1,035 research outputs found
Theoretical Description of Pulsed RYDMR: Refocusing Zero-Quantum and Single Quantum Coherences
A theoretical description of pulsed reaction yield detected magnetic resonance (RYDMR) is proposed. In RYDMR, magnetic resonance spectra of radical pairs (RPs) are indirectly detected by monitoring their recombination yield. Such a detection method is significantly more sensitive than conventional electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR), but design of appropriate pulse sequences for RYDMR requires additional effort because of a different observable. In this work various schemes for generating spin-echo like signals and detecting them by RYDMR are treated. Specifically, we consider refocusing of zero-quantum coherences (ZQCs) and single-quantum coherences (SQCs) by selective as well as by non-selective pulses and formulate a general analytical approach to pulsed RYDMR, which makes an efficient use of the product operator formalism. We anticipate that these results are of importance for RYDMR studies of elusive paramagnetic particles, notably, in organic semiconductors
Physical Vacuum Properties and Internal Space Dimension
The paper addresses matrix spaces, whose properties and dynamics are
determined by Dirac matrices in Riemannian spaces of different dimension and
signature. Among all Dirac matrix systems there are such ones, which nontrivial
scalar, vector or other tensors cannot be made up from. These Dirac matrix
systems are associated with the vacuum state of the matrix space. The simplest
vacuum system realization can be ensured using the orthonormal basis in the
internal matrix space. This vacuum system realization is not however unique.
The case of 7-dimensional Riemannian space of signature 7(-) is considered in
detail. In this case two basically different vacuum system realizations are
possible: (1) with using the orthonormal basis; (2) with using the
oblique-angled basis, whose base vectors coincide with the simple roots of
algebra E_{8}.
Considerations are presented, from which it follows that the least-dimension
space bearing on physics is the Riemannian 11-dimensional space of signature
1(-)& 10(+). The considerations consist in the condition of maximum vacuum
energy density and vacuum fluctuation energy density.Comment: 19 pages, 1figure. Submitted to General Relativity and Gravitatio
Higher triplet state of fullerene C70 revealed by electron spin relaxation
Spin-lattice relaxation timesT1 of photoexcited triplets 3C70 in glassy
decalin were obtained from electron spin echo inversion recovery dependences.
In the range 30–100 K, the temperature dependence of T1 was fitted by the
Arrhenius law with an activation energy of 172 cm−1. This indicates that the
dominant relaxation process of 3C70 is described by an Orbach-Aminov mechanism
involving the higher triplet state t2 which lies 172 cm−1 above the lowest
triplet state t1. Chemical modification of C70fullerene not only decreases the
intrinsic triplet lifetime by about ten times but also increases T1 by several
orders of magnitude. The reason for this is the presence of a low-lying
excited triplet state in 3C70 and its absence in triplet C70 derivatives. The
presence of the higher triplet state in C70 is in good agreement with the
previous results from phosphorescence spectroscopy
Influence of the Crc regulator on the hierarchical use of carbon sources from a complete medium in Pseudomonas
Rare processes and coherent phenomena in crystals
We study coherent enhancement of Coulomb excitation of high energy particles
in crystals. We develop multiple scattering theory description of coherent
excitation which consistently incorporates both the specific resonant
properties of particle-crystal interactions and the final/initial state
interaction effects typical of the diffractive scattering. Possible
applications to observation of induced radiative neutrino transitions are
discussed.Comment: 8 pages, LaTe
Elucidating the structural composition of a Fe-N-C catalyst by nuclear and electron resonance techniques
Fe–N–C catalysts are very promising materials for fuel cells and metal–air batteries. This work gives fundamental insights into the structural composition of an Fe–N–C catalyst and highlights the importance of an in‐depth characterization. By nuclear‐ and electron‐resonance techniques, we are able to show that even after mild pyrolysis and acid leaching, the catalyst contains considerable fractions of α‐iron and, surprisingly, iron oxide. Our work makes it questionable to what extent FeN4 sites can be present in Fe–N–C catalysts prepared by pyrolysis at 900 °C and above. The simulation of the iron partial density of phonon states enables the identification of three FeN4 species in our catalyst, one of them comprising a sixfold coordination with end‐on bonded oxygen as one of the axial ligands
New Approach for Measuring at Future -Factories
It is suggested that the measurements of hadronic invariant mass ()
distributons in the inclusive decays can be
useful in extracting the CKM matrix element . We investigated
hadronic invariant mass distributions within the various theoretical models of
HQET, FAC and chiral lagrangian as well as ACCMM model. It is also emphasized
that the distribution even at the region in the inclusive
are effetive in selecting the events, experimentally viable at
the future asymmetric factories, with better theoretical understandings.Comment: 11 pages not including 1 figur
Helicity Analysis of Semileptonic Hyperon Decays Including Lepton Mass Effects
Using the helicity method we derive complete formulas for the joint angular
decay distributions occurring in semileptonic hyperon decays including lepton
mass and polarization effects. Compared to the traditional covariant
calculation the helicity method allows one to organize the calculation of the
angular decay distributions in a very compact and efficient way. In the
helicity method the angular analysis is of cascade type, i.e. each decay in the
decay chain is analyzed in the respective rest system of that particle. Such an
approach is ideally suited as input for a Monte Carlo event generation program.
As a specific example we take the decay () followed by the nonleptonic decay for which we show a few examples of decay distributions which are
generated from a Monte Carlo program based on the formulas presented in this
paper. All the results of this paper are also applicable to the semileptonic
and nonleptonic decays of ground state charm and bottom baryons, and to the
decays of the top quark.Comment: Published version. 40 pages, 11 figures included in the text. Typos
corrected, comments added, references added and update
Calculation of 1/m^3 terms in the total semileptonic width of D mesons.
We calculate the 1/ corrections in the inclusive semileptonic widths
of mesons. We show that these are due to the novel penguin type operators
that appear at this level in the transition operator. Taking into account the
nonperturbative corrections leads to the predicted value of the semileptonic
width significantly lower than the experimental value. The worsen the
situation or at the very least, within uncertainty, give small contribution. We
indicate possible ways out. It seems most probable that violations of duality
are noticeable in the energy range characteristic to the inclusive decays in
the charm family. Theoretically these deviations are related to divergence of
the high-order terms in the power expansion in the inverse heavy quark mass.Comment: Final version accepted for publication in Physical Review D (19
pages, 5 figures appended as two PS files at the end of the LATEX file
AMBRA1 is able to induce mitophagy via LC3 binding, regardless of PARKIN and p62/SQSTM1
Damaged mitochondria are eliminated by mitophagy, a selective form of autophagy whose dysfunction associates with neurodegenerative diseases. PINK1, PARKIN and p62/SQTMS1 have been shown to regulate mitophagy, leaving hitherto ill-defined the contribution by key players in 'general' autophagy. In basal conditions, a pool of AMBRA1 - an upstream autophagy regulator and a PARKIN interactor - is present at the mitochondria, where its pro-autophagic activity is inhibited by Bcl-2. Here we show that, upon mitophagy induction, AMBRA1 binds the autophagosome adapter LC3 through a LIR (LC3 interacting region) motif, this interaction being crucial for regulating both canonical PARKIN-dependent and -independent mitochondrial clearance. Moreover, forcing AMBRA1 localization to the outer mitochondrial membrane unleashes a massive PARKIN- and p62-independent but LC3-dependent mitophagy. These results highlight a novel role for AMBRA1 as a powerful mitophagy regulator, through both canonical or noncanonical pathways
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