3,039 research outputs found
Self-gravitating spheres of anisotropic fluid in geodesic flow
The fluid models mentioned in the title are classified. All characteristics
of the fluid are expressed through a master potential, satisfying an ordinary
second order differential equation. Different constraints are imposed on this
core of relations, finding new solutions and deriving the classical results for
perfect fluids and dust as particular cases. Many uncharged and charged
anisotropic solutions, all conformally flat and some uniform density solutions
are found. A number of solutions with linear equation among the two pressures
are derived, including the case of vanishing tangential pressure.Comment: 21 page
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Magnetic Levitation as a Platform for Competitive ProteinâLigand Binding Assays
This paper describes a method based on magnetic levitation (MagLev) that is capable of indirectly measuring the binding of unlabeled ligands to unlabeled protein. We demonstrate this method by measuring the affinity of unlabeled bovine carbonic anhydrase (BCA) for a variety of ligands (most of which are benzene sulfonamide derivatives). This method utilizes porous gel beads that are functionalized with a common aryl sulfonamide ligand. The beads are incubated with BCA and allowed to reach an equilibrium state in which the majority of the immobilized ligands are bound to BCA. Since the beads are less dense than the protein, protein binding to the bead increases the overall density of the bead. This change in density can be monitored using MagLev. Transferring the beads to a solution containing no protein creates a situation where net protein efflux from the bead is thermodynamically favorable. The rate at which protein leaves the bead for the solution can be calculated from the rate at which the levitation height of the bead changes. If another small molecule ligand of BCA is dissolved in the solution, the rate of protein efflux is accelerated significantly. This paper develops a reaction-diffusion (RD) model to explain both this observation, and the physical-organic chemistry that underlies it. Using this model, we calculate the dissociation constants of several unlabeled ligands from BCA, using plots of levitation height versus time. Notably, although this method requires no electricity, and only a single piece of inexpensive equipment, it can measure accurately the binding of unlabeled proteins to small molecules over a wide range of dissociation constants (Kd values within the range from 10 nM to 100 ÎŒM are measured easily). Assays performed using this method generally can be completed within a relatively short time period (20 minâ2 h). A deficiency of this system is that it is not, in its present form, applicable to proteins with molecular weight greater than approximately 65 kDa.Chemistry and Chemical Biolog
First principles investigation of ferroelectricity in epitaxially strained PbTiO
The structure and polarization of the as-yet hypothetical Ruddlesden-Popper
compound PbTiO are investigated within density-functional theory. Zone
enter phonons of the high-symmetry KNiF-type reference structure, space
group , were calculated. At the theoretical ground-state lattice
constants, there is one unstable infrared-active phonon. This phonon freezes in
to give the ferroelectric state. As a function of epitaxial strain, two
additional ferroelectric phases are found, with space groups and
at compressive and tensile strains, respectively.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Quantum Creation of Black Hole by Tunneling in Scalar Field Collapse
Continuously self-similar solution of spherically symmetric gravitational
collapse of a scalar field is studied to investigate quantum mechanical black
hole formation by tunneling in the subcritical case where, classically, the
collapse does not produce a black hole.Comment: t clarification of the quantization method in Sec. IV, version to
appear in PR
Diffeomorphisms, Noether Charges and Canonical Formalism in 2D Dilaton Gravity
We carry out a parallel study of the covariant phase space and the
conservation laws of local symmetries in two-dimensional dilaton gravity. Our
analysis is based on the fact that the Lagrangian can be brought to a form that
vanishes on-shell giving rise to a well-defined covariant potential for the
symplectic current. We explicitly compute the symplectic structure and its
potential and show that the requirement to be finite and independent of the
Cauchy surface restricts the asymptotic symmetries.Comment: 14 pages, latex with psfig macro, one figur
Renormalized Thermodynamic Entropy of Black Holes in Higher Dimensions
We study the ultraviolet divergent structures of the matter (scalar) field in
a higher D-dimensional Reissner-Nordstr\"{o}m black hole and compute the matter
field contribution to the Bekenstein-Hawking entropy by using the Pauli-Villars
regularization method. We find that the matter field contribution to the black
hole entropy does not, in general, yield the correct renormalization of the
gravitational coupling constants. In particular we show that the matter field
contribution in odd dimensions does not give the term proportional to the area
of the black hole event horizon.Comment: Final Revision Form as to be published in Physical Review D, ReVTeX,
No Figure
Mesoscale magnetism at the grain boundaries in colossal magnetoresistive films
We report the discovery of mesoscale regions with distinctive magnetic
properties in epitaxial LaSrMnO films which exhibit
tunneling-like magnetoresistance across grain boundaries. By using
temperature-dependent magnetic force microscopy we observe that the mesoscale
regions are formed near the grain boundaries and have a different Curie
temperature (up to 20 K {\it higher}) than the grain interiors. Our images
provide direct evidence for previous speculations that the grain boundaries in
thin films are not magnetically and electronically sharp interfaces. The size
of the mesoscale regions varies with temperature and nature of the underlying
defect.Comment: 4 pages of text, 4 figure
Kinetic Study on Heavy Metal Divalent Ions Removal using Zirconium-Based Magnetic Sorbent
In this research, zirconium-based magnetic sorbent synthesised by chemical co-precipitation method is explored as a potential sorbent for removal of divalent metal ions from aqueous solution. The interaction characteristics between the ions and the sorbent were elucidated by instrumental analyses such as Fourier Transform InfraRed (FT-IR) Spectroscopy, Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM), and Brunauer, Emmett, and Teller (BET) surface area analyser. Results show that the sorption rate was increased with an increase in contact time and initial metal ion concentration. Moreover, a two-stage kinetics behaviour was observed, and all the batch experiments achieved an equilibrium state within 4 hours. The evaluation of the adsorption behaviour of heavy metal divalent ions onto the magnetic sorbent was explained using two kinetic models, and it was mostly found to follow the postulate of the pseudo-second-order kinetic model. The validity of kinetic models applied in this study is also evaluated by using a normalised standard deviation
Mesoscopic Phase Coherence in a Quantum Spin Fluid
Mesoscopic quantum phase coherence is important because it improves the
prospects for handling quantum degrees of freedom in technology. Here we show
that the development of such coherence can be monitored using magnetic neutron
scattering from a one-dimensional spin chain Y2BaNiO5, a quantum spin fluid
where no classical, static magnetic order is present. In the cleanest samples,
the quantum coherence length is 20 nm, almost an order of magnitude larger than
the classical antiferromagnetic correlation length of 3 nm. We also demonstrate
that the coherence length can be modified by static and thermally activated
defects in a quantitatively predictable manner
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