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Wir haben uns mit der Leitfähigkeitsdynamik von Barium-Natrium-Niobat-Kristallen (BSN-Kristallen) auseinandergesetzt und haben verschiedene Untersuchungen zum Themenkreis Lyapunov-Exponenten anhand von experimentellen BSN-Zeitreihen durchgeführt. Als einen typischen größten Lyapunov-Exponenten von chaotischen BSN-Zuständen erhalten wir Werte in der Größenordnung von 0.1 / s. Der Maximalwert entspricht ca. 3.5 bits pro Attraktorumlauf. Wir beobachten für die Mehrzahl der chaotische BSN-Zustände entlang der unersuchten Ruelle-Takens-Newhouse-Route (RTN-Route) zwei positive Lyapunov-Exponenten mit einem schmalen Übergangsbereich in dem wir nur einen positiven Lyapunov-Exponenten erkennen. Diesen Befund interpretieren wir als eine kompleer werdende Dynamik mit wachsender Stromstärke durch den Kristall, die wir auch durch eine kompliziertere Attraktorstruktur der BSN-Zustände entlang der RTN-Route ins Chaos bestätigen können. Die Abschätzung von Lyapunov-Exponenten der BSN-Zustände entlang der RTN-Route bestätigen die meisten der Ergebnisse, die wir bisher mit anderen Verfahren erhalten haben. Die Kolmogorov-Entropie K1 die wir mit Gleichung (5) aus den positiven Lyapunov-Exponenten bestimmen, ist allerdings um etwa einen Faktor vier kleiner als Abschätzungen der Entropie K2, die sich aus Korrelationsbetrachtungen in vorangegangenen Untersuchungen ergeben haben. Durch die Untersuchungen zu lokalisierten Lyapunov-Exponenten erhalten wir eine detailliertere Beschreibung der BSN-Dynamik im rekonstruierten Ersatz-Phasenraum. Wir erkennen an verschiedenen Beispielen, daß die Attraktoren von BSN-Zuständen entlang der RTN-Route durch mindestens einen markanten Bereich mit großen positiven lokalisierten Lyapunov-Exponeten ausgezeichnet sind. Bezüglich der Variation der Attraktoren entlang der RTN-Route beobachten wir, wie sich bevorzugt diese Bereiche in ihrer Form verändern. Die chaotischen Zustände sind durch eine Attraktorregion ausgezeichnet, die einen sichtbar größeren lokalisierten Lyapunov-Exponenten besitzt, als die restlichen Gebiete. Wir führen diese Beobachtung auf das lokale Aufbrechen eines 2-Frequenz-Torus zurück und können diese Vermutung durch Untersuchungen zu einem chaotischen Zustand aus der RTN-Route belegen. Die Simulationsergebnisse zur BSN-Modellgleichung zeigen, daß die Gleichung innerhalb der untersuchten Parameterbereiche kein chaotisches Verhalten generiert. Die aus experimentellen Daten angepaßten Parametervektoren ->k deuten darauf hin, daß die Lösungen periodische Inseln in einer Fixpunktlandschaft darstellen. Mit den entwickelten Methoden zur Bestimmung von Lyapunov-Exponenten aus Delay-Differentialgleichungen stellen wir die Grundlage bereit, um zukünftige Untersuchungen an gekoppelten Modellgleichungen durchführen zu können.
In der vorliegenden Arbeit beschäftigen wir uns mit der Frage, wie ein Regler für ein hochdimensionales physikalisch/technisches System strukturiert und optimiert werden soll. Diesbezüglich untersuchen wir einen neuen Ansatz, welcher versucht, Regel-Mechanismen des ökonomischen Marktes und Lern-Prozesse mit in den Regler einzubauen. Um eine anschauliche Vorstellung von der Wirkung des Reglers zu erhalten, wenden wir diesen auf ein einfaches physikalisches Model an, eine an ihren Enden eingespannte eindimensionale Federkette. Wir implementieren das Model auf einem Rechner und simulieren den Einfluß des Regelverfahrens auf die Bewegung der Kette. Dabei beschränken wir uns auf den Grenzfall kleiner Amplituden, um das System im Rahmen einer näherungsweise linearen Dynamik beschreiben zu können. Mit Hilfe eines schwachen destabilisierenden Zusatzpotentials erreichen wir, daß die niedrigen Eigenmoden der schwingenden Kette instabil werden und die ausgestreckte Kette eine instabile Gleichgewichtslage darstellt. Wir stellen uns die Aufgabe, diese unter Verwendung des Reglers zu stabilisieren. Anhand des Modells untersuchen wir den Einfluß verschiedener Anfangsbedingungen der Kette, den Einfluß der Markt-Regelung, den Einfluß verschiedener Kommunikationsstrukturen und den Einfluß des Lernverfahrens auf die Wirksamkeit und die Robustheit des Regelprozesses. Als wichtigstes Ergebnis erkennen wir, daß die Regelung mit dem Markt robuster im Vergleich mit der Regelung ohne Markt ist, aber im allgemeinen einen höheren Regel-Energieaufwand aufweist. Untersuchungen anhand des Lernverfahrens ergeben, daß sich das Lernen der Markt- und der Kommunikationsstruktur kombinieren läßt und dadurch die Wirksamkeit der Regelung gegen über der Verwendung von nur einem der beiden Lern-Ansätze erhöht werden kann. Unsere Ergebnisse zeigen, daß sich das Markt-Konzept vollständig auf den gegebenen technischen Regelprozeß übertragen läßt. In der Diskussion der Ergebnisse führen wir die erhöhte Robustheit und den erhöhten Energieaufwand der Markt-Regelung auf eine indirekte, nichtlineare Kopplung der Regeleinheiten zurück, die der Markt-Mechanismus in den Regelprozeß einführt. Die Nichtlinearität bewirkt, daß die von dem Regler bestimmten Regelkräfte bei kleinen Kontrollfehlern relativ größer sind als bei großen Kontrollfehlern. Daduch ist der Energieaufwand der Markt-Regelung bei kleinen Kontrollfehlern gegenüber der Regelung ohne Markt erhöht. Der Regler ist damit in der Lage, die Kette auch bei dem Ausfall einer Regeleinheit zu stabilisieren, da ausreichend große Regelkräfte durch die verbleibenden Regeleinheiten ausgeübt werden. Die Kopplung von benachbarten Massenpunkten durch Federn unterstützt die Robustheit der Regelung in dem untersuchten Ketten-Modell, da die Kopplung dazu führt, daß die Massenpunkte eine zur instabilen Gleichgewichtslage rücktreibende Kraft erfahren und dadurch in den Bereich von kleinen Kontrollfehlern und relativ hohen Regelkräften gelangen. Am Ende der Diskussion gehen wir kurz auf mögliche Anwendungen der gewonnen Ergebnisse ein. Dabei haben wir besonders technische Regelprozesse im Sinne von Smart Matter (intelligente Bauteile) im Auge.
Folding of G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) according to the two-stage model (Popot, J. L., and Engelman, D. M. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 4031–4037) is postulated to proceed in 2 steps: partitioning of the polypeptide into the membrane followed by diffusion until native contacts are formed. Herein we investigate conformational preferences of fragments of the yeast Ste2p receptor using NMR. Constructs comprising the first, the first two, and the first three transmembrane (TM) segments, as well as a construct comprising TM1–TM2 covalently linked to TM7 were examined. We observed that the isolated TM1 does not form a stable helix nor does it integrate well into the micelle. TM1 is significantly stabilized upon interaction with TM2, forming a helical hairpin reported previously (Neumoin, A., Cohen, L. S., Arshava, B., Tantry, S., Becker, J. M., Zerbe, O., and Naider, F. (2009) Biophys. J. 96, 3187–3196), and in this case the protein integrates into the hydrophobic interior of the micelle. TM123 displays a strong tendency to oligomerize, but hydrogen exchange data reveal that the center of TM3 is solvent exposed. In all GPCRs so-far structurally characterized TM7 forms many contacts with TM1 and TM2. In our study TM127 integrates well into the hydrophobic environment, but TM7 does not stably pack against the remaining helices. Topology mapping in microsomal membranes also indicates that TM1 does not integrate in a membrane-spanning fashion, but that TM12, TM123, and TM127 adopt predominantly native-like topologies. The data from our study would be consistent with the retention of individual helices of incompletely synthesized GPCRs in the vicinity of the translocon until the complete receptor is released into the membrane interior.
The production yields of the Σ(1385)± and Ξ(1530)0 resonances are measured in pp collisions at s√=13 TeV with ALICE. The measurements are performed as a function of the charged particle multiplicity ⟨dNch/dη⟩, which is related to the energy density produced in the collision. The results include transverse momentum (pT) distributions, pT-integrated yields, mean transverse momenta of Σ(1385)± and Ξ(1530)0, as well as ratios of the pT-integrated resonance yields relative to yields of other hadron species. The Σ(1385)±/π± and Ξ(1530)0/π± yield ratios are consistent with the trend of the enhancement of strangeness production from low to high multiplicity pp collisions, which was previously observed for strange and multi-strange baryons. The yield ratio between the measured resonances and the long-lived baryons with the same strangeness content exhibits a hint of a mild increasing trend at low multiplicity, despite too large uncertainties to exclude the flat behaviour. The results are compared to predictions from models such as EPOS-LHC and PYTHIA 8 with Rope shoving. The latter provides the best description of the multiplicity dependence of the Σ(1385)± and Ξ(1530)0 production in pp collisions at s√=13 TeV.
Measurements of the production cross sections of prompt D0, D+, D∗+, D+s, Λ+c, and Ξ+c charm hadrons at midrapidity in proton−proton collisions at s√=13 TeV with the ALICE detector are presented. The D-meson cross sections as a function of transverse momentum (pT) are provided with improved precision and granularity. The ratios of pT-differential meson production cross sections based on this publication and on measurements at different rapidity and collision energy provide a constraint on gluon parton distribution functions at low values of Bjorken-x (10−5−10−4). The measurements of Λ+c (Ξ+c) baryon production extend the measured pT intervals down to pT=0(3)~GeV/c. These measurements are used to determine the charm-quark fragmentation fractions and the cc¯¯ production cross section at midrapidity (|y|<0.5) based on the sum of the cross sections of the weakly-decaying ground-state charm hadrons D0, D+, D+s, Λ+c, Ξ0c and, for the first time, Ξ+c, and of the strongly-decaying J/psi mesons. The first measurements of Ξ+c and Σ0,++c fragmentation fractions at midrapidity are also reported. A significantly larger fraction of charm quarks hadronising to baryons is found compared to e+e− and ep collisions. The cc¯¯ production cross section at midrapidity is found to be at the upper bound of state-of-the-art perturbative QCD calculations.
Measurements of the production cross sections of prompt D0, D+, D∗+, D+s, Λ+c, and Ξ+c charm hadrons at midrapidity in proton−proton collisions at s√=13 TeV with the ALICE detector are presented. The D-meson cross sections as a function of transverse momentum (pT) are provided with improved precision and granularity. The ratios of pT-differential meson production cross sections based on this publication and on measurements at different rapidity and collision energy provide a constraint on gluon parton distribution functions at low values of Bjorken-x (10−5−10−4). The measurements of Λ+c (Ξ+c) baryon production extend the measured pT intervals down to pT=0(3)~GeV/c. These measurements are used to determine the charm-quark fragmentation fractions and the cc¯¯ production cross section at midrapidity (|y|<0.5) based on the sum of the cross sections of the weakly-decaying ground-state charm hadrons D0, D+, D+s, Λ+c, Ξ0c and, for the first time, Ξ+c, and of the strongly-decaying J/psi mesons. The first measurements of Ξ+c and Σ0,++c fragmentation fractions at midrapidity are also reported. A significantly larger fraction of charm quarks hadronising to baryons is found compared to e+e− and ep collisions. The cc¯¯ production cross section at midrapidity is found to be at the upper bound of state-of-the-art perturbative QCD calculations.
This Letter presents the first measurement of event-by-event fluctuations of the net number (difference between the particle and antiparticle multiplicities) of multistrange hadrons Ξ− and Ξ¯¯¯¯+ and its correlation with the net-kaon number using the data collected by the ALICE Collaboration in pp, p−Pb, and Pb−Pb collisions at a center-of-mass energy per nucleon pair sNN−−−√=5.02 TeV. The statistical hadronization model with a correlation over three units of rapidity between hadrons having the same and opposite strangeness content successfully describes the results. On the other hand, string-fragmentation models that mainly correlate strange hadrons with opposite strange quark content over a small rapidity range fail to describe the data.
he first measurement of 3ΛH and 3Λ¯¯¯¯H¯¯¯¯ differential production with respect to transverse momentum and centrality in Pb−Pb collisions at sNN−−−√=5.02~TeV is presented. The 3ΛH has been reconstructed via its two-charged-body decay channel, i.e., 3ΛH→3He+π−. A Blast-Wave model fit of the pT-differential spectra of all nuclear species measured by the ALICE collaboration suggests that the 3ΛH kinetic freeze-out surface is consistent with that of other nuclei. The ratio between the integrated yields of 3ΛH and 3He is compared to predictions from the statistical hadronisation model and the coalescence model, with the latter being favoured by the presented measurements.
First measurements of hadron(h)−Λ azimuthal angular correlations in p−Pb collisions at sNN−−−√ = 5.02 TeV using the ALICE detector at the LHC are presented. These correlations are used to separate the production of associated Λ baryons into three different kinematic regions, namely those produced in the direction of the trigger particle (near-side), those produced in the opposite direction (away-side), and those whose production is uncorrelated with the jet-axis (underlying event). The per-trigger associated Λ yields in these regions are extracted, along with the near- and away-side azimuthal peak widths, and the results are studied as a function of associated particle pT and event multiplicity. Comparisons with the DPMJET event generator and previous measurements of the ϕ(1020) meson are also made. The final results indicate that strangeness production in the highest multiplicity p−Pb collisions is enhanced relative to low multiplicity collisions in the jet-like regions, as well as the underlying event. The production of Λ relative to charged hadrons is also enhanced in the underlying event when compared to the jet-like regions. Additionally, the results hint that strange quark production in the away-side of the jet is modified by soft interactions with the underlying event.
Collective behavior has been observed in high-energy heavy-ion collisions for several decades. Collectivity is driven by the high particle multiplicities that are produced in these collisions. At the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), features of collectivity have also been seen in high-multiplicity proton-proton collisions that can attain particle multiplicities comparable to peripheral Pb-Pb collisions. One of the possible signatures of collective behavior is the decrease of femtoscopic radii extracted from pion and kaon pairs emitted from high-multiplicity collisions with increasing pair transverse momentum. This decrease can be described in terms of an approximate transverse mass scaling. In the present work, femtoscopic analyses are carried out by the ALICE collaboration on charged pion and kaon pairs produced in pp collisions at s√=13 TeV from the LHC to study possible collectivity in pp collisions. The event-shape analysis method based on transverse sphericity is used to select for spherical versus jet-like events, and the effects of this selection on the femtoscopic radii for both charged pion and kaon pairs are studied. This is the first time this selection method has been applied to charged kaon pairs. An approximate transverse-mass scaling of the radii is found in all multiplicity ranges studied when the difference in the Lorentz boost for pions and kaons is taken into account. This observation does not support the hypothesis of collective expansion of hot and dense matter that should only occur in high-multiplicity events. A possible alternate explanation of the present results is based on a scenario of common emission conditions for pions and kaons in pp collisions for the multiplicity ranges studied.