6,773 research outputs found
Intensive Care Units (ICUs), and Ordinary Means: Turning Virtue Into Vice
There is a social process by which what have been virtues in one social context can become vices in another. Alasdair MacIntyre 1 </jats:p
THE CONSTITUTIONALITY OF TAKING A SPORTS FRANCHISE BY EMINENT DOMAIN AND THE NEED FOR FEDERAL LEGISLATION TO RESTRICT FRANCHISE RELOCATION
In 1985, two cities were in proceedings to each take over a sports franchises located within their respective cities. However, a number of constitutional limitations may prevent a city from taking sports franchises. This Note examines the constitutional public use, just compensation,right to travel and commerce clause limitations as applied to the taking of sports franchises by eminent domain. This Note concludes that eminent domain is an improper method of protecting cities\u27 interests in preventing the relocation of sports franchises. Consequently, it suggests that only carefully drawn federal legislation can protect a city\u27s interest in keeping its sports franchises without subjecting franchises to nonuniform and discriminatory treatment
Flux-correlation approach to characterizing reaction pathways in quantum systems: a study of condensed-phase proton-coupled electron transfer
We introduce a simple method for characterizing reactive pathways in quantum systems. Flux auto-correlation
and cross-correlation functions are employed to develop a quantitative measure of dynamical coupling in
quantum transition events, such as reactive tunnelling and resonant energy transfer. We utilize the method to
study condensed-phase proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET) reactions and to determine the relative
importance of competing concerted and sequential reaction pathways. Results presented here include numerically
exact quantum dynamics simulations for model condensed-phase PCET reactions. This work demonstrates the
applicability of the new method for the analysis of both approximate and exact quantum dynamics simulations
Sampling diffusive transition paths
We address the problem of sampling double-ended diffusive paths. The ensemble
of paths is expressed using a symmetric version of the Onsager-Machlup formula,
which only requires evaluation of the force field and which, upon direct time
discretization, gives rise to a symmetric integrator that is accurate to second
order. Efficiently sampling this ensemble requires avoiding the well-known
stiffness problem associated with sampling infinitesimal Brownian increments of
the path, as well as a different type of stiffness associated with sampling the
coarse features of long paths. The fine-feature sampling stiffness is
eliminated with the use of the fast sampling algorithm (FSA), and the
coarse-feature sampling stiffness is avoided by introducing the sliding and
sampling (S&S) algorithm. A key feature of the S&S algorithm is that it enables
massively parallel computers to sample diffusive trajectories that are long in
time. We use the algorithm to sample the transition path ensemble for the
structural interconversion of the 38-atom Lennard-Jones cluster at low
temperature.Comment: 13 pages 5 figure
Quantum diffusion in liquid water from ring polymer molecular dynamics
We have used the ring polymer molecular-dynamics method to study the translational and orientational motions in an extended simple point charge model of liquid water under ambient conditions. We find, in agreement with previous studies, that quantum-mechanical effects increase the self-diffusion coefficient D and decrease the relaxation times around the principal axes of the water molecule by a factor of around 1.5. These results are consistent with a simple Stokes-Einstein picture of the molecular motion and suggest that the main effect of the quantum fluctuations is to decrease the viscosity of the liquid by about a third. We then go on to consider the system-size scaling of the calculated self-diffusion coefficient and show that an appropriate extrapolation to the limit of infinite system size increases D by a further factor of around 1.3 over the value obtained from a simulation of a system containing 216 water molecules. These findings are discussed in light of the widespread use of classical molecular-dynamics simulations of this sort of size to model the dynamics of aqueous systems
Torsional path integral Monte Carlo method for the quantum simulation of large molecules
A molecular application is introduced for calculating quantum statistical mechanical expectation values of large molecules at nonzero temperatures. The Torsional Path Integral Monte Carlo (TPIMC) technique applies an uncoupled winding number formalism to the torsional degrees of freedom in molecular systems. The internal energy of the molecules ethane, n-butane, n-octane, and enkephalin are calculated at standard temperature using the TPIMC technique and compared to the expectation values obtained using the harmonic oscillator approximation and a variational technique. All studied molecules exhibited significant quantum mechanical contributions to their internal energy expectation values according to the TPIMC technique. The harmonic oscillator approximation approach to calculating the internal energy performs well for the molecules presented in this study but is limited by its neglect of both anharmonicity effects and the potential coupling of intramolecular torsion
Torsional path integral Monte Carlo method for calculating the absolute quantum free energy of large molecules
A new technique for evaluating the absolute free energy of large molecules is presented. Quantum-mechanical contributions to the intramolecular torsions are included via the torsional path integral Monte Carlo (TPIMC) technique. Importance sampling schemes based on uncoupled free rotors and harmonic oscillators facilitate the use of the TPIMC technique for the direct evaluation of quantum partition functions. Absolute free energies are calculated for the molecules ethane, n-butane, n-octane, and enkephalin, and quantum contributions are found to be significant. Comparison of the TPIMC technique with the harmonic oscillator approximation and a variational technique is performed for the ethane molecule. For all molecules, the quantum contributions to free energy are found to be significant but slightly smaller than the quantum contributions to internal energy
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