volumes via polymeasures
We prove a characterization of the dual mixed volume in terms of functional
properties of the polynomial associated to it. To do this, we use tools from
the theory of multilinear operators on spaces of continuos functions. Along the
way we reprove, with these same techniques, a recently found characterization
of the dual mixed volume
Symplectic Regularization of Binary Collisions in the Circular N+2 Sitnikov Problem
We present a brief overview of the regularizing transformations of the Kepler
problem and we relate the Euler transformation with the symplectic structure of
the phase space of the N-body problem. We show that any particular solution of
the N-body problem where two bodies have rectilinear dynamics can be
regularized by a linear symplectic transformation and the inclusion of the
Euler transformation into the group of symplectic local diffeomorphisms over
the phase space. As an application we regularize a particular configuration of
the circular N+2 Sitnikov problem.Comment: 23 pages, 5 figures. References to algorithmic regularization
included, changes in References and small typographic corrections. Accepted
in J. of Phys. A: Math. Theor 44 (2011) 265204
http://stacks.iop.org/1751-8121/44/26520
Reynolds number effects on the Reynolds-stress budgets in turbulent channels
Budgets for the nonzero components of the Reynolds-stress tensor are presented for numerical channels with Reynolds numbers in the range Reτ ≤180–2000. The scaling of the different terms is discussed, both above and within the buffer and viscous layers. Above (x_2^+)≈150, most budget components scale reasonably well with u_t^3/h, but the scaling with (u_t^4)/v is generally poor below that level. That is especially true for the dissipations and for the pressure-related terms. The former is traced to the effect of the wall-parallel large-scale motions, and the latter to the scaling of the pressure itself. It is also found that the pressure terms scale better near the wall when they are not separated into their diffusion and deviatoric components, but mostly only because the two terms tend to cancel each other in the viscous sublayer. The budgets, together with their statistical uncertainties, are available electronically from http://torroja.dmt.upm.es/channels
CCharPPI web server: computational characterization of protein–protein interactions from structure
The atomic structures of protein–protein interactions are central to understanding their role in biological systems, and a wide variety of biophysical functions and potentials have been developed for their characterization and the construction of predictive models. These tools are scattered across a multitude of stand-alone programs, and are often available only as model parameters requiring reimplementation. This acts as a significant barrier to their widespread adoption. CCharPPI integrates many of these tools into a single web server. It calculates up to 108 parameters, including models of electrostatics, desolvation and hydrogen bonding, as well as interface packing and complementarity scores, empirical potentials at various resolutions, docking potentials and composite scoring functions.The research leading to these results has received funding from the People Programme (Marie Curie Actions) of the European Unions Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007-
2013) under REA grant agreement PIEF-GA-2012-327899 and grant BIO2013-48213-R from Spanish Ministry of Economy and
Competitiveness.Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version
Effects of biasing on the galaxy power spectrum at large scales
n this paper we study the effect of biasing on the power spectrum at large
scales. We show that even though non-linear biasing does introduce a white
noise contribution on large scales, the behavior of the
matter power spectrum on large scales may still be visible and above the white
noise for about one decade. We show, that the Kaiser biasing scheme which leads
to linear bias of the correlation function on {\em large} scales, also
generates a linear bias of the {\rm power spectrum} on rather small scales.
This is a consequence of the divergence on small scales of the pure
Harrison-Zeldovich spectrum. However, biasing becomes k-dependent when we damp
the underlying power spectrum on small scales. We also discuss the effect of
biasing on the baryon acoustic oscillations.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures. One figure and comments clarifying the linear
biasing on small scales and references added. V3 version accepted in PR
Towards defining the role of glycans as hardware in information storage and transfer: Basic principles, experimental approaches and recent progress
The term `code' in biological information transfer appears to be tightly and hitherto exclusively connected with the genetic code based on nucleotides and translated into functional activities via proteins. However, the recent appreciation of the enormous coding capacity of oligosaccharide chains of natural glycoconjugates has spurred to give heed to a new concept: versatile glycan assembly by the genetically encoded glycosyltransferases endows cells with a probably not yet fully catalogued array of meaningful messages. Enciphered by sugar receptors such as endogenous lectins the information of code words established by a series of covalently linked monosaccharides as fetters for example guides correct intra- and intercellular routing of glycoproteins, modulates cell proliferation or migration and mediates cell adhesion. Evidently, the elucidation of the structural frameworks and the recognition strategies within the operation of the sugar code poses a fascinating conundrum. The far-reaching impact of this recognition mode on the level of cells, tissues and organs has fueled vigorous investigations to probe the subtleties of protein-carbohydrate interactions. This review presents information on the necessarily concerted approach using X-ray crystallography, molecular modeling, nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, thermodynamic analysis and engineered ligands and receptors. This part of the treatise is flanked by exemplarily chosen insights made possible by these techniques. Copyright (C) 2001 S. Karger AG, Basel
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