Showing 491 - 500 of 2040 Items

The N = 2 U(N) gauge theory prepotential and periods from a perturbative matrix model calculation

Date: 2003-02-24

Creator: Stephen G. Naculich

Howard J. Schnitzer

Niclas Wyllard

Access: Open access

We perform a completely perturbative matrix model calculation of the physical low-energy quantities of the N = 2 U(N) gauge theory. Within the matrix model framework we propose a perturbative definition of the periods a i in terms of certain tadpole diagrams, and check our conjecture up to first order in the gauge theory instanton expansion. The prescription does not require knowledge of the Seiberg-0Witten differential or curve.We also compute the N = 2 prepotential F(a) perturbatively up to the first-instanton level, finding agreement with the known result. 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.


Vacuum states of N =1* mass deformations of N =4 and N =2 conformal gauge theories and their brane interpretations

Date: 2001-08-27

Creator: Stephen G. Naculich

Howard J. Schnitzer

Niclas Wyllard

Access: Open access

We find the classical supersymmetric vacuum states of a class of N =1* field theories obtained by mass deforming superconformal models with simple gauge groups and N =4 or N =2 supersymmetry. In particular, new classical vacuum states for mass-deformed N =4 models with Sp(2N) and SO(N) gauge symmetry are found. We also derive the classical vacua for various mass-deformed N =2 models with Sp(2N) and SU(N) gauge groups and antisymmetric (and symmetric) hypermultiplets. We suggest interpretations of the mass-deformed vacua in terms of three-branes expanded into five-brane configurations. © 2001 Elsevier Science B.V.


Probing quantum Hall state homogeneity with surface waves

Date: 2013-01-01

Creator: M. E. Msall

W. Dietsche

S. Schmult

K. Von Klitzing

Access: Open access

We study single quantum wells and matched density bilayer samples. Simultaneous measurements of the Hall voltages using low frequency lock-in techniques and of the changes in the 232 MHz (12.6 μm) SAW propagation measured with a vector network-analyzer allow comparison of the complex bulk and edge conductivities. The vtotal 1 bilayer state is seen directly in the SAW measurement only when the conductivity is below ∼ 6 × 10 -7 Siemens and is destroyed at moderate SAW powers by localized heating. The simultaneous reduction of the conductivity minima extracted from Hall data and from SAW data conclusively demonstrates that the vtotal 1 state disappears simultaneously throughout the bulk and not by the formation of competing domains or conducting filaments. © Published under licence by IOP Publishing Ltd.


Arginine methylation of yeast mRNA-binding protein Npl3 directly affects its function, nuclear export, and intranuclear protein interactions

Date: 2005-09-02

Creator: Anne E. McBride

Jeffrey T. Cook

Elizabeth A. Stemmler

Kate L. Rutledge

Kelly A., McGrath

Jeffrey A. Rubens

Access: Open access

Arginine methylation can affect both nucleocytoplasmic transport and protein-protein interactions of RNA-binding proteins. These effects are seen in cells that lack the yeast hnRNP methyltransferase (HMT1), raising the question of whether effects on specific proteins are direct or indirect. The presence of multiple arginines in individual methylated proteins also raises the question of whether overall methylation or methylation of a subset of arginines affects protein function. We have used the yeast mRNA-binding protein Npl3 to address these questions in vivo. Matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization Fourier transform mass spectrometry was used to identify 17 methylated arginines in Npl3 purified from yeast: whereas 10 Arg-Gly-Gly (RGG) tripeptides were exclusively dimethylated, variable levels off methylation were found for 5 RGG and 2 RG motif arginines. We constructed a set of Npl3 proteins in which subsets of the RGG arginines were mutated to lysine. Expression of these mutant proteins as the sole form of Npl3 specifically affected growth of a strain that requires Hmtl. Although decreased growth generally correlated with increased numbers of Arg-to-Lys mutations, lysine substitutions in the N terminus of the RGG domain showed more severe effects. Npl3 with all 15 RGG arginines mutated to lysine exited the nucleus independent of Hmtl, indicating a direct effect of methylation on Npl3 transport. These mutations also resulted in a decreased, methylation-independent interaction of Npl3 with transcription elongation factor Tho2 and inhibited Npl3 self-association. These results support a model in which arginine methylation facilitates Npl3 export directly by weakening contacts with nuclear proteins. © 2005 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.


From local to global behavior in competitive Lotka-Volterra systems

Date: 2003-01-01

Creator: E. C. Zeeman

M. L. Zeeman

Access: Open access

In this paper we exploit the linear, quadratic, monotone and geometric structures of competitive Lotka-Volterra systems of arbitrary dimension to give geometric, algebraic and computational hypotheses for ruling out nontrivial recurrence. We thus deduce the global dynamics of a system from its local dynamics. The geometric hypotheses rely on the introduction of a split Liapunov function. We show that if a system has a fixed point p ∈ int R+n and the carrying simplex of the system lies to one side of its tangent hyperplane at p, then there is no nontrivial recurrence, and the global dynamics are known. We translate the geometric hypotheses into algebraic hypotheses in terms of the definiteness of a certain quadratic function on the tangent hyperplane. Finally, we derive a computational algorithm for checking the algebraic hypotheses, and we compare this algorithm with the classical Volterra-Liapunov stability theorem for Lotka-Volterra systems.


Can the electroweak symmetry-breaking sector be hidden?

Date: 1992-10-29

Creator: S. G. Naculich

C. P. Yuan

Access: Open access

In a recent paper, Chivukula and Golden claimed that the electroweak symmetry-breaking sector could be hidden if there were many inelastic channels in the longitudinal WW scattering process. They presented a model in which the W's couple to pseudo-Goldstone bosons, which may be difficult to detect experimentally. Because of these inelastic channels, thw WW interactions do not become strong in the TeV region. We demonstrate that, despite the reduced WW elastic amplitudes in this model, the total event rate (∼ 5000 extra longitudinal W+W- pairs produced in one standard SSC year) does not decrease with an increasing number of inelastic channels, and is roughly the same as in a model with a broad high-energy resonance and no inelastic channels. © 1992.


Carbon cycle studies based on the distribution of O2 in air

Date: 1999-01-01

Creator: Michael L. Bender

Mark O. Battle

Access: Open access



Statement by Allen Sockabasin collected by Rachel George on January 20, 2015

Date: 2015-01-20

Creator: Allen Sockabasin

Access: Open access



Miniature of A Small College in Maine
A Small College in Maine
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    Interview with Kermit Lipez by Mike Hastings

    Date: 2009-11-20

    Creator: Kermit V Lipez

    Access: Open access

    Biographial Note

    Kermit Victor Lipez was born August 18, 1941, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, to Abraham Hyman Lipez and Beatrice (Mayerson) Lipez. He was graduated from Haverford College in 1963 and took his law degree from Yale Law School in 1967. In 1990, he obtained a master of laws degree from the University of Virginia School of Law. He began his legal career in the Civil Rights Division of the U.S. Dept. of Justice (1967-1968) before serving as special assistant and legal counsel to Maine Governor Ken Curtis (1968-1971). From 1971 to 1972, he served as a legislative aide to Senator Edmund Muskie and then entered private practice as an attorney in Maine. From 1985 to 1994, he presided as a justice of the Maine Superior Court, and from 1994 to 1998 he sat on the Maine Supreme Court. Since 1998, he has served as a federal judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit.

    Summary

    Interview includes discussion of: family and educational background; early civil rights work; 1970 Maine gubernatorial election recount; Maine 1974 gubernatorial campaign; playing tennis; George Mitchell’s personal attributes; First Circuit Court of Appeals; Ken Curtis; Edmund S. Muskie’s staff.