15,944 research outputs found
Instantons, supersymmetric vacua, and emergent geometries
We study instanton solutions and superpotentials for the large number of
vacua of the plane-wave matrix model and a 2+1 dimensional Super Yang-Mills
theory on with sixteen supercharges. We get the superpotential in
the weak coupling limit from the gauge theory description. We study the gravity
description of these instantons. Perturbatively with respect to a background,
they are Euclidean branes wrapping cycles in the dual gravity background.
Moreover, the superpotential can be given by the energy of the electric charge
system characterizing each vacuum. These charges are interpreted as the
eigenvalues of matrices from a reduction for the 1/8 BPS sector of the gauge
theories. We also discuss qualitatively the emergence of the extra spatial
dimensions appeared on the gravity side.Comment: 29 pages, 3 figures, latex. v2: references added, comments added. v3:
accepted version in PR
Press and social media reaction to ideologically inspired murder:The case of Lee Rigby
This article analyses reaction to the ideologically inspired murder of a soldier, Lee Rigby, in central London by two converts to Islam, Michael Adebowale and Michael Adebolajo. The focus of the analysis is upon the contrast between how the event was reacted to by the UK National Press and on social media. To explore this contrast, we undertook a corpus-assisted discourse analysis to look at three periods during the event: the initial attack, the verdict of the subsequent trial and the sentencing of the murderers. To do this, we constructed and analysed corpora of press and Twitter coverage of the attack, the conviction of the suspects and the sentencing of them. The analysis shows that social media and the press are intertwined, with the press exerting a notable influence through social media, but social media not always being led by the press. When looking at social media reaction to such an event as this, analysts should always consider the role that the press are playing in forming that discourse
The Bravyi-Kitaev transformation for quantum computation of electronic structure
Quantum simulation is an important application of future quantum computers
with applications in quantum chemistry, condensed matter, and beyond. Quantum
simulation of fermionic systems presents a specific challenge. The
Jordan-Wigner transformation allows for representation of a fermionic operator
by O(n) qubit operations. Here we develop an alternative method of simulating
fermions with qubits, first proposed by Bravyi and Kitaev [S. B. Bravyi, A.Yu.
Kitaev, Annals of Physics 298, 210-226 (2002)], that reduces the simulation
cost to O(log n) qubit operations for one fermionic operation. We apply this
new Bravyi-Kitaev transformation to the task of simulating quantum chemical
Hamiltonians, and give a detailed example for the simplest possible case of
molecular hydrogen in a minimal basis. We show that the quantum circuit for
simulating a single Trotter time-step of the Bravyi-Kitaev derived Hamiltonian
for H2 requires fewer gate applications than the equivalent circuit derived
from the Jordan-Wigner transformation. Since the scaling of the Bravyi-Kitaev
method is asymptotically better than the Jordan-Wigner method, this result for
molecular hydrogen in a minimal basis demonstrates the superior efficiency of
the Bravyi-Kitaev method for all quantum computations of electronic structure
Highly specific PCR-RFLP assays for karyotyping the widespread 2Rb inversion in malaria vectors of the Anopheles gambiae complex
Background: Chromosomal inversion polymorphisms play a role in adaptation to heterogeneous environments. Inversion polymorphisms are implicated in the very high ecological flexibility of the three main malaria vector species of the Afrotropical Anopheles gambiae complex, facilitating the exploitation of anthropogenic environmental modifications and promoting a strong association with humans. In addition to extending the species' spatial and temporal distribution, inversions are associated with epidemiologically relevant mosquito behavior and physiology, underscoring their medical importance. We here present novel PCR-RFLP based assays strongly predictive of genotype for the cosmopolitan 2Rb inversion in An. coluzzii and An. gambiae, a development which overcomes the numerous constraints inherent to traditional cytological karyotyping. Methods: We designed PCR-RFLP genotyping assays based on tag SNPs previously computationally identified as strongly predictive (> 95%) of 2Rb genotype. We targeted those tags whose alternative allelic states destroyed or created the recognition site of a commercially available restriction enzyme, and designed assays with distinctive cleavage profiles for each inversion genotype. The assays were validated on 251 An. coluzzii and 451 An. gambiae cytologically karyotyped specimens from nine countries across Africa and one An. coluzzii laboratory colony. Results: For three tag SNPs, PCR-RFLP assays (denoted DraIII, MspAI, and TatI) reliably produced robust amplicons and clearly distinguishable electrophoretic profiles for all three inversion genotypes. Results obtained with the DraIII assay are ≥ 95% concordant with cytogenetic assignments in both species, while MspAI and TatI assays produce patterns highly concordant with cytogenetic assignments only in An. coluzzii or An. gambiae, respectively. Joint application of species-appropriate pairs of assays increased the concordance levels to > 99% in An. coluzzii and 98% in An. gambiae. Potential sources of discordance (e.g. imperfect association between tag and inversion, allelic dropout, additional polymorphisms in the restriction target site, incomplete or failed restriction digestion) are discussed. Conclusions: The availability of highly specific, cost effective and accessible molecular assays for genotyping 2Rb in An. gambiae and An. coluzzii allows karyotyping of both sexes and all developmental stages. These novel tools will accelerate deeper investigations into the role of this ecologically and epidemiologically important chromosomal inversion in vector biology.[Figure not available: see fulltext.
Discrete elastic model for stretching-induced flagellar polymorphs
Force-induced reversible transformations between coiled and normal polymorphs
of bacterial flagella have been observed in recent optical-tweezer experiment.
We introduce a discrete elastic rod model with two competing helical states
governed by a fluctuating spin-like variable that represents the underlying
conformational states of flagellin monomers. Using hybrid Brownian dynamics
Monte-Carlo simulations, we show that a helix undergoes shape transitions
dominated by domain wall nucleation and motion in response to externally
applied uniaxial tension. A scaling argument for the critical force is
presented in good agreement with experimental and simulation results.
Stretching rate-dependent elasticity including a buckling instability are
found, also consistent with the experiment
Multistability of free spontaneously-curved anisotropic strips
Multistable structures are objects with more than one stable conformation,
exemplified by the simple switch. Continuum versions are often elastic
composite plates or shells, such as the common measuring tape or the slap
bracelet, both of which exhibit two stable configurations: rolled and unrolled.
Here we consider the energy landscape of a general class of multistable
anisotropic strips with spontaneous Gaussian curvature. We show that while
strips with non-zero Gaussian curvature can be bistable, strips with positive
spontaneous curvature are always bistable, independent of the elastic moduli,
strips of spontaneous negative curvature are bistable only in the presence of
spontaneous twist and when certain conditions on the relative stiffness of the
strip in tension and shear are satisfied. Furthermore, anisotropic strips can
become tristable when their bending rigidity is small. Our study complements
and extends the theory of multistability in anisotropic shells and suggests new
design criteria for these structures.Comment: 20 pages, 10 figure
The effects of the interaction of animals with children diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder and their families [abstract]
The CDC estimates that one in 110 children receive a diagnosis of Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) annually. Pet dogs have been found to be a social catalyst and service dogs have demonstrated measurable benefits for children with ASD. Given that 39% of American households have a dog, this survey investigates the perceived benefits and barriers of having a dog in a family with a child with ASD
In silico karyotyping of chromosomally polymorphic malaria mosquitoes in the Anopheles gambiae complex
Chromosomal inversion polymorphisms play an important role in adaptation to environmental heterogeneities. For mosquito species in the Anopheles gambiae complex that are significant vectors of human malaria, paracentric inversion polymorphisms are abundant and are associated with ecologically and epidemiologically important phenotypes. Improved understanding of these traits relies on determining mosquito karyotype, which currently depends upon laborious cytogenetic methods whose application is limited both by the requirement for specialized expertise and for properly preserved adult females at specific gonotrophic stages. To overcome this limitation, we developed sets of tag single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) inside inversions whose biallelic genotype is strongly correlated with inversion genotype. We leveraged 1,347 fully sequenced An. gambiae and Anopheles coluzzii genomes in the Ag1000G database of natural variation. Beginning with principal components analysis (PCA) of population samples, applied to windows of the genome containing individual chromosomal rearrangements, we classified samples into three inversion genotypes, distinguishing homozygous inverted and homozygous uninverted groups by inclusion of the small subset of specimens in Ag1000G that are associated with cytogenetic metadata. We then assessed the correlation between candidate tag SNP genotypes and PCA-based inversion genotypes in our training sets, selecting those candidates with >80% agreement. Our initial tests both in held-back validation samples from Ag1000G and in data independent of Ag1000G suggest that when used for in silico inversion genotyping of sequenced mosquitoes, these tags perform better than traditional cytogenetics, even for specimens where only a small subset of the tag SNPs can be successfully ascertained
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