21,140 research outputs found
Dynamic model for failures in biological systems
A dynamic model for failures in biological organisms is proposed and studied
both analytically and numerically. Each cell in the organism becomes dead under
sufficiently strong stress, and is then allowed to be healed with some
probability. It is found that unlike the case of no healing, the organism in
general does not completely break down even in the presence of noise. Revealed
is the characteristic time evolution that the system tends to resist the stress
longer than the system without healing, followed by sudden breakdown with some
fraction of cells surviving. When the noise is weak, the critical stress beyond
which the system breaks down increases rapidly as the healing parameter is
raised from zero, indicative of the importance of healing in biological
systems.Comment: To appear in Europhys. Let
Interlayer tunneling in counterflow experiments on the excitonic condensate in quantum Hall bilayers
The effect of tunneling on the transport properties of} quantum Hall double
layers in the regime of the excitonic condensate at total filling factor one is
studied in counterflow experiments. If the tunnel current is smaller than a
critical , tunneling is large and is effectively shorting the two layers.
For tunneling becomes negligible. Surprisingly, the transition
between the two tunneling regimes has only a minor impact on the features of
the filling-factor one state as observed in magneto-transport, but at currents
exceeding the resistance along the layers increases rapidly
Non-thermal origin of nonlinear transport across magnetically induced superconductor-metal-insulator transition
We have studied the effect of perpendicular magnetic fields and temperatures
on the nonlinear electronic transport in amorphous Ta superconducting thin
films. The films exhibit a magnetic field induced metallic behavior intervening
the superconductor-insulator transition in the zero temperature limit. We show
that the nonlinear transport in the superconducting and metallic phase is of
non-thermal origin and accompanies an extraordinarily long voltage response
time.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Better age estimations using UV-optical colours: breaking the age-metallicity degeneracy
We demonstrate that the combination of GALEX UV photometry in the FUV (~1530
angstroms) and NUV (~2310 angstroms) passbands with optical photometry in the
standard U,B,V,R,I filters can efficiently break the age-metallicity
degeneracy. We estimate well-constrained ages, metallicities and their
associated errors for 42 GCs in M31, and show that the full set of
FUV,NUV,U,B,V,R,I photometry produces age estimates that are ~90 percent more
constrained and metallicity estimates that are ~60 percent more constrained
than those produced by using optical filters alone. The quality of the age
constraints is comparable or marginally better than those achieved using a
large number of spectrscopic indices.Comment: Published in MNRAS (2007), 381, L74 (doi:
10.1111/j.1745-3933.2007.00370.x
Free Energy Approach to the Formation of an Icosahedral Structure during the Freezing of Gold Nanoclusters
The freezing of metal nanoclusters such as gold, silver, and copper exhibits
a novel structural evolution. The formation of the icosahedral (Ih) structure
is dominant despite its energetic metastability. This important phenomenon,
hitherto not understood, is studied by calculating free energies of gold
nanoclusters. The structural transition barriers have been determined by using
the umbrella sampling technique combined with molecular dynamics simulations.
Our calculations show that the formation of Ih gold nanoclusters is attributed
to the lower free energy barrier from the liquid to the Ih phases compared to
the barrier from the liquid to the face-centered-cubic crystal phases
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