3,524 research outputs found
Retinal S-antigen Th1 cell epitope mapping in patients with Behcet's disease
Background - Retinal S-antigen (S-Ag) is a most characterized autoantigen of autoimmune uveitis. The recognized immunodominant epitope of human S-Ag in patients with uveitis has not been identified. In this study, we selected certain patients with active uveitis to map the Th1 cell epitope spectrum of human S-Ag in Behcet's disease(BD). Methods - Blood samples were taken from eight active BD patients who showed an immune response to 40 mixed overlapping peptides spanning the entire sequence of human S-Ag. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells were isolated and stimulated with single S-Ag peptide at 5 mu g/ml or 20 mu g/ml. Single-cell immune responses were measured by IFN-gamma ELIspot assay. Results - BD patients heterogeneously responded to the S-Ag peptides at two concentrations. In general, the responses to 5 mu g/ml peptides were slightly stronger than those to 20 mu g/ml peptides, while the maximum SFC frequency to single peptide at the two concentrations was similar. Several peptides including P31, P35 and P40 induced a prominent response, with the frequency of S-Ag specific cells being about 0.007%. Significant reactivity pattern shift was noted in patients with different disease courses. Conclusions - Certain active BD patients have S-Ag specific Th1 cells with a low frequency. The S-Ag epitope specificity between patients is highly heterogeneous, and varies with the uveitis cours
Spatio-temporal patterns of crab fisheries in the main bays of Guangdong Province, China
Using a semi-balloon otter trawl, crab fisheries in the main bays of Guangdong Province, China, were carried out seasonally . A total of 70 species were found, all belonging to the South China Sea Faunal sub region in the tropical India-West-Pacific Faunal Region. The clustering and nMDS ordination analysis revealed the existence of three groups. Group 1 included Hailing Bay and four bays to its east where typical species were Portunus sanguinolentus, P. pelagicus and Charybdis feriatus. Group 2 included Shuidong Bay and Leizhou Bay where typical species were P. sanguinolentus, P. pelagicus and P. hastatoides. Group 3 was Liusha Bay where typical species were C. feriatus, C. vadorum and C. truncate. The spatial and temporal variations of crab fisheries were mainly associated with characteristics of the sediment, seasonal changes and their own biological characteristics, but not significantly with water depth, temperature, salinity, and the “mid-summer fishing moratorium” conservation measure
Exact solution of the trigonometric vertex model with non-diagonal open boundaries
The trigonometric vertex model with {\it generic
non-diagonal} boundaries is studied. The double-row transfer matrix of the
model is diagonalized by algebraic Bethe ansatz method in terms of the
intertwiner and the corresponding face-vertex relation. The eigenvalues and the
corresponding Bethe ansatz equations are obtained.Comment: Latex file, 25 pages; V2: minor typos corrected, the version appears
in JHE
Collective edge modes in fractional quantum Hall systems
Over the past few years one of us (Murthy) in collaboration with R. Shankar
has developed an extended Hamiltonian formalism capable of describing the
ground state and low energy excitations in the fractional quantum Hall regime.
The Hamiltonian, expressed in terms of Composite Fermion operators,
incorporates all the nonperturbative features of the fractional Hall regime, so
that conventional many-body approximations such as Hartree-Fock and
time-dependent Hartree-Fock are applicable. We apply this formalism to develop
a microscopic theory of the collective edge modes in fractional quantum Hall
regime. We present the results for edge mode dispersions at principal filling
factors and for systems with unreconstructed edges. The
primary advantage of the method is that one works in the thermodynamic limit
right from the beginning, thus avoiding the finite-size effects which
ultimately limit exact diagonalization studies.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures, See cond-mat/0303359 for related result
Coulomb Gaps in One-Dimensional Spin-Polarized Electron Systems
We investigate the density of states (DOS) near the Fermi energy of
one-dimensional spin-polarized electron systems in the quantum regime where the
localization length is comparable to or larger than the inter-particle
distance. The Wigner lattice gap of such a system, in the presence of weak
disorder, can occur precisely at the Fermi energy, coinciding with the Coulomb
gap in position. The interplay between the two is investigated by treating the
long-range Coulomb interaction and the random disorder potential in a
self-consistent Hartree-Fock approximation. The DOS near the Fermi energy is
found to be well described by a power law whose exponent decreases with
increasing disorder strength.Comment: 4 pages, revtex, 4 figures, to be published in Phys. Rev. B as a
Rapid Communicatio
Curvature, hybridization, and STM images of carbon nanotubes
The curvature effects in carbon nanotubes are studied analytically as a
function of chirality. The pi-orbitals are found to be significantly
rehybridized in all tubes, so that they are never normal to the tubes' surface.
This results in a curvature induced gap in the electronic band-structure, which
turns out to be larger than previous estimates. The tilting of the pi-orbitals
should be observable by atomic resolution scanning tunneling microscopy
measurements.Comment: Four pages in revtex format including four epsfig-embedded figures.
The latest version in PDF format is available from
http://fy.chalmers.se/~eggert/papers/hybrid.pd
Photo--assisted current and shot noise in the fractional quantum Hall effect
The effect of an AC perturbation on the shot noise of a fractional quantum
Hall fluid is studied both in the weak and the strong backscattering regimes.
It is known that the zero-frequency current is linear in the bias voltage,
while the noise derivative exhibits steps as a function of bias. In contrast,
at Laughlin fractions, the backscattering current and the backscattering noise
both exhibit evenly spaced singularities, which are reminiscent of the
tunneling density of states singularities for quasiparticles. The spacing is
determined by the quasiparticle charge and the ratio of the DC bias
with respect to the drive frequency. Photo--assisted transport can thus be
considered as a probe for effective charges at such filling factors, and could
be used in the study of more complicated fractions of the Hall effect. A
non-perturbative method for studying photo--assisted transport at is
developed, using a refermionization procedure.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figure
Determinant Representations of Correlation Functions for the Supersymmetric t-J Model
Working in the -basis provided by the factorizing -matrix, the scalar
products of Bethe states for the supersymmetric t-J model are represented by
determinants. By means of these results, we obtain determinant representations
of correlation functions for the model.Comment: Latex File, 41 pages, no figure; V2: minor typos corrected, V3: This
version will appear in Commun. Math. Phy
Topological Phase Transition and Electrically Tunable Diamagnetism in Silicene
Silicene is a monolayer of silicon atoms forming a honeycomb lattice. The
lattice is actually made of two sublattices with a tiny separation. Silicene is
a topological insulator, which is characterized by a full insulating gap in the
bulk and helical gapless edges. It undergoes a phase transition from a
topological insulator to a band insulator by applying external electric field.
Analyzing the spin Chern number based on the effective Dirac theory, we find
their origin to be a pseudospin meron in the momentum space. The peudospin
degree of freedom arises from the two-sublattice structure. Our analysis makes
clear the mechanism how a phase transition occurs from a topological insulator
to a band insulator under increasing electric field. We propose a method to
determine the critical electric field with the aid of diamagnetism of silicene.
Diamagnetism is tunable by the external electric field, and exhibits a singular
behaviour at the critical electric field. Our result is important also from the
viewpoint of cross correlation between electric field and magnetism. Our
finding will be important for future electro-magnetic correlated devices.Comment: 4 pages,5 figure
Edge reconstruction in the fractional quantum Hall regime
The interplay of electron-electron interaction and confining potential can
lead to the reconstruction of fractional quantum Hall edges. We have performed
exact diagonalization studies on microscopic models of fractional quantum Hall
liquids, in finite size systems with disk geometry, and found numerical
evidence of edge reconstruction under rather general conditions. In the present
work we have taken into account effects like layer thickness and Landau level
mixing, which are found to be of quantitative importance in edge physics. Due
to edge reconstruction, additional nonchiral edge modes arise for both
incompressible and compressible states. These additional modes couple to
electromagnetic fields and thus can be detected in microwave conductivity
measurements. They are also expected to affect the exponent of electron Green's
function, which has been measured in tunneling experiments. We have studied in
this work the electric dipole spectral function that is directly related to the
microwave conductivity measurement. Our results are consistent with the
enhanced microwave conductivity observed in experiments performed on samples
with an array of antidots at low temperatures, and its suppression at higher
temperatures. We also discuss the effects of the edge reconstruction on the
single electron spectral function at the edge.Comment: 19 pages, 12 figure
- …
