3,151 research outputs found
Parameter selection for the supply system in a Pilger mill
The braking chamber in the supply system of a Pilger pipe mill is modernized. The influence of constant and variable parameters of the supply system on braking is studied. © 2013 Allerton Press, Inc
Controlling circular polarization of light emitted by quantum dots using chiral photonic crystal slab
We study the polarization properties of light emitted by quantum dots that
are embedded in chiral photonic crystal structures made of achiral planar GaAs
waveguides. A modification of the electromagnetic mode structure due to the
chiral grating fabricated by partial etching of the wave\-guide layer has been
shown to result in a high circular polarization degree of the quantum
dot emission in the absence of external magnetic field. The physical nature of
the phenomenon can be understood in terms of the reciprocity principle taking
into account the structural symmetry. At the resonance wavelength, the
magnitude of is predicted to exceed 98%. The experimentally achieved
value of % is smaller, which is due to the contribution of
unpolarized light scattered by grating defects, thus breaking its periodicity.
The achieved polarization degree estimated removing the unpolarized nonresonant
background from the emission spectra can be estimated to be as high as 96%,
close to the theoretical prediction
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Evidence of neutral transcriptome evolution in plants
The transcriptome of an organism is its set of gene transcripts (mRNAs) at a defined spatial and temporal locus. Because gene expression is affected markedly by
environmental and developmental perturbations, it is widely assumed that transcriptome divergence among taxa represents adaptive phenotypic selection. This assumption has been challenged by neutral theories which propose that stochastic
processes drive transcriptome evolution. To test for evidence of neutral transcriptome evolution in plants, we quantified 18 494 gene transcripts in nonsenescent leaves of 14 taxa of Brassicaceae using robust cross-species transcriptomics which includes a two-step physical and in silicobased normalization procedure based on DNA similarity among taxa. Transcriptome divergence correlates positively with evolutionary distance between taxa and with variation in gene expression among samples. Results are similar for pseudogenes and chloroplast genes evolving at different rates. Remarkably, variation in transcript abundance among root-cell samples correlates positively with
transcriptome divergence among root tissues and among taxa.
Because neutral processes affect transcriptome evolution in plants, many differences in gene expression among or within taxa may be nonfunctional, reflecting ancestral
plasticity and founder effects. Appropriate null models are required when comparing transcriptomes in space and time
Inertial mechanism: dynamical mass as a source of particle creation
A kinetic theory of vacuum particle creation under the action of an inertial
mechanism is constructed within a nonpertrubative dynamical approach. At the
semi-phenomenological level, the inertial mechanism corresponds to quantum
field theory with a time-dependent mass. At the microscopic level, such a
dependence may be caused by different reasons: The non-stationary Higgs
mechanism, the influence of a mean field or condensate, the presence of the
conformal multiplier in the scalar-tensor gravitation theory etc. In what
follows, a kinetic theory in the collisionless approximation is developed for
scalar, spinor and massive vector fields in the framework of the oscillator
representation, which is an effective tool for transition to the quasiparticle
description and for derivation of non-Markovian kinetic equations. Properties
of these equations and relevant observables (particle number and energy
densities, pressure) are studied. The developed theory is applied here to
describe the vacuum matter creation in conformal cosmological models and
discuss the problem of the observed number density of photons in the cosmic
microwave background radiation. As other example, the self-consistent evolution
of scalar fields with non-monotonic self-interaction potentials (the
W-potential and Witten - Di Vecchia - Veneziano model) is considered. In
particular, conditions for appearance of tachyonic modes and a problem of the
relevant definition of a vacuum state are considered.Comment: 51 pages, 18 figures, submitted to PEPAN (JINR, Dubna); v2: added
reference
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