5,756 research outputs found
Continued study of NAVSTAR/GPS for general aviation
A conceptual approach for examining the full potential of Global Positioning Systems (GPS) for the general aviation community is presented. Aspects of an experimental program to demonstrate these concepts are discussed. The report concludes with the observation that the true potential of GPS can only be exploited by utilization in concert with a data link. The capability afforded by the combination of position location and reporting stimulates the concept of GPS providing the auxiliary functions of collision avoidance, and approach and landing guidance. A series of general recommendations for future NASA and civil community efforts in order to continue to support GPS for general aviation are included
Coupled dynamics of RNA folding and nanopore translocation
The translocation of structured RNA or DNA molecules through narrow pores
necessitates the opening of all base pairs. Here, we study the interplay
between the dynamics of translocation and base-pairing theoretically, using
kinetic Monte Carlo simulations and analytical methods. We find that the
transient formation of basepairs that do not occur in the ground state can
significantly speed up translocation.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, to appear in Physical Review Letter
Molecular Electroporation and the Transduction of Oligoarginines
Certain short polycations, such as TAT and polyarginine, rapidly pass through
the plasma membranes of mammalian cells by an unknown mechanism called
transduction as well as by endocytosis and macropinocytosis. These
cell-penetrating peptides (CPPs) promise to be medically useful when fused to
biologically active peptides. I offer a simple model in which one or more CPPs
and the phosphatidylserines of the inner leaflet form a kind of capacitor with
a voltage in excess of 180 mV, high enough to create a molecular electropore.
The model is consistent with an empirical upper limit on the cargo peptide of
40--60 amino acids and with experimental data on how the transduction of a
polyarginine-fluorophore into mouse C2C12 myoblasts depends on the number of
arginines in the CPP and on the CPP concentration. The model makes three
testable predictions.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figure
Non-local fluctuation correlations in active gels
Many active materials and biological systems are driven far from equilibrium
by embedded agents that spontaneously generate forces and distort the
surrounding material. Probing and characterizing these athermal fluctuations is
essential for understanding the properties and behaviors of such systems. Here
we present a mathematical procedure to estimate the local action of
force-generating agents from the observed fluctuating displacement fields. The
active agents are modeled as oriented force dipoles or isotropic compression
foci, and the matrix on which they act is assumed to be either a compressible
elastic continuum or a coupled network-solvent system. Correlations at a single
point and between points separated by an arbitrary distance are obtained,
giving a total of three independent fluctuation modes that can be tested with
microrheology experiments. Since oriented dipoles and isotropic compression
foci give different contributions to these fluctuation modes, ratiometric
analysis allows us characterize the force generators. We also predict and
experimentally find a high-frequency ballistic regime, arising from individual
force generating events in the form of the slow build-up of stress followed by
rapid but finite decay. Finally, we provide a quantitative statistical model to
estimate the mean filament tension from these athermal fluctuations, which
leads to stiffening of active networks.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures; some clarifications and ammended figure
notation
Preliminary study of NAVSTAR/GPS for general aviation
The activities conducted as a planning effort to focus attention on the applicability of the global positioning system for general aviation are described. The description of GPS, its impact on economic and functional aspects of general aviation avionics, as well as a declaration of potential extensions of the basic concept have been studied in detail
Effect of Salt Concentration on the Electrophoretic Speed of a Polyelectrolyte through a Nanopore
In a previous paper [S. Ghosal, Phys. Rev. E 74, 041901 (2006)] a
hydrodynamic model for determining the electrophoretic speed of a
polyelectrolyte through an axially symmetric slowly varying nanopore was
presented in the limit of a vanishingly small Debye length. Here the case of a
finite Debye layer thickness is considered while restricting the pore geometry
to that of a cylinder of length much larger than the diameter. Further, the
possibility of a uniform surface charge on the walls of the nanopore is taken
into account. It is thereby shown that the calculated transit times are
consistent with recent measurements in silicon nanopores.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Surface tension in bilayer membranes with fixed projected area
We study the elastic response of bilayer membranes with fixed projected area
to both stretching and shape deformations. A surface tension is associated to
each of these deformations. By using model amphiphilic membranes and computer
simulations, we are able to observe both the types of deformation, and thus,
both the surface tensions, related to each type of deformation, are measured
for the same system. These surface tensions are found to assume different
values in the same bilayer membrane: in particular they vanish for different
values of the projected area. We introduce a simple theory which relates the
two quantities and successfully apply it to the data obtained with computer
simulations
Fluctuation-Driven Molecular Transport in an Asymmetric Membrane Channel
Channel proteins, that selectively conduct molecules across cell membranes,
often exhibit an asymmetric structure. By means of a stochastic model, we argue
that channel asymmetry in the presence of non-equilibrium fluctuations, fueled
by the cell's metabolism as observed recently, can dramatically influence the
transport through such channels by a ratchet-like mechanism. For an
aquaglyceroporin that conducts water and glycerol we show that a previously
determined asymmetric glycerol potential leads to enhanced inward transport of
glycerol, but for unfavorably high glycerol concentrations also to enhanced
outward transport that protects a cell against poisoning.Comment: REVTeX4, 4 pages, 3 figures; Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Let
Undulation instability in a bilayer lipid membrane due to electric field interaction with lipid dipoles
Bilayer lipid membranes [BLMs] are an essential component of all biological
systems, forming a functional barrier for cells and organelles from the
surrounding environment. The lipid molecules that form membranes contain both
permanent and induced dipoles, and an electric field can induce the formation
of pores when the transverse field is sufficiently strong (electroporation).
Here, a phenomenological free energy is constructed to model the response of a
BLM to a transverse static electric field. The model contains a continuum
description of the membrane dipoles and a coupling between the headgroup
dipoles and the membrane tilt. The membrane is found to become unstable through
buckling modes, which are weakly coupled to thickness fluctuations in the
membrane. The thickness fluctuations, along with the increase in interfacial
area produced by membrane buckling, increase the probability of localized
membrane breakdown, which may lead to pore formation. The instability is found
to depend strongly on the strength of the coupling between the dipolar
headgroups and the membrane tilt as well as the degree of dipolar ordering in
the membrane.Comment: 29 pages 8 fig
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