923 research outputs found
Business cycle volatility and country size: evidence for a sample of OECD countries
The main purpose of this paper is to investigate the relationship between business cycle volatility and country size using quarterly data for a sample of OECD countries over 1960-2000. The results suggest very strongly that the relationship between country size and business cycle volatility is negative and statistically significant. This finding is very robust, suggesting that country size does matter, at least for the severity of cyclical fluctuations
Resonantly enhanced filamentation in gases
In this Letter, a low-loss Kerr-driven optical filament in Krypton gas is
experimentally reported in the ultraviolet. The experimental findings are
supported by ab initio quantum calculations describing the atomic optical
response. Higher-order Kerr effect induced by three-photon resonant transitions
is identified as the underlying physical mechanism responsible for the
intensity stabilization during the filamentation process, while ionization
plays only a minor role. This result goes beyond the commonly-admitted paradigm
of filamentation, in which ionization is a necessary condition of the filament
intensity clamping. At resonance, it is also experimentally demonstrated that
the filament length is greatly extended because of a strong decrease of the
optical losses
Harmonic generation and filamentation: when secondary radiations have primary consequences
In this Letter, it is experimentally and theoretically shown that weak odd
harmonics generated during the propagation of an infrared ultrashort
ultra-intense pulse unexpectedly modify the nonlinear properties of the medium
and lead to a strong modification of the propagation dynamics. This result is
in contrast with all current state-of-the-art propagation model predictions, in
which secondary radiations, such as third harmonic, are expected to have a
negligible action upon the fundamental pulse propagation. By analysing full
three-dimensional ab initio quantum calculations describing the microscopic
atomic optical response, we have identified a fundamental mechanism resulting
from interferences between a direct ionization channel and a channel involving
one single ultraviolet photon. This mechanism is responsible for wide
refractive index modifications in relation with significant variation of the
ionization rate. This work paves the way to the full physical understanding of
the filamentation mechanism and could lead to unexplored phenomena, such as
coherent control of the filamentation by harmonic seeding.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
Subcycle engineering of laser filamentation in gas by harmonic seeding
Manipulating at will the propagation dynamics of high power laser pulses is a
long-standing dream whose accomplishment would lead to the control of a
plethora of fascinating physical phenomena emerging from laser-matter
interaction. The present work represents a significant step towards such an
ideal control by manipulating the nonlinear optical properties of the gas
medium at the quantum level. This is accomplished by engineering the intense
laser pulse experiencing filamentation at the subcycle level with a relatively
weak (about 1%) third-harmonic radiation. The control results from quantum
interferences between a single and a two-color (mixing the fundamental
frequency with its 3rd harmonic) ionization channel. This mechanism, which
depends on the relative phase between the two electric fields, is responsible
for wide refractive index modifications in relation with significant
enhancement or suppression of the ionization rate. As a first application, we
demonstrate the production and control of an axially modulated plasma channel
that could be used for quasi-phase matched laser wakefield acceleration.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
Orientation and Alignment Echoes
We present what is probably the simplest classical system featuring the echo
phenomenon - a collection of randomly oriented free rotors with dispersed
rotational velocities. Following excitation by a pair of time-delayed impulsive
kicks, the mean orientation/alignment of the ensemble exhibits multiple echoes
and fractional echoes. We elucidate the mechanism of the echo formation by
kick-induced filamentation of phase space, and provide the first experimental
demonstration of classical alignment echoes in a thermal gas of CO_2 molecules
excited by a pair of femtosecond laser pulses
On the interpretation of negative birefringence observed in strong-field optical pump-probe experiments: high-order Kerr and plasma grating effects
The analysis of negative birefringence optically induced in major air
components (Loriot et al., [1, 2]) is revisited in light of the recently
reported plasma grating-induced phase-shift effect predicted for strong field
pump-probe experiments (Wahlstrand and Milchberg, [3]). The nonlinear birefrin-
gence induced by a short and intense laser pulse in argon is measured by
femtosecond time-resolved polarimetry. The experiments are performed with
degenerate colors, where the pump and probe beam share the same spectrum, or
with two different colors and non-overlapping spectra. The in- terpretation of
the experimental results is substantiated using a numerical 3D+1 model
accounting for nonlinear propagation effects, cross-beam geometry of the
interacting laser pulses, and detec- tion technique. The model also includes
the ionization rate of argon and high-order Kerr indices introduced by Loriot
et al. enabling to assess the contribution of both terms to the observed
effect. The results show that the ionization-induced phase-shift has a minor
contribution compared to the high-order Kerr effect formerly introduced, the
latter allowing a reasonably good reproduction of the experimental data for the
present conditions.Comment: 10 pages, 11 figure
The ejection of triatomic molecular hydrogen ions H-3(+) produced by the interaction of benzene molecules with ultrafast laser pulses
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PPL2 translesion polymerase is essential for the completion of chromosomal DNA replication in the african trypanosome
Faithful copying of the genome is essential for life. In
eukaryotes, a single archaeo-eukaryotic primase (AEP), DNA primase, is required for the initiation and progression of DNA replication. Here we have identified additional eukaryotic AEP-like proteins with DNA-dependent primase and/or polymerase activity. Uniquely, the genomes of trypanosomatids, a group of kinetoplastid protozoa of significant medical importance, encode two PrimPol-like (PPL) proteins. In the African trypanosome, PPL2 is a nuclear enzyme present in G2 phase cells. Following PPL2
knockdown, a cell-cycle arrest occurs after the bulk of DNA synthesis, the DNA damage response is activated, and cells fail to recover. Consistent with this phenotype, PPL2 replicates damaged DNA templates in vitro, including templates containing the UV-induced pyrimidine-pyrimidone (6-4) photoproduct. Furthermore, PPL2 accumulates at sites of nuclear DNA damage. Taken together, our results indicate an essential role for PPL2 in postreplication tolerance of endogenous DNA damage, thus allowing completion of genome duplication
An Elisa-Based Platform for Rapid Identification of Structure-Dependent Nucleic Acid-Protein Interactions Detects Novel DNA Triplex Interactors
Unusual nucleic acid structures play vital roles as intermediates in many cellular processes and, in the case of peptide nucleic acid (PNA)-mediated triplexes, are leveraged as tools for therapeutic gene editing. However, due to their transient nature, an understanding of the factors that interact with and process dynamic nucleic acid structures remains limited. Here, we developed snapELISA (structure-specific nucleic acid-binding protein ELISA), a rapid high-throughput platform to interrogate and compare up to 2688 parallel nucleic acid structure-protein interactions in vitro. We applied this system to both triplex-forming oligonucleotide-induced DNA triplexes and DNA-bound PNA heterotriplexes to describe the identification of previously known and novel interactors for both structures. For PNA heterotriplex recognition analyses, snapELISA identified factors implicated in nucleotide excision repair (XPA, XPC), single-strand annealing repair (RAD52), and recombination intermediate structure binding (TOP3A, BLM, MUS81). We went on to validate selected factor localization to genome-targeted PNA structures within clinically relevant loci in human cells. Surprisingly, these results demonstrated XRCC5 localization to PNA triplex-forming sites in the genome, suggesting the presence of a double-strand break intermediate. These results describe a powerful comparative approach for identifying structure-specific nucleic acid interactions and expand our understanding of the mechanisms of triplex structure recognition and repair
Sources of Output Fluctuations During the Interwar Period: Further Evidence on the Causes of the Great Depression
This paper decomposes output fluctuations during the 1913 to 1940 period into components resulting from aggregate supply and aggregate demand shocks. We estimates a number of different models, all of which yield qualitatively similar results. While identification is normally achieved by assuming that aggregate demand shocks have no long run real effects, we also estimate models that allow demand shocks to permanently affect output. Our findings support the following three conclusions: (i) there was a large negative aggregate demand shock in November 1929, immediately after the stock market crash; (ii) aggregate demand shocks are mainly responsible for the decline in output through mid to late 1931; (iii) beginning in mid 1931 there is an aggregate supply collapse that coincides with the onset on severe bank panics.
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