1,122 research outputs found
Improving the robustness of the railway system in Brussels
In order to improve the robustness of a railway system in station areas, this paper introduces an iterative approach to successively solve the route choice problem in station areas to optimality and to improve this solution by applying some changes to the timetable in a tabu search environment. Using a discrete event simulation model, the performance of our algorithms is evaluated based on a case study for the Brussels' area. The railway network of the Brussels' area is introduced and its relevance is emphasized. Computational results indicate an improvement in robustness of about 10%, a decrease in knock-on delay of more than 15%, and a 25% reduction in the number of trains that are confronted with conflicts
Mutant and chimeric recobinant plasminogen activatorsproduction in eukaryotic cellsand preliminary characterization
Mutant urokinase-type plasminogen activator (u-PA) genes and hybrid genes between tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) and u-PA have been designed to direct the synthesis of new plasminogen activators and to investigate the structure-function relationship in these molecules. The following classes of constructs were made starting from cDNA encoding human t-PA or u-PA: 1) u-PA mutants in which the Arg156 and Lys158 were substituted with threonine, thus preventing cleavage by thrombin and plasmin; 2) hybrid molecules in which the NH2-terminal regions of t-PA (amino acid residues 1-67, 1-262, or 1-313) were fused with the COOH-terminal region of u-PA (amino acids 136-411, 139-411, or 195-411, respectively); and 3) a hybrid molecule in which the second kringle of t-PA (amino acids 173-262) was inserted between amino acids 130 and 139 of u-PA. In all cases but one, the recombinant proteins, produced by transfected eukaryotic cells, were efficiently secreted in the culture medium. The translation products have been tested for their ability to activate plasminogen after in situ binding to an insolubilized monoclonal antibody directed against urokinase. All recombinant enzymes were shown to be active, except those in which Lys158 of u-PA was substituted with threonine. Recombination of structural regions derived from t-PA, such as the finger, the kringle 2, or most of the A-chain sequences, with the protease part or the complete u-PA molecule did not impair the catalytic activity of the hybrid polypeptides. This observation supports the hypothesis that structural domains in t-PA and u-PA fold independently from one to another
Toeplitz Quantization of K\"ahler Manifolds and
For general compact K\"ahler manifolds it is shown that both Toeplitz
quantization and geometric quantization lead to a well-defined (by operator
norm estimates) classical limit. This generalizes earlier results of the
authors and Klimek and Lesniewski obtained for the torus and higher genus
Riemann surfaces, respectively. We thereby arrive at an approximation of the
Poisson algebra by a sequence of finite-dimensional matrix algebras ,
.Comment: 17 pages, AmsTeX 2.1, Sept. 93 (rev: only typos are corrected
Tunneling conductance of SIN junctions with different gap symmetries and non-magnetic impurities by direct solution of real-axis Eliashberg equations
We theoretically investigate the effect of various symmetries of the
superconducting order parameter Delta(omega) on the normalized tunneling
conductance of SIN junctions by directly solving the real-axis Eliashberg
equations (EEs) for a half-filled infinite band, with the simplifying
assumption mu*=0. We analyze six different symmetries of the order parameter:
s, d, s+id, s+d, extended s and anisotropic s, by assuming that the spectral
function alpha^{2}F(Omega) contains an isotropic part alpha^{2}F(Omega)_{is}
and an anisotropic one, alpha^{2}F(Omega)_{an}, such that
alpha^{2}F(Omega)_{an} = g alpha^{2}F(Omega)_{is}, where g is a constant.
We compare the resulting conductance curves at T=2 K to those obtained by
analytical continuation of the imaginary-axis solution of the EEs, and we show
that the agreement is not equally good for all symmetries. Then, we discuss the
effect of non-magnetic impurities on the theoretical tunneling conductance
curves at T=4 K for all the symmetries considered.
Finally, as an example, we apply our calculations to the case of
optimally-doped high-T_{c} superconductors (HTSC). Surprisingly, although the
possibility of explaining the very complex phenomenology of HTSC is probably
beyond the limits of the Eliashberg theory, the comparison of the theoretical
curves calculated at T=4 K with the experimental ones obtained in various
optimally-doped copper-oxides gives fairly good results.Comment: 11 pages, 11 figures, 2 tables. References added, figs. 6,7,10 and 11
changed, text change
On the class SI of J-contractive functions intertwining solutions of linear differential equations
In the PhD thesis of the second author under the supervision of the third
author was defined the class SI of J-contractive functions, depending on a
parameter and arising as transfer functions of overdetermined conservative 2D
systems invariant in one direction. In this paper we extend and solve in the
class SI, a number of problems originally set for the class SC of functions
contractive in the open right-half plane, and unitary on the imaginary line
with respect to some preassigned signature matrix J. The problems we consider
include the Schur algorithm, the partial realization problem and the
Nevanlinna-Pick interpolation problem. The arguments rely on a correspondence
between elements in a given subclass of SI and elements in SC. Another
important tool in the arguments is a new result pertaining to the classical
tangential Schur algorithm.Comment: 46 page
Deformation Quantization of a Certain Type of Open Systems
We give an approach to open quantum systems based on formal deformation
quantization. It is shown that classical open systems of a certain type can be
systematically quantized into quantum open systems preserving the complete
positivity of the open time evolution. The usual example of linearly coupled
harmonic oscillators is discussed.Comment: Major update. Improved main statements. 21 page
Temperature Dependence of the Flux Line Lattice Transition into Square Symmetry in Superconducting LuNiBC
We have investigated the temperature dependence of the H || c flux line
lattice structural phase transition from square to hexagonal symmetry, in the
tetragonal superconductor LuNi_2B_2C (T_c = 16.6 K). At temperatures below 10 K
the transition onset field, H_2(T), is only weakly temperature dependent. Above
10 K, H_2(T) rises sharply, bending away from the upper critical field. This
contradicts theoretical predictions of H_2(T) merging with the upper critical
field, and suggests that just below the H_c2(T)-curve the flux line lattice
might be hexagonal.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Do good health and material circumstances protect older people from the increased risk of death after bereavement?
This is an open access Article. Copyright @ 2012 The AuthorsAn increased risk of death in persons who have suffered spousal bereavement has been described in many populations. The impact of modifying factors, such as chronic disease and material circumstances, is less well understood. The authors followed 171,120 couples 60 years of age or older in a United Kingdom primary care database between 2005 and 2010 for an average of 4 years. A total of 26,646 (15.5%) couples experienced bereavement, with mean follow up after bereavement of 2 years. In a model adjusted for age, sex, comorbid conditions at baseline, material deprivation based on area of residence, season, and smoking status, the hazard ratio for mortality in the first year after bereavement was 1.25 (95% confidence interval: 1.18, 1.33). Further adjustment for changes in comorbid conditions throughout follow up did not alter the hazard ratio for bereavement (hazard ratio = 1.27, 95% confidence interval: 1.19, 1.35). The association was strongest in individuals with no significant chronic comorbid conditions throughout follow up (hazard ratio = 1.50, 95% confidence interval: 1.28, 1.77) and in more affluent couples (P = 0.035). In the first year after bereavement, the association between bereavement and death is not primarily mediated through worsening or new onset of chronic disease. Good health and material circumstances do not protect individuals from increased mortality rates after bereavement.This study was funded by a grant from the Dunhill Medical Trust
Effect of bilayer coupling on tunneling conductance of double-layer high T_c cuprates
Physical effects of bilayer coupling on the tunneling spectroscopy of high
T cuprates are investigated. The bilayer coupling separates the bonding
and antibonding bands and leads to a splitting of the coherence peaks in the
tunneling differential conductance. However, the coherence peak of the bonding
band is strongly suppressed and broadened by the particle-hole asymmetry in the
density of states and finite quasiparticle life-time, and is difficult to
resolve by experiments. This gives a qualitative account why the bilayer
splitting of the coherence peaks was not clearly observed in tunneling
measurements of double-layer high-T oxides.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, to be published in PR
Scanning Tunneling Spectroscopy in MgB2
We present scanning tunneling microscopy measurements of the surface of
superconducting MgB2 with a critical temperature of 39K. In zero magnetic field
the conductance spectra can be analyzed in terms of the standard BCS theory
with a smearing parameter Gamma. The value of the superconducting gap is 5.2
meV at 4.2 K, with no experimentally significant variation across the surface
of the sample. The temperature dependence of the gap follows the BCS form,
fully consistent with phonon-mediated superconductivity in this novel
superconductor. The application of a magnetic field induces strong
pair-breaking as seen in the conductance spectra in fields up to 6 T.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
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