Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Article (1876)
- Preprint (1253)
- Doctoral Thesis (593)
- Conference Proceeding (248)
- diplomthesis (101)
- Bachelor Thesis (75)
- Master's Thesis (61)
- Contribution to a Periodical (46)
- Book (33)
- Diploma Thesis (33)
Keywords
- Kollisionen schwerer Ionen (47)
- heavy ion collisions (44)
- LHC (25)
- Quark-Gluon-Plasma (25)
- Heavy Ion Experiments (20)
- equation of state (19)
- quark-gluon plasma (19)
- Relativistic heavy-ion collisions (16)
- QCD (15)
- QGP (15)
Institute
- Physik (4414) (remove)
Hadronic polarization and the related anisotropy of the dilepton angular distribution are studied for the reaction πN→Ne+e−. We employ consistent effective interactions for baryon resonances up to spin-5/2, where non-physical degrees of freedom are eliminated, to compute the anisotropy coefficients for isolated intermediate baryon resonances. It is shown that the spin and parity of the intermediate baryon resonance is reflected in the angular dependence of the anisotropy coefficient. We then compute the anisotropy coefficient including the N(1520) and N(1440) resonances, which are essential at the collision energy of the recent data obtained by the HADES Collaboration on this reaction. We conclude that the anisotropy coefficient provides useful constraints for unraveling the resonance contributions to this process.
A newly proposed framework of perfect-fluid relativistic hydrodynamics for particles with spin 1/2 is briefly reviewed. The hydrodynamic equations follow entirely from the conservation laws for energy, momentum, and angular momentum. The incorporation of the angular-momentum conservation requires that the spin polarization tensor ωμν is introduced. It plays a role of a Lagrange multiplier conjugated to the spin tensor Sλ,μν. The space-time evolution of the spin polarization tensor depends on the specific form chosen for the spin tensor.
We study the phase structure of QCD at finite temperature within a Polyakov-loop extended quark–meson model. Such a model describes the chiral as well as the confinement-deconfinement dynamics. In the present investigation, based on the approach and results put forward in [1], [2], [3], [4], both matter and glue fluctuations are included. We present results for the order parameters as well as some thermodynamic observables and find very good agreement with recent results from lattice QCD.
We investigate the phase structure of strongly interacting matter at non-vanishing isospin before the onset of pion condensation in the framework of the unquenched Polyakov–Quark-Meson model with 2+1 quark flavors. We show results for the order parameters and all relevant thermodynamic quantities. In particular, we obtain a moderate change of the pressure with isospin at vanishing baryon chemical potential, whereas the chiral condensate decreases more appreciably. We compare the effective model to recent lattice data for the decrease of the pseudo-critical temperature with the isospin chemical potential. We also demonstrate the major role played by the value of the pion mass in the curvature of the transition line, and the need for lattice results with a physical pion mass. Limitations of the model at nonzero chemical potential are also discussed.
We show from first principles the emergence of classical Boltzmann equations from relativistic nonequilibrium quantum field theory as described by the Kadanoff–Baym equations. Our method applies to a generic quantum field, coupled to a collection of background fields and sources, in a homogeneous and isotropic spacetime. The analysis is based on analytical solutions to the full Kadanoff–Baym equations, using the WKB approximation. This is in contrast to previous derivations of kinetic equations that rely on similar physical assumptions, but obtain approximate equations of motion from a gradient expansion in momentum space. We show that the system follows a generalized Boltzmann equation whenever the WKB approximation holds. The generalized Boltzmann equation, which includes off-shell transport, is valid far from equilibrium and in a time dependent background, such as the expanding universe.
We demonstrate that a Quark–Gluon Plasma (QGP) with a dilute admixture of heavy quarks has, in general, a lower speed of sound than a “pure” QGP without effects from heavy flavors. The change in the speed of sound is sensitive to the details of the theory, making the hydrodynamic response to “flavoring” a sensitive probe of the underlying microscopic dynamics. We suggest that this effect may be measured in ultrarelativistic heavy ion collisions by relating the event-by-event number of charm quarks to flow observables such as the average transverse momentum.
The width of the ω meson in cold nuclear matter is computed in a hadronic many-body approach, focusing on a detailed treatment of the medium modifications of intermediate πρ states. The π and ρ propagators are dressed by their self-energies in nuclear matter taken from previously constrained many-body calculations. The pion self-energy includes Nh and Δh excitations with short-range correlations, while the ρ self-energy incorporates the same dressing of its 2π cloud with a full 3-momentum dependence and vertex corrections, as well as direct resonance-hole excitations; both contributions were quantitatively fit to total photo-absorption spectra and πN→ρN scattering. Our calculations account for in-medium decays of type ωN→πN(⁎),ππN(Δ), and 2-body absorptions ωNN→NN(⁎),πNN. This causes deviations of the in-medium ω width from a linear behavior in density, with important contributions from spacelike ρ propagators. The ω width from the ρπ cloud may reach up to 200 MeV at normal nuclear matter density, with a moderate 3-momentum dependence. This largely resolves the discrepancy of linear T–ϱ approximations with the values deduced from nuclear photoproduction measurements.
Within the statistical model, the net strangeness conservation and incomplete total strangeness equilibration lead to the suppression of strange particle multiplicities. Furthermore, suppression effects appear to be stronger in small systems. By treating the production of strangeness within the canonical ensemble formulation we developed a simple model which allows to predict the excitation function of K+/π+ ratio in nucleus–nucleus collisions. In doing so we assumed that different values of K+/π+, measured in p + p and Pb + Pb interactions at the same collision energy per nucleon, are driven by the finite size effects only. These predictions may serve as a baseline for experimental results from NA61/SHINE at the CERN SPS and the future CBM experiment at FAIR.
We construct net baryon number and strangeness susceptibilities as well as correlations between electric charge, strangeness and baryon number from experimental data at midrapidity of the ALICE Collaboration at CERN. The data were taken in central Pb–Pb collisions at sNN=2.76 TeV and cover one unit of rapidity. The resulting fluctuations and correlations are consistent with Lattice QCD results at the chiral crossover pseudocritical temperature Tc≃155 MeV. This agreement lends strong support to the assumption that the fireball created in these collisions is of thermal origin and exhibits characteristic properties expected in QCD at the transition from the quark gluon plasma to the hadronic phase. The volume of the fireball for one unit of rapidity at Tc is found to exceed 3000 fm3. A detailed discussion on uncertainties in the temperature and volume of the fireball is presented. The results are linked to pion interferometry measurements and predictions from percolation theory.
Possible hadronization of supercooled QGP, created in heavy ion collisions at RHIC and SPS, is discussed within a Bjorken hydrodynamic model. Such a hadronization is expected to be a very fast shock-like process, what, if hadronization coincides or shortly followed by freeze out, could explain a part of the HBT puzzle, i.e., the flash-like particle emission (Rout/Rside≈1). HBT data also show that the expansion time before freeze out is very short (∼6–10 fm/c). In this Letter we discuss the question of supercooled QGP and the timescale of the reaction.
The fluctuations in the ideal quantum gases are studied using the strongly intensive measures Δ[A,B] and Σ[A,B] defined in terms of two extensive quantities A and B. In the present Letter, these extensive quantities are taken as the motional variable, A=X, the system energy E or transverse momentum PT, and number of particles, B=N. This choice is most often considered in studying the event-by-event fluctuations and correlations in high energy nucleus–nucleus collisions. The recently proposed special normalization ensures that Δ and Σ are dimensionless and equal to unity for fluctuations given by the independent particle model. In statistical mechanics, the grand canonical ensemble formulation within the Boltzmann approximation gives an example of independent particle model. Our results demonstrate the effects due to the Bose and Fermi statistics. Estimates of the effects of quantum statistics in the hadron gas at temperatures and chemical potentials typical for thermal models of hadron production in high energy collisions are presented. In the case of massless particles and zero chemical potential the Δ and Σ measures are calculated analytically.
We present, in the framework of the interacting hadron resonance gas, an evaluation of thermodynamical quantities. The interaction is modelled via a correction for the finite size of the hadrons. We investigate the sensitivity of the model calculations on the radius of the hadrons, which is a parameter of the model. Our calculations for thermodynamical quantities as energy and entropy densities and pressure are confronted with predictions using the lattice Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD) formalism.
Loosely-bound objects such as light nuclei are copiously produced in proton-proton and nuclear collisions at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), despite the fact that typical energy scales in such collisions exceed the binding energy of the objects by orders of magnitude. In this review we summarise the experimental observations, put them into context of previous studies at lower energies, and discuss the underlying physics. Most of the data discussed here were taken by the ALICE Collaboration during LHC Run1, which started in 2009 and ended in 2013. Specifically we focus on the production of (anti-)nuclei and (anti-)hypernuclei. Also included are searches for exotic objects like the H-dibaryon, a possible uuddss hexaquark state, or also a possible bound state of a Λ hyperon and a neutron. Furthermore, the study of hyperon-nucleon and hyperon-hyperon interactions through measurements of correlations are briefly discussed, especially in connection with the possible existence of loosely-bound states composed of these baryons. In addition, some results in the strange and charmed hadron sector are presented, to show the capabilities for future measurements on loosely-bound objects in this direction. Finally, perspectives are given for measurements in the currently ongoing Run2 period of the LHC and in the future LHC Run3.
The HADES experiment provides a large acceptance combined with a high mass resolution and therefore makes it possible to study dielectron and hadron production in heavy-ion collisions with unprecedented precision. With the high statistics of seven billion Au+Au collisions at 1.23 AGeV recorded in 2012 the investigation of collective effects and particle correlations is possible with unprecedented accuracy. We present multi-differential data on directed (v1) and elliptic (v2) flow, and the first measurement of triangular flow (v3), of protons and deuterons.
HADES has a large acceptance combined with a good mass-resolution and therefore allows the study of dielectron and hadron production in heavy-ion collisions with unprecedented precision. With the statistics of seven billion Au-Au collisions at 1.23A GeV recorded in 2012, the investigation of higher-order flow harmonics is possible. At the BEVALAC and SIS18 directed and elliptic flow has been measured for pions, charged kaons, protons, neutrons and fragments, but higher-order harmonics have not yet been studied. They provide additional important information on the properties of the dense hadronic medium produced in heavy-ion collisions. We present here a high-statistics, multidifferential measurement of v1 and v2 for protons in Au+Au collisions at 1.23A GeV.
Quarkonia, i.e. bound states of bb‾ and cc‾ quarks, are powerful observables to study the properties of nuclear matter under extreme conditions. The formation of a Quark-Gluon Plasma (QGP), which is predicted by lattice QCD calculations at high temperatures as reached at the LHC energies, has a strong influence on the production and behavior of quarkonia. The latest ALICE results on bottomonium and charmonium production in nucleus−nucleus collisions are presented. This includes measurements of the ϒ(1S) and ϒ(2S) nuclear modification factor (RAA) at forward rapidity and the J/ψ RAA and ν2 as a function of centrality, pT and rapidity in Pb–Pb collisions at sNN=5.02TeV. Also, first results from J/ψ measurements in Xe–Xe collisions at sNN=5.44TeV are presented. Further on, the experimental results are compared to various calculations from theoretical models.
Influence of the emission site on the photoelectron circular dichroism in trifluoromethyloxirane
(2022)
We report a joint experimental and theoretical study of the differential photoelectron circular dichroism (PECD) in inner-shell photoionization of uniaxially oriented trifluoromethyloxirane. By adjusting the photon energy of the circularly polarized synchrotron radiation, we address 1s-photoionization of the oxygen, different carbon, and all fluorine atoms. The photon energies were chosen such that in all cases electrons with a similar kinetic energy of about 11 eV are emitted. Employing coincident detection of electrons and fragment ions, we concentrate on identical molecular fragmentation channels for all of the electron-emitter scenarios. Thereby, we systematically examine the influence of the emission site of the photoelectron wave on the differential PECD. We observe large differences in the PECD signals. The present experimental results are supported by corresponding relaxed-core Hartree–Fock calculations.
Effects of a phase transition on HBT correlations in an integrated Boltzmann+hydrodynamics approach
(2009)
A systematic study of HBT radii of pions, produced in heavy ion collisions in the intermediate energy regime (SPS), from an integrated (3+1)d Boltzmann+hydrodynamics approach is presented. The calculations in this hybrid approach, incorporating an hydrodynamic stage into the Ultra-relativistic Quantum Molecular Dynamics transport model, allow for a comparison of different equations of state retaining the same initial conditions and final freeze-out. The results are also compared to the pure cascade transport model calculations in the context of the available data. Furthermore, the effect of different treatments of the hydrodynamic freeze-out procedure on the HBT radii are investigated. It is found that the HBT radii are essentially insensitive to the details of the freeze-out prescription as long as the final hadronic interactions in the cascade are taken into account. The HBT radii RL and RO and the RO/RS ratio are sensitive to the EoS that is employed during the hydrodynamic evolution. We conclude that the increased lifetime in case of a phase transition to a QGP (via a Bag Model equation of state) is not supported by the available data.
Hadron production and their suppression in Pb+Pb collisions at LHC at a center-of-mass energy of sNN=2.76 TeV are studied within a multiphase transport (AMPT) model whose initial conditions are obtained from the recently updated HIJING 2.0 model. The centrality dependence of charged hadron multiplicity dNch/dη at midrapidity was found quite sensitive to the largely uncertain gluon shadowing parameter sg that determines the nuclear modification of the gluon distribution. We find final-state parton scatterings reduce considerably hadron yield at midrapidity and enforces a smaller gluon shadowing to be consistent with dNch/dη data at LHC. With such a constrained parton shadowing, charged hadron and neutral pion production over a wide transverse momenta range are investigated in AMPT. Relative to nucleon–nucleon collisions, the particle yield in central heavy ion collisions is suppressed due to parton energy loss. While the calculated magnitude and pattern of suppression is found consistent with that measured in Au+Au collisions at sNN=0.2 TeV at RHIC, at the LHC energy the suppression is overpredicted which may imply the medium formed at LHC is less opaque than expected from simple RHIC extrapolations. Reduction of the QCD coupling constant αs by ∼30% in the higher temperature plasma formed at LHC as compared to that at RHIC was found to reproduce the measured suppression at LHC.
The ALICE experiment has measured low-mass dimuon production in pp collisions at √s=7 TeV in the dimuon rapidity region 2.5<y<4. The observed dimuon mass spectrum is described as a superposition of resonance decays (η,ρ,ω,η′,ϕ) into muons and semi-leptonic decays of charmed mesons. The measured production cross sections for ω and ϕ are σω(1<pt<5 GeV/c,2.5<y<4)=5.28±0.54(stat)±0.49(syst) mb and σϕ(1<pt<5 GeV/c,2.5<y<4)=0.940±0.084(stat)±0.076(syst) mb. The differential cross sections d2σ/dydpt are extracted as a function of pt for ω and ϕ. The ratio between the ρ and ω cross section is obtained. Results for the ϕ are compared with other measurements at the same energy and with predictions by models.
he first measurements of the invariant differential cross sections of inclusive π0 and η meson production at mid-rapidity in proton–proton collisions at s=0.9 TeV and s=7 TeV are reported. The π0 measurement covers the ranges 0.4<pT<7 GeV/c and 0.3<pT<25 GeV/c for these two energies, respectively. The production of η mesons was measured at s=√7 TeV in the range 0.4<pT<15 GeV/c. Next-to-Leading Order perturbative QCD calculations, which are consistent with the π0 spectrum at s=0.9 TeV, overestimate those of π0 and η mesons at s=√7 TeV, but agree with the measured η/π0 ratio at s=√7 TeV.
Rapidity and transverse momentum dependence of inclusive J/ψ production in pp collisions at √s=7 TeV
(2011)
The ALICE experiment at the LHC has studied inclusive J/ψ production at central and forward rapidities in pp collisions at √s=7 TeV. In this Letter, we report on the first results obtained detecting the J/ψ through the dilepton decay into e+e− and μ+μ− pairs in the rapidity ranges |y|<0.9 and 2.5<y<4, respectively, and with acceptance down to zero pT. In the dielectron channel the analysis was carried out on a data sample corresponding to an integrated luminosity Lint=5.6 nb−1 and the number of signal events is NJ/ψ=352±32(stat.)±28(syst.); the corresponding figures in the dimuon channel are Lint=15.6 nb−1 and NJ/ψ=1924±77(stat.)±144(syst.). The measured production cross sections are σJ/ψ(|y|<0.9)=10.7±1.0(stat.)±1.6(syst.)−2.3+1.6(syst.pol.)μb and σJ/ψ(2.5<y<4)=6.31±0.25(stat.)±0.76(syst.)−1.96+0.95(syst.pol.)μb. The differential cross sections, in transverse momentum and rapidity, of the J/ψ were also measured.
The pT-differential inclusive production cross section of the prompt charm-strange meson Ds+ in the rapidity range |y|<0.5 was measured in proton–proton collisions at s=7 TeV at the LHC using the ALICE detector. The analysis was performed on a data sample of 2.98×108 events collected with a minimum-bias trigger. The corresponding integrated luminosity is Lint=4.8 nb−1. Reconstructing the decay Ds+→ϕπ+, with ϕ→K−K+, and its charge conjugate, about 480 Ds± mesons were counted, after selection cuts, in the transverse momentum range 2<pT<12 GeV/c. The results are compared with predictions from models based on perturbative QCD. The ratios of the cross sections of four D meson species (namely D0, D+, D⁎+ and Ds+) were determined both as a function of pT and integrated over pT after extrapolating to full pT range, together with the strangeness suppression factor in charm fragmentation. The obtained values are found to be compatible within uncertainties with those measured by other experiments in e+e−, ep and pp interactions at various centre-of-mass energies.
Inclusive transverse momentum spectra of primary charged particles in Pb–Pb collisions at √sNN=2.76 TeV have been measured by the ALICE Collaboration at the LHC. The data are presented for central and peripheral collisions, corresponding to 0–5% and 70–80% of the hadronic Pb–Pb cross section. The measured charged particle spectra in |η|<0.8 and 0.3<pT<20 GeV/c are compared to the expectation in pp collisions at the same sNN, scaled by the number of underlying nucleon–nucleon collisions. The comparison is expressed in terms of the nuclear modification factor RAA. The result indicates only weak medium effects (RAA≈0.7) in peripheral collisions. In central collisions, RAA reaches a minimum of about 0.14 at pT=6–7 GeV/c and increases significantly at larger pT. The measured suppression of high-pT particles is stronger than that observed at lower collision energies, indicating that a very dense medium is formed in central Pb–Pb collisions at the LHC.
The first measurement of two-pion Bose–Einstein correlations in central Pb–Pb collisions at √sNN=2.76 TeV at the Large Hadron Collider is presented. We observe a growing trend with energy now not only for the longitudinal and the outward but also for the sideward pion source radius. The pion homogeneity volume and the decoupling time are significantly larger than those measured at RHIC.
The inclusive charged particle transverse momentum distribution is measured in proton–proton collisions at s=900 GeV at the LHC using the ALICE detector. The measurement is performed in the central pseudorapidity region (|η|<0.8) over the transverse momentum range 0.15<pT<10 GeV/c. The correlation between transverse momentum and particle multiplicity is also studied. Results are presented for inelastic (INEL) and non-single-diffractive (NSD) events. The average transverse momentum for |η|<0.8 is 〈pT〉INEL=0.483±0.001 (stat.)±0.007 (syst.) GeV/c and 〈pT〉NSD=0.489±0.001 (stat.)±0.007 (syst.) GeV/c, respectively. The data exhibit a slightly larger 〈pT〉 than measurements in wider pseudorapidity intervals. The results are compared to simulations with the Monte Carlo event generators PYTHIA and PHOJET.
In this paper, we present an overview of some of the existing issues of the research in quantum gravity. We also introduce the basic ideas that led Padmanabhan to consider a duality property in path integrals. Such a duality is consistent with the T-duality in string theory. More importantly, the path integral duality discloses a universal feature of any quantum geometry, namely the existence of a zero point length L0. We also comment about recent developments aiming to expose effects of the zero point length in strong electrodynamics and black holes. There are reasons to believe that the main characters of the phenomenology of quantum gravity may be described by means of a single parameter like L0.
In this Letter we derive the gravity field equations by varying the action for an ultraviolet complete quantum gravity. Then we consider the case of a static source term and we determine an exact black hole solution. As a result we find a regular spacetime geometry: in place of the conventional curvature singularity extreme energy fluctuations of the gravitational field at small length scales provide an effective cosmological constant in a region locally described in terms of a de Sitter space. We show that the new metric coincides with the noncommutative geometry inspired Schwarzschild black hole. Indeed, we show that the ultraviolet complete quantum gravity, generated by ordinary matter is the dual theory of ordinary Einstein gravity coupled to a noncommutative smeared matter. In other words we obtain further insights about that quantum gravity mechanism which improves Einstein gravity in the vicinity of curvature singularities. This corroborates all the existing literature in the physics and phenomenology of noncommutative black holes.
In this Letter we study the radiation measured by an accelerated detector, coupled to a scalar field, in the presence of a fundamental minimal length. The latter is implemented by means of a modified momentum space Green's function. After calibrating the detector, we find that the net flux of field quanta is negligible, and that there is no Planckian spectrum. We discuss possible interpretations of this result, and we comment on experimental implications in heavy ion collisions and atomic systems.
Fuzziness at the horizon
(2010)
We study the stability of the noncommutative Schwarzschild black hole interior by analysing the propagation of a massless scalar field between the two horizons. We show that the spacetime fuzziness triggered by the field higher momenta can cure the classical exponential blue-shift divergence, suppressing the emergence of infinite energy density in a region nearby the Cauchy horizon.
In this Letter, we propose a new scenario emerging from the conjectured presence of a minimal length ℓ in the spacetime fabric, on the one side, and the existence of a new scale invariant, continuous mass spectrum, of un-particles on the other side. We introduce the concept of un-spectral dimension DU of a d-dimensional, euclidean (quantum) spacetime, as the spectral dimension measured by an “un-particle” probe. We find a general expression for the un-spectral dimension DU labelling different spacetime phases: a semi-classical phase, where ordinary spectral dimension gets contribution from the scaling dimension dU of the un-particle probe; a critical “Planckian phase”, where four-dimensional spacetime can be effectively considered two-dimensional when dU=1; a “Trans-Planckian phase”, which is accessible to un-particle probes only, where spacetime as we currently understand it looses its physical meaning.
Quarkyonic or baryquark matter? On the dynamical generation of momentum space shell structure
(2023)
We study the equation of state of a mixture of (quasi-)free constituent quarks and nucleons with hard-core repulsion at zero temperature. Two opposite scenarios for the realization of the Pauli exclusion principle are considered: (i) a Fermi sea of quarks surrounded by a shell of baryons – the quarkyonic matter, and (ii) a Fermi sea of nucleons surrounded by a shell of quarks which we call baryquark matter. In both scenarios, the sizes of the Fermi sea and shell are fixed through energy minimization at fixed baryon number density. While both cases yield a qualitatively similar transition from hadronic to quark matter, we find that baryquark matter is energetically favored in this setup and yields a physically acceptable behavior of the speed of sound without the need to introduce an infrared regulator. In order to retain the theoretically more appealing quarkyonic matter as the preferred form of dense QCD matter will thus require modifications to the existing dynamical generation mechanisms, such as, for example, the introduction of momentum-dependent nuclear interactions.
The production of the hypertriton nuclei HΛ3 and H‾Λ¯3 has been measured for the first time in Pb–Pb collisions at sNN=2.76 TeV with the ALICE experiment at LHC. The pT-integrated HΛ3 yield in one unity of rapidity, dN/dy×B.R.(HΛ3→He3,π−)=(3.86±0.77(stat.)±0.68(syst.))×10−5 in the 0–10% most central collisions, is consistent with the predictions from a statistical thermal model using the same temperature as for the light hadrons. The coalescence parameter B3 shows a dependence on the transverse momentum, similar to the B2 of deuterons and the B3 of 3He nuclei. The ratio of yields S3=HΛ3/(He3×Λ/p) was measured to be S3=0.60±0.13(stat.)±0.21(syst.) in 0–10% centrality events; this value is compared to different theoretical models. The measured S3 is compatible with thermal model predictions. The measured HΛ3 lifetime, τ=181−39+54(stat.)±33(syst.)ps is in agreement within 1σ with the world average value.
The ALICE Collaboration has made the first measurement at the LHC of J/ψ photoproduction in ultra-peripheral Pb–Pb collisions at sNN=2.76 TeV. The J/ψ is identified via its dimuon decay in the forward rapidity region with the muon spectrometer for events where the hadronic activity is required to be minimal. The analysis is based on an event sample corresponding to an integrated luminosity of about 55 μb−1. The cross section for coherent J/ψ production in the rapidity interval −3.6<y<−2.6 is measured to be dσJ/ψcoh/dy=1.00±0.18(stat)−0.26+0.24(syst) mb. The result is compared to theoretical models for coherent J/ψ production and found to be in good agreement with those models which include nuclear gluon shadowing.
Some quantitative data about the carbon-metabolism in Saccharomyces-cells of different ploidy were determined. The amount of carbon, necessary for the formation of a cell, proved to be proportional to the degree of ploidy of the cells. For the duplication of a diploid cell 6,7·10-11g glucose were used. In comparison with respiratory deficient cells the simultaneous utilization of fermentation and respiration metabolism in respiration sufficient cells leads to a decrease of the cell cycle duration, however, the energy needed for the formation of a cell is not decreased. The rate of cell multiplication has a maximum at about 30 °C for all classes of ploidy. Certain assumptions about the utilization of the carbon source were confirmed by experiments with 14C marked glucose.
The nuclear stopping, the elliptic flow, and the HBT interferometry are calculated by the UrQMD transport model, in which potentials for “pre-formed” particles (string fragments) from color fluxtube fragmentation as well as for confined particles are considered. This description provides stronger pressure at the early stage and describes these observables better than the default cascade mode (where the “pre-formed” particles from string fragmentation are treated to be free-streaming). It should be stressed that the inclusion of potential interactions pushes down the calculated HBT radius RO and pulls up the RS so that the HBT time-related puzzle disappears throughout the energies from AGS, SPS, to RHIC.
Based on the microscopic transport model UrQMD in which hadronic and string degrees of freedom are employed, the HBT parameters in the longitudinal co-moving system are investigated for charged pion and kaon, and Λ sources in heavy ion collisions (HICs) at SPS and RHIC energies. In the Cascade mode, RO and the RL at high SPS and RHIC energies do not follow the mT-scaling, however, after considering a soft equation of state with momentum dependence (SM-EoS) for formed baryons and a density-dependent Skyrme-like potential for “pre-formed” particles, the HBT radii of pions and kaons and even those of Λs with large transverse momenta follow the mT-scaling function R=3/mT fairly well.
We propose a method to experimentally study the equation of state of strongly interacting matter created at the early stage of nucleus–nucleus collisions. The method exploits the relation between relative entropy and energy fluctuations and equation of state. As a measurable quantity, the ratio of properly filtered multiplicity to energy fluctuations is proposed. Within a statistical approach to the early stage of nucleus–nucleus collisions, the fluctuation ratio manifests a non-monotonic collision energy dependence with a maximum in the domain where the onset of deconfinement occurs.
Modifications of the gyromagnetic moment of electrons and muons due to a minimal length scale combined with a modified fundamental scale Mf are explored. First-order deviations from the theoretical SM value for g−2 due to these string theory-motivated effects are derived. Constraints for the fundamental scale Mf are given.
Large extra dimensions could lower the Planck scale to experimentally accessible values. Not only is the Planck scale the energy scale at which effects of modified gravity become important. The Planck length also acts as a minimal length in nature, providing a natural ultraviolet cutoff and a limit to the possible resolution of spacetime.
In this Letter we examine the influence of the minimal length on the Casimir energy between two plates.
We determine the hard-loop resummed propagator in an anisotropic QCD plasma in general covariant gauges and define a potential between heavy quarks from the Fourier transform of its static limit. We find that there is stronger attraction on distance scales on the order of the inverse Debye mass for quark pairs aligned along the direction of anisotropy than for transverse alignment.
We suggest that the fluctuations of strange hadron multiplicity could be sensitive to the equation of state and microscopic structure of strongly interacting matter created at the early stage of high energy nucleus–nucleus collisions. They may serve as an important tool in the study of the deconfinement phase transition. We predict, within the statistical model of the early stage, that the ratio of properly filtered fluctuations of strange to non-strange hadron multiplicities should have a non-monotonic energy dependence with a minimum in the mixed phase region.
We propose to use the hadron number fluctuations in the limited momentum regions to study the evolution of initial flows in high energy nuclear collisions. In this method by a proper preparation of a collision sample the projectile and target initial flows are marked in fluctuations in the number of colliding nucleons. We discuss three limiting cases of the evolution of flows, transparency, mixing and reflection, and present for them quantitative predictions obtained within several models. Finally, we apply the method to the NA49 results on fluctuations of the negatively charged hadron multiplicity in Pb+Pb interactions at 158A GeV and conclude that the data favor a hydrodynamical model with a significant degree of mixing of the initial flows at the early stage of collisions.
We point out that during the supernova II type explosion the thermodynamical conditions of stellar matter between the protoneutron star and the shock front correspond to the nuclear liquid–gas coexistence region, which can be investigated in nuclear multifragmentation reactions. We have demonstrated, that neutron-rich hot heavy nuclei can be produced in this region. The production of these nuclei may influence dynamics of the explosion and contribute to the synthesis of heavy elements.
It has been suggested that the existence of a non-Gaussian fixed point in general relativity might cure the ultraviolet problems of this theory. Such a fixed point is connected to an effective running of the gravitational coupling. We calculate the effect of the running gravitational coupling on the black hole production cross section in models with large extra dimensions.
Phosphorylation of the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+)-ATPase (SERCA1a) was studied with time-resolved Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. ATP and ATP analogs (ITP, 2'- and 3'-dATP) were used to study the effect of the adenine ring and the ribose hydroxyl groups on ATPase phosphorylation. All modifications of ATP altered conformational changes and phosphorylation kinetics. The differences compared with ATP increased in the following order: 3'-dATP > ITP > 2'-dATP. Enzyme phosphorylation with ITP results in larger absorbance changes in the amide I region, indicating larger conformational changes of the Ca(2+)-ATPase. The respective absorbance changes obtained with 3'-dATP are significantly different from the others with different band positions and amplitudes in the amide I region, indicating different conformational changes of the protein backbone. ATPase phosphorylation with 3'-dATP is also much ( approximately 30 times) slower than with ATP. Our results indicate that modifications to functional groups of ATP (the ribose 2'- and 3'-OH and the amino group in the adenine ring) affect gamma-phosphate transfer to the phosphorylation site of the Ca(2+)-ATPase by changing the extent of conformational change and the phosphorylation rate. ADP binding to the ADP-sensitive phosphoenzyme (Ca(2)E1P) stabilizes the closed conformation of Ca(2)E1P.
Time-resolved Fourier transform infrared difference spectra of the phosphoenzyme conversion and Ca(2+) release reaction (Ca(2)E(1)-P --> E(2)-P) of the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+)-ATPase were recorded at pH 7 and 1 degrees C in H(2)O and (2)H(2)O. In the amide I spectral region, the spectra indicate backbone conformational changes preserving conformational changes of the preceding phosphorylation step. beta-sheet or turn structures (band at 1685 cm(-1)) and alpha-helical structures (band at 1653 cm(-1)) seem to be involved. Spectra of the model compound EDTA for Ca(2+) chelation indicate the assignment of bands at 1570, 1554, 1411 and 1399 cm(-1) to Ca(2+) chelating Asp and Glu carboxylate groups partially shielded from the aqueous environment. In addition, an E(2)-P band at 1638 cm(-1) has been tentatively assigned to a carboxylate group in a special environment. A Tyr residue seems to be involved in the reaction (band at 1517 cm(-1) in H(2)O and 1515 cm(-1) in (2)H(2)O). A band at 1192 cm(-1) was shown by isotopic replacement in the gamma-phosphate of ATP to originate from the E(2)-P phosphate group. This is a clear indication that the immediate environment of the phosphoenzyme phosphate group changes in the conversion reaction, altering phosphate geometry and/or electron distribution.
P-O bond destabilization accelerates phosphoenzyme hydrolysis of sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase
(2004)
The phosphate group of the ADP-insensitive phosphoenzyme (E2-P) of sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase (SERCA1a) was studied with infrared spectroscopy to understand the high hydrolysis rate of E2-P. By monitoring an autocatalyzed isotope exchange reaction, three stretching vibrations of the transiently bound phosphate group were selectively observed against a background of 50,000 protein vibrations. They were found at 1194, 1137, and 1115 cm–1. This information was evaluated using the bond valence model and empirical correlations. Compared with the model compound acetyl phosphate, structure and charge distribution of the E2-P aspartyl phosphate resemble somewhat the transition state in a dissociative phosphate transfer reaction; the aspartyl phosphate of E2-P has 0.02 Å shorter terminal P–O bonds and a 0.09 Å longer bridging P–O bond that is ∼20% weaker, the angle between the terminal P–O bonds is wider, and –0.2 formal charges are shifted from the phosphate group to the aspartyl moiety. The weaker bridging P–O bond of E2-P accounts for a 1011–1015-fold hydrolysis rate enhancement, implying that P–O bond destabilization facilitates phosphoenzyme hydrolysis. P–O bond destabilization is caused by a shift of noncovalent interactions from the phosphate oxygens to the aspartyl oxygens. We suggest that the relative positioning of Mg2+ and Lys684 between phosphate and aspartyl oxygens controls the hydrolysis rate of the ATPase phosphoenzymes and related phosphoproteins.
String theory suggests the existence of a minimum length scale. An exciting quantum mechanical implication of this feature is a modification of the uncertainty principle. In contrast to the conventional approach, this generalised uncertainty principle does not allow to resolve space–time distances below the Planck length. In models with extra dimensions, which are also motivated by string theory, the Planck scale can be lowered to values accessible by ultra high energetic cosmic rays (UHECRs) and by future colliders, i.e., Mf≈ 1 TeV. It is demonstrated that in this novel scenario, short distance physics below 1/Mf is completely cloaked by the uncertainty principle. Therefore, Planckian effects could be the final physics discovery at future colliders and in UHECRs. As an application, we predict the modifications to the e+e−→f+f− cross-sections.
We calculate the antibaryon-to-baryon ratios, p̄/p,Λ̄/Λ,Ξ/Ξ, and Ω/Ω for Au+Au collisions at RHIC (sNN=200 GeV). The effects of strong color fields associated with an enhanced strangeness and diquark production probability and with an effective decrease of formation times are investigated. Antibaryon-to-baryon ratios increase with the color field strength. The ratios also increase with the strangeness content |S|. The netbaryon number at midrapidity considerably increases with the color field strength while the netproton number remains roughly the same. This shows that the enhanced baryon transport involves a conversion into the hyperon sector (hyperonization) which can be observed in the (Λ−Λ̄)/(p−p̄) ratio.
Production of J/ψ mesons in heavy ion collisions is considered within the statistical coalescence model. The model is in agreement with the experimental data of the NA50 Collaboration for Pb+Pb collisions at 158 AGeV in a wide centrality range, including the so-called “anomalous” suppression domain. The model description of the J/ψ data requires, however, strong enhancement of the open charm production in central Pb+Pb collisions. This model prediction may be checked in the future SPS runs.
The measured particle ratios in central heavy-ion collisions at RHIC-BNL are investigated within a chemical and thermal equilibrium chiral SU(3) σ–ω approach. The commonly adopted noninteracting gas calculations yield temperatures close to or above the critical temperature for the chiral phase transition, but without taking into account any interactions. Contrary, the chiral SU(3) model predicts temperature and density dependent effective hadron masses and effective chemical potentials in the medium and a transition to a chirally restored phase at high temperatures or chemical potentials. Three different parametrizations of the model, which show different types of phase transition behaviour, are investigated. We show that if a chiral phase transition occured in those collisions, “freezing” of the relative hadron abundances in the symmetric phase is excluded by the data. Therefore, either very rapid chemical equilibration must occur in the broken phase, or the measured hadron ratios are the outcome of the dynamical symmetry breaking. Furthermore, the extracted chemical freeze-out parameters differ considerably from those obtained in simple noninteracting gas calculations. In particular, the three models yield up to 35 MeV lower temperatures than the free gas approximation. The in-medium masses turn out to differ up to 150 MeV from their vacuum values.
We study properties of compact stars with the deconfinement phase transition in their interiors. The equation of state of cold baryon-rich matter is constructed by combining a relativistic mean-field model for the hadronic phase and the MIT Bag model for the deconfined phase. In a narrow parameter range two sequences of compact stars (twin stars), which differ by the size of the quark core, have been found. We demonstrate the possibility of a rapid transition between the twin stars with the energy release of about 1052 ergs. This transition should be accompanied by the prompt neutrino burst and the delayed gamma-ray burst.
Recent calculations applying statistical mechanics indicate that in a setting with compactified large extra dimensions a black hole might evolve into a (quasi-)stable state with mass close to the new fundamental scale Mf. Black holes and therefore their relics might be produced at the LHC in the case of extra-dimensional topologies. In this energy regime, Hawking's evaporation scenario is modified due to energy conservation and quantum effects. We reanalyse the evaporation of small black holes including the quantisation of the emitted radiation due to the finite surface of the black hole. It is found that observable stable black hole relics with masses ∼1–3Mf would form which could be identified by a delayed single jet with a corresponding hard momentum kick to the relic and by ionisation, e.g., in a TPC.
We consider J/ψ production in heavy ion collisions at RHIC energies in the statistical coalescence model with exact (canonical ensemble) charm conservation. Charm quark–antiquark pairs are assumed to be created in primary hard parton collisions, but open and hidden charm particles are formed at the hadronization stage according to the laws of statistical mechanics. The dependence of the J/ψ production on both the number of nucleon participants and the collision energy is studied. The model predicts J/ψ suppression for low energies, whereas at the highest RHIC energy the model reveals J/ψ enhancement.
We study the production of transversely polarized Λ hyperons in high-energy collisions of protons with large nuclei. The large gluon density of the target at saturation provides an intrinsic semi-hard scale which should naturally allow for a weak-coupling QCD description of the process in terms of a convolution of the quark distribution of the proton with the elementary quark–nucleus scattering cross section (resummed to all twists) and a fragmentation function. In this case of transversely polarized Λ production we employ a so-called polarizing fragmentation function, which is an odd function of the transverse momentum of the Λ relative to the fragmenting quark. Due to this kt-odd nature, the resulting Λ polarization is essentially proportional to the derivative of the quark–nucleus cross section with respect to transverse momentum, which peaks near the saturation momentum scale. Such processes might therefore provide generic signatures for high parton density effects and for the approach to the “black-body” (unitarity) limit of hadronic scattering.
Transverse activity of kaons and deconfinement phase transition in nucleus–nucleus collisions
(2003)
We found that the experimental results on transverse mass spectrum of kaons produced in central Pb+Pb (Au+Au) collisions show an anomalous dependence on the colliding energy. The inverse slope of the spectrum increases with the energy in the low (AGS) and high (RHIC) energy domains, whereas it remains constant in the intermediate (SPS) energy range. We argue that this anomaly is probably caused by the modification of the equation of state in the transition region between confined and deconfined matter. This observation may be considered as a new signal, in addition to the previously reported anomalies in the pion and strangeness production, of the onset of deconfinement located in the low SPS energy domain.
For statistical multifragmentation model the critical indices α′,β,γ′,δ are calculated as functions of the Fisher parameter τ. It is found that these indices have different values than in Fisher's droplet model. Some peculiarities of the scaling relations are discussed. The basic model predicts for the index τ a narrow range of values, 1.799<τ<1.846, which is consistent with two experiments on nuclear multifragmentation.
In high energy p(p)+p interactions the mean multiplicity and transverse mass spectra of neutral mesons from η to ϒ (m≅0.5–10 GeV/c2) and the transverse mass spectra of pions (mT> 1 GeV/c2) reveal a remarkable behaviour: they follow, over more than 10 orders of magnitude, the power-law function: Cm(T)−P. The parameters C and P are energy dependent, but similar for all mesons produced at the same collision energy. This scaling resembles that expected in the statistical description of hadron production: the parameter P plays the role of a temperature and the normalisation constant C is analogous to the system volume. The fundamental difference is, however, in the form of the distribution function. In order to reproduce the experimental results and preserve the basic structure of the statistical approach the Boltzmann factor e−E∗/T appearing in standard statistical mechanics has to be substituted by a power-law factor (E∗/Λ)−P.
In this paper, we present a family of regular black hole solutions in the presence of charge and angular momentum. We also discuss the related thermodynamics and we comment about the black hole life cycle during the balding and spin down phases. Interestingly the static solution resembles the Ayón-Beato–García spacetime, provided the T-duality scale is redefined in terms of the electric charge, l0→Q. The key factor at the basis of our derivation is the employment of Padmanabhan's propagator to calculate static potentials. Such a propagator encodes string T-duality effects. This means that the regularity of the spacetimes here presented can open a new window on string theory phenomenology.
Vibrational energy transfer (VET) is emerging as key mechanism for protein functions, possibly playing an important role for energy dissipation, allosteric regulation, and enzyme catalysis. A deep understanding of VET is required to elucidate its role in such processes. Ultrafast VIS-pump/IR-probe spectroscopy can detect pathways of VET in proteins. However, the requirement of having a VET donor and a VET sensor installed simultaneously limits the possible target proteins and sites; to increase their number we compare six IR labels regarding their utility as VET sensors. We compare these labels in terms of their FTIR, and VET signature in VET donor-sensor dipeptides in different solvents. Furthermore, we incorporated four of these labels in PDZ3 to assess their capabilities in more complex systems. Our results show that different IR labels can be used interchangeably, allowing for free choice of the right label depending on the system under investigation and the methods available.
We investigated the excitation of surface plasmon polaritons on gold films with the metallized probe tip of a scattering-type scanning near-field optical microscope (s-SNOM). The emission of the polaritons from the tip, illuminated by near-infrared laser radiation, was found to be anisotropic and not circularly symmetric as expected on the basis of literature data. We furthermore identified an additional excitation channel via light that was reflected off the tip and excited the plasmon polaritons at the edge of the metal film. Our results, while obtained for a non-rotationally-symmetric type of probe tip and thus specific for this situation, indicate that when an s-SNOM is employed for the investigation of plasmonic structures, the unintentional excitation of surface waves and anisotropic surface wave propagation must be considered in order to correctly interpret the signatures of plasmon polariton generation and propagation.
The deuteron coalescence parameter 𝐵2 in proton+proton and nucleus+nucleus collisions in the energy range of √s N N = 900–7000 GeV for proton + proton and √s N N = 2–2760 GeV for nucleus + nucleus collisions is analyzed with the Ultrarelativistic Quantum Molecular Dynamics (UrQMD) transport model, supplemented by an event-by-event phase space coalescence model for deuteron and anti-deuteron production. The results are compared to data by the E866, E877, PHENIX, STAR and ALICE experiments. The 𝐵2 values are calculated from the final spectra of protons and deuterons. At lower energies, √s N N ≤ 20 GeV, B2 drops drastically with increasing energy. The calculations confirm that this is due to the increasing freeze-out volume reflected in B2 ∼ 1/V . At higher energies, √s N N ≥ 20 GeV, B2 saturates at a constant level. This qualitative change and the vanishing of the volume suppression is shown to be due to the development of strong radial flow with increasing energy. The flow leads to strong space-momentum correlations which counteract the volume effect.
Cryo-electron tomography (CryoET) resolves individual macromolecules inside living cells. However, the complex composition and high density of cells challenge the faithful identification of features in tomograms. Here, we capitalize on recent advances in electron tomography and demonstrate that 3D template matching (TM) localizes a wide range of structures inside crowded eukaryotic cells with confidence 10 to 100-fold above the noise level. We establish a TM pipeline with systematically tuned parameters for automated, objective and comprehensive feature identification. High-fidelity and high-confidence localizations of nuclear pore complexes, vaults, ribosomes, proteasomes, lipid membranes and microtubules, and individual subunits, demonstrate that TM is generic. We resolve ~100-kDa proteins, connect the functional states of complexes to their cellular localization, and capture vaults carrying ribosomal cargo in situ. By capturing individual molecular events inside living cells with defined statistical confidence, high-confidence TM greatly speeds up the CryoET workflow and sets the stage for visual proteomics.
Proton-powered c-ring rotation in mitochondrial ATP synthase is crucial to convert the transmembrane protonmotive force into torque to drive the synthesis of ATP. Capitalizing on recent cryo-EM structures, we aim at a structural and energetic understanding of how functional directional rotation is achieved. We performed multi-microsecond atomistic simulations to determine the free energy profiles along the c-ring rotation angle before and after the arrival of a new proton. Our results reveal that rotation proceeds by dynamic sliding of the ring over the a-subunit surface, during which interactions with conserved polar residues stabilize distinct intermediates. Ordered water chains line up for a Grotthuss-type proton transfer in one of these intermediates. After proton transfer, a high barrier prevents backward rotation and an overall drop in free energy favors forward rotation, ensuring the directionality of c-ring rotation required for the thermodynamically disfavored ATP synthesis. The essential arginine of the a-subunit stabilizes the rotated configuration through a salt-bridge with the c-ring. Overall, we describe a complete mechanism for the rotation step of the ATP synthase rotor, thereby illuminating a process critical to all life at atomic resolution.
Proton-powered c-ring rotation in mitochondrial ATP synthase is crucial to convert the transmembrane protonmotive force into torque to drive the synthesis of ATP. Capitalizing on recent cryo-EM structures, we aim at a structural and energetic understanding of how functional directional rotation is achieved. We performed multi-microsecond atomistic simulations to determine the free energy profiles along the c-ring rotation angle before and after the arrival of a new proton. Our results reveal that rotation proceeds by dynamic sliding of the ring over the a-subunit surface, during which interactions with conserved polar residues stabilize distinct intermediates. Ordered water chains line up for a Grotthuss-type proton transfer in one of these intermediates. After proton transfer, a high barrier prevents backward rotation and an overall drop in free energy favors forward rotation, ensuring the directionality of c-ring rotation required for the thermodynamically disfavored ATP synthesis. The essential arginine of the a-subunit stabilizes the rotated configuration through a salt-bridge with the c-ring. Overall, we describe a complete mechanism for the rotation step of the ATP synthase rotor, thereby illuminating a process critical to all life at atomic resolution.
Precise tune determination and split beam emittance reconstruction at the CERN PS synchrotron
(2023)
In accelerator physics, the need to improve the performance and better control the operating point of an accelerator has become, year after year, an increasingly important need in order to achieve higher energies and brightness, as well as point-like particle beams. If this involves increasingly advanced technological developments (in terms, for example, of materials for more intense superconducting magnets), it can not take place in the absence of targeted studies of linear and non-linear beam dynamics. In the context of this Ph.D. thesis in physics, linear and non-linear dynamics of charged particles in circular accelerators is the topic that will be discussed and treated in detail. In particular, the presentation and discussion of the results will be divided in two main topics: the need to know the physical properties of a proton beam; and the development of innovative methods to determine and study the accelerator’s working point. With regard to the first topic, an innovative procedure will be presented to determine the transverse size of the PS beam in the beam extraction phase. Among the different ways the extraction occurs at the PS, the analysed one is based on the transverse splitting of the beam by means of non-linear fields. Thus, the knowledge of the transverse beam size is not trivial since resonant linear and non-linear beam structures (namely, core and islands) arise and, for each of them, the beam size has to be quantified. This parameter is crucial for two main reasons: the accelerator that will receive the beam exiting the upstream accelerator may have restrictions (physical or magnetic) that involve a partial or total loss of the incoming beam; and any experiments located downstream of the considered accelerator may need a beam with a transversal size as constant as possible; consequently, its monitoring and control are essential. The second topic concerns the accurate determination of the working point of an accelerator, defined as the number of transverse oscillations the particle beam travels per unit of accelerator circumference, both horizontally and vertically. This quantity is called horizontal and vertical tune, respectively. Their knowledge is also crucial to understand whether the beam will be stable or unstable. In fact, not all tune values are acceptable, as there are particular values that bring the beam into resonance. In this configuration, the amplitude of the transverse oscillations of the particles increases in an uncontrolled manner and leads to the loss of all or part of the beam. Note that, in particular operating conditions, the resonant conditions are sought and desired to model, in a suitable way, the transversal shape of the beam, such as the above mentioned PS extraction scheme. It is even clearer how much the determination of the machine working point is essential to determine the operating conditions of an accelerator. In this context, several methods (also taken from the field of applied mathematics) to calculate the tune will be demonstrated and tested numerically on different types of synthetic signals. At the end of this description, the use of experimental data will allow to obtain the benchmark of a new method for the direct calculation of some characteristic quantities of non-linear beam dynamics (namely, the amplitude detuning, i.e. the variation of tune as a function of intensity of the perturbation provided to the beam.
The β-barrel assembly machinery (BAM) consisting of the central β-barrel BamA and four other lipoproteins mediates the folding of the majority of the outer membrane proteins. BamA is placed in an asymmetric bilayer and its lateral gate is suggested to be the functional hotspot. Here we used in situ pulsed electron-electron double resonance spectroscopy to characterize BamA in the native outer membrane. In the detergent micelles, the data is consistent with mainly an inward-open conformation of BamA. The native membrane considerably enhanced the conformational heterogeneity. The lateral gate and the extracellular loop 3 exist in an equilibrium between different conformations. The outer membrane provides a favorable environment for occupying multiple conformational states independent of the lipoproteins. Our results reveal a highly dynamic behavior of the lateral gate and other key structural elements and provide direct evidence for the conformational modulation of a membrane protein in situ.
Geometrical frustration among interacting spins combined with strong quantum fluctuations destabilize long-range magnetic order in favor of more exotic states such as spin liquids. By following this guiding principle, a number of spin liquid candidate systems were identified in quasi-two-dimensional (quasi-2D) systems. For 3D, however, the situation is less favorable as quantum fluctuations are reduced and competing states become more relevant. Here we report a comprehensive study of thermodynamic, magnetic and dielectric properties on single crystalline and pressed-powder samples of PbCuTe2O6, a candidate material for a 3D frustrated quantum spin liquid featuring a hyperkagome lattice. Whereas the low-temperature properties of the powder samples are consistent with the recently proposed quantum spin liquid state, an even more exotic behavior is revealed for the single crystals. These crystals show ferroelectric order at TFE ≈ 1 K, accompanied by strong lattice distortions, and a modified magnetic response—still consistent with a quantum spin liquid—but with clear indications for quantum critical behavior.
Cryo-electron tomography (cryo-ET) is a powerful method to elucidate subcellular architecture and to structurally analyse biomolecules in situ by subtomogram averaging (STA). Specimen thickness is a key factor affecting cryo-ET data quality. Cells that are too thick for transmission imaging can be thinned by cryo-focused-ion-beam (cryo-FIB) milling. However, optimal specimen thickness for cryo-ET on lamellae has not been systematically investigated. Furthermore, the ions used to ablate material can cause damage in the lamellae, thereby reducing STA resolution. Here, we systematically benchmark the resolution depending on lamella thickness and the depth of the particles within the sample. Up to ca. 180 nm, lamella thickness does not negatively impact resolution. This shows that there is no need to generate very thin lamellae and thickness can be chosen such that it captures major cellular features. Furthermore, we show that gallium-ion-induced damage extends to depths of up to 30 nm from either lamella surface.
Precise intensity monitoring at CRYRING@ESR: on designing a Cryogenic Current Comparator for FAIR
(2023)
In the field of today’s beam intensity diagnostic there is a significant gap in the non-interceptive, calibrated measurement of the absolute intensity of continuous (unbunched) dc beams with current amplitudes below 1 μA. At the Facility for Antiproton and Ion Research (FAIR) low-intensity DC beams will occur during slow extraction from the synchrotrons as well as for coasting beams of highly-charged or exotic nuclei in the storage rings. The lack of adequate beam instrumentation limits the experimental program as well as the accuracy of experimental results.
The Cryogenic Current Comparator (CCC) can close the diagnostic gap with a high-precision dc current reading independent of ion-species and of beam parameters. However, the established detector design based on a core with high magnetic permeability and on a radial shield geometry has well-known weaknesses concerning magnetic shielding efficiency and intrinsic current noise. To eliminate these weaknesses, a novel coreless CCC with a co-axial shield was constructed and combined with a high-performance SQUID contributed by the Leibniz-Institute of Photonic Technology (Leibniz-IPHT Jena). The new axial CCC model was compared to a radial CCC with the established design provided by the Friedrich-Schiller-University Jena. According to numerical simulations prepared at TU Darmstadt and test measurements of the detectors in the laboratory, the new design offered a significant improvement of the shielding factor – from 75dB to 207dB at the required dimensions – and eliminated all noise contributions from the core material, promising an improved current resolution. Although the lower inductance of the pickup coil reduced the coupling to the beam significantly, the noise properties of the new CCC type were comparable to the classical version with a high-permeability core. However, the expected decrease of the low-frequency noise and thus an increase of the current resolution could not be observed at this stage of development.
Consequently, the classical CCC based on the radial shielding and high-permeability core had to be installed in CRYRING@ESR to provide best possible intensity measurements for the upcoming experimental campaign. In CRYRING the CCC was operated with beam currents between 1nA and 20μA and with different ion species (H, Ne, O, Pb, U). It was shown that the CCC provides a noise-limited current resolution of better than 3.2 nArms at a bandwidth of 200 kHz as well as a noise level below 40 pA/√Hz above 1 kHz. During the operation, the main noise sources of the accelerator environment had to be identified and suitable mitigation strategies were developed. Temperature and pressure fluctuations were suppressed with a newly-designed cryogenic support system based on a 70 l helium bath cryostat, developed and built in collaboration with the Institut für Luft- und Kältetechnik Dresden, in combination with a helium re-liquefier. The cryogenic operating time was restricted to around 7 days, which must be expanded significantly in the future. Digital filters were developed to remove the perturbations of the helium liquefier and of the neighboring dipole magnets. Given the promising results the CCC system can be considered as a prototype for future CCCs at FAIR.
We estimate the temperature dependence of the bulk viscosity in a relativistic hadron gas. Employing the Green–Kubo formalism in the SMASH (Simulating Many Accelerated Strongly-interacting Hadrons) transport approach, we study different hadronic systems in increasing order of complexity. We analyze the (in)validity of the single exponential relaxation ansatz for the bulk-channel correlation function and the strong influence of the resonances and their lifetimes. We discuss the difference between the inclusive bulk viscosity of an equilibrated, long-lived system, and the effective bulk viscosity of a short-lived mixture like the hadronic phase of relativistic heavy-ion collisions, where the processes whose inverse relaxation rate are larger than the fireball duration are excluded from the analysis. This clarifies the differences between previous approaches which computed the bulk viscosity including/excluding the very slow processes in the hadron gas. We compare our final results with previous hadron gas calculations and confirm a decreasing trend of the inclusive bulk viscosity over entropy density as temperature increases, whereas the effective bulk viscosity to entropy ratio, while being lower than the inclusive one, shows no strong dependence to temperature.
Abstract
The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is a key organelle of membrane biogenesis and crucial for the folding of both membrane and secretory proteins. Sensors of the unfolded protein response (UPR) monitor the unfolded protein load in the ER and convey effector functions for maintaining ER homeostasis. Aberrant compositions of the ER membrane, referred to as lipid bilayer stress, are equally potent activators of the UPR. How the distinct signals from lipid bilayer stress and unfolded proteins are processed by the conserved UPR transducer Ire1 remains unknown. Here, we have generated a functional, cysteine-less variant of Ire1 and performed systematic cysteine crosslinking experiments in native membranes to establish its transmembrane architecture in signaling-active clusters. We show that the transmembrane helices of two neighboring Ire1 molecules adopt an X-shaped configuration independent of the primary cause for ER stress. This suggests that different forms of stress converge in a common, signaling-active transmembrane architecture of Ire1.
Summary
The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is a hotspot of lipid biosynthesis and crucial for the folding of membrane and secretory proteins. The unfolded protein response (UPR) controls the size and folding capacity of the ER. The conserved UPR transducer Ire1 senses both unfolded proteins and aberrant lipid compositions to mount adaptive responses. Using a biochemical assay to study Ire1 in signaling-active clusters, Väth et al. provide evidence that the neighboring transmembrane helices of clustered Ire1 form an ‘X’ irrespectively of the primary cause of ER stress. Hence, different forms of ER stress converge in a common, signaling-active transmembrane architecture of Ire1.
Physikalische und thermische Kontrastierung führt bei Fixierung in Glutaraldehyd und Einbettung in Vestopal bei Parenchymzellen der Leber zu weitgehend ähnlichen Kontrastunterschieden auch bei Mitochondrien und den Membranen des Retikulums. Beide Verfahren wirken also weitgehend unspezifisch. Von den chemischen Verfahren liefert Uranylacetat im Cytoplasma ähnliche Kontrastverhältnisse wie die beiden genannten Verfahren. Das spezifische Verhalten des Uranylacetats kann z. B. an der Kontrastierung des Chromatins demonstriert werden. Sie bleibt aus, wenn die färbbare Substanz auf der Wasseroberfläche des Messertroges herausgewaschen wurde. Bleicitrat-Kontrastierung hat hier im Gegensatz zu Uranylacetat eine spezifische Wirkung nur auf RNS-haltige Zellbestandteile.
This thesis deals with several aspects of non-perturbative calculations in low-dimensional quantum field theories. It is split into two main parts:
The first part focuses on method development and testing. Using exactly integrable QFTs in zero spacetime dimensions as toy models, the need for non-perturbative methods in QFT is demonstrated. In particular, we focus on the functional renormalization group (FRG) as a non-perturbative exact method and present a novel fluid-dynamic reformulation of certain FRG flow equations. This framework and the application of numerical schemes from the field of computational fluid dynamics (CFD) to the FRG is tested and benchmarked against exact results for correlation functions. We also draw several conclusions for the qualitative understanding and interpretation of renormalization group (RG) flows from this fluid-dynamic reformulation and discuss the generalization of our findings to realistic higher-dimensional QFTs.
The topics discussed in the second part are also manifold. In general, the second part of this thesis deals with the Gross-Neveu (GN) model, which is a prototype of a relativistic QFT. Even though being a model in two spacetime dimensions, it shares many features of realistic models and theories for high-energy particle physics, but also emerges as a limiting case from systems in solid state physics. Especially, it is interesting to study the model at non-vanishing temperatures and densities, thus, its thermodynamic properties and phase structure.
First, we use this model to test and apply our findings of the first part of this thesis in a realistic environment. We analyze how the fluid-dynamic aspects of the FRG realize themselves in the RG flow of a full-fledged QFT and how we profit from this numeric framework in actual calculations. Thereby, however, we also aim at answering a long-standing question: Is there still symmetry breaking and condensation at non-zero temperatures in the GN model, if one relaxes the commonly used approximation of an infinite number of fermion species and works with a finite number of fermions? In short: Is matter (in the GN model) in a single spatial dimension at non-zero temperature always gas-like?
In general, we also use the GN model to learn about the correct description of QFTs at non-zero temperatures and densities. This is of utmost relevance for model calculations in low-energy quan- tum chromodynamics (QCD) or other QFTs in medium and we draw several conclusions for the requirements for stable calculations at non-zero chemical potential.
Investigation of the kinematics involved in compton scattering and hard X-ray photoabsorption
(2023)
The present work investigates the kinematics of Compton scattering at gaseous, internally-cool helium and molecular nitrogen targets in the high- and the low-energy regime. Additionally, photoionization at molecular nitrogen with high-energy photons is investigated. These exeprimental regimes were previously inaccessible due to the extremely small cross sections involved. Nowadays, the third- and fourth-generation synchrotron machines produce sufficient photon flux, enabling the investiagtion of the above processes. The utilized cold-target recoil-ion momentum spectroscopy (COLTRIMS) technique further increases the detection efficiency of the observed processes, since it enables full-solid-angle detection by exploiting momentum conservation.
Compton scattering is investigated at both high (helium and N2) and low (helium) photon energies. In the high-energy regime, the impulse approximation is mostly valid, which is not the case for the low-energy regime. The impulse approximation assumes that the Compton-scattering process takes place at a free electron with a momentum distribution as if it was bound, thus ignoring the binding energy of the system. In the low-energy regime, the impulse approximation is not valid.
Photoionization is investigated at high photon energies, where the linear momentum of the photon cannot be neglected, as is the fashion of the commonly used dipole approximation.
Magnetische Quadrupole und Solenoide sind ein elementarer Bestandteil einer Beschleunigeranlage und begrenzen die transversale Ausdehnung eines Teilchenstrahls durch eine Reflexion der Teilchen in Richtung der Beschleunigerachse. Die konventionelle Bauweise als Elektromagnet besteht aus einem Eisenjoch welches mit Spulen umwickelt ist. In dieser Arbeit werden diese Magnetstrukturen auf Basis von Permanentmagneten designt und hinsichtlich ihrer Qualität zum Strahltransport optimiert, sowie Feldmessungen an permanentmagnetischen Quadrupolen durchgeführt. Diese wurden mit 3D-gedruckten Halterungen aus Kunststoff gefertigt, was eine Vielzahl von Formvariationen ermöglicht. Darauf aufbauend wurde ein im Vakuum befindlicher Aufbau entwickelt, mit welchem die Strahlenvelope im inneren eines permanentmagnetischen Quadrupol Tripletts diagnostiziert werden kann. Dies greift auf ein am Institut für angewandte Physik entwickeltes System zur nicht-invasiven Strahldiagnose mithilfe von Raspberry Pi Einplatinencomputern und Kameras in starken Magnetfeldern zurück.
Die in dieser Arbeit vorgestellte Konfiguration eines PMQ’s ist eine Weiterentwicklung des am CERN im Linac4, einem Alvarez-Driftröhrenbeschleuniger zur Beschleunigung von H– , verwendeten Designs. Bei diesem sind je acht quaderförmige Permanentmagnete aus Samarium Cobalt (SmCo) in die Driftröhren des Beschleunigers integriert.
Darauf aufbauend wurden die geometrischen Designparameter hinsichtlich ihres Einflusses auf die Qualität des Magnetfelds untersucht. In einem magnetischen Quadrupol zur Strahlfokussierung wird dies durch einen linearen Anstieg des Magnetfeldes von Quadrupolachse zu Polflächen charakterisiert. Das Design wurde im Zuge dessen zur Verwendung von industriellen Standardgeometrien von Quadermagneten und der Erhöhung der magnetischen Flussdichte erweitert. Dazu wurde untersucht wie sich das Hinzufügen von zusätzlichen Magneten auswirkt und ob eine bessere Feldqualität durch andere Magnetformen erreicht wird.
Die Kombination mehrerer PMQ in geringem Abstand (<10 mm) führt abhängig von der Geometrie der PMQ-Singlets zu einer erheblichen Verschlechterung der Feldlinearität, was eine Erhöhung des besetzten Phasenraumvolumens der Teilchen nach sich zieht.
Am Beispiel von PMQ-Tripletts werden die zu beachtenden Designparameter analysiert und Lösungsansätze vorgestellt. Die auftretenden Effekte werden anhand von Strahldynamiksimulation veranschaulicht. Für eine Anwendung der vorgestellten Designs wurde eine Magnethülle mit einer Wabenstruktur zur Aufnahme der Einzelmagnete entwickelt. Diese besteht aus zwei Halbschalen, welche jeweils den Kompletteinschluss aller Magnete garantiert und eine einfache Montage um ein Strahlrohr ermöglicht. Diese wurden in der Institutswerkstatt aus Kunststoff via 3D-Druck gefertigt. Aufgrund der höheren erreichbaren Magnetisierung wurden Neodym-Eisen-Bor-Magnete (Nd2F14B, Br =1,36 T) für den Bau der entwickelten Strukturen verwendet. Für eine Magnetfeldmessung zur Bestätigung der magnetostatischen Simulationen und einer Bewertung der Druckqualität wurde eine motorisierte xyz-Stage zur Bewegung einer Hallsonde aufgebaut. Die Messungen zeigen eine gute Zentrierung des Magnetfeldes, sodass PMQ mit einer Kunststoffhalterung eine schnelle und billige Möglichkeit sind, kurzfristig eine Quadrupol-Konfiguration aufzubauen. Die Kosten belaufen sich für einen einzelnen PMQ je nach Länge auf 50€ bis 100€.
Basierend auf der PMQ-Struktur wurde ein PMQ-Triplett in ein Vakuum versetzt und mit Raspberry Pi Kameras im Zwischenraum der Singlets ausgestattet. Dies ermöglichte die Aufnahme der Strahlenvelope innerhalb des Tripletts anhand der durch einen Heliumstrahl induzierten Fluoreszenz und erste Erkenntnisse für notwendige Weiterentwicklungen wurden gesammelt. Auf den genauen technischen Aufbau wird im abschließenden Kapitel der Arbeit detailliert eingegangen.
In der einfachsten Form wird ein PM-Solenoid anhand eines einzelnen axial magnetisierten Hohlzylinders realisiert und erzeugt näherungsweise die Feldverteilung einer Zylinderspule. Durch die radialen Magnetfeldkomponenten an den Rändern des Solenoiden erhalten Teilchen eine tangentiale Geschwindigkeitskomponente und führen eine Gyrationsbewegung entlang der Solenoidachse aus. Diese reduziert den Strahlradius und die Teilchen behalten eine Geschwindigkeitskomponente, welche zur Solenoidachse zeigt. Für eine Maximierung dieser Fokussierung muss das Magnetfeld auf die Zylinderachse konzentriert werden. Insbesondere bei einer Verlängerung des Hohlzylinders wird die Kopplung der Polflächen über das Innenvolumen abgeschwächt. Aufgrund dessen wurde ein Design bestehend aus drei Hohlzylindersegmenten entwickelt. Dieses setzt sich aus zwei radial und einem axial magnetisierten Hohlzylinder zusammen und erhöht die mittlere magnetische Flussdichte für ausgewählte Geometrien um einen Faktor zwei im Vergleich zu einem einzelnen Hohlzylinder gleicher Geometrie. Dies ist gleichzusetzen mit einer Vervierfachung der Fokussierstärke, welche quadratisch mit der mittleren magnetischen Flussdichte skaliert. Die Strahldynamischen Konsequenzen werden anhand von Simulationen mit generierten Magnetfeldverteilungen erläutert. Für eine kostengünstige Bauweise wurde eine Design basierend auf quaderförmigen Magneten entwickelt.
Es wird auf die Mannigfaltigkeit der Kontraste hingewiesen, die sich bei mit Aldehyden fixiertem, in Vestopal W oder Durcupan ACM eingebettetem Gewebe durch gesteuerte Elektronenbestrahlung erreichen läßt. Voraussetzung für einen einwandfreien Vergleich von Kontrasten bei z. B. verschieden gefärbten Schnitten ist daher eine Bestrahlung, die zu ausreichend definierten Objektveränderungen führt. Brauchbar in diesem Sinne ist eine Bestrahlung, die zum maximalen „reinen Strahlenverlust“ führt, bei der aber thermische Substanzverluste vermieden werden. Der Negativkontrast von Chromatin und Nucleolen und die offenbar physikalisch bedingte Färbbarkeit der nucleinsäurehaltigen Zellbestandteile mittels der „negative-staining“-Methode werden diskutiert.
Um die von RAJEWSKY und WOLF aufgeworfene Frage nach dem Einfluß der DNS-Struktur auf die radiationschemische Veränderung der Basen zu untersuchen, wurde die DNS-Spirale bei einem Teil der Untersuchungen in dest. Wasser aufgelöst und mit Röntgenstrahlen bestrahlt. Es ergab sich eine Erhöhung der Strahlenempfindlichkeit der Basen, vor allem zu Beginn der Bestrahlung auf den Wert, den man bei der Bestrahlung der Monomerlösungen beobachtet. Bei Bestrahlung in 0,1 und 1-n. NaCl gelöster DNS sind dagegen die Basen gegen die Einwirkung der im Wasser gebildeten Radikale geschützt, solange sie innerhalb der intakten Spirale gebunden sind. Dieser strukturbedingte Schutzeffekt besteht nicht gegenüber der direkten Strahlenwirkung von UV-Licht. Dieses Ergebnis ist von strahlenbiologischem Interesse, da das Optimum der Strahlenwirkung auf den Mitoseablauf nach Arbeiten von CARLSON und GRAY in der frühen Prophase liegt17, also ebenfalls in einem Stadium, in dem die DNS-Spirale (vor der Verdoppelung) völlig aufgelöst ist. (Vgl. auch BACQ-ALEXANDER und FRITZ-NIGGLI.
Die von verschiedenen Autoren 2–8 experimentell bestimmten Kontrastdicken für Kohle stimmen nicht mit den heute of benutzten numerischen Werten aus der Lenz schen Theorie überein. Die Diskrepanz läßt sich beheben, wenn man zur Auswertung der Theorie einen anderen, schon von LENZ zur Diskussion gestellten Θ-Wert benutzt. Durch Experimente wird gezeigt, daß auch der Bereich, in dem das Exponentialgesetz nicht mehr gilt, gut durch eine aus der Lenz schen Theorie hergeleitete Formel dargestellt werden kann. Der Bereich, in dem das Exponentialgesetz verwandt werden darf, wird näher diskutiert.
Cells maintain membrane fluidity by regulating lipid saturation, but the molecular mechanisms of this homeoviscous adaptation remain poorly understood. We have reconstituted the core machinery for regulating lipid saturation in baker’s yeast to study its molecular mechanism. By combining molecular dynamics simulations with experiments, we uncover a remarkable sensitivity of the transcriptional regulator Mga2 to the abundance, position, and configuration of double bonds in lipid acyl chains, and provide insights into the molecular rules of membrane adaptation. Our data challenge the prevailing hypothesis that membrane fluidity serves as the measured variable for regulating lipid saturation. Rather, we show that Mga2 senses the molecular lipid-packing density in a defined region of the membrane. Our findings suggest that membrane property sensors have evolved remarkable sensitivities to highly specific aspects of membrane structure and dynamics, thus paving the way toward the development of genetically encoded reporters for such properties in the future.
Eine einfache Methode wird erklärt, die es gestattet, genaue Aussagen über das Verteilungsgesetz elektrischer Relaxationszeiten in frequenzabhängigen Dielektrika zu machen. Die Methode setzt die Gültigkeit einer verallgemeinerten Form des von Cole und Cole formulierten Verteilungsgesetzes elektrischer Relaxationszeiten voraus. Sie basiert auf der Tatsache, daß dielektrische Verluste. die bei wesentlich kleineren Frequenzen als der mittleren charakteristischen Frequenz bestimmt werden, außerordentlich empfindlich sind gegen geringe Änderungen im Verteilungsgesetz. Die Methode wird am Beispiel dielektrischer Messungen an Wasser demonstriert. Die Auswertung eigener Messungen ergibt, daß sich im Rahmen der erzielbaren hohen Genauigkeit das dielektrische Verhalten von Wasser durch eine einzige Relaxationszeit charakterisieren läßt.
In der vorliegenden Arbeit wird die Frequenzabhängigkeit des dielektrischen Verhaltens einer Suspension von Kugeln mit Schale untersucht. Es werden die allgemeine Lösung sowie spezielle Näherungsformeln angegeben. Das Frequenzverhalten wird exakt durch 2 Relaxationsausdrücke vom Debye - Typ, die sich superponieren, charakterisiert.
Die vorgetragenen Formeln erlauben die Analyse der Impedanzkurven von Zellsuspensionen aus Erythrozyten, Bakterien, Seeigeleiern u. a. m., aber auch von Proteinlösungen und anderen Suspensionen.
Bei B. cadaveris, die in einem an organischen Substanzen reichen Medium kultiviert wurden, nimmt der O2-Verbrauch pro Zeiteinheit bei Glucoseveratmung mit der Röntgenstrahlendosis ab, während bei Bakterien, die in einem Salzmedium gewachsen sind, die Atmung bis zu einer Dosis von 2 - 3 Mr erst ansteigt, um erst bei höheren Dosen abzufallen. Die Atmung wird erst bei Dosen in der Größenordnung von 1 Million r merklich beeinflußt.
Die Atmung der Bakterien ist damit unter den hier untersuchten Bedingungen noch strahlenresistenter als die Gewebeatmung von Säugetierzellen.
Es wurde das Leitfähigkeitsverhalten von reinem, lufthaltigem Wasser bei kontinuierlicher und impulsgetasteter Röntgenbestrahlung (60 kV8) untersucht. Hierbei ergaben sich zwei einander überlagerte Effekte: 1. Ein der Röntgen-Dosisleistung proportionaler irreversibler Leitfähigkeitsanstieg, der vermutlich auf eine Strahlenreaktion des gelösten CO2 zurückzuführen ist, 2. eine reversible Leitfähigkeitserhöhung während der Bestrahlung, die sich mit der Entstehung einer Ionenart mit einer mittleren Lebensdauer von ca. 0,15 sec erklären läßt. Es wird angenommen, daß es sich dabei um Radikalionen O2⊖ handelt, welche durch die Reaktion der als Strahlungsprodukt entstehenden Η-Radikale mit dem gelösten Sauerstoff gebildet werden. Ein möglicher chemischer Reaktionsmechanismus wird angegeben, der zu befriedigender quantitativer Übereinstimmung der Versuchsergebnisse mit Ausbeutewerten und Reaktionskonstanten aus der Literatur führt.
Imposing multi-physics constraints at different densities on the neutron Star Equation of State
(2022)
Neutron star matter spans a wide range of densities, from that of nuclei at the surface to exceeding several times normal nuclear matter density in the core. While terrestrial experiments, such as nuclear or heavy-ion collision experiments, provide clues about the behaviour of dense nuclear matter, one must resort to theoretical models of neutron star matter to extrapolate to higher density and finite neutron/proton asymmetry relevant for neutron stars. In this work, we explore the parameter space within the framework of the Relativistic Mean Field model allowed by present uncertainties compatible with state-of-the-art experimental data. We apply a cut-off filter scheme to constrain the parameter space using multi-physics constraints at different density regimes: chiral effective field theory, nuclear and heavy-ion collision data as well as multi-messenger astrophysical observations of neutron stars. Using the results of the study, we investigate possible correlations between nuclear and astrophysical observables.
Trockene Mildisäure-Dehydrogenase wurde mit Protonen verschiedener Energie bis maximal 80 keV in dünnen Schichten bestrahlt. Die Inaktivierungsquerschnitte betrugen bei Zimmertemperatur ca. 0,4·10-12 cm2 und waren in dem gemessenen Energiebereich konstant. Der Einfluß der Teilchenenergie auf den Inaktivierungsverlauf wurde insbesondere bei sehr kleinen Energien abgeschätzt. Bestrahlungen bei verschiedenen Temperaturen zeigten eine Abnahme des Strahleneffektes nach niedrigeren Temperaturen.
Es wird der Einfluß von Röntgenstrahlen und ultravioletten Strahlen verschiedener Wellenlängen auf kernhaltige Zellteile von Acetabularia mediterranea untersucht. Die Röntgenbestrahlung führt zu einer Verminderung des Regenerationsvermögens der Zellteile, zu einer Verringerung der Cystenbildung der Regenerate und zu einer Herabsetzung der Lebensfähigkeit der Cysten. Erst nach einer Dosis von 400 kr ist das Regenerationsvermögen fast völlig zerstört. Die Fähigkeit zur Bildung fortpflanzungsfähiger Gameten geht bereits nach 40 kr verloren. Die Wirkung von UV-Bestrahlungen ist demgegenüber sehr gering. Es wird geschlossen, daß die beobachteten Leistungen der kernhaltigen Zellteile wesentlich durch den Zellkern bestimmt sind, der im Rhizoid gegen die UV-Strahlung weitgehend abgeschirmt ist. Erfolgt eine vollständige Regeneration bis zur Hutbildung, so scheinen Größe und Gestalt der ausgewachsenen Regenerate nicht wesentlich von der Röntgenbestrahlung beeinflußt zu sein. In den meisten Fällen bilden Hutregenerate auch Cysten.