TY - GEN A1 - Rätzel, Dennis A1 - Wilkens, Martin A1 - Menzel, Ralf T1 - Gravitational properties of light BT - the gravitational field of a laser pulse N2 - The gravitational field of a laser pulse of finite lifetime, is investigated in the framework of linearized gravity. Although the effects are very small, they may be of fundamental physical interest. It is shown that the gravitational field of a linearly polarized light pulse is modulated as the norm of the corresponding electric field strength, while no modulations arise for circular polarization. In general, the gravitational field is independent of the polarization direction. It is shown that all physical effects are confined to spherical shells expanding with the speed of light, and that these shells are imprints of the spacetime events representing emission and absorption of the pulse. Nearby test particles at rest are attracted towards the pulse trajectory by the gravitational field due to the emission of the pulse, and they are repelled from the pulse trajectory by the gravitational field due to its absorption. Examples are given for the size of the attractive effect. It is recovered that massless test particles do not experience any physical effect if they are co-propagating with the pulse, and that the acceleration of massless test particles counter-propagating with respect to the pulse is four times stronger than for massive particles at rest. The similarities between the gravitational effect of a laser pulse and Newtonian gravity in two dimensions are pointed out. The spacetime curvature close to the pulse is compared to that induced by gravitational waves from astronomical sources. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe - 222 KW - electromagnetic radiation KW - general relativity KW - gravity KW - laser pulses KW - linearized gravity KW - pp-wave solutions Y1 - 2016 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-90553 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Rätzel, Dennis A1 - Wilkens, Martin A1 - Menzel, Ralf T1 - Gravitational properties of light BT - the gravitational field of a laser pulse JF - New journal of physics : the open-access journal for physics N2 - The gravitational field of a laser pulse of finite lifetime, is investigated in the framework of linearized gravity. Although the effects are very small, they may be of fundamental physical interest. It is shown that the gravitational field of a linearly polarized light pulse is modulated as the norm of the corresponding electric field strength, while no modulations arise for circular polarization. In general, the gravitational field is independent of the polarization direction. It is shown that all physical effects are confined to spherical shells expanding with the speed of light, and that these shells are imprints of the spacetime events representing emission and absorption of the pulse. Nearby test particles at rest are attracted towards the pulse trajectory by the gravitational field due to the emission of the pulse, and they are repelled from the pulse trajectory by the gravitational field due to its absorption. Examples are given for the size of the attractive effect. It is recovered that massless test particles do not experience any physical effect if they are co-propagating with the pulse, and that the acceleration of massless test particles counter-propagating with respect to the pulse is four times stronger than for massive particles at rest. The similarities between the gravitational effect of a laser pulse and Newtonian gravity in two dimensions are pointed out. The spacetime curvature close to the pulse is compared to that induced by gravitational waves from astronomical sources. KW - gravity KW - general relativity KW - laser pulses KW - electromagnetic radiation KW - linearized gravity KW - pp-wave solutions Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1088/1367-2630/18/2/023009 SN - 1367-2630 VL - 18 SP - 1 EP - 16 PB - IOP Science CY - London ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Rätzel, Dennis A1 - Wilkens, Martin A1 - Menzel, Ralf T1 - Gravitational properties of light-the gravitational field of a laser pulse JF - NEW JOURNAL OF PHYSICS N2 - The gravitational field of a laser pulse of finite lifetime, is investigated in the framework of linearized gravity. Although the effects are very small, they may be of fundamental physical interest. It is shown that the gravitational field of a linearly polarized light pulse is modulated as the norm of the corresponding electric field strength, while no modulations arise for circular polarization. In general, the gravitational field is independent of the polarization direction. It is shown that all physical effects are confined to spherical shells expanding with the speed of light, and that these shells are imprints of the spacetime events representing emission and absorption of the pulse. Nearby test particles at rest are attracted towards the pulse trajectory by the gravitational field due to the emission of the pulse, and they are repelled from the pulse trajectory by the gravitational field due to its absorption. Examples are given for the size of the attractive effect. It is recovered that massless test particles do not experience any physical effect if they are co-propagating with the pulse, and that the acceleration of massless test particles counter-propagating with respect to the pulse is four times stronger than for massive particles at rest. The similarities between the gravitational effect of a laser pulse and Newtonian gravity in two dimensions are pointed out. The spacetime curvature close to the pulse is compared to that induced by gravitational waves from astronomical sources. KW - gravity KW - general relativity KW - laser pulses KW - electromagnetic radiation KW - linearized gravity KW - pp-wave solutions Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1088/1367-2630/18/2/023009 SN - 1367-2630 VL - 18 PB - IOP Publ. Ltd. CY - Bristol ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Rätzel, Dennis A1 - Wilkens, Martin A1 - Menzel, Ralf T1 - The effect of entanglement in gravitational photon-photon scattering JF - epl : a letters journal exploring the frontiers of physics N2 - The differential cross-section for gravitational photon-photon scattering calculated in perturbative quantum gravity is shown to depend on the degree of polarization entanglement of the two photons. The interaction between photons in the symmetric Bell state is stronger than between not entangled photons. In contrast, the interaction between photons in the anti-symmetric Bell state is weaker than between not entangled photons. The results are interpreted in terms of quantum interference, and it is shown how they fit into the idea of distance-dependent forces. Copyright (C) EPLA, 2016 Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1209/0295-5075/115/51002 SN - 0295-5075 SN - 1286-4854 VL - 115 SP - S12 EP - S13 PB - EDP Sciences CY - Mulhouse ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Puhlmann, Dirk A1 - Henkel, Carsten A1 - Heuer, Axel A1 - Pieplow, Gregor A1 - Menzel, Ralf T1 - Characterization of a remote optical element with bi-photons JF - Physica scripta : an international journal for experimental and theoretical physics N2 - We present a simple setup that exploits the interference of entangled photon pairs. 'Signal' photons are sent through a Mach–Zehnder-like interferometer, while 'idlers' are detected in a variable polarization state. Two-photon interference (in coincidence detection) is observed with very high contrast and for significant time delays between signal and idler detection events. This is explained by quantum erasure of the polarization tag and a delayed choice protocol involving a non-local virtual polarizer. The phase of the two-photon fringes is scanned by varying the path length in the signal beam or by rotating a birefringent crystal in the idler beam. We exploit this to characterize one beam splitter of the signal photon interferometer (reflection and transmission amplitudes including losses), using only information about coincidences and control parameters in the idler path. This is possible because our bi-photon state saturates the Greenberger–Yelin–Englert inequality between contrast and predictability. KW - quantum optics KW - quantum eraser KW - entanglement KW - bi-photons Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1088/0031-8949/91/2/023006 SN - 0031-8949 SN - 1402-4896 VL - 91 SP - 113 EP - 114 PB - IOP Publ. Ltd. CY - Bristol ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Intravaia, F. A1 - Behunin, R. O. A1 - Henkel, Carsten A1 - Busch, K. A1 - Dalvit, D. A. R. T1 - Failure of Local Thermal Equilibrium in Quantum Friction JF - Physical review letters N2 - Recent progress in manipulating atomic and condensed matter systems has instigated a surge of interest in nonequilibrium physics, including many-body dynamics of trapped ultracold atoms and ions, near-field radiative heat transfer, and quantum friction. Under most circumstances the complexity of such nonequilibrium systems requires a number of approximations to make theoretical descriptions tractable. In particular, it is often assumed that spatially separated components of a system thermalize with their immediate surroundings, although the global state of the system is out of equilibrium. This powerful assumption reduces the complexity of nonequilibrium systems to the local application of well-founded equilibrium concepts. While this technique appears to be consistent for the description of some phenomena, we show that it fails for quantum friction by underestimating by approximately 80% the magnitude of the drag force. Our results show that the correlations among the components of driven, but steady-state, quantum systems invalidate the assumption of local thermal equilibrium, calling for a critical reexamination of this approach for describing the physics of nonequilibrium systems. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.117.100402 SN - 0031-9007 SN - 1079-7114 VL - 117 SP - 989 EP - 1010 PB - American Physical Society CY - College Park ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Intravaia, F. A1 - Behunin, R. O. A1 - Henkel, Carsten A1 - Busch, K. A1 - Dalvit, D. A. R. T1 - Non-Markovianity in atom-surface dispersion forces JF - Physical review : A, Atomic, molecular, and optical physics N2 - We discuss the failure of the Markov approximation in the description of atom-surface fluctuation-induced interactions, both in equilibrium (Casimir-Polder forces) and out of equilibrium (quantum friction). Using general theoretical arguments, we show that the Markov approximation can lead to erroneous predictions of such phenomena with regard to both strength and functional dependencies on system parameters. In particular, we show that the long-time power-law tails of two-time dipole correlations and their corresponding low-frequency behavior, neglected in the Markovian limit, affect the prediction of the force. Our findings highlight the importance of non-Markovian effects in dispersion interactions. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevA.94.042114 SN - 2469-9926 SN - 2469-9934 VL - 94 PB - American Physical Society CY - College Park ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Japha, Yonathan A1 - Zhou, Shuyu A1 - Keil, Mark A1 - Folman, Ron A1 - Henkel, Carsten A1 - Vardi, Amichay T1 - Suppression and enhancement of decoherence in an atomic Josephson junction JF - NEW JOURNAL OF PHYSICS N2 - We investigate the role of interatomic interactions when a Bose gas, in a double-well potential with a finite tunneling probability (a 'Bose–Josephson junction'), is exposed to external noise. We examine the rate of decoherence of a system initially in its ground state with equal probability amplitudes in both sites. The noise may induce two kinds of effects: firstly, random shifts in the relative phase or number difference between the two wells and secondly, loss of atoms from the trap. The effects of induced phase fluctuations are mitigated by atom–atom interactions and tunneling, such that the dephasing rate may be suppressed by half its single-atom value. Random fluctuations may also be induced in the population difference between the wells, in which case atom–atom interactions considerably enhance the decoherence rate. A similar scenario is predicted for the case of atom loss, even if the loss rates from the two sites are equal. We find that if the initial state is number-squeezed due to interactions, then the loss process induces population fluctuations that reduce the coherence across the junction. We examine the parameters relevant for these effects in a typical atom chip device, using a simple model of the trapping potential, experimental data, and the theory of magnetic field fluctuations near metallic conductors. These results provide a framework for mapping the dynamical range of barriers engineered for specific applications and set the stage for more complex atom circuits ('atomtronics'). KW - atomtronics KW - coherence KW - ultracold atoms KW - Bose-Einstein condensate KW - Bose-Hubbard model KW - tunneling KW - Josephson junction Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1088/1367-2630/18/5/055008 SN - 1367-2630 VL - 18 PB - IOP Publ. Ltd. CY - Bristol ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Kumph, Muir A1 - Henkel, Carsten A1 - Rabl, Peter A1 - Brownnutt, Michael A1 - Blatt, Rainer T1 - Electric-field noise above a thin dielectric layer on metal electrodes JF - NEW JOURNAL OF PHYSICS N2 - The electric-field noise above a layered structure composed of a planar metal electrode covered by a thin dielectric is evaluated and it is found that the dielectric film considerably increases the noise level, in proportion to its thickness. Importantly, even a thin (mono) layer of a low-loss dielectric can enhance the noise level by several orders of magnitude compared to the noise above a bare metal. Close to this layered surface, the power spectral density of the electric field varies with the inverse fourth power of the distance to the surface, rather than with the inverse square, as it would above a bare metal surface. Furthermore, compared to a clean metal, where the noise spectrum does not vary with frequency (in the radio-wave and microwave bands), the dielectric layer can generate electricfield noise which scales in inverse proportion to the frequency. For various realistic scenarios, the noise levels predicted from this model are comparable to those observed in trapped-ion experiments. Thus, these findings are of particular importance for the understanding and mitigation of unwanted heating and decoherence in miniaturized ion traps. KW - ion trap KW - electric field noise KW - fluctuation dissipation Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1088/1367-2630/18/2/023020 SN - 1367-2630 VL - 18 SP - 1125 EP - 1136 PB - IOP Publ. Ltd. CY - Bristol ER - TY - THES A1 - Bendre, Abhijit B. T1 - Growth and saturation of dynamo in spiral galaxies via direct simulations T1 - Wachstum und Sättigung des Dynamos in Spiralgalaxien mit direkten Simulationen N2 - We do magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) simulations of local box models of turbulent Interstellar Medium (ISM) and analyse the process of amplification and saturation of mean magnetic fields with methods of mean field dynamo theory. It is shown that the process of saturation of mean fields can be partially described by the prolonged diffusion time scales in presence of the dynamically significant magnetic fields. However, the outward wind also plays an essential role in the saturation in higher SN rate case. Algebraic expressions for the back reaction of the magnetic field onto the turbulent transport coefficients are derived, which allow a complete description of the nonlinear dynamo. We also present the effects of dynamically significant mean fields on the ISM configuration and pressure distribution. We further add the cosmic ray component in the simulations and investigate the kinematic growth of mean fields with a dynamo perspective. N2 - Wir fuehren magnetohydrodynamische (MHD) Simulationen des turbulenten interstellaren Mediums (ISM) in lokalen Boxen durch und analysieren darin den Prozess der Verstaerkung und Saturation der mittleren Magnetfelder mit Methoden der Dynamotheorie mittlerer Felder. Es wird gezeigt, dass der Prozess der Saturation mittlerer Felder teilweise durch eine verlaengerte Diffusionzeit in Gegenwart dynamisch signifikanter Magnetfelder erklaert werden kann. Fuer hoehere Supernovae-Raten spielt auch der nach aussen treibende Wind eine essenzielle Rolle fuer die Saturation. Aus den Simulationen konnten algebraische Formeln fuer die Rueckwirkung des Magnetfeldes auf die turbulenten Transportkoeffizienten abgeleitet werden, die eine vollstaendige Beschreibung des nichtlinearen Dynamos erlauben. Wir praesentieren zudem den Einfluss signifikanter mittlerer Magnetfelder auf die ISM-Konfiguration und Druckverteilung. Wir fuegen der Simulation ausserdem kosmische Strahlung als Komponente hinzu und untersuchen das kinematische Wachstum mittlerer Felder aus einer Dynamo-Perspektive. KW - magnetohydrodynamics KW - ISM: Turbulence KW - spiral galaxies: magnetic fields KW - nonliear dynamo KW - cosmic ray dynamo KW - Magnetohydrodynamik KW - ISM: Turbulenz KW - Spiralgalaxien: Magnetfelder KW - nichtlineare Dynamo KW - kosmische Strahlung Dynamo Y1 - 2016 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-407517 ER - TY - GEN A1 - Tomov, Petar A1 - Pena, Rodrigo F. O. A1 - Roque, Antonio C. A1 - Zaks, Michael A. T1 - Mechanisms of self-sustained oscillatory states in hierarchical modular networks with mixtures of electrophysiological cell types T2 - Frontiers in computational neuroscience N2 - In a network with a mixture of different electrophysiological types of neurons linked by excitatory and inhibitory connections, temporal evolution leads through repeated epochs of intensive global activity separated by intervals with low activity level. This behavior mimics "up" and "down" states, experimentally observed in cortical tissues in absence of external stimuli. We interpret global dynamical features in terms of individual dynamics of the neurons. In particular, we observe that the crucial role both in interruption and in resumption of global activity is played by distributions of the membrane recovery variable within the network. We also demonstrate that the behavior of neurons is more influenced by their presynaptic environment in the network than by their formal types, assigned in accordance with their response to constant current. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe - 452 KW - self-sustained activity KW - cortical oscillations KW - irregular firing activity KW - hierarchical modular networks KW - cortical network models KW - intrinsic neuronal diversity KW - up-down states KW - chaotic neural dynamics Y1 - 2018 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-407724 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Jeon, Jae-Hyung A1 - Javanainen, Matti A1 - Martinez-Seara, Hector A1 - Metzler, Ralf A1 - Vattulainen, Ilpo T1 - Protein Crowding in Lipid Bilayers Gives Rise to Non-Gaussian Anomalous Lateral Diffusion of Phospholipids and Proteins JF - Physical review : X, Expanding access N2 - Biomembranes are exceptionally crowded with proteins with typical protein-to-lipid ratios being around 1:50 - 1:100. Protein crowding has a decisive role in lateral membrane dynamics as shown by recent experimental and computational studies that have reported anomalous lateral diffusion of phospholipids and membrane proteins in crowded lipid membranes. Based on extensive simulations and stochastic modeling of the simulated trajectories, we here investigate in detail how increasing crowding by membrane proteins reshapes the stochastic characteristics of the anomalous lateral diffusion in lipid membranes. We observe that correlated Gaussian processes of the fractional Langevin equation type, identified as the stochastic mechanism behind lipid motion in noncrowded bilayer, no longer adequately describe the lipid and protein motion in crowded but otherwise identical membranes. It turns out that protein crowding gives rise to a multifractal, non-Gaussian, and spatiotemporally heterogeneous anomalous lateral diffusion on time scales from nanoseconds to, at least, tens of microseconds. Our investigation strongly suggests that the macromolecular complexity and spatiotemporal membrane heterogeneity in cellular membranes play critical roles in determining the stochastic nature of the lateral diffusion and, consequently, the associated dynamic phenomena within membranes. Clarifying the exact stochastic mechanism for various kinds of biological membranes is an important step towards a quantitative understanding of numerous intramembrane dynamic phenomena. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.6.021006 SN - 2160-3308 VL - 6 PB - American Physical Society CY - College Park ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Beta, Carsten T1 - To turn or not to turn? JF - NEW JOURNAL OF PHYSICS N2 - Bacteria typically swim in straight runs, interruped by sudden turning events. In particular, some species are limited to a reversal in the swimming direction as the only turning maneuver at their disposal. In a recent article, Grossmann et al (2016 New J. Phys. 18 043009) introduce a theoretical framework to analyze the diffusive properties of active particles following this type of run-and-reverse pattern. Based on a stochastic clock model to mimic the regulatory pathway that triggers reversal events, they show that a run-and-reverse swimmer can optimize its diffusive spreading by tuning the reversal rate according to the level of rotational noise. With their approach, they open up promising new perspectives of how to incorporate the dynamics of intracellular signaling into coarse-grained active particle descriptions. KW - bacterial swimming KW - random walks KW - diffusion KW - stochastic models Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1088/1367-2630/18/5/051003 SN - 1367-2630 VL - 18 SP - 1 EP - 17 PB - IOP Publ. Ltd. CY - Bristol ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Thiem, A. A1 - Bagheri, M. A1 - Grosse-Siestrup, C. A1 - Zehbe, Rolf T1 - Gelatin-poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) scaffolds with oriented pore channel architecture - From in vitro to in vivo testing JF - Vision research : an international journal for functional aspects of vision. N2 - A gelatin-poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid), PLGA, composite scaffold, featuring a highly oriented pore channel structure, was developed as a template for articular cartilage regeneration. As a design principle the composite scaffold was optimized to contain only medical grade educts and accordingly no chemical cross linking agents or other toxicological relevant substances or methods were used. Scaffolds were synthesized using a freeze structuring method combined with an electrochemical process followed by freeze-drying. Finally, cross linking was performed using dehydrothermal treatment, which was simultaneously used for sterilization purposes. These composite scaffolds were analyzed in regard to structural and biomechanical properties, and to their degradation behavior. Furthermore, cell culture performance was tested using chondrocytes originated from joint articular cartilage tissue from 6 to 10 months old domestic pigs. Finally, the scaffolds were tested for tissue biocompatibility and their ability for tissue integration in a rat model. The scaffolds showed both excellent functional performance and high biocompatibility in vitro and in vivo. We expect that these gelatin-PLGA scaffolds can effectively support chondrogenesis in vivo demonstrating great potential for the use in cartilage defect treatment. (C) 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. KW - Gelatin-PLGA Scaffold KW - Dehydrothermal cross linking KW - Cartilage tissue engineering KW - Biomechanics KW - Rat model Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.msec.2016.02.019 SN - 0928-4931 SN - 1873-0191 VL - 62 SP - 585 EP - 595 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Xue, Zhike A1 - Yan, Xiaoli A1 - Cheng, Xin A1 - Yang, Liheng A1 - Su, Yingna A1 - Kliem, Bernhard A1 - Zhang, Jun A1 - Liu, Zhong A1 - Bi, Yi A1 - Xiang, Yongyuan A1 - Yang, Kai A1 - Zhao, Li T1 - Observing the release of twist by magnetic reconnection in a solar filament eruption JF - Nature Communications N2 - Magnetic reconnection is a fundamental process of topology change and energy release, taking place in plasmas on the Sun, in space, in astrophysical objects and in the laboratory. However, observational evidence has been relatively rare and typically only partial. Here we present evidence of fast reconnection in a solar filament eruption using high-resolution H-alpha images from the New Vacuum Solar Telescope, supplemented by extreme ultraviolet observations. The reconnection is seen to occur between a set of ambient chromospheric fibrils and the filament itself. This allows for the relaxation of magnetic tension in the filament by an untwisting motion, demonstrating a flux rope structure. The topology change and untwisting are also found through nonlinear force-free field modelling of the active region in combination with magnetohydrodynamic simulation. These results demonstrate a new role for reconnection in solar eruptions: the release of magnetic twist. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms11837 SN - 2041-1723 VL - 7 PB - Nature Publ. Group CY - London ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Kuznetsov, Sergey P. T1 - Parametric chaos generator operating on a varactor diode with the instability limitation decay mechanism JF - Technical Physics N2 - Equations are derived for a parametric chaos generator containing three oscillatory circuits and a variable-capacitance diode (varactor) and are reduced to equations for slow amplitudes of parametrically interacting modes. With allowance for quadratic nonlinearity, the problem is reduced to a system of three first-order differential equations for Pikovsky-Rabinovich-Trakhtengerts real amplitudes with a Lorenz-type attractor. In a more accurate description of nonlinearity of the varactor, the equations for slow amplitudes are complex-valued, which leads to the loss of robustness of chaotic dynamics, which is typical of the Lorenz attractor. The results of numerical calculations (portraits of attractors and Lyapunov exponents) in models with different approximation levels are compared. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1134/S1063784216030129 SN - 1063-7842 SN - 1090-6525 VL - 61 SP - 436 EP - 445 PB - Pleiades Publ. CY - New York ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Lenske, Gerlinde A1 - Wagner, Wolfgang A1 - Wirth, Joachim A1 - Thillmann, Hubertina A1 - Cauet, Eva A1 - Liepertz, Sven A1 - Leutner, Detlev T1 - The importance of pedagogical knowledge for classroom management and for and for students’ achievement JF - Zeitschrift für Erziehungswissenschaft N2 - Im Rahmen der vorliegenden Studie wurde untersucht, ob das pädagogisch-psychologische Wissen von Lehrkräften die prozessuale Qualität des Physikunterrichts mit Blick auf die Klassenführung und den Lernzuwachs der Schülerinnen und Schüler beeinflusst. Das pädagogisch-psychologische Professionswissen, konzeptualisiert als ein fächerübergreifendes, handlungsleitendes Wissen über Strategien und Mittel zur Unterrichtsgestaltung, wurde über einen Paper-Pencil-Test, bestehend aus einer Skala zum deklarativen und einer Skala zum konditional-prozeduralen Wissen erhoben (Lenske et al. 2015). Als ein grundlegendes Merkmal prozessualer Unterrichtsqualität wurde die Klassenführung anhand von Videoratings zu zwei Messzeitpunkten (zwei Unterrichtsstunden) erfasst. Der Lernzuwachs der Schülerinnen und Schüler wurde über standardisierte Fachwissenstests im Prä-Post-Testdesign gemessen. Die Stichprobe umfasst 34 Gymnasiallehrkräfte und deren Schülerinnen und Schüler (N = 993). Auf Basis eines Complex-Bootstrap-Mediations-Modells zeigte sich, dass das pädagogisch-psychologische Professionswissen über die Klassenführung vermittelt den Lernzuwachs der Schüler und Schülerinnen positiv beeinflusst. In the present study it was investigated whether the pedagogical knowledge of teachers has an influence on the process quality of physics instruction and on the learning achievement of students as well. Pedagogical knowledge, conceptualized as knowledge about strategies in classroom instruction that is domain-general and relevant for teaching behaviors, was measured using a paper-and-pencil test with two scales: one scale on declarative knowledge, the other on conditional-procedural knowledge (Lenske et al. 2015). As a basic aspect of the process quality of classroom instruction, classroom management was assessed using video ratings of two lessons from each participating teacher. Students’ learning achievement was assessed using standardized domain-specific knowledge tests in a pretest-posttest design. The sample included 34 teachers from higher-track secondary schools and their students (N = 993). A complex bootstrapping mediation model shows that teachers’ pedagogical knowledge, mediated by their classroom management, has a positive effect on their students’ learning achievement. KW - Classroom management KW - Instructional quality KW - Mediation-model KW - Pedagogical professional knowledge KW - Professional knowledge Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s11618-015-0659-x SN - 1434-663X SN - 1862-5215 VL - 19 SP - 211 EP - 233 PB - Springer CY - Wiesbaden ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Shi, Wenqin A1 - Eijt, Stephan W. H. A1 - Sandeep, Chandramathi Sukumaran Suchand A1 - Siebbeles, Laurens D. A. A1 - Houtepen, Arjan J. A1 - Kinge, Sachin A1 - Bruck, Ekkes A1 - Barbiellini, Bernardo A1 - Bansil, Arun T1 - Ligand-surface interactions and surface oxidation of colloidal PbSe quantum dots revealed by thin-film positron annihilation methods JF - Applied physics letters N2 - Positron Two Dimensional Angular Correlation of Annihilation Radiation (2D-ACAR) measurements reveal modifications of the electronic structure and composition at the surfaces of PbSe quantum dots (QDs), deposited as thin films, produced by various ligands containing either oxygen or nitrogen atoms. In particular, the 2D--ACAR measurements on thin films of colloidal PbSe QDs capped with oleic acid ligands yield an increased intensity in the electron momentum density (EMD) at high momenta compared to PbSe quantum dots capped with oleylamine. Moreover, the EMD of PbSe QDs is strongly affected by the small ethylenediamine ligands, since these molecules lead to small distances between QDs and favor neck formation between near neighbor QDs, inducing electronic coupling between neighboring QDs. The high sensitivity to the presence of oxygen atoms at the surface can be also exploited to monitor the surface oxidation of PbSe QDs upon exposure to air. Our study clearly demonstrates that positron annihilation spectroscopy applied to thin films can probe surface transformations of colloidal semiconductor QDs embedded in functional layers. (C) 2016 AIP Publishing LLC. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4942609 SN - 0003-6951 SN - 1077-3118 VL - 108 SP - 213 EP - 230 PB - American Institute of Physics CY - Melville ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Liu, Rui A1 - Kliem, Bernhard A1 - Titov, Viacheslav S. A1 - Chen, Jun A1 - Wang, Yuming A1 - Wang, Haimin A1 - Liu, Chang A1 - Xu, Yan A1 - Wiegelmann, Thomas T1 - STRUCTURE, STABILITY, AND EVOLUTION OF MAGNETIC FLUX ROPES FROM THE PERSPECTIVE OF MAGNETIC TWIST JF - The astrophysical journal : an international review of spectroscopy and astronomical physics N2 - We investigate the evolution of NOAA Active Region (AR) 11817 during 2013 August 10–12, when it developed a complex field configuration and produced four confined, followed by two eruptive, flares. These C-and-above flares are all associated with a magnetic flux rope (MFR) located along the major polarity inversion line, where shearing and converging photospheric flows are present. Aided by the nonlinear force-free field modeling, we identify the MFR through mapping magnetic connectivities and computing the twist number ${{ \mathcal T }}_{w}$ for each individual field line. The MFR is moderately twisted ($| {{ \mathcal T }}_{w}| \lt 2$) and has a well-defined boundary of high squashing factor Q. We found that the field line with the extremum $| {{ \mathcal T }}_{w}| $ is a reliable proxy of the rope axis, and that the MFR's peak $| {{ \mathcal T }}_{w}| $ temporarily increases within half an hour before each flare while it decreases after the flare peak for both confined and eruptive flares. This pre-flare increase in $| {{ \mathcal T }}_{w}| $ has little effect on the AR's free magnetic energy or any other parameters derived for the whole region, due to its moderate amount and the MFR's relatively small volume, while its decrease after flares is clearly associated with the stepwise decrease in the whole region's free magnetic energy due to the flare. We suggest that ${{ \mathcal T }}_{w}$ may serve as a useful parameter in forewarning the onset of eruption, and therefore, the consequent space weather effects. The helical kink instability is identified as the prime candidate onset mechanism for the considered flares. KW - coronal mass ejections (CMEs) KW - Sun: corona KW - Sun: filaments, pominences KW - Sun: flares KW - Sun: magnetic fields Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.3847/0004-637X/818/2/148 SN - 0004-637X SN - 1538-4357 VL - 818 PB - IOP Publ. Ltd. CY - Bristol ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Zaks, Michael A. A1 - Tomov, Petar T1 - Onset of time dependence in ensembles of excitable elements with global repulsive coupling JF - Physical review : E, Statistical, nonlinear and soft matter physics N2 - We consider the effect of global repulsive coupling on an ensemble of identical excitable elements. An increase of the coupling strength destabilizes the synchronous equilibrium and replaces it with many attracting oscillatory states, created in the transcritical heteroclinic bifurcation. The period of oscillations is inversely proportional to the distance from the critical parameter value. If the elements interact with the global field via the first Fourier harmonics of their phases, the stable equilibrium is in one step replaced by the attracting continuum of periodic motions. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.93.020201 SN - 2470-0045 SN - 2470-0053 VL - 93 PB - American Physical Society CY - College Park ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Godec, Aljaz A1 - Metzler, Ralf T1 - First passage time distribution in heterogeneity controlled kinetics: going beyond the mean first passage time JF - Scientific reports N2 - The first passage is a generic concept for quantifying when a random quantity such as the position of a diffusing molecule or the value of a stock crosses a preset threshold (target) for the first time. The last decade saw an enlightening series of new results focusing mostly on the so-called mean and global first passage time (MFPT and GFPT, respectively) of such processes. Here we push the understanding of first passage processes one step further. For a simple heterogeneous system we derive rigorously the complete distribution of first passage times (FPTs). Our results demonstrate that the typical FPT significantly differs from the MFPT, which corresponds to the long time behaviour of the FPT distribution. Conversely, the short time behaviour is shown to correspond to trajectories connecting directly from the initial value to the target. Remarkably, we reveal a previously overlooked third characteristic time scale of the first passage dynamics mirroring brief excursion away from the target. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1038/srep20349 SN - 2045-2322 VL - 6 PB - Nature Publ. Group CY - London ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Sandmann, Michael A1 - Garz, Andreas A1 - Menzel, Ralf T1 - Physiological response of two different Chlamydomonas reinhardtii strains to light-dark rhythms JF - Botany N2 - Cells of a cell-wall deficient line (cw15-type) of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and of the corresponding wild type were grown during repetitive light-dark cycles. In a direct comparison, both lines showed approximately the same relative biomass increase during light phase but the cw-line produced significantly more, and smaller, daughter cells. Throughout the light period the average cellular starch content, the cellular chlorophyll content, the cellular rate of dark respiration, and the cellular rate of photosynthesis of the cw-line was lower. Despite this, several non-cell volume related parameters like the development of starch content per cell volume were clearly different over time between the strains. Additionally, the chlorophyll-based photosynthesis rates were 2-fold higher in the mutant than in the wild-type cells, and the ratio of chlorophyll a to chlorophyll b as well as the light-saturation index were also consistently higher in the mutant cells. Differences in the starch content were also confirmed by single cell analyses using a sensitive SHG-based microscopy approach. In summary, the cw15-type mutant deviates from its genetic background in the entire cell physiology. Both lines should be used in further studies in comparative systems biology with focus on the detailed relation between cell volume increase, photosynthesis, starch metabolism, and daughter cell productivity. KW - cell wall deficient mutant KW - diurnal rhythm KW - nonlinear microscopy KW - photosynthesis KW - single-cell analysis Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1139/cjb-2015-0144 SN - 1916-2790 SN - 1916-2804 VL - 94 SP - 53 EP - 64 PB - NRC Research Press CY - Ottawa ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Ghosh, Surya K. A1 - Cherstvy, Andrey G. A1 - Petrov, Eugene P. A1 - Metzler, Ralf T1 - Interactions of rod-like particles on responsive elastic sheets JF - Soft matter N2 - What are the physical laws of the mutual interactions of objects bound to cell membranes, such as various membrane proteins or elongated virus particles? To rationalise this, we here investigate by extensive computer simulations mutual interactions of rod-like particles adsorbed on the surface of responsive elastic two-dimensional sheets. Specifically, we quantify sheet deformations as a response to adhesion of such filamentous particles. We demonstrate that tip-to-tip contacts of rods are favoured for relatively soft sheets, while side-by-side contacts are preferred for stiffer elastic substrates. These attractive orientation-dependent substrate-mediated interactions between the rod-like particles on responsive sheets can drive their aggregation and self-assembly. The optimal orientation of the membrane-bound rods is established via responding to the elastic energy profiles created around the particles. We unveil the phase diagramme of attractive-repulsive rod-rod interactions in the plane of their separation and mutual orientation. Applications of our results to other systems featuring membrane-associated particles are also discussed. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1039/c6sm01522k SN - 1744-683X SN - 1744-6848 VL - 12 SP - 7908 EP - 7919 PB - Royal Society of Chemistry CY - Cambridge ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Münch, Thomas A1 - Kipfstuhl, Sepp A1 - Freitag, Johannes A1 - Meyer, Hanno A1 - Laepple, Thomas T1 - Regional climate signal vs. local noise: a two-dimensional view of water isotopes in Antarctic firn at Kohnen Station, Dronning Maud Land JF - Climate of the past : an interactive open access journal of the European Geosciences Union N2 - In low-accumulation regions, the reliability of delta O-18-derived temperature signals from ice cores within the Holocene is unclear, primarily due to the small climate changes relative to the intrinsic noise of the isotopic signal. In order to learn about the representativity of single ice cores and to optimise future ice-core-based climate reconstructions, we studied the stable-water isotope composition of firn at Kohnen Station, Dronning Maud Land, Antarctica. Analysing delta O-18 in two 50m long snow trenches allowed us to create an unprecedented, two-dimensional image characterising the isotopic variations from the centimetre to the 100-metre scale. Our results show seasonal layering of the isotopic composition but also high horizontal isotopic variability caused by local stratigraphic noise. Based on the horizontal and vertical structure of the isotopic variations, we derive a statistical noise model which successfully explains the trench data. The model further allows one to determine an upper bound for the reliability of climate reconstructions conducted in our study region at seasonal to annual resolution, depending on the number and the spacing of the cores taken. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.5194/cp-12-1565-2016 SN - 1814-9324 SN - 1814-9332 VL - 12 SP - 1565 EP - 1581 PB - Copernicus CY - Göttingen ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Zehbe, Rolf A1 - Zaslansky, Paul A1 - Mochales, Carolina A1 - Mueller, Wolf-Dieter A1 - Fleck, Claudia T1 - Synchrotron micro tomographic evaluation of multilayered zirconia ceramics-Volumetric effects after indentation JF - Journal of the European Ceramic Society N2 - Electrophoretic deposition was used to produce zirconia specimen consisting of alternating layers of fully stabilized cubic zirconia and partially stabilized tetragonal zirconia. In this configuration, the tetragonal stabilized zirconia layers can undergo transformation toughening upon mechanical induced stresses, while the cubic stabilized layers can act as confining element. To understand the volumetric changes due to transformation toughening in these layered materials after indentation, we used an advanced synchrotron-based X-ray mu CT setup and compared the results with surface sensitive methods like Raman spectroscopy, AFM and white light interferometry. The high spatial resolution and the adapted beam energy between the absorption edges of zirconia and yttria allowed discriminating between individual layers due to differences in their yttria content. Furthermore we were able to identify single indents and link volume changes to different physical effects in the different stabilized zirconia parts and visualize the three dimensional volume around only few micrometre sized indents. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. KW - Yttria stabilized zirconia multilayers KW - X-ray mu CT KW - Electrophoretic deposition KW - Transformation toughening Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jeurceramsoc.2015.09.015 SN - 0955-2219 SN - 1873-619X VL - 36 SP - 171 EP - 177 PB - Elsevier CY - Oxford ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Gessner, Oliver A1 - Gühr, Markus T1 - Monitoring Ultrafast Chemical Dynamics by Time-Domain X-ray Photo- and Auger-Electron Spectroscopy JF - Accounts of chemical research N2 - The directed flow of charge and energy is at the heart of all chemical processes. Extraordinary efforts are underway to monitor and understand the concerted motion of electrons and nuclei with ever increasing spatial and temporal sensitivity. The element specificity, chemical sensitivity, and temporal resolution of ultrafast X-ray spectroscopy techniques hold great promise to provide new insight into the fundamental interactions underlying chemical dynamics in systems ranging from isolated molecules to application-like devices. Here, we focus on the potential of ultrafast X-ray spectroscopy techniques based on the detection of photo- and Auger electrons to provide new fundamental insight into photochemical processes of systems with various degrees of complexity. Isolated nucleobases provide an excellent testing ground for our most fundamental understanding of intramolecular coupling between electrons and nuclei beyond the traditionally applied Born-Oppenheimer approximation. Ultrafast electronic relaxation dynamics enabled by the breakdown of this approximation is the major component of the nucleobase photoprotection mechanisms. Transient X-ray induced Auger electron spectroscopy on photoexcited thymine molecules provides atomic-site specific details of the extremely efficient coupling that converts potentially bond changing ultraviolet photon energy into benign heat. In particular, the time-dependent spectral shift of a specific Auger band is sensitive to the length of a single bond within the molecule. The X-ray induced Auger transients show evidence for an electronic transition out of the initially excited state within only similar to 200 fs in contrast to theoretically predicted picosecond population trapping behind a reaction barrier. Photoinduced charge transfer dynamics between transition metal complexes and semiconductor nanostructures are of central importance for many emerging energy and climate relevant technologies. Numerous demonstrations of photovoltaic and photocatalytic activity have been performed based on the combination of strong light absorption in dye molecules with charge separation and transport in adjacent semiconductor nanostructures. However, a fundamental understanding of the enabling and limiting dynamics on critical atomic length- and time scales is often still lacking. Femtosecond time-resolved X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy is employed to gain a better understanding of a short-lived intermediate that may be linked to the unexpectedly limited performance of ZnO based dye-sensitized solar cells by delaying the generation of free charge carriers. The transient spectra strongly suggest that photoexcited dye molecules attached to ZnO nanocrystals inject their charges into the substrate within less than 1 ps but the electrons are then temporarily trapped at the surface of the semiconductor in direct vicinity of the injecting molecules. The experiments are extended to monitor the electronic response of the semiconductor substrate to the collective injection from a monolayer of dye molecules and the subsequent electron-ion recombination dynamics. The results indicate some qualitative similarities but quantitative differences between the recombination dynamics at molecule-semiconductor interfaces and previously studied bulk-surface electron-hole recombination dynamics in photoexcited semiconductors. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.accounts.5b00361 SN - 0001-4842 SN - 1520-4898 VL - 49 SP - 138 EP - 145 PB - American Chemical Society CY - Washington ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Martinez Gonzalez, M. J. A1 - Pastor Yabar, A. A1 - Lagg, A. A1 - Asensio Ramos, A. A1 - Collados Vera, M. A1 - Solanki, S. K. A1 - Balthasar, H. A1 - Berkefeld, T. A1 - Denker, Carsten A1 - Doerr, H. P. A1 - Feller, A. A1 - Franz, M. A1 - González Manrique, Sergio Javier A1 - Hofmann, A. A1 - Kneer, F. A1 - Kuckein, Christoph A1 - Louis, R. A1 - von der Lühe, O. A1 - Nicklas, H. A1 - Orozco, D. A1 - Rezaei, R. A1 - Schlichenmaier, R. A1 - Schmidt, D. A1 - Schmidt, W. A1 - Sigwarth, M. A1 - Sobotka, M. A1 - Soltau, D. A1 - Staude, J. A1 - Strassmeier, Klaus G. A1 - Verma, Meetu A1 - Waldman, T. A1 - Volkmer, R. T1 - Inference of magnetic fields in the very quiet Sun JF - Journal of geophysical research : Earth surface N2 - Context. Over the past 20 yr, the quietest areas of the solar surface have revealed a weak but extremely dynamic magnetism occurring at small scales (<500 km), which may provide an important contribution to the dynamics and energetics of the outer layers of the atmosphere. Understanding this magnetism requires the inference of physical quantities from high-sensitivity spectro-polarimetric data with high spatio-temporal resolution. Aims. We present high-precision spectro-polarimetric data with high spatial resolution (0.4") of the very quiet Sun at 1.56 mu m obtained with the GREGOR telescope to shed some light on this complex magnetism. Methods. We used inversion techniques in two main approaches. First, we assumed that the observed profiles can be reproduced with a constant magnetic field atmosphere embedded in a field-free medium. Second, we assumed that the resolution element has a substructure with either two constant magnetic atmospheres or a single magnetic atmosphere with gradients of the physical quantities along the optical depth, both coexisting with a global stray-light component. Results. Half of our observed quiet-Sun region is better explained by magnetic substructure within the resolution element. However, we cannot distinguish whether this substructure comes from gradients of the physical parameters along the line of sight or from horizontal gradients (across the surface). In these pixels, a model with two magnetic components is preferred, and we find two distinct magnetic field populations. The population with the larger filling factor has very weak (similar to 150 G) horizontal fields similar to those obtained in previous works. We demonstrate that the field vector of this population is not constrained by the observations, given the spatial resolution and polarimetric accuracy of our data. The topology of the other component with the smaller filling factor is constrained by the observations for field strengths above 250 G: we infer hG fields with inclinations and azimuth values compatible with an isotropic distribution. The filling factors are typically below 30%. We also find that the flux of the two polarities is not balanced. From the other half of the observed quiet-Sun area similar to 50% are two-lobed Stokes V profiles, meaning that 23% of the field of view can be adequately explained with a single constant magnetic field embedded in a non-magnetic atmosphere. The magnetic field vector and filling factor are reliable inferred in only 50% based on the regular profiles. Therefore, 12% of the field of view harbour hG fields with filling factors typically below 30%. At our present spatial resolution, 70% of the pixels apparently are non-magnetised. KW - Sun: atmosphere KW - Sun: magnetic fields KW - techniques: polarimetric KW - methods: observational Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201628449 SN - 1432-0746 VL - 596 PB - EDP Sciences CY - Les Ulis ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Verma, Meetu A1 - Denker, Carsten A1 - Balthasar, H. A1 - Kuckein, Christoph A1 - González Manrique, Sergio Javier A1 - Sobotka, M. A1 - Gonzalez, N. Bello A1 - Hoch, S. A1 - Diercke, Andrea A1 - Kummerow, Philipp A1 - Berkefeld, T. A1 - Collados Vera, M. A1 - Feller, A. A1 - Hofmann, A. A1 - Kneer, F. A1 - Lagg, A. A1 - Löhner-Böttcher, J. A1 - Nicklas, H. A1 - Pastor Yabar, A. A1 - Schlichenmaier, R. A1 - Schmidt, D. A1 - Schmidt, W. A1 - Schubert, M. A1 - Sigwarth, M. A1 - Solanki, S. K. A1 - Soltau, D. A1 - Staude, J. A1 - Strassmeier, Klaus G. A1 - Volkmer, R. A1 - von der Lühe, O. A1 - Waldmann, T. T1 - Horizontal flow fields in and around a small active region The transition period between flux emergence and decay JF - Polymers N2 - Context. The solar magnetic field is responsible for all aspects of solar activity. Thus, emergence of magnetic flux at the surface is the first manifestation of the ensuing solar activity. Aims. Combining high-resolution and synoptic observations aims to provide a comprehensive description of flux emergence at photospheric level and of the growth process that eventually leads to a mature active region. Methods. The small active region NOAA 12118 emerged on 2014 July 17 and was observed one day later with the 1.5-m GREGOR solar telescope on 2014 July 18. High-resolution time-series of blue continuum and G-band images acquired in the blue imaging channel (BIC) of the GREGOR Fabry-Perot Interferometer (GFPI) were complemented by synoptic line-of-sight magnetograms and continuum images obtained with the Helioseismic and Magnetic Imager (HMI) onboard the Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO). Horizontal proper motions and horizontal plasma velocities were computed with local correlation tracking (LCT) and the differential affine velocity estimator (DAVE), respectively. Morphological image processing was employed to measure the photometric and magnetic area, magnetic flux, and the separation profile of the emerging flux region during its evolution. Results. The computed growth rates for photometric area, magnetic area, and magnetic flux are about twice as high as the respective decay rates. The space-time diagram using HMI magnetograms of five days provides a comprehensive view of growth and decay. It traces a leaf-like structure, which is determined by the initial separation of the two polarities, a rapid expansion phase, a time when the spread stalls, and a period when the region slowly shrinks again. The separation rate of 0.26 km s(-1) is highest in the initial stage, and it decreases when the separation comes to a halt. Horizontal plasma velocities computed at four evolutionary stages indicate a changing pattern of inflows. In LCT maps we find persistent flow patterns such as outward motions in the outer part of the two major pores, a diverging feature near the trailing pore marking the site of upwelling plasma and flux emergence, and low velocities in the interior of dark pores. We detected many elongated rapidly expanding granules between the two major polarities, with dimensions twice as large as the normal granules. KW - Sun: photosphere KW - Sun: magnetic fields KW - techniques: image processing KW - methods: data analysis Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201628380 SN - 1432-0746 VL - 596 PB - EDP Sciences CY - Les Ulis ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Ryabchun, Alexander A1 - Kollosche, Matthias A1 - Wegener, Michael A1 - Sakhno, Oksana T1 - Holographic Structuring of Elastomer Actuator: First True Monolithic Tunable Elastomer Optics JF - Advanced materials N2 - Volume diffraction gratings (VDGs) are inscribed selectively by diffusive introduction of benzophenone and subsequent UV-holographic structuring into an electroactive dielectric elastomer actuator (DEA), to afford a continuous voltage-controlled grating shift of 17%. The internal stress coupling of DEA and optical domain allows for a new generation of true monolithic tunable elastomer optics with voltage controlled properties. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/adma.201602881 SN - 0935-9648 SN - 1521-4095 VL - 28 SP - 10217 EP - 10223 PB - Wiley-VCH CY - Weinheim ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Kuik, Friderike A1 - Lauer, Axel A1 - Churkina, Galina A1 - Van der Gon, Hugo A. C. Denier A1 - Fenner, Daniel A1 - Mar, Kathleen A. A1 - Butler, Tim M. T1 - Air quality modelling in the Berlin-Brandenburg region using WRF-Chem v3.7.1: sensitivity to resolution of model grid and input data JF - Geoscientific model development : an interactive open access journal of the European Geosciences Union N2 - Air pollution is the number one environmental cause of premature deaths in Europe. Despite extensive regulations, air pollution remains a challenge, especially in urban areas. For studying summertime air quality in the Berlin–Brandenburg region of Germany, the Weather Research and Forecasting Model with Chemistry (WRF-Chem) is set up and evaluated against meteorological and air quality observations from monitoring stations as well as from a field campaign conducted in 2014. The objective is to assess which resolution and level of detail in the input data is needed for simulating urban background air pollutant concentrations and their spatial distribution in the Berlin–Brandenburg area. The model setup includes three nested domains with horizontal resolutions of 15, 3 and 1 km and anthropogenic emissions from the TNO-MACC III inventory. We use RADM2 chemistry and the MADE/SORGAM aerosol scheme. Three sensitivity simulations are conducted updating input parameters to the single-layer urban canopy model based on structural data for Berlin, specifying land use classes on a sub-grid scale (mosaic option) and downscaling the original emissions to a resolution of ca. 1 km × 1 km for Berlin based on proxy data including traffic density and population density. The results show that the model simulates meteorology well, though urban 2 m temperature and urban wind speeds are biased high and nighttime mixing layer height is biased low in the base run with the settings described above. We show that the simulation of urban meteorology can be improved when specifying the input parameters to the urban model, and to a lesser extent when using the mosaic option. On average, ozone is simulated reasonably well, but maximum daily 8 h mean concentrations are underestimated, which is consistent with the results from previous modelling studies using the RADM2 chemical mechanism. Particulate matter is underestimated, which is partly due to an underestimation of secondary organic aerosols. NOx (NO + NO2) concentrations are simulated reasonably well on average, but nighttime concentrations are overestimated due to the model's underestimation of the mixing layer height, and urban daytime concentrations are underestimated. The daytime underestimation is improved when using downscaled, and thus locally higher emissions, suggesting that part of this bias is due to deficiencies in the emission input data and their resolution. The results further demonstrate that a horizontal resolution of 3 km improves the results and spatial representativeness of the model compared to a horizontal resolution of 15 km. With the input data (land use classes, emissions) at the level of detail of the base run of this study, we find that a horizontal resolution of 1 km does not improve the results compared to a resolution of 3 km. However, our results suggest that a 1 km horizontal model resolution could enable a detailed simulation of local pollution patterns in the Berlin–Brandenburg region if the urban land use classes, together with the respective input parameters to the urban canopy model, are specified with a higher level of detail and if urban emissions of higher spatial resolution are used. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.5194/gmd-9-4339-2016 SN - 1991-959X SN - 1991-9603 VL - 9 SP - 4339 EP - 4363 PB - Copernicus CY - Göttingen ER - TY - GEN A1 - Berenstein, Igal A1 - Beta, Carsten A1 - De Decker, Yannick T1 - Comment on "Flow-induced arrest of spatiotemporal chaos and transition to a stationary pattern in the Gray-Scott model" T2 - Physical review : E, Statistical, nonlinear and soft matter physics N2 - In this Comment, we review the results of pattern formation in a reaction-diffusion-advection system following the kinetics of the Gray-Scott model. A recent paper by Das [Phys. Rev. E 92, 052914 (2015)] shows that spatiotemporal chaos of the intermittency type can disappear as the advective flow is increased. This study, however, refers to a single point in the space of kinetic parameters of the original Gray-Scott model. Here we show that the wealth of patterns increases substantially as some of these parameters are changed. In addition to spatiotemporal intermittency, defect-mediated turbulence can also be found. In all cases, however, the chaotic behavior is seen to disappear as the advective flow is increased, following a scenario similar to what was reported in our earlier work [I. Berenstein and C. Beta, Phys. Rev. E 86, 056205 (2012)] as well as by Das. We also point out that a similar phenomenon can be found in other reaction-diffusion-advection models, such as the Oregonator model for the Belousov-Zhabotinsky reaction under flow conditions. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.94.046201 SN - 2470-0045 SN - 2470-0053 VL - 94 PB - American Physical Society CY - College Park ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Laepple, Thomas A1 - Hörhold, Maria A1 - Münch, Thomas A1 - Freitag, Johannes A1 - Wegner, Anna A1 - Kipfstuhl, Sepp T1 - Layering of surface snow and firn at Kohnen Station, Antarctica: Noise or seasonal signal? JF - Journal of geophysical research : Earth surface N2 - The density of firn is an important property for monitoring and modeling the ice sheets as well as to model the pore close-off and thus to interpret ice core-based greenhouse gas records. One feature, which is still in debate, is the potential existence of an annual cycle of firn density in low-accumulation regions. Several studies describe or assume seasonally successive density layers, horizontally evenly distributed, as seen in radar data. On the other hand, high-resolution density measurements on firn cores in Antarctica and Greenland show no clear seasonal cycle in the top few meters. A major caveat of most existing snow-pit and firn-core-based studies is that they represent one vertical profile from a laterally heterogeneous density field. To overcome this, we created an extensive data set of horizontal and vertical density data at Kohnen Station, Dronning Maud Land, on the East Antarctic Plateau. We drilled and analyzed three 90m long firn cores as well as 143 one-meter-long vertical profiles from two elongated snow trenches to obtain a two-dimensional view of the density variations. The analysis of the 45m wide and 1m deep density fields reveals a seasonal cycle in density. However, the seasonality is overprinted by strong stratigraphic noise, making it invisible when analyzing single firn cores. Our density data set extends the view from the local ice core perspective to a hundred meter scale and thus supports linking spatially integrating methods such as radar and seismic studies to ice and firn cores. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/2016JF003919 SN - 2169-9003 SN - 2169-9011 VL - 121 SP - 1849 EP - 1860 PB - American Geophysical Union CY - Washington ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Velk, Natalia A1 - Uhlig, Katja A1 - Vikulina, Anna A1 - Duschl, Claus A1 - Volodkin, Dmitry T1 - Mobility of lysozyme in poly(L-lysine)/hyaluronic acid multilayer films JF - Colloids and surfaces : an international journal devoted to fundamental and applied research on colloid and interfacial phenomena in relation to systems of biological origin ; B, Biointerfaces N2 - The spatial and temporal control over presentation of protein-based biomolecules such as growth factors and hormones is crucial for in vitro applications to mimic the complex in vivo environment. We investigated the interaction of a model protein lysozyme (Lys) with poly(L-lysine)/hyaluronic acid (PLL/HA) multilayer films. We focused on Lys diffusion as well as adsorption and retention within the film as a function of the film deposition conditions and post-treatment. Additionally, an effect of Lys concentration on its mobility was probed. A combination of confocal fluorescence microscopy, fluorescence recovery after photobleaching, and microfluidics was employed for this investigation. Our main finding is that adsorption of PLL and HA after protein loading induces acceleration and reduction of Lys mobility, respectively. These results suggest that a charge balance in the film to a high extent governs the protein-film interaction. We believe that control over protein mobility is a key to reach the full potential of the PLL/HA films as reservoirs for biomolecules depending on the application demand. (C) 2016 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. KW - Layer-by-layer KW - Protein KW - Diffusion KW - Release KW - FRAP Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.colsurfb.2016.07.055 SN - 0927-7765 SN - 1873-4367 VL - 147 SP - 343 EP - 350 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Turner, Monica L. A1 - Schaye, Joop A1 - Crain, Robert A. A1 - Theuns, Tom A1 - Wendt, Martin T1 - Observations of metals in the z approximate to 3.5 intergalactic medium and comparison to the EAGLE simulations JF - Monthly notices of the Royal Astronomical Society N2 - We study the z approximate to 3.5 intergalactic medium (IGM) by comparing new, high-quality absorption spectra of eight QSOs with < z(QSO)> = 3.75, to virtual observations of the Evolution and Assembly of Galaxies and their Environments (EAGLE) cosmological hydrodynamical simulations. We employ the pixel optical depth method and uncover strong correlations between various combinations of H I, C III, C IV, Si III, Si IV, and O VI. We find good agreement between many of the simulated and observed correlations, including tau(O) (VI) (tau(H) (I)). However, the observed median optical depths for the tau(C) (IV) (tau(H) (I)) and tau(Si) (IV) (tau(H) (I)) relations are higher than those measured from the mock spectra. The discrepancy increases from up to approximate to 0.1 dex at tau(H) (I) = 1 to approximate to 1 dex at tau(H) (I) = 10(2), where we are likely probing dense regions at small galactocentric distances. As possible solutions, we invoke (a) models of ionizing radiation softened above 4 Ryd to account for delayed completion of He II reionization; (b) simulations run at higher resolution; (c) the inclusion of additional line broadening due to unresolved turbulence; and (d) increased elemental abundances; however, none of these factors can fully explain the observed differences. Enhanced photoionization of H I by local sources, which was not modelled, could offer a solution. However, the much better agreement with the observed O VI(H I) relation, which we find probes a hot and likely collisionally ionized gas phase, indicates that the simulations are not in tension with the hot phase of the IGM, and suggests that the simulated outflows may entrain insufficient cool gas. KW - galaxies: formation KW - intergalactic medium KW - quasars: absorption lines Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stw1816 SN - 0035-8711 SN - 1365-2966 VL - 462 SP - 2440 EP - 2464 PB - Oxford Univ. Press CY - Oxford ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Valliappan, Senthamizh Pavai A1 - Arlt, Rainer A1 - Diercke, Andrea A1 - Denker, Carsten A1 - Vaquero, J. M. T1 - Sunspot group tilt angle measurements from historical observations JF - Advances in space research N2 - Sunspot positions from various historical sets of solar drawings are analyzed with respect to the tilt angles of bipolar sunspot groups. Data by Scheiner, Hevelius, Staudacher, Zucconi, Schwabe, and Sporer deliver a series of average tilt angles spanning a period of 270 years, additional to previously found values for 20th-century data obtained by other authors. We find that the average tilt angles before the Maunder minimum were not significantly different from the modem values. However, the average tilt angles of a period 50 years after the Maunder minimum, namely for cycles 0 and 1, were much lower and near zero. The normal tilt angles before the Maunder minimum suggest that it was not abnormally low tilt angles which drove the solar cycle into a grand minimum. (C) 2016 COSPAR. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. KW - Sun: sunspots KW - Tilt angles KW - Cycle-averaged tilt angle Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.asr.2016.03.002 SN - 0273-1177 SN - 1879-1948 VL - 58 SP - 1468 EP - 1474 PB - Elsevier CY - Oxford ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Fischer, Jost Leonhardt A1 - Bader, Rolf A1 - Abel, Markus T1 - Aeroacoustical coupling and synchronization of organ pipes JF - The journal of the Acoustical Society of America N2 - A synchronization experiment on two mutual interacting organ pipes is compared with a theoretical model which takes into account the coupling mechanisms by the underlying first principles of fluid mechanics and aeroacoustics. The focus is on the Arnold-tongue, a mathematical object in the parameter space of detuning and coupling strength which quantitatively captures the interaction of the synchronized sound sources. From the experiment, a nonlinearly shaped Arnold-tongue is obtained, describing the coupling of the synchronized pipe-pipe system. This is in contrast to the linear shaped Arnold-tongue found in a preliminary experiment of the coupled system pipe-loudspeaker. To understand the experimental result, a coarse-grained model of two nonlinear coupled self-sustained oscillators is developed. The model, integrated numerically, is in very good agreement with the synchronization experiment for separation distances of the pipes in the far field and in the intermediate field. The methods introduced open the door for a deeper understanding of the fundamental processes of sound generation and the coupling mechanisms on mutual interacting acoustic oscillators. (C) 2016 Acoustical Society of America. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1121/1.4964135 SN - 0001-4966 SN - 1520-8524 VL - 140 SP - 2344 EP - 2351 PB - American Institute of Physics CY - Melville ER - TY - JOUR A1 - de Carvalho, Sidney J. A1 - Metzler, Ralf A1 - Cherstvy, Andrey G. T1 - Critical adsorption of polyelectrolytes onto planar and convex highly charged surfaces: the nonlinear Poisson-Boltzmann approach JF - NEW JOURNAL OF PHYSICS N2 - We study the adsorption-desorption transition of polyelectrolyte chains onto planar, cylindrical and spherical surfaces with arbitrarily high surface charge densities by massive Monte Carlo computer simulations. We examine in detail how the well known scaling relations for the threshold transition demarcating the adsorbed and desorbed domains of a polyelectrolyte near weakly charged surfaces-are altered for highly charged interfaces. In virtue of high surface potentials and large surface charge densities, the Debye-Huckel approximation is often not feasible and the nonlinear Poisson-Boltzmann approach should be implemented. At low salt conditions, for instance, the electrostatic potential from the nonlinear Poisson-Boltzmann equation is smaller than the Debye-Huckel result, such that the required critical surface charge density for polyelectrolyte adsorption sigma(c) increases. The nonlinear relation between the surface charge density and electrostatic potential leads to a sharply increasing critical surface charge density with growing ionic strength, imposing an additional limit to the critical salt concentration above which no polyelectrolyte adsorption occurs at all. We contrast our simulations findings with the known scaling results for weak critical polyelectrolyte adsorption onto oppositely charged surfaces for the three standard geometries. Finally, we discuss some applications of our results for some physical-chemical and biophysical systems. KW - polyelectrolyte adsorption KW - electrostatic interactions KW - critical phenomena KW - Debye screening Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1088/1367-2630/18/8/083037 SN - 1367-2630 VL - 18 PB - IOP Publ. Ltd. CY - Bristol ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Santos de Lima, Reinaldo A1 - Yan, Huirong A1 - de Gouveia Dal Pino, E. M. A1 - Lazarian, A. T1 - Limits on the ion temperature anisotropy in the turbulent intracluster medium JF - Monthly notices of the Royal Astronomical Society N2 - Turbulence in the weakly collisional intracluster medium (ICM) of galaxies is able to generate strong thermal velocity anisotropies in the ions (with respect to the local magnetic field direction), if the magnetic moment of the particles is conserved in the absence of Coulomb collisions. In this scenario, the anisotropic pressure magnetohydrodynamic (AMHD) turbulence shows a very different statistical behaviour from the standard MHD one and is unable to amplify seed magnetic fields. This is in contrast to previous cosmological MHD simulations that are successful in explaining the observed magnetic fields in the ICM. On the other hand, temperature anisotropies can also drive plasma instabilities that can relax the anisotropy. This work aims to compare the relaxation rate with the growth rate of the anisotropies driven by the turbulence. We employ quasi-linear theory to estimate the ion scattering rate resulting from the parallel firehose, mirror and ion-cyclotron instabilities, for a set of plasma parameters resulting from AMHD simulations of the turbulent ICM. We show that the ICM turbulence can sustain only anisotropy levels very close to the instability thresholds. We argue that the AMHD model that bounds the anisotropies at the marginal stability levels can describe the Alfv,nic turbulence cascade in the ICM. KW - MHD KW - plasmas KW - turbulence KW - galaxies: clusters: intracluster medium Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stw1079 SN - 0035-8711 SN - 1365-2966 VL - 460 SP - 2492 EP - 2504 PB - Oxford Univ. Press CY - Oxford ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Waldrip, S. H. A1 - Niven, R. K. A1 - Abel, Markus A1 - Schlegel, M. T1 - Maximum Entropy Analysis of Hydraulic Pipe Flow Networks JF - Journal of hydraulic engineering KW - Maximum entropy method KW - Water distribution systems KW - Hydraulic networks KW - Pipe networks KW - Hydraulic models KW - Non-linear analysis KW - Probability Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1061/(ASCE)HY.1943-7900.0001126 SN - 0733-9429 SN - 1943-7900 VL - 142 SP - 332 EP - 347 PB - American Society of Civil Engineers CY - Reston ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Rettig, L. A1 - Dornes, C. A1 - Thielemann-Kuehn, Nele A1 - Pontius, N. A1 - Zabel, Hartmut A1 - Schlagel, D. L. A1 - Lograsso, T. A. A1 - Chollet, M. A1 - Robert, A. A1 - Sikorski, M. A1 - Song, S. A1 - Glownia, J. M. A1 - Schuessler-Langeheine, Christian A1 - Johnson, S. L. A1 - Staub, U. T1 - Itinerant and Localized Magnetization Dynamics in Antiferromagnetic Ho JF - Physical review letters N2 - Using femtosecond time-resolved resonant magnetic x-ray diffraction at the Ho L-3 absorption edge, we investigate the demagnetization dynamics in antiferromagnetically ordered metallic Ho after femtosecond optical excitation. Tuning the x-ray energy to the electric dipole (E1, 2p -> 5d) or quadrupole (E2, 2p -> 4f) transition allows us to selectively and independently study the spin dynamics of the itinerant 5d and localized 4f electronic subsystems via the suppression of the magnetic (2 1 3-tau) satellite peak. We find demagnetization time scales very similar to ferromagnetic 4f systems, suggesting that the loss of magnetic order occurs via a similar spin-flip process in both cases. The simultaneous demagnetization of both subsystems demonstrates strong intra-atomic 4f-5d exchange coupling. In addition, an ultrafast lattice contraction due to the release of magneto-striction leads to a transient shift of the magnetic satellite peak. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.116.257202 SN - 0031-9007 SN - 1079-7114 VL - 116 SP - 6382 EP - 6389 PB - American Physical Society CY - College Park ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Dzhanoev, Arsen R. A1 - Schmidt, J. A1 - Liu, X. A1 - Spahn, Frank T1 - Charging of small grains in a space plasma: Application to Jovian stream particles JF - International psychogeriatrics N2 - Context. Most theoretical investigations of dust charging processes in space have treated the current balance condition as independent of grain size. However, for small grains, since they are often observed in space environments, a dependence on grain size is expected owing to secondary electron emission (SEE). Here, by the term "small" we mean a particle size comparable to the typical penetration depth for given primary electron energy. The results are relevant for the dynamics of small, charged dust particles emitted by the volcanic moon Io, which forms the Jovian dust streams. Aims. We revise the theory of charging of small (submicron sized) micrometeoroids to take into account a high production of secondary electrons for small grains immersed in an isotropic flux of electrons. We apply our model to obtain an improved estimate for the charge of the dust streams leaving the Jovian system, detected by several spacecraft. Methods. We apply a continuum model to describe the penetration of primary electrons in a grain and the emission of secondary electrons along the path. Averaging over an isotropic flux of primaries, we derive a new expression for the secondary electron yield, which can be used to express the secondary electron current on a grain. Results. For the Jupiter plasma environment we derive the surface potential of grains composed of NaCl (believed to be the major constituent of Jovian dust stream particles) or silicates. For small particles, the potential depends on grain size and the secondary electron current induces a sensitivity to material properties. As a result of the small particle effect, the estimates for the charging times and for the fractional charge fluctuations of NaCl grains obtained using our general approach to SEE give results qualitatively different from the analogous estimates derived from the traditional approach to SEE. We find that for the charging environment considered in this paper field emission does not limit the charging of NaCl grains. KW - plasmas KW - planets and satellites: individual: Jupiter Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201527891 SN - 1432-0746 VL - 591 SP - 647 EP - 684 PB - EDP Sciences CY - Les Ulis ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Guber, Christoph R. A1 - Richter, Philipp T1 - Dust depletion of Ca and Ti in QSO absorption-line systems JF - Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews : Water N2 - Aims. To explore the role of titanium-and calcium-dust depletion in gas in and around galaxies, we systematically study Ti/Ca abundance ratios in intervening absorption-line systems at low and high redshift. Methods. We investigate high-resolution optical spectra obtained by the UVES instrument at the Very Large Telescope (VLT) and spectroscopically analyze 34 absorption-line systems at z <= 0.5 to measure column densities (or limits) for Ca II and Ti II. We complement our UVES data set with previously published absorption-line data on Ti/Ca for redshifts up to z similar to 3.8. Our absorber sample contains 110 absorbers including damped Lyman alpha systems (DLAs), sub-DLAs, and Lyman-Limit systems (LLS). We compare our Ti/Ca findings with results from the MilkyWay and the Magellanic Clouds and discuss the properties of Ti/Ca absorbers in the general context of quasar absorption-line systems. Results. Our analysis indicates that there are two distinct populations of absorbers with either high or low Ti/Ca ratios with a separation at [Ti/Ca] approximate to 1. While the calcium-dust depletion in most of the absorbers appears to be severe, the titanium depletions are mild in systems with high Ti/Ca ratios. The derived trend indicates that absorbers with high Ti/Ca ratios have dust-to-gas ratios that are substantially lower than in the Milky Way. We characterize the overall nature of the absorbers by correlating Ti/Ca with other observables (e.g., metallicity, velocity-component structure) and by modeling the ionization properties of singly-ionized Ca and Ti in different environments. Conclusions. We conclude that Ca II and Ti II bearing absorption-line systems trace predominantly neutral gas in the disks and inner halo regions of galaxies, where the abundance of Ca and Ti reflects the local metal and dust content of the gas. Our study suggests that the Ti/Ca ratio represents a useful measure for the gas-to-dust ratio and overall metallicity in intervening absorption-line systems. KW - quasars: absorption lines KW - dust, extinction KW - galaxies: abundances KW - galaxies: ISM KW - intergalactic medium Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201628466 SN - 1432-0746 VL - 591 PB - EDP Sciences CY - Les Ulis ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Schwarzl, Maria A1 - Godec, Aljaz A1 - Oshanin, Gleb A1 - Metzler, Ralf T1 - A single predator charging a herd of prey: effects of self volume and predator-prey decision-making JF - Journal of physics : A, Mathematical and theoretical N2 - We study the degree of success of a single predator hunting a herd of prey on a two-dimensional square lattice landscape. We explicitly consider the self volume of the prey restraining their dynamics on the lattice. The movement of both predator and prey is chosen to include an intelligent, decision making step based on their respective sighting ranges, the radius in which they can detect the other species (prey cannot recognise each other besides the self volume interaction): after spotting each other the motion of prey and predator turns from a nearest neighbour random walk into directed escape or chase, respectively. We consider a large range of prey densities and sighting ranges and compute the mean first passage time for a predator to catch a prey as well as characterise the effective dynamics of the hunted prey. We find that the prey's sighting range dominates their life expectancy and the predator profits more from a bad eyesight of the prey than from his own good eye sight. We characterise the dynamics in terms of the mean distance between the predator and the nearest prey. It turns out that effectively the dynamics of this distance coordinate can be captured in terms of a simple Ornstein–Uhlenbeck picture. Reducing the many-body problem to a simple two-body problem by imagining predator and nearest prey to be connected by an effective Hookean bond, all features of the model such as prey density and sighting ranges merge into the effective binding constant. KW - first passage process KW - diffusion KW - predator-prey model Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1088/1751-8113/49/22/225601 SN - 1751-8113 SN - 1751-8121 VL - 49 PB - IOP Publ. Ltd. CY - Bristol ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Love, John A. A1 - Chou, Shu-Hua A1 - Huang, Ye A1 - Bazan, Guillermo C. A1 - Thuc-Quyen Nguyen, T1 - Effects of solvent additive on "s-shaped" curves in solution-processed small molecule solar cells JF - Beilstein journal of organic chemistry N2 - A novel molecular chromophore, p-SIDT(FBTThCA8)(2), is introduced as an electron-donor material for bulk heterojunction (BHJ) solar cells with broad absorption and near ideal energy levels for the use in combination with common acceptor materials. It is found that films cast from chlorobenzene yield devices with strongly s-shaped current-voltage curves, drastically limiting performance. We find that addition of the common solvent additive diiodooctane, in addition to facilitating crystallization, leads to improved vertical phase separation. This yields much better performing devices, with improved curve shape, demonstrating the importance of morphology control in BHJ devices and improving the understanding of the role of solvent additives. KW - current voltage analysis KW - morphology KW - organic solar cells Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.3762/bjoc.12.249 SN - 1860-5397 VL - 12 SP - 2543 EP - 2555 PB - Beilstein-Institut zur Förderung der Chemischen Wissenschaften CY - Frankfurt, Main ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Qiu, Xunlin T1 - Significant enhancement of the charging efficiency in the cavities of ferroelectrets through gas exchange during charging JF - Applied physics letters N2 - Ferroelectrets are non-polar polymer foams or polymer systems with internally charged cavities. They are charged through a series of dielectric barrier discharges (DBDs) that are caused by the electrical breakdown of the gas inside the cavities. Thus, the breakdown strength of the gas strongly influences the charging process of ferroelectrets. A gas with a lower breakdown strength has a lower threshold voltage, thus decreasing the onset voltage for DBD charging. However, a lower threshold voltage also leads to a lower value for the remanent polarization, as back discharges that are caused by the electric field of the internally deposited charges can take place already at lower charge levels. On this basis, a charging strategy is proposed where the DBDs start in a gas with a lower breakdown strength (in the present example, helium) and are completed at a higher breakdown strength (e.g., nitrogen or atmospheric air). Thus, the exchange of the gas in the cavities during charging can significantly enhance the charging efficiency, i.e., yield much higher piezoelectric coefficients in ferroelectrets at significantly lower charging voltages. Published by AIP Publishing. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4971259 SN - 0003-6951 SN - 1077-3118 VL - 109 SP - 2543 EP - 2555 PB - American Institute of Physics CY - Melville ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Godec, Aljaz A1 - Metzler, Ralf T1 - Universal Proximity Effect in Target Search Kinetics in the Few-Encounter Limit JF - Physical review : X, Expanding access N2 - When does a diffusing particle reach its target for the first time? This first-passage time (FPT) problem is central to the kinetics of molecular reactions in chemistry and molecular biology. Here, we explain the behavior of smooth FPT densities, for which all moments are finite, and demonstrate universal yet generally non-Poissonian long-time asymptotics for a broad variety of transport processes. While Poisson-like asymptotics arise generically in the presence of an effective repulsion in the immediate vicinity of the target, a time-scale separation between direct and reflected indirect trajectories gives rise to a universal proximity effect: Direct paths, heading more or less straight from the point of release to the target, become typical and focused, with a narrow spread of the corresponding first-passage times. Conversely, statistically dominant indirect paths exploring the entire system tend to be massively dissimilar. The initial distance to the target particularly impacts gene regulatory or competitive stochastic processes, for which few binding events often determine the regulatory outcome. The proximity effect is independent of details of the transport, highlighting the robust character of the FPT features uncovered here. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.6.041037 SN - 2160-3308 VL - 6 PB - American Physical Society CY - College Park ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Aliu, E. A1 - Archambault, S. A1 - Archer, A. A1 - Benbow, W. A1 - Bird, R. A1 - Biteau, Jonathan A1 - Buchovecky, M. A1 - Buckley, J. H. A1 - Bugaev, V. A1 - Byrum, K. A1 - Cardenzana, J. V. A1 - Cerruti, M. A1 - Chen, Xuhui A1 - Ciupik, L. A1 - Connolly, M. P. A1 - Cui, W. A1 - Dickinson, H. J. A1 - Eisch, J. D. A1 - Falcone, A. A1 - Feng, Q. A1 - Finley, J. P. A1 - Fleischhack, H. A1 - Flinders, A. A1 - Fortin, P. A1 - Fortson, L. A1 - Furniss, A. A1 - Gillanders, G. H. A1 - Griffin, S. A1 - Grube, J. A1 - Gyuk, G. A1 - Huetten, M. A1 - Hakansson, Nils A1 - Holder, J. A1 - Humensky, T. B. A1 - Johnson, C. A. A1 - Kaaret, P. A1 - Kar, P. A1 - Kelley-Hoskins, N. A1 - Kertzman, M. A1 - Kieda, D. A1 - Krause, M. A1 - Lang, M. J. A1 - Loo, A. A1 - Maier, G. A1 - McArthur, S. A1 - McCann, A. A1 - Meagher, K. A1 - Moriarty, P. A1 - Mukherjee, R. A1 - Nguyen, T. A1 - Nieto, D. A1 - Ong, R. A. A1 - Otte, A. N. A1 - Pandel, D. A1 - Park, N. A1 - Pelassa, V. A1 - Petrashyk, A. A1 - Pohl, M. A1 - Popkow, A. A1 - Pueschel, Elisa A1 - Quinn, J. A1 - Ragan, K. A1 - Reynolds, P. T. A1 - Richards, G. T. A1 - Roache, E. A1 - Rulten, C. A1 - Santander, M. A1 - Sembroski, G. H. A1 - Shahinyan, K. A1 - Smith, A. W. A1 - Staszak, D. A1 - Telezhinsky, Igor O. A1 - Tucci, J. V. A1 - Tyler, J. A1 - Varlotta, A. A1 - Vincent, S. A1 - Wakely, S. P. A1 - Weiner, O. M. A1 - Weinstein, A. A1 - Wilhelm, Alina A1 - Williams, D. A. A1 - Zitzer, B. A1 - Chernyakova, M. A1 - Roberts, M. S. E. T1 - A SEARCH FOR VERY HIGH ENERGY GAMMA RAYS FROM THE MISSING LINK BINARY PULSAR J1023+0038 WITH VERITAS JF - The astrophysical journal : an international review of spectroscopy and astronomical physics N2 - The binary millisecond radio pulsar PSR J1023+0038 exhibits many characteristics similar to the gamma-ray binary system PSR B1259-63/LS 2883, making it an ideal candidate for the study of high-energy nonthermal emission. It has been the subject of multiwavelength campaigns following the disappearance of the pulsed radio emission in 2013 June, which revealed the appearance of an accretion disk around the neutron star. We present the results of very high energy (VHE) gamma-ray observations carried out by the Very Energetic Radiation Imaging Telescope Array System before and after this change of state. Searches for steady and pulsed emission of both data sets yield no significant gamma-ray signal above 100 GeV, and upper limits are given for both a steady and pulsed gamma-ray flux. These upper limits are used to constrain the magnetic field strength in the shock region of the PSR J1023+0038 system. Assuming that VHE gamma rays are produced via an inverse Compton mechanism in the shock region, we constrain the shock magnetic field to be greater than similar to 2 G before the disappearance of the radio pulsar and greater than similar to 10 G afterward. KW - binaries: general KW - gamma rays: general KW - pulsars: general KW - pulsars: individual (PSR J1023+0038) Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.3847/0004-637X/831/2/193 SN - 0004-637X SN - 1538-4357 VL - 831 PB - IOP Publ. Ltd. CY - Bristol ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Komarov, Maxim A1 - Bazhenov, Maxim T1 - Linking dynamics of the inhibitory network to the input structure JF - Journal of computational neuroscience KW - Inhibitory neurons KW - Information coding KW - Neural network KW - Olfactory system KW - Spike sequences KW - Odor discrimination Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s10827-016-0622-8 SN - 0929-5313 SN - 1573-6873 VL - 41 SP - 367 EP - 391 PB - Springer CY - Dordrecht ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Arlt, Rainer A1 - Valliappan, Senthamizh Pavai A1 - Schmiel, C. A1 - Spada, F. T1 - Sunspot positions, areas, and group tilt angles for 1611-1631 from observations by Christoph Scheiner JF - Mountain research and development N2 - Methods. In most cases, the given orientation of the ecliptic is used to set up the heliographic coordinate system for the drawings. Positions and sizes are measured manually on screen. Very early drawings have no indication of their orientation. A rotational matching using common spots of adjacent days is used in some cases, while in other cases, the assumption that images were aligned with a zenith-horizon coordinate system appeared to be the most probable. KW - Sun: activity KW - sunspots KW - history and philosophy of astronomy Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201629000 SN - 1432-0746 VL - 595 PB - EDP Sciences CY - Les Ulis ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Kruesemann, Henning A1 - Schwarzl, Richard A1 - Metzler, Ralf T1 - Ageing Scher-Montroll Transport JF - Transport in Porous Media N2 - We study the properties of ageing Scher-Montroll transport in terms of a biased subdiffusive continuous time random walk in which the waiting times between consecutive jumps of the charge carriers are distributed according to the power law probability with . As we show, the dynamical properties of the Scher-Montroll transport depend on the ageing time span between the initial preparation of the system and the start of the observation. The Scher-Montroll transport theory was originally shown to describe the photocurrent in amorphous solids in the presence of an external electric field, but it has since been used in many other fields of physical sciences, in particular also in the geophysical context for the description of the transport of tracer particles in subsurface aquifers. In the absence of ageing () the photocurrent of the classical Scher-Montroll model or the breakthrough curves in the groundwater context exhibit a crossover between two power law regimes in time with the scaling exponents and . In the presence of ageing a new power law regime and an initial plateau regime of the current emerge. We derive the different power law regimes and crossover times of the ageing Scher-Montroll transport and show excellent agreement with simulations of the process. Experimental data of ageing Scher-Montroll transport in polymeric semiconductors are shown to agree well with the predictions of our theory. KW - Anomalous diffusion KW - Ageing KW - Scher-Montroll transport Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s11242-016-0686-y SN - 0169-3913 SN - 1573-1634 VL - 115 SP - 327 EP - 344 PB - Springer CY - New York ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Balthasar, H. A1 - Gömöry, P. A1 - González Manrique, Sergio Javier A1 - Kuckein, Christoph A1 - Kavka, J. A1 - Kucera, A. A1 - Schwartz, P. A1 - Vaskova, R. A1 - Berkefeld, T. A1 - Collados Vera, M. A1 - Denker, Carsten A1 - Feller, A. A1 - Hofmann, A. A1 - Lagg, A. A1 - Nicklas, H. A1 - Suarez, D. A1 - Pastor Yabar, A. A1 - Rezaei, R. A1 - Schlichenmaier, R. A1 - Schmidt, D. A1 - Schmidt, W. A1 - Sigwarth, M. A1 - Sobotka, M. A1 - Solanki, S. K. A1 - Soltau, D. A1 - Staude, J. A1 - Strassmeier, Klaus G. A1 - Volkmer, R. A1 - von der Lühe, O. A1 - Waldmann, T. T1 - Spectropolarimetric observations of an arch filament system with the GREGOR solar telescope JF - Astronomische Nachrichten = Astronomical notes N2 - Arch filament systems occur in active sunspot groups, where a fibril structure connects areas of opposite magnetic polarity, in contrast to active region filaments that follow the polarity inversion line. We used the GREGOR Infrared Spectrograph (GRIS) to obtain the full Stokes vector in the spectral lines SiI lambda 1082.7 nm, He I lambda 1083.0 nm, and Ca I lambda 1083.9 nm. We focus on the near-infrared calcium line to investigate the photospheric magnetic field and velocities, and use the line core intensities and velocities of the helium line to study the chromospheric plasma. The individual fibrils of the arch filament system connect the sunspot with patches of magnetic polarity opposite to that of the spot. These patches do not necessarily coincide with pores, where the magnetic field is strongest. Instead, areas are preferred not far from the polarity inversion line. These areas exhibit photospheric downflows of moderate velocity, but significantly higher downflows of up to 30 km s(-1) in the chromospheric helium line. Our findings can be explained with new emerging flux where the matter flows downward along the field lines of rising flux tubes, in agreement with earlier results. (C) 2016 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH& Co. KGaA, Weinheim KW - Sun: filaments KW - Sun: photosphere KW - techniques: polarimetric KW - techniques: spectroscopic Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/asna.201612432 SN - 0004-6337 SN - 1521-3994 VL - 337 SP - 1050 EP - 1056 PB - Wiley-VCH CY - Weinheim ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Gonzalez Manrique, Sergio Javier A1 - Kuckein, Christoph A1 - Pastor Yabar, A. A1 - Collados Vera, M. A1 - Denker, Carsten A1 - Fischer, C. E. A1 - Gömöry, P. A1 - Diercke, Andrea A1 - Gonzalez, N. Bello A1 - Schlichenmaier, R. A1 - Balthasar, H. A1 - Berkefeld, T. A1 - Feller, A. A1 - Hoch, S. A1 - Hofmann, A. A1 - Kneer, F. A1 - Lagg, A. A1 - Nicklas, H. A1 - Orozco Suarez, D. A1 - Schmidt, D. A1 - Schmidt, W. A1 - Sigwarth, M. A1 - Sobotka, M. A1 - Solanki, S. K. A1 - Soltau, D. A1 - Staude, J. A1 - Strassmeier, Klaus G. A1 - Verma, Meetu A1 - Volkmer, R. A1 - von der Lühe, O. A1 - Waldmann, T. T1 - Fitting peculiar spectral profiles in He I 10830 angstrom absorption features JF - Astronomische Nachrichten = Astronomical notes N2 - The new generation of solar instruments provides better spectral, spatial, and temporal resolution for a better understanding of the physical processes that take place on the Sun. Multiple-component profiles are more commonly observed with these instruments. Particularly, the He i 10830 triplet presents such peculiar spectral profiles, which give information on the velocity and magnetic fine structure of the upper chromosphere. The purpose of this investigation is to describe a technique to efficiently fit the two blended components of the He i 10830 triplet, which are commonly observed when two atmospheric components are located within the same resolution element. The observations used in this study were taken on 2015 April 17 with the very fast spectroscopic mode of the GREGOR Infrared Spectrograph (GRIS) attached to the 1.5-m GREGOR solar telescope, located at the Observatorio del Teide, Tenerife, Spain. We apply a double-Lorentzian fitting technique using Levenberg-Marquardt least-squares minimization. This technique is very simple and much faster than inversion codes. Line-of-sight Doppler velocities can be inferred for a whole map of pixels within just a few minutes. Our results show sub-and supersonic downflow velocities of up to 32 km s(-1) for the fast component in the vicinity of footpoints of filamentary structures. The slow component presents velocities close to rest. (C) 2016 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH& Co. KGaA, Weinheim KW - Sun: chromosphere KW - methods: data analysis KW - techniques: spectroscopic KW - line: profiles Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/asna.201512433 SN - 0004-6337 SN - 1521-3994 VL - 337 SP - 1057 EP - 1063 PB - Wiley-VCH CY - Weinheim ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Verma, Meetu A1 - Denker, Carsten A1 - Böhm, F. A1 - Balthasar, H. A1 - Fischer, C. E. A1 - Kuckein, Christoph A1 - Gonzalez, N. Bello A1 - Berkefeld, T. A1 - Collados Vera, M. A1 - Diercke, Andrea A1 - Feller, A. A1 - Gonzalez Manrique, Sergio Javier A1 - Hofmann, A. A1 - Lagg, A. A1 - Nicklas, H. A1 - Orozco Suarez, D. A1 - Pator Yabar, A. A1 - Rezaei, R. A1 - Schlichenmaier, R. A1 - Schmidt, D. A1 - Schmidt, W. A1 - Sigwarth, M. A1 - Sobotka, M. A1 - Solanki, S. K. A1 - Soltau, D. A1 - Staude, J. A1 - Strassmeier, Klaus G. A1 - Volkmer, R. A1 - von der Lühe, O. A1 - Waldmann, T. T1 - Flow and magnetic field properties in the trailing sunspots of active region NOAA 12396 JF - Astronomische Nachrichten = Astronomical notes N2 - Improved measurements of the photospheric and chromospheric three-dimensional magnetic and flow fields are crucial for a precise determination of the origin and evolution of active regions. We present an illustrative sample of multi-instrument data acquired during a two-week coordinated observing campaign in August 2015 involving, among others, the GREGOR solar telescope (imaging and near-infrared spectroscopy) and the space missions Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) and Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph (IRIS). The observations focused on the trailing part of active region NOAA 12396 with complex polarity inversion lines and strong intrusions of opposite polarity flux. The GREGOR Infrared Spectrograph (GRIS) provided Stokes IQUV spectral profiles in the photospheric Si i.1082.7 nm line, the chromospheric He I lambda 1083.0 nm triplet, and the photospheric Ca I lambda 1083.9 nm line. Carefully calibrated GRIS scans of the active region provided maps of Doppler velocity and magnetic field at different atmospheric heights. We compare quick-look maps with those obtained with the " Stokes Inversions based on Response functions" (SIR) code, which furnishes deeper insight into the magnetic properties of the region. We find supporting evidence that newly emerging flux and intruding opposite polarity flux are hampering the formation of penumbrae, i.e., a penumbra fully surrounding a sunspot is only expected after cessation of flux emergence in proximity to the sunspots. (C) 2016 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH& Co.KGaA, Weinheim KW - Sun: magnetic fields KW - sunspots KW - methods: data analysis KW - techniques: polarimetric KW - techniques: spectroscopic Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/asna.201612447 SN - 0004-6337 SN - 1521-3994 VL - 337 SP - 1090 EP - 1098 PB - Wiley-VCH CY - Weinheim ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Denker, Carsten A1 - Heibel, C. A1 - Rendtel, J. A1 - Arlt, K. A1 - Balthasar, H. A1 - Diercke, Andrea A1 - Gonzalez Manrique, Sergio Javier A1 - Hofmann, A. A1 - Kuckein, Christoph A1 - Önel, H. A1 - Valliappan, Senthamizh Pavai A1 - Staude, J. A1 - Verma, Meetu T1 - Solar physics at the Einstein Tower JF - Astronomische Nachrichten = Astronomical notes KW - history and philosophy of astronomy KW - Sun: photosphere KW - Sun: magnetic fields KW - techniques: spectroscopic KW - telescopes Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/asna.201612442 SN - 0004-6337 SN - 1521-3994 VL - 337 SP - 1105 EP - 1113 PB - Wiley-VCH CY - Weinheim ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Schreck, Simon A1 - Wernet, Philippe T1 - Isotope effects in liquid water probed by transmission mode x-ray absorption spectroscopy at the oxygen K-edge JF - The journal of chemical physics : bridges a gap between journals of physics and journals of chemistr N2 - The effects of isotope substitution in liquid water are probed by x-ray absorption spectroscopy at the O K-edge as measured in transmission mode. Confirming earlier x-ray Raman scattering experiments, the D2O spectrum is found to be blue shifted with respect to H2O, and the D2O spectrum to be less broadened. Following the earlier interpretations of UV and x-ray Raman spectra, the shift is related to the difference in ground-state zero-point energies between D2O and H2O, while the difference in broadening is related to the difference in ground-state vibrational zero-point distributions. We demonstrate that the transmission-mode measurements allow for determining the spectral shapes with unprecedented accuracy. Owing in addition to the increased spectral resolution and signal to noise ratio compared to the earlier measurements, the new data enable the stringent determination of blue shift and broadening in the O K-edge x-ray absorption spectrum of liquid water upon isotope substitution. The results are compared to UV absorption data, and it is discussed to which extent they reflect the differences in zero-point energies and vibrational zero-point distributions in the ground-states of the liquids. The influence of the shape of the final-state potential, inclusion of the Franck-Condon structure, and differences between liquid H2O and D2O resulting from different hydrogen-bond environments in the liquids are addressed. The differences between the O K-edge absorption spectra of water from our transmission-mode measurements and from the state-of-the-art x-ray Raman scattering experiments are discussed in addition. The experimentally extracted values of blue shift and broadening are proposed to serve as a test for calculations of ground-state zero-point energies and vibrational zero-point distributions in liquid H2O and D2O. This clearly motivates the need for new calculations of the O K-edge x-ray absorption spectrum of liquid water. Published by AIP Publishing. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4962237 SN - 0021-9606 SN - 1089-7690 VL - 145 SP - 24 EP - 32 PB - American Institute of Physics CY - Melville ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Cherstvy, Andrey G. A1 - Metzler, Ralf T1 - Anomalous diffusion in time-fluctuating non-stationary diffusivity landscapes JF - Physical chemistry, chemical physics : a journal of European Chemical Societies N2 - We investigate the ensemble and time averaged mean squared displacements for particle diffusion in a simple model for disordered media by assuming that the local diffusivity is both fluctuating in time and has a deterministic average growth or decay in time. In this study we compare computer simulations of the stochastic Langevin equation for this random diffusion process with analytical results. We explore the regimes of normal Brownian motion as well as anomalous diffusion in the sub- and superdiffusive regimes. We also consider effects of the inertial term on the particle motion. The investigation of the resulting diffusion is performed for unconfined and confined motion. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1039/c6cp03101c SN - 1463-9076 SN - 1463-9084 VL - 18 SP - 23840 EP - 23852 PB - Royal Society of Chemistry CY - Cambridge ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Godec, Aljaz A1 - Metzler, Ralf T1 - Active transport improves the precision of linear long distance molecular signalling JF - Journal of physics : A, Mathematical and theoretical N2 - Molecular signalling in living cells occurs at low copy numbers and is thereby inherently limited by the noise imposed by thermal diffusion. The precision at which biochemical receptors can count signalling molecules is intimately related to the noise correlation time. In addition to passive thermal diffusion, messenger RNA and vesicle-engulfed signalling molecules can transiently bind to molecular motors and are actively transported across biological cells. Active transport is most beneficial when trafficking occurs over large distances, for instance up to the order of 1 metre in neurons. Here we explain how intermittent active transport allows for faster equilibration upon a change in concentration triggered by biochemical stimuli. Moreover, we show how intermittent active excursions induce qualitative changes in the noise in effectively one-dimensional systems such as dendrites. Thereby they allow for significantly improved signalling precision in the sense of a smaller relative deviation in the concentration read-out by the receptor. On the basis of linear response theory we derive the exact mean field precision limit for counting actively transported molecules. We explain how intermittent active excursions disrupt the recurrence in the molecular motion, thereby facilitating improved signalling accuracy. Our results provide a deeper understanding of how recurrence affects molecular signalling precision in biological cells and novel medical-diagnostic devices. KW - noise in biochemical signalling KW - Brownian motion KW - active transport KW - linear response theory KW - fluctuation-dissipation theorem KW - generalised Langevin equation KW - recurrence Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1088/1751-8113/49/36/364001 SN - 1751-8113 SN - 1751-8121 VL - 49 PB - IOP Publ. Ltd. CY - Bristol ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Kunnus, Kristjan A1 - Josefsson, Ida A1 - Rajkovic, Ivan A1 - Schreck, Simon A1 - Quevedo, Wilson A1 - Beye, Martin A1 - Grübel, Sebastian A1 - Scholz, Mirko A1 - Nordlund, Dennis A1 - Zhang, Wenkai A1 - Hartsock, Robert W. A1 - Gaffney, Kelly J. A1 - Schlotter, William F. A1 - Turner, Joshua J. A1 - Kennedy, Brian A1 - Hennies, Franz A1 - Techert, Simone A1 - Wernet, Philippe A1 - Odelius, Michael A1 - Föhlisch, Alexander T1 - Anti-Stokes resonant x-ray Raman scattering for atom specific and excited state selective dynamics JF - NEW JOURNAL OF PHYSICS N2 - Ultrafast electronic and structural dynamics of matter govern rate and selectivity of chemical reactions, as well as phase transitions and efficient switching in functional materials. Since x-rays determine electronic and structural properties with elemental, chemical, orbital and magnetic selectivity, short pulse x-ray sources have become central enablers of ultrafast science. Despite of these strengths, ultrafast x-rays have been poor at picking up excited state moieties from the unexcited ones. With time-resolved anti-Stokes resonant x-ray Raman scattering (AS-RXRS) performed at the LCLS, and ab initio theory we establish background free excited state selectivity in addition to the elemental, chemical, orbital and magnetic selectivity of x-rays. This unparalleled selectivity extracts low concentration excited state species along the pathway of photo induced ligand exchange of Fe(CO)(5) in ethanol. Conceptually a full theoretical treatment of all accessible insights to excited state dynamics with AS-RXRS with transform-limited x-ray pulses is given-which will be covered experimentally by upcoming transform-limited x-ray sources. KW - ultrafast photochemistry KW - excited state selectivity KW - anti-Stokes resonant x-ray raman scattering KW - free electron lasers KW - resonant inelastic x-ray scattering Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1088/1367-2630/18/10/103011 SN - 1367-2630 VL - 18 PB - IOP Publ. Ltd. CY - Bristol ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Metzler, Ralf A1 - Jeon, J. -H. A1 - Cherstvy, Andrey G. T1 - Non-Brownian diffusion in lipid membranes: Experiments and simulations JF - Biochimica et biophysica acta : Biomembranes N2 - The dynamics of constituents and the surface response of cellular membranes also in connection to the binding of various particles and macromolecules to the membrane are still a matter of controversy in the membrane biophysics community, particularly with respect to crowded membranes of living biological cells. We here put into perspective recent single particle tracking experiments in the plasma membranes of living cells and supercomputing studies of lipid bilayer model membranes with and without protein crowding. Special emphasis is put on the observation of anomalous, non-Brownian diffusion of both lipid molecules and proteins embedded in the lipid bilayer. While single component, pure lipid bilayers in simulations exhibit only transient anomalous diffusion of lipid molecules on nanosecond time scales, the persistence of anomalous diffusion becomes significantly longer ranged on the addition of disorder through the addition of cholesterol or proteins and on passing of the membrane lipids to the gel phase. Concurrently, experiments demonstrate the anomalous diffusion of membrane embedded proteins up to macroscopic time scales in the minute time range. Particular emphasis will be put on the physical character of the anomalous diffusion, in particular, the occurrence of ageing observed in the experiments the effective diffusivity of the measured particles is a decreasing function of time. Moreover, we present results for the time dependent local scaling exponent of the mean squared displacement of the monitored particles. Recent results finding deviations from the commonly assumed Gaussian diffusion patterns in protein crowded membranes are reported. The properties of the displacement autocorrelation function of the lipid molecules are discussed in the light of their appropriate physical anomalous diffusion models, both for non-crowded and crowded membranes. In the last part of this review we address the upcoming field of membrane distortion by elongated membrane-binding particles. We discuss how membrane compartmentalisation and the particle-membrane binding energy may impact the dynamics and response of lipid membranes. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Biosimulations edited by Ilpo Vattulainen and Tomasz Rog. (C) 2016 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. KW - Lipid bilayer KW - Protein crowding KW - Anomalous diffusion KW - Simulations KW - Stochastic modelling KW - Non-Gaussian Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bbamem.2016.01.022 SN - 0005-2736 SN - 0006-3002 VL - 1858 SP - 2451 EP - 2467 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Zehbe, Rolf A1 - Zehbe, Kerstin T1 - Strontium doped poly-epsilon-caprolactone composite scaffolds made by reactive foaming JF - The European journal of the history of economic thought N2 - In the reconstruction and regeneration of bone tissue, a primary goal is to initiate bone growth and to stabilize the surrounding bone. In this regard, a potentially useful component in biomaterials for bone tissue engineering is strontium, which acts as cationic active agent, triggering certain intracellular pathways and acting as so called dual action bone agent which inhibits bone resorption while stimulating bone regeneration. In this study we established a novel processing for the foaming of a polymer (poly-epsilon-caprolactone) and simultaneous chemical reaction of a mixture of calcium and strontium hydroxides to the respective carbonates using supercritical carbon dioxide. The resultant porous composite scaffold was optimized in composition and strontium content and was characterized via different spectroscopic (infrared and Raman spectroscopy, energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy), imaging (SEM, mu CT), mechanical testing and in vitro methods (fluorescence vital staining, MTT-assay). As a result, the composite scaffold showed good in vitro biocompatibility with partly open pore structure and the expected chemistry. First mechanical testing results indicate sufficient mechanical stability to support future in vivo applications. (C) 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. KW - Strontium KW - Poly-epsilon-caprolactone KW - Porous scaffold KW - CAL-72 osteoblasts KW - L-929 fibroblasts KW - Reactive foaming KW - mu CT imaging KW - Spectroscopy Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.msec.2016.05.045 SN - 0928-4931 SN - 1873-0191 VL - 67 SP - 259 EP - 266 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Palyulin, Vladimir V. A1 - Chechkin, Aleksei V. A1 - Klages, Rainer A1 - Metzler, Ralf T1 - Search reliability and search efficiency of combined Levy-Brownian motion: long relocations mingled with thorough local exploration JF - Journal of physics : A, Mathematical and theoretical N2 - A combined dynamics consisting of Brownian motion and Levy flights is exhibited by a variety of biological systems performing search processes. Assessing the search reliability of ever locating the target and the search efficiency of doing so economically of such dynamics thus poses an important problem. Here we model this dynamics by a one-dimensional fractional Fokker-Planck equation combining unbiased Brownian motion and Levy flights. By solving this equation both analytically and numerically we show that the superposition of recurrent Brownian motion and Levy flights with stable exponent alpha < 1, by itself implying zero probability of hitting a point on a line, leads to transient motion with finite probability of hitting any point on the line. We present results for the exact dependence of the values of both the search reliability and the search efficiency on the distance between the starting and target positions as well as the choice of the scaling exponent a of the Levy flight component. KW - random search process KW - first passage KW - first arrival KW - Levy flights KW - Brownian motion Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1088/1751-8113/49/39/394002 SN - 1751-8113 SN - 1751-8121 VL - 49 SP - 2189 EP - 2193 PB - IOP Publ. Ltd. CY - Bristol ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Vafin, Sergei A1 - Schlickeiser, R. A1 - Yoon, P. H. T1 - AMPLIFICATION OF COLLECTIVE MAGNETIC FLUCTUATIONS IN MAGNETIZED BI-MAXWELLIAN PLASMAS FOR PARALLEL WAVE VECTORS. I. ELECTRON-PROTON PLASMA JF - The astrophysical journal : an international review of spectroscopy and astronomical physics N2 - The general electromagnetic fluctuation theory is a powerful tool to analyze the magnetic fluctuation spectrum of a plasma. Recent works utilizing this theory for a magnetized non-relativistic isotropic Maxwellian electron-proton plasma have demonstrated that the equilibrium ratio of vertical bar delta B vertical bar/B-0 can be as high as 10(-12). This value results from the balance between spontaneous emission of fluctuations and their damping, and it is considerably smaller than the observed value vertical bar delta B vertical bar/B-0 in the solar wind at 1 au, where 10(-3) less than or similar to vertical bar delta B vertical bar/B-0 less than or similar to 10(-1). In the present manuscript, we consider an anisotropic bi-Maxwellian distribution function to investigate the effect of plasma instabilities on the magnetic field fluctuations. We demonstrate that these instabilities strongly amplify the magnetic field fluctuations and provide a sufficient mechanism to explain the observed value of vertical bar delta B vertical bar/B-0 in the solar wind at 1 au. KW - instabilities KW - magnetic fields KW - solar wind KW - turbulence KW - waves Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.3847/0004-637X/829/1/41 SN - 0004-637X SN - 1538-4357 VL - 829 PB - IOP Publ. Ltd. CY - Bristol ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Clusella, Pau A1 - Politi, Antonio A1 - Rosenblum, Michael T1 - A minimal model of self-consistent partial synchrony JF - NEW JOURNAL OF PHYSICS N2 - We show that self-consistent partial synchrony in globally coupled oscillatory ensembles is a general phenomenon. We analyze in detail appearance and stability properties of this state in possibly the simplest setup of a biharmonic Kuramoto-Daido phase model as well as demonstrate the effect in limit-cycle relaxational Rayleigh oscillators. Such a regime extends the notion of splay state from a uniform distribution of phases to an oscillating one. Suitable collective observables such as the Kuramoto order parameter allow detecting the presence of an inhomogeneous distribution. The characteristic and most peculiar property of self-consistent partial synchrony is the difference between the frequency of single units and that of the macroscopic field. KW - synchronization KW - collective dynamics KW - coupled oscillators Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1088/1367-2630/18/9/093037 SN - 1367-2630 VL - 18 PB - IOP Publ. Ltd. CY - Bristol ER - TY - GEN A1 - Bürger, Andreas A1 - Magdans, Uta A1 - Gies, Hermann T1 - Adsorption of amino acids on the magnetite-(111)-surface: a force field study (vol 19, 851, 2013) T2 - Journal of molecular modeling Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s00894-016-3124-8 SN - 1610-2940 SN - 0948-5023 VL - 22 PB - Springer CY - New York ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Negrete, Jose A1 - Pumir, Alain A1 - Hsu, Hsin-Fang A1 - Westendorf, Christian A1 - Tarantola, Marco A1 - Beta, Carsten A1 - Bodenschatz, Eberhard T1 - Noisy Oscillations in the Actin Cytoskeleton of Chemotactic Amoeba JF - Physical review letters N2 - Biological systems with their complex biochemical networks are known to be intrinsically noisy. Here we investigate the dynamics of actin polymerization of amoeboid cells, which are close to the onset of oscillations. We show that the large phenotypic variability in the polymerization dynamics can be accurately captured by a generic nonlinear oscillator model in the presence of noise. We determine the relative role of the noise with a single dimensionless, experimentally accessible parameter, thus providing a quantitative description of the variability in a population of cells. Our approach, which rests on a generic description of a system close to a Hopf bifurcation and includes the effect of noise, can characterize the dynamics of a large class of noisy systems close to an oscillatory instability. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.117.148102 SN - 0031-9007 SN - 1079-7114 VL - 117 PB - American Physical Society CY - College Park ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Richardson, Noel D. A1 - Shenar, Tomer A1 - Roy-Loubier, Olivier A1 - Schaefer, Gail A1 - Moffat, Anthony F. J. A1 - St-Louis, Nicole A1 - Gies, Douglas R. A1 - Farrington, Chris A1 - Hill, Grant M. A1 - Williams, Peredur M. A1 - Gordon, Kathryn A1 - Pablo, Herbert A1 - Ramiaramanantsoa, Tahina T1 - The CHARA Array resolves the long-period Wolf-Rayet binaries WR 137 and WR 138 JF - Monthly notices of the Royal Astronomical Society N2 - We report on interferometric observations with the CHARAArray of two classical Wolf-Rayet (WR) stars in suspected binary systems, namely WR 137 and WR 138. In both cases, we resolve the component stars to be separated by a few milliarcseconds. The data were collected in the H band, and provide a measure of the fractional flux for both stars in each system. We find that the WR star is the dominant H-band light source in both systems (fWR, 137 = 0.59 +/- 0.04; fWR, 138 = 0.67 +/- 0.01), which is confirmed through both comparisons with estimated fundamental parameters for WR stars and O dwarfs, as well as through spectral modelling of each system. Our spectral modelling also provides fundamental parameters for the stars and winds in these systems. The results on WR 138 provide evidence that it is a binary system which may have gone through a previous mass-transfer episode to create the WR star. The separation and position of the stars in the WR 137 system together with previous results from the IOTA interferometer provides evidence that the binary is seen nearly edgeon. The possible edge-on orbit of WR 137 aligns well with the dust production site imaged by the Hubble Space Telescope during a previous periastron passage, showing that the dust production may be concentrated in the orbital plane. KW - binaries: visual KW - stars: individual: WR 137 KW - stars: individual: WR 138 KW - stars: mass-loss KW - stars: winds, outflows KW - stars: Wolf-Rayet Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stw1585 SN - 0035-8711 SN - 1365-2966 VL - 461 SP - 4115 EP - 4124 PB - Oxford Univ. Press CY - Oxford ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Pedatella, Nick M. A1 - Fang, T. -W. A1 - Jin, Hao A1 - Sassi, F. A1 - Schmidt, H. A1 - Chau, Jorge Luis A1 - Siddiqui, Tarique Adnan A1 - Goncharenko, L. T1 - Multimodel comparison of the ionosphere variability during the 2009 sudden stratosphere warming JF - Journal of geophysical research : Space physics N2 - A comparison of different model simulations of the ionosphere variability during the 2009 sudden stratosphere warming (SSW) is presented. The focus is on the equatorial and low-latitude ionosphere simulated by the Ground-to-topside model of the Atmosphere and Ionosphere for Aeronomy (GAIA), Whole Atmosphere Model plus Global Ionosphere Plasmasphere (WAM+GIP), and Whole Atmosphere Community Climate Model eXtended version plus Thermosphere-Ionosphere-Mesosphere-Electrodynamics General Circulation Model (WACCMX+TIMEGCM). The simulations are compared with observations of the equatorial vertical plasma drift in the American and Indian longitude sectors, zonal mean Fregion peak density (NmF2) from the Constellation Observing System for Meteorology, Ionosphere, and Climate (COSMIC) satellites, and ground-based Global Positioning System (GPS) total electron content (TEC) at 75 degrees W. The model simulations all reproduce the observed morning enhancement and afternoon decrease in the vertical plasma drift, as well as the progression of the anomalies toward later local times over the course of several days. However, notable discrepancies among the simulations are seen in terms of the magnitude of the drift perturbations, and rate of the local time shift. Comparison of the electron densities further reveals that although many of the broad features of the ionosphere variability are captured by the simulations, there are significant differences among the different model simulations, as well as between the simulations and observations. Additional simulations are performed where the neutral atmospheres from four different whole atmosphere models (GAIA, HAMMONIA (Hamburg Model of the Neutral and Ionized Atmosphere), WAM, and WACCMX) provide the lower atmospheric forcing in the TIME-GCM. These simulations demonstrate that different neutral atmospheres, in particular, differences in the solar migrating semidiurnal tide, are partly responsible for the differences in the simulated ionosphere variability in GAIA, WAM+GIP, and WACCMX+TIMEGCM. KW - ionosphere KW - sudden stratosphere warming Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/2016JA022859 SN - 2169-9380 SN - 2169-9402 VL - 121 SP - 7204 EP - 7225 PB - American Geophysical Union CY - Washington ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Kunnus, Kristjan A1 - Zhang, Wenkai A1 - Delcey, Mickael G. A1 - Pinjari, Rahul V. A1 - Miedema, Piter S. A1 - Schreck, Simon A1 - Quevedo, Wilson A1 - Schröder, Henning A1 - Föhlisch, Alexander A1 - Gaffney, Kelly J. A1 - Lundberg, Marcus A1 - Odelius, Michael A1 - Wernet, Philippe T1 - Viewing the Valence Electronic Structure of Ferric and Ferrous Hexacyanide in Solution from the Fe and Cyanide Perspectives JF - The journal of physical chemistry : B, Condensed matter, materials, surfaces, interfaces & biophysical chemistry N2 - The valence-excited states of ferric and ferrous hexacyanide ions in aqueous solution were mapped by resonant inelastic X-ray scattering (RIXS) at the Fe L-2,L-3 and N K edges. Probing of both the central Fe and the ligand N atoms enabled identification of the metal-and ligand-centered excited states, as well as ligand-to-metal and metal-to-ligand charge-transfer excited states. Ab initio calculations utilizing the RASPT2 method were used to simulate the Fe L-2,L-3-edge RIXS spectra and enabled quantification of the covalencies of both occupied and empty orbitals of pi and sigma symmetry. We found that pi back-donation in the ferric complex is smaller than that in the ferrous complex. This is evidenced by the relative amounts of Fe 3d character in the nominally 2 pi CN- molecular orbital of 7% and 9% in ferric and ferrous hexacyanide, respectively. Utilizing the direct sensitivity of Fe L-3-edge RIXS to the Fe 3d character in the occupied molecular orbitals, we also found that the donation interactions are dominated by sigma bonding. The latter was found to be stronger in the ferric complex, with an Fe 3d contribution to the nominally 5 sigma CN- molecular orbitals of 29% compared to 20% in the ferrous complex. These results are consistent with the notion that a higher charge at the central metal atom increases donation and decreases back-donation. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcb.6b04751 SN - 1520-6106 VL - 120 SP - 7182 EP - 7194 PB - American Chemical Society CY - Washington ER - TY - GEN A1 - Wuesthoff, Martin A1 - Sohl, F. T1 - Obliquity tides have an impact in diurnal tidal stresses on the Moon. T2 - Macromolecules : a publication of the American Chemical Society Y1 - 2016 SN - 1086-9379 SN - 1945-5100 VL - 51 SP - A672 EP - A672 PB - Wiley-Blackwell CY - Hoboken ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Xiong, Chao A1 - Stolle, Claudia A1 - Lühr, Hermann T1 - The Swarm satellite loss of GPS signal and its relation to ionospheric plasma irregularities JF - Space Weather: The International Journal of Research and Applications N2 - In this study we investigated conditions for loss of GPS signals observed by the Swarm satellites during a 2 year period, from December 2013 to November 2015. Our result shows that the Swarm satellites encountered most of the total loss of GPS signal at the ionization anomaly crests, between +/- 5 degrees and +/- 20 degrees magnetic latitude, forming two bands along the magnetic equator, and these low-latitude events mainly appear around postsunset hours from 19: 00 to 22: 00 local time. By further checking the in situ electron density measurements of Swarm, we found that practically, all the total loss of GPS signal events at low latitudes are related to equatorial plasma irregularities (EPIs) that show absolute density depletions larger than 10 x 10(11) m(-3); then, the Swarm satellites encountered for up to 95% loss of GPS signal for at least one channel and up to 45% tracked less than four GPS satellites (making precise orbit determination impossible). For those EPIs with density depletions less than 10 x 10(11) m(-3), the chance of tracked GPS signals less than four reduces to only 1.0%. Swarm also observed total loss of all GPS signal at high latitudes, mainly around local noon, and these events are related to large spatial density gradients due to polar patches or increased geomagnetic/auroral activities. We further found that the loss of GPS signals were less frequent after appropriate settings of the Swarm GPS receivers had been updated. However, the more recent period of the mission, e.g., after the GPS receiver settings have been updated, also coincides with less severe electron density depletions due to the declining solar cycle, making GPS loss events less likely. We conclude that both lower electron density gradients and appropriate GPS receiver settings reduce the probability for Swarm satellites loss of GPS signals. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/2016SW001439 SN - 1542-7390 VL - 14 SP - 563 EP - 577 PB - American Geophysical Union CY - Washington ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Quade, Markus A1 - Abel, Markus A1 - Shafi, Kamran A1 - Niven, Robert K. A1 - Noack, Bernd R. T1 - Prediction of dynamical systems by symbolic regression JF - Physical review : E, Statistical, nonlinear and soft matter physics N2 - We study the modeling and prediction of dynamical systems based on conventional models derived from measurements. Such algorithms are highly desirable in situations where the underlying dynamics are hard to model from physical principles or simplified models need to be found. We focus on symbolic regression methods as a part of machine learning. These algorithms are capable of learning an analytically tractable model from data, a highly valuable property. Symbolic regression methods can be considered as generalized regression methods. We investigate two particular algorithms, the so-called fast function extraction which is a generalized linear regression algorithm, and genetic programming which is a very general method. Both are able to combine functions in a certain way such that a good model for the prediction of the temporal evolution of a dynamical system can be identified. We illustrate the algorithms by finding a prediction for the evolution of a harmonic oscillator based on measurements, by detecting an arriving front in an excitable system, and as a real-world application, the prediction of solar power production based on energy production observations at a given site together with the weather forecast. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.94.012214 SN - 2470-0045 SN - 2470-0053 VL - 94 PB - American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics CY - Bethesda ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Liu, Xiaodong A1 - Sachse, Manuel A1 - Spahn, Frank A1 - Schmidt, Jurgen T1 - Dynamics and distribution of Jovian dust ejected from the Galilean satellites JF - Journal of geophysical research, Planets N2 - In this paper, the dynamical analysis of the Jovian dust originating from the four Galilean moons is presented. High-accuracy orbital integrations of dust particles are used to determine their dynamical evolution. A variety of forces are taken into account, including the Lorentz force, solar radiation pressure, Poynting-Robertson drag, solar gravity, the satellites' gravity, plasma drag, and gravitational effects due to nonsphericity of Jupiter. More than 20,000 dust particles from each source moon in the size range from 0.05 μm to 1 cm are simulated over 8000 (Earth) years until each dust grain hits a sink (moons, Jupiter, or escape from the system). Configurations of dust number density in the Jovicentric equatorial inertial frame are calculated and shown. In a Jovicentric frame rotating with the Sun the dust distributions are found to be asymmetric. For certain small particle sizes, the dust population is displaced towards the Sun, while for certain larger sizes, the dust population is displaced away from the Sun. The average lifetime as a function of particle size for ejecta from each source moon is derived, and two sharp jumps in the average lifetime are analyzed. Transport of dust between the Galilean moons and to Jupiter is investigated. Most of the orbits for dust particles from Galilean moons are prograde, while, surprisingly, a small fraction of orbits are found to become retrograde mainly due to solar radiation pressure and Lorentz force. The distribution of orbital elements is also analyzed. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/2016JE004999 SN - 2169-9097 SN - 2169-9100 VL - 121 SP - 1141 EP - 1173 PB - American Geophysical Union CY - Washington ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Roshchupkin, Dmitry A1 - Ortega, Luc A1 - Plotitcyna, Olga A1 - Erko, Alexei A1 - Zizak, Ivo A1 - Vadilonga, Simone A1 - Irzhak, Dmitry A1 - Emelin, Evgenii A1 - Buzanov, Oleg A1 - Leitenberger, Wolfram T1 - Piezoelectric Ca3NbGa3Si2O14 crystal: crystal growth, piezoelectric and acoustic properties JF - Journal of geophysical research : Space physics N2 - Ca3NbGa3Si2O14 (CNGS), a five-component crystal of lanthanum-gallium silicate group, was grown by the Czochralski method. The parameters of the elementary unit cell of the crystal were measured by powder diffraction. The independent piezoelectric strain coefficients d(11) and d(14) were determined by the triple-axis X-ray diffraction in the Bragg and Laue geometries. Excitation and propagation of surface acoustic waves (SAW) were studied by high-resolution X-ray diffraction at BESSY II synchrotron radiation source. The velocity of SAW propagation and power flow angles in the Y-, X-and yxl/+36 degrees-cuts of the CNGS crystal were determined from the analysis of the diffraction spectra. The CNGS crystal was found practically isotropic by its acoustic properties. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s00339-016-0279-1 SN - 0947-8396 SN - 1432-0630 VL - 122 SP - 2803 EP - 2812 PB - Springer CY - New York ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Thomas, Timon A1 - Feldmeier, Achim T1 - Radiative waves in stellar winds with line scattering JF - Monthly notices of the Royal Astronomical Society N2 - Photospheric radiation can drive winds from hot, massive stars by direct momentum transfer through scattering in bound-bound transitions of atmospheric ions. The line radiation force should cause a new radiative wave mode. The dispersion relation from perturbations of the line force was analysed so far either in Sobolev approximation or for pure line absorption. The former does not include the line-driven instability, and the latter cannot account for upstream propagating, radiative waves. We consider a non-Sobolev line force that includes scattering in a simplified way, accounting however for the important line-drag effect. We derive a new dispersion relation for radiative waves, and analyse wave propagation using Fourier methods, and by numerical solution of an integro-differential equation. The existence of an upstream propagating, dispersive radiative wave mode is demonstrated. KW - hydrodynamics KW - radiative transfer KW - waves KW - stars: winds KW - outflows Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stw1008 SN - 0035-8711 SN - 1365-2966 VL - 460 SP - 1923 EP - 1933 PB - Oxford Univ. Press CY - Oxford ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Xu, Siyao A1 - Yan, Huirong A1 - Lazarian, A. T1 - DAMPING OF MAGNETOHYDRODYNAMIC TURBULENCE IN PARTIALLY IONIZED PLASMA: IMPLICATIONS FOR COSMIC RAY PROPAGATION JF - The astrophysical journal : an international review of spectroscopy and astronomical physics N2 - We study the damping processes of both incompressible and compressible magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) turbulence in a partially ionized medium. We start from the linear analysis of MHD waves, applying both single-fluid and two-fluid treatments. The damping rates derived from the linear analysis are then used in determining the damping scales of MHD turbulence. The physical connection between the damping scale of MHD turbulence and the cutoff boundary of linear MHD waves is investigated. We find two branches of slow modes propagating in ions and neutrals, respectively, below the damping scale of slow MHD turbulence, and offer a thorough discussion of their propagation and dissipation behavior. Our analytical results are shown to be applicable in a variety of partially ionized interstellar medium (ISM) phases and the solar chromosphere. The importance of neutral viscosity in damping the Alfvenic turbulence in the interstellar warm neutral medium and the solar chromosphere is demonstrated. As a significant astrophysical utility, we introduce damping effects to the propagation of cosmic rays in partially ionized ISM. The important role of turbulence damping in both transit-time damping and gyroresonance is identified. KW - cosmic rays KW - magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) KW - turbulence Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.3847/0004-637X/826/2/166 SN - 0004-637X SN - 1538-4357 VL - 826 PB - IOP Publ. Ltd. CY - Bristol ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Winkler, Michael A1 - Abel, Markus T1 - Optimized setup for two-dimensional convection experiments in thin liquid films JF - Review of scientific instruments : a monthly journal devoted to scientific instruments, apparatus, and techniques N2 - We present a novel experimental setup to investigate two-dimensional thermal convection in a freestanding thin liquid film. Such films can be produced in a controlled way on the scale of 5-1000 nm. Our primary goal is to investigate convection patterns and the statistics of reversals in Rayleigh-Benard convection with varying aspect ratio. Additionally, questions regarding the physics of liquid films under controlled conditions can be investigated, like surface forces, or stability under varying thermodynamical parameters. The film is suspended in a frame which can be adjusted in height and width to span an aspect ratio range of Gamma = 0.16-10. The top and bottom frame elements can be set to specific temperature within T = 15 degrees C to 55 degrees C. A thickness to area ratio of approximately 108 enables only two-dimensional fluid motion in the time scales relevant for turbulent motion. The chemical composition of the film is well-defined and optimized for film stability and reproducibility and in combination with carefully controlled ambient parameters allows the comparison to existing experimental and numerical data. Published by AIP Publishing. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4950871 SN - 0034-6748 SN - 1089-7623 VL - 87 PB - American Institute of Physics CY - Melville ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Parezanovic, Vladimir A1 - Cordier, Laurent A1 - Spohn, Andreas A1 - Duriez, Thomas A1 - Noack, Bernd R. A1 - Bonnet, Jean-Paul A1 - Segond, Marc A1 - Abel, Markus A1 - Brunton, Steven L. T1 - Frequency selection by feedback control in a turbulent shear flow JF - Journal of fluid mechanics N2 - Many previous studies have shown that the turbulent mixing layer under periodic forcing tends to adopt a lock-on state, where the major portion of the fluctuations in the flow are synchronized at the forcing frequency. The goal of this experimental study is to apply closed-loop control in order to provoke the lock-on state, using information from the flow itself. We aim to determine the range of frequencies for which the closed-loop control can establish the lock-on, and what mechanisms are contributing to the selection of a feedback frequency. In order to expand the solution space for optimal closed-loop control laws, we use the genetic programming control (CPC) framework. The best closed-loop control laws obtained by CPC are analysed along with the associated physical mechanisms in the mixing layer flow. The resulting closed-loop control significantly outperforms open-loop forcing in terms of robustness to changes in the free-stream velocities. In addition, the selection of feedback frequencies is not locked to the most amplified local mode, but rather a range of frequencies around it. KW - free shear layers KW - instability control KW - turbulence control Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1017/jfm.2016.261 SN - 0022-1120 SN - 1469-7645 VL - 797 SP - 247 EP - 283 PB - Cambridge Univ. Press CY - New York ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Tomov, Peter A1 - Pena, Rodrigo F. O. A1 - Roque, Antonio C. A1 - Zaks, Michael A. T1 - Mechanisms of Self-Sustained Oscillatory States in Hierarchical Modular Networks with Mixtures of Electrophysiological Cell Types JF - Frontiers in computational neuroscience / Frontiers Research Foundation N2 - In a network with a mixture of different electrophysiological types of neurons linked by excitatory and inhibitory connections, temporal evolution leads through repeated epochs of intensive global activity separated by intervals with low activity level. This behavior mimics "up" and "down" states, experimentally observed in cortical tissues in absence of external stimuli. We interpret global dynamical features in terms of individual dynamics of the neurons. In particular, we observe that the crucial role both in interruption and in resumption of global activity is played by distributions of the membrane recovery variable within the network. We also demonstrate that the behavior of neurons is more influenced by their presynaptic environment in the network than by their formal types, assigned in accordance with their response to constant current. KW - self-sustained activity KW - cortical oscillations KW - irregular firing activity KW - hierarchical modular networks KW - cortical network models KW - intrinsic neuronal diversity KW - up-down states KW - chaotic neural dynamics Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.3389/fncom.2016.00023 SN - 1662-5188 VL - 10 SP - 476 EP - + PB - Frontiers Research Foundation CY - Lausanne ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Bouche, Nicolas A1 - Finley, H. A1 - Schroetter, I. A1 - Murphy, M. T. A1 - Richter, Philipp A1 - Bacon, Roland A1 - Contini, Thierry A1 - Richard, J. A1 - Wendt, Martin A1 - Kamann, S. A1 - Epinat, Benoit A1 - Cantalupo, Sebastiano A1 - Straka, Lorrie A. A1 - Schaye, Joop A1 - Martin, C. L. A1 - Peroux, C. A1 - Wisotzki, Lutz A1 - Soto, K. A1 - Lilly, S. A1 - Carollo, C. M. A1 - Brinchmann, Jarle A1 - Kollatschny, W. T1 - POSSIBLE SIGNATURES OF A COLD-FLOW DISK FROM MUSE USING A z similar to 1 GALAXY-QUASAR PAIR TOWARD SDSS J1422-0001 JF - The astrophysical journal : an international review of spectroscopy and astronomical physics N2 - We use a background quasar to detect the presence of circumgalactic gas around a z = 0.91 low-mass star-forming galaxy. Data from the new Multi Unit Spectroscopic Explorer (MUSE) on the Very Large Telescope show that the galaxy has a dust-corrected star formation rate (SFR) of 4.7 +/- 2.0. M-circle dot yr(-1), with no companion down to 0.22 M-circle dot yr(-1) (5 sigma) within 240 h(-1) kpc ("30"). Using a high-resolution spectrum of the background quasar, which is fortuitously aligned with the galaxy major axis (with an azimuth angle alpha of only 15 degrees), we find, in the gas kinematics traced by low-ionization lines, distinct signatures consistent with those expected for a "cold-flow disk" extending at least 12 kpc (3 x R-1/2). We estimate the mass accretion rate M-in to be at least two to three times larger than the SFR, using the geometric constraints from the IFU data and the H (I) column density of log N-H (I)/cm(-2) similar or equal to 20.4 obtained from a Hubble Space Telescope/COS near-UV spectrum. From a detailed analysis of the low-ionization lines (e.g., Zn II, Cr II, Ti II, MnII, Si II), the accreting material appears to be enriched to about 0.4 Z(circle dot) (albeit with large uncertainties: log Z/Z(circle dot) = -0.4 +/- 0.4), which is comparable to the galaxy metallicity (12 + log O/H = 8.7 +/- 0.2), implying a large recycling fraction from past outflows. Blueshifted Mg II and Fe II absorptions in the galaxy spectrum from the MUSE data reveal the presence of an outflow. The Mg II and Fe II absorption line ratios indicate emission infilling due to scattering processes, but the MUSE data do not show any signs of fluorescent Fe II* emission. KW - galaxies: evolution KW - galaxies: formation KW - intergalactic medium KW - quasars: individual (SDSS J142253.31-000149) Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.3847/0004-637X/820/2/121 SN - 0004-637X SN - 1538-4357 VL - 820 SP - 1872 EP - 1882 PB - IOP Publ. Ltd. CY - Bristol ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Husser, Tim-Oliver A1 - Kamann, Sebastian A1 - Dreizler, Stefan A1 - Wendt, Martin A1 - Wulff, Nina A1 - Bacon, Roland A1 - Wisotzki, Lutz A1 - Brinchmann, Jarle A1 - Weilbacher, Peter Michael A1 - Roth, Martin M. A1 - Monreal-Ibero, Ana T1 - MUSE crowded field 3D spectroscopy of over 12 000 stars in the globular cluster NGC 6397 I. The first comprehensive HRD of a globular cluster JF - Nucleic acids research N2 - Aims. We demonstrate the high multiplex advantage of crowded field 3D spectroscopy with the new integral field spectrograph MUSE by means of a spectroscopic analysis of more than 12 000 individual stars in the globular cluster NGC 6397. Methods. The stars are deblended with a point spread function fitting technique, using a photometric reference catalogue from HST as prior, including relative positions and brightnesses. This catalogue is also used for a first analysis of the extracted spectra, followed by an automatic in-depth analysis via a full-spectrum fitting method based on a large grid of PHOENIX spectra. Results. We analysed the largest sample so far available for a single globular cluster of 18 932 spectra from 12 307 stars in NGC 6397. We derived a mean radial velocity of v(rad) = 17.84 +/- 0.07 km s(-1) and a mean metallicity of [Fe/H] = -2.120 +/- 0.002, with the latter seemingly varying with temperature for stars on the red giant branch (RGB). We determine Teff and [Fe/H] from the spectra, and log g from HST photometry. This is the first very comprehensive Hertzsprung-Russell diagram (HRD) for a globular cluster based on the analysis of several thousands of stellar spectra, ranging from the main sequence to the tip of the RGB. Furthermore, two interesting objects were identified; one is a post-AGB star and the other is a possible millisecond-pulsar companion. KW - methods: data analysis KW - techniques: imaging spectroscopy KW - planets and satellites: fundamental parameters KW - stars: atmospheres KW - pulsars: general KW - globular clusters: individual: NGC 6397 Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201526949 SN - 1432-0746 VL - 588 PB - EDP Sciences CY - Les Ulis ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Kamann, S. A1 - Husser, T. -O. A1 - Brinchmann, Jarle A1 - Emsellem, E. A1 - Weilbacher, Peter Michael A1 - Wisotzki, Lutz A1 - Wendt, Martin A1 - Krajnovic, D. A1 - Roth, M. M. A1 - Bacon, Roland A1 - Dreizler, S. T1 - MUSE crowded field 3D spectroscopy of over 12 000 stars in the globular cluster NGC 6397 JF - Tectonophysics : international journal of geotectonics and the geology and physics of the interior of the earth N2 - We present a detailed analysis of the kinematics of the Galactic globular cluster NGC 6397 based on more than similar to 18 000 spectra obtained with the novel integral field spectrograph MUSE. While NGC 6397 is often considered a core collapse cluster, our analysis suggests a flattening of the surface brightness profile at the smallest radii. Although it is among the nearest globular clusters, the low velocity dispersion of NGC 6397 of < 5 km s(-1) imposes heavy demands on the quality of the kinematical data. We show that despite its limited spectral resolution, MUSE reaches an accuracy of 1 km s(-1) in the analysis of stellar spectra. We find slight evidence for a rotational component in the cluster and the velocity dispersion profile that we obtain shows a mild central cusp. To investigate the nature of this feature, we calculate spherical Jeans models and compare these models to our kinematical data. This comparison shows that if a constant mass-to-light ratio is assumed, the addition of an intermediate-mass black hole with a mass of 600 M-circle dot brings the model predictions into agreement with our data, and therefore could be at the origin of the velocity dispersion profile. We further investigate cases with varying mass-to-light ratios and find that a compact dark stellar component can also explain our observations. However, such a component would closely resemble the black hole from the constant mass-to-light ratio models as this component must be confined to the central similar to 5 ' of the cluster and must have a similar mass. Independent constraints on the distribution of stellar remnants in the cluster or kinematic measurements at the highest possible spatial resolution should be able to distinguish the two alternatives. KW - globular clusters: individual: NGC 6397 KW - stars: kinematics and dynamics KW - techniques: radial velocities KW - techniques: imaging spectroscopy KW - black hole physics Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201527065 SN - 1432-0746 VL - 588 PB - EDP Sciences CY - Les Ulis ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Kegeles, Alexander A1 - Oriti, Daniele T1 - Generalized conservation laws in non-local field theories JF - Journal of physics : A, Mathematical and theoretical N2 - We propose a geometrical treatment of symmetries in non-local field theories, where the non-locality is due to a lack of identification of field arguments in the action. We show that the existence of a symmetry of the action leads to a generalized conservation law, in which the usual conserved current acquires an additional non-local correction term, obtaining a generalization of the standard Noether theorem. We illustrate the general formalism by discussing the specific physical example of complex scalar field theory of the type describing the hydrodynamic approximation of Bose-Einstein condensates. We expect our analysis and results to be of particular interest for the group field theory formulation of quantum gravity. KW - conservation laws KW - non-local field theory KW - Noether theorem KW - group field theory Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1088/1751-8113/49/13/135401 SN - 1751-8113 SN - 1751-8121 VL - 49 SP - 119 EP - 134 PB - IOP Publ. Ltd. CY - Bristol ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Stadtherr, Lisa A1 - Coumou, Dim A1 - Petoukhov, Vladimir A1 - Petri, Stefan A1 - Rahmstorf, Stefan T1 - Record Balkan floods of 2014 linked to planetary wave resonance JF - Science Advances N2 - In May 2014, the Balkans were hit by a Vb-type cyclone that brought disastrous flooding and severe damage to Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia, and Croatia. Vb cyclones migrate from the Mediterranean, where they absorb warm and moist air, to the north, often causing flooding in central/eastern Europe. Extreme rainfall events are increasing on a global scale, and both thermodynamic and dynamical mechanisms play a role. Where thermodynamic aspects are generally well understood, there is large uncertainty associated with current and future changes in dynamics. We study the climatic and meteorological factors that influenced the catastrophic flooding in the Balkans, where we focus on large-scale circulation. We show that the Vb cyclone was unusually stationary, bringing extreme rainfall for several consecutive days, and that this situation was likely linked to a quasi-stationary circumglobal Rossby wave train. We provide evidence that this quasi-stationary wave was amplified by wave resonance. Statistical analysis of daily spring rainfall over the Balkan region reveals significant upward trends over 1950-2014, especially in the high quantiles relevant for flooding events. These changes cannot be explained by simple thermodynamic arguments, and we thus argue that dynamical processes likely played a role in increasing flood risks over the Balkans. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.1501428 SN - 2375-2548 VL - 2 PB - American Assoc. for the Advancement of Science CY - Washington ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Goychuk, Igor T1 - Molecular machines operating on the nanoscale: from classical to quantum JF - Beilstein journal of nanotechnology N2 - The main physical features and operating principles of isothermal nanomachines in the microworld, common to both classical and quantum machines, are reviewed. Special attention is paid to the dual, constructive role of dissipation and thermal fluctuations, the fluctuation-dissipation theorem, heat losses and free energy transduction, thermodynamic efficiency, and thermodynamic efficiency at maximum power. Several basic models are considered and discussed to highlight generic physical features. This work examines some common fallacies that continue to plague the literature. In particular, the erroneous beliefs that one should minimize friction and lower the temperature for high performance of Brownian machines, and that the thermodynamic efficiency at maximum power cannot exceed one-half are discussed. The emerging topic of anomalous molecular motors operating subdiffusively but very efficiently in the viscoelastic environment of living cells is also discussed. KW - anomalous dynamics with memory KW - Brownian nanomachines KW - nanoscale friction and thermal noise KW - quantum effects KW - thermodynamic efficiency Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.3762/bjnano.7.31 SN - 2190-4286 VL - 7 SP - 328 EP - 350 PB - Beilstein-Institut zur Förderung der Chemischen Wissenschaften CY - Frankfurt, Main ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Sandin, C. A1 - Steffen, M. A1 - Schoenberner, D. A1 - Rühling, Ute T1 - Hot bubbles of planetary nebulae with hydrogen-deficient winds I. Heat conduction in a chemically stratified plasma JF - Frontiers in psychology N2 - Heat conduction has been found a plausible solution to explain discrepancies between expected and measured temperatures in hot bubbles of planetary nebulae (PNe). While the heat conduction process depends on the chemical composition, to date it has been exclusively studied for pure hydrogen plasmas in PNe. A smaller population of PNe show hydrogen-deficient and helium-and carbon-enriched surfaces surrounded by bubbles of the same composition; considerable differences are expected in physical properties of these objects in comparison to the pure hydrogen case. The aim of this study is to explore how a chemistry-dependent formulation of the heat conduction affects physical properties and how it affects the X-ray emission from PN bubbles of hydrogen-deficient stars. We extend the description of heat conduction in our radiation hydrodynamics code to work with any chemical composition. We then compare the bubble-formation process with a representative PN model using both the new and the old descriptions. We also compare differences in the resulting X-ray temperature and luminosity observables of the two descriptions. The improved equations show that the heat conduction in our representative model of a hydrogen-deficient PN is nearly as efficient with the chemistry-dependent description; a lower value on the diffusion coefficient is compensated by a slightly steeper temperature gradient. The bubble becomes somewhat hotter with the improved equations, but differences are otherwise minute. The observable properties of the bubble in terms of the X-ray temperature and luminosity are seemingly unaffected. KW - conduction KW - hydrodynamics KW - planetary nebulae: general KW - stars: AGB and post-AGB KW - stars: Wolf-Rayet KW - X-rays: stars Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201527357 SN - 1432-0746 VL - 586 PB - EDP Sciences CY - Les Ulis ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Ge, J. X. A1 - He, J. H. A1 - Yan, Huirong T1 - Effects of turbulent dust grain motion to interstellar chemistry JF - Monthly notices of the Royal Astronomical Society N2 - Theoretical studies have revealed that dust grains are usually moving fast through the turbulent interstellar gas, which could have significant effects upon interstellar chemistry by modifying grain accretion. This effect is investigated in this work on the basis of numerical gas-grain chemical modelling. Major features of the grain motion effect in the typical environment of dark clouds (DC) can be summarized as follows: (1) decrease of gas-phase (both neutral and ionic) abundances and increase of surface abundances by up to 2-3 orders of magnitude; (2) shifts of the existing chemical jumps to earlier evolution ages for gas-phase species and to later ages for surface species by factors of about 10; (3) a few exceptional cases in which some species turn out to be insensitive to this effect and some other species can show opposite behaviours too. These effects usually begin to emerge from a typical DC model age of about 10(5) yr. The grain motion in a typical cold neutral medium (CNM) can help overcome the Coulomb repulsive barrier to enable effective accretion of cations on to positively charged grains. As a result, the grain motion greatly enhances the abundances of some gas-phase and surface species by factors up to 2-6 or more orders of magnitude in the CNM model. The grain motion effect in a typical molecular cloud (MC) is intermediate between that of the DC and CNM models, but with weaker strength. The grain motion is found to be important to consider in chemical simulations of typical interstellar medium. KW - astrochemistry KW - turbulence KW - ISM: abundances KW - ISM: clouds KW - dust, extinction KW - ISM: molecules Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stv2560 SN - 0035-8711 SN - 1365-2966 VL - 455 SP - 3570 EP - 3587 PB - Oxford Univ. Press CY - Oxford ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Kappel, David A1 - Arnold, Gabriele A1 - Haus, Rainer T1 - Multi-spectrum retrieval of Venus IR surface emissivity maps from VIRTIS/VEX nightside measurements at Themis Regio JF - Icarus : international journal of solar system studies N2 - Renormalized emissivity maps of Themis Regio at the three surface windows are determined from 64 measurement repetitions. Retrieval errors are estimated by a statistical evaluation of maps derived from various disjoint selections of spectra and using different assumptions on the interfering parameters. Double standard deviation errors for the three surface windows amount to 3%, 8%, and 4%, respectively, allowing geologic interpretation. A comparison to results from an earlier error analysis based on synthetic spectra shows that unconsidered time variations of interfering atmospheric parameters are a major error source. Spatial variations of the 1.02 mu m surface emissivity of 20% that correspond to the difference between unweathered granitic and basaltic rocks would be easily detectable, but such variations are ruled out for the studied target area. Emissivity anomalies of up to 8% are detected at both 1.02 and 1.18 mu m. At present sensitivity, no anomalies are identified at 1.10 mu m, but anomalies exceeding the determined error level can be excluded. With single standard deviation significance, all three maps show interesting spatial emissivity variations. (C) 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. KW - Venus, surface KW - Infrared observations KW - Radiative transfer Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.icarus.2015.10.014 SN - 0019-1035 SN - 1090-2643 VL - 265 SP - 42 EP - 62 PB - Elsevier CY - San Diego ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Leonhardt, Helmar A1 - Gerhardt, Matthias A1 - Hoeppner, Nadine A1 - Krüger, Kirsten A1 - Tarantola, Marco A1 - Beta, Carsten T1 - Cell-substrate impedance fluctuations of single amoeboid cells encode cell-shape and adhesion dynamics JF - Physical review : E, Statistical, nonlinear and soft matter physics N2 - We show systematic electrical impedance measurements of single motile cells on microelectrodes. Wild-type cells and mutant strains were studied that differ in their cell-substrate adhesion strength. We recorded the projected cell area by time-lapse microscopy and observed irregular oscillations of the cell shape. These oscillations were correlated with long-term variations in the impedance signal. Superposed to these long-term trends, we observed fluctuations in the impedance signal. Their magnitude clearly correlated with the adhesion strength, suggesting that strongly adherent cells display more dynamic cell-substrate interactions. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.93.012414 SN - 2470-0045 SN - 2470-0053 VL - 93 PB - American Physical Society CY - College Park ER - TY - GEN A1 - Metzler, Ralf T1 - PROTEIN PHYSICS Forever ageing T2 - Nature physics N2 - Single-molecule techniques have long given us insight into the motion and interactions of individual molecules. But simulations now show that the dynamics inside single proteins is not as simple as we thought — and that proteins are forever changing. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1038/nphys3585 SN - 1745-2473 SN - 1745-2481 VL - 12 SP - 113 EP - 114 PB - Nature Publ. Group CY - London ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Baushev, Anton N. T1 - Can the dark matter annihilation signal be significantly boosted by substructures? JF - Journal of cosmology and astroparticle physics N2 - A very general cosmological consideration suggests that, along with galactic dark matter halos, much smaller dark matter structures may exist. These structures are usually called `clumps', and their mass extends to 10−6 M ⊙ or even lower. The clumps should give the main contribution into the signal of dark matter annihilation, provided that they have survived until the present time. Recent observations favor a cored profile for low-mass astrophysical halos. We consider cored clumps and show that they are significantly less firm than the standard NFW ones. In contrast to the standard scenario, the cored clumps should have been completely destroyed inside ~ 20 kpc from the Milky Way center. The dwarf spheroidals should not contain any dark matter clumps. On the other hand, even under the most pessimistic assumption about the clump structure, the clumps should have survived in the Milky Way at a distance exceeding 50 kpc from the center, as well as in low-density cosmic structures. There they significantly boost the dark matter annihilation. We show that at least 70% of the clumps endured the primordial structure formation should still exist untouched in the present-day Universe. KW - dark matter theory KW - particle physics - cosmology connection KW - supersymmetry and cosmology KW - cosmic ray theory Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1088/1475-7516/2016/01/018 SN - 1475-7516 VL - 30 SP - 12 EP - 18 PB - IOP Publ. Ltd. CY - Bristol ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Liebig, Ferenc A1 - Sarhan, Radwan Mohamed A1 - Prietzel, Claudia Christina A1 - Reinecke, Antje A1 - Koetz, Joachim T1 - "Green" gold nanotriangles: synthesis, purification by polyelectrolyte/micelle depletion flocculation and performance in surface-enhanced Raman scattering JF - RSC Advances N2 - The aim of this study was to develop a one-step synthesis of gold nanotriangles (NTs) in the presence of mixed phospholipid vesicles followed by a separation process to isolate purified NTs. Negatively charged vesicles containing AOT and phospholipids, in the absence and presence of additional reducing agents (polyampholytes, polyanions or low molecular weight compounds), were used as a template phase to form anisotropic gold nanoparticles. Upon addition of the gold chloride solution, the nucleation process is initiated and both types of particles, i.e., isotropic spherical and anisotropic gold nanotriangles, are formed simultaneously. As it was not possible to produce monodisperse nanotriangles with such a one-step procedure, the anisotropic nanoparticles needed to be separated from the spherical ones. Therefore, a new type of separation procedure using combined polyelectrolyte/micelle depletion flocculation was successfully applied. As a result of the different purification steps, a green colored aqueous dispersion was obtained containing highly purified, well-defined negatively charged flat nanocrystals with a platelet thickness of 10 nm and an edge length of about 175 nm. The NTs produce promising results in surface-enhanced Raman scattering. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1039/c6ra04808k SN - 2046-2069 VL - 6 SP - 33561 EP - 33568 PB - Royal Society of Chemistry CY - Cambridge ER - TY - GEN A1 - Teif, Vladimir B. A1 - Cherstvy, Andrey G. T1 - Chromatin and epigenetics: current biophysical views T2 - AIMS biophysics N2 - Recent advances in high-throughput sequencing experiments and their theoretical descriptions have determined fast dynamics of the "chromatin and epigenetics" field, with new concepts appearing at high rate. This field includes but is not limited to the study of DNA-protein-RNA interactions, chromatin packing properties at different scales, regulation of gene expression and protein trafficking in the cell nucleus, binding site search in the crowded chromatin environment and modulation of physical interactions by covalent chemical modifications of the binding partners. The current special issue does not pretend for the full coverage of the field, but it rather aims to capture its development and provide a snapshot of the most recent concepts and approaches. Eighteen open-access articles comprising this issue provide a delicate balance between current theoretical and experimental biophysical approaches to uncover chromatin structure and understand epigenetic regulation, allowing free flow of new ideas and preliminary results. KW - chromatin KW - epigenetics KW - linker histones KW - nucleosome KW - DNA-protein binding KW - histone modifications KW - remodelers KW - topologically associated domains KW - DNA methylation KW - DNA supercoiling Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.3934/biophy.2016.1.88 SN - 2377-9098 VL - 3 SP - 88 EP - 98 PB - American Institute of Mathematical Sciences CY - Springfield ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Zehbe, Rolf A1 - Mochales, Carolina A1 - Radzik, Daniela A1 - Mueller, Wolf-Dieter A1 - Fleck, Claudia T1 - Electrophoretic deposition of multilayered (cubic and tetragonal stabilized) zirconia ceramics for adapted crack deflection JF - Journal of the European Ceramic Society N2 - The electrophoretic deposition process was used to produce multi-layered ceramics consisting of alternating layers of fully stabilized cubic zirconia and partially stabilized tetragonal zirconia to make use of their different mechanical behaviour, investigating the possibility to deflect advancing cracks at the interfaces of the different layers. This crack deflection is apparently impacted by a toughening mechanism only found in the tetragonal stabilized zirconia polymorph and is characterized by the stress induced transformation of the metastable tetragonal phase into the monoclinic one, which is accompanied by a volume increase resulting in a closing mechanism for advancing cracks. While improving the electrophoretic deposition process, we investigated the transformation toughening mechanism at the layer interfaces and their effect on crack propagation. Investigations involved a combination of different imaging methods, including light microscopy, white light interferometry, atomic force microscopy, scanning electron microscopy, energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy and Raman spectroscopy. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. KW - Electrophoretic deposition KW - Yttria stabilized zirconia KW - Transformation toughening KW - Multilayer KW - Crack deflection Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jeurceramsoc.2015.08.022 SN - 0955-2219 SN - 1873-619X VL - 36 SP - 357 EP - 364 PB - Elsevier CY - Oxford ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Kuznetsov, Alexander P. A1 - Turukina, Ludmila V. A1 - Chernyshov, Nikolai Yu A1 - Sedova, Yuliya V. T1 - Oscillations and Synchronization in a System of Three Reactively Coupled Oscillators JF - International journal of bifurcation and chaos : in applied sciences and engineering N2 - We consider a system of three interacting van der Pol oscillators with reactive coupling. Phase equations are derived, using proper order of expansion over the coupling parameter. The dynamics of the system is studied by means of the bifurcation analysis and with the method of Lyapunov exponent charts. Essential and physically meaningful features of the reactive coupling are discussed. KW - Synchronization KW - quasi-periodic oscillation KW - bifurcation KW - chaos Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1142/S0218127416500103 SN - 0218-1274 SN - 1793-6551 VL - 26 SP - 31 EP - 39 PB - World Scientific CY - Singapore ER - TY - THES A1 - Marx, Robert T1 - A quantitative model of spatial correlations in parametric down conversion for investigating complementarity at a double slit Y1 - 2016 ER - TY - THES A1 - Breitling, Frank T1 - Propagation of energetic electrons in the solar corona observed with LOFAR T1 - Ausbreitung energiereicher Elektronen in der Sonnenkorona beobachtet mit LOFAR N2 - This work reports about new high-resolution imaging and spectroscopic observations of solar type III radio bursts at low radio frequencies in the range from 30 to 80 MHz. Solar type III radio bursts are understood as result of the beam-plasma interaction of electron beams in the corona. The Sun provides a unique opportunity to study these plasma processes of an active star. Its activity appears in eruptive events like flares, coronal mass ejections and radio bursts which are all accompanied by enhanced radio emission. Therefore solar radio emission carries important information about plasma processes associated with the Sun’s activity. Moreover, the Sun’s atmosphere is a unique plasma laboratory with plasma processes under conditions not found in terrestrial laboratories. Because of the Sun’s proximity to Earth, it can be studied in greater detail than any other star but new knowledge about the Sun can be transfer to them. This “solar stellar connection” is important for the understanding of processes on other stars. The novel radio interferometer LOFAR provides imaging and spectroscopic capabilities to study these processes at low frequencies. Here it was used for solar observations. LOFAR, the characteristics of its solar data and the processing and analysis of the latter with the Solar Imaging Pipeline and Solar Data Center are described. The Solar Imaging Pipeline is the central software that allows using LOFAR for solar observations. So its development was necessary for the analysis of solar LOFAR data and realized here. Moreover a new density model with heat conduction and Alfvén waves was developed that provides the distance of radio bursts to the Sun from dynamic radio spectra. Its application to the dynamic spectrum of a type III burst observed on March 16, 2016 by LOFAR shows a nonuniform radial propagation velocity of the radio emission. The analysis of an imaging observation of type III bursts on June 23, 2012 resolves a burst as bright, compact region localized in the corona propagating in radial direction along magnetic field lines with an average velocity of 0.23c. A nonuniform propagation velocity is revealed. A new beam model is presented that explains the nonuniform motion of the radio source as a propagation effect of an electron ensemble with a spread velocity distribution and rules out a monoenergetic electron distribution. The coronal electron number density is derived in the region from 1.5 to 2.5 R☉ and fitted with the newly developed density model. It determines the plasma density for the interplanetary space between Sun and Earth. The values correspond to a 1.25- and 5-fold Newkirk model for harmonic and fundamental emission, respectively. In comparison to data from other radio instruments the LOFAR data shows a high sensitivity and resolution in space, time and frequency. The new results from LOFAR’s high resolution imaging spectroscopy are consistent with current theories of solar type III radio bursts and demonstrate its capability to track fast moving radio sources in the corona. LOFAR solar data is found to be a valuable source for solar radio physics and opens a new window for studying plasma processes associated with highly energetic electrons in the solar corona. N2 - Diese Arbeit befasst sich mit neuen hochaufgelösten abbildenden und spektroskopischen Beobachtungen von solaren Typ III Radiobursts bei niedrigen Frequenzen im Bereich von 30 bis 80 MHz. Solare Typ III Radiobursts werden auf die Beam-Plasmawechselwirkung von Elektronenstrahlen in der Korona zurückgeführt. Die Sonne stellt eine einzigartige Möglichkeit dar, diese Plasmaprozesse eines aktiven Sterns zu untersuchen. Die Aktivität zeigt sich in eruptiven Ereignissen wie Flares, koronalen Massenauswürfen und Radiobursts, die jeweils von erhöhter Radiostrahlung begleitet werden. Daher trägt solare Radioemission wichtige Informationen über Plasmaprozesse, die mit Sonnenaktivität in Verbindung stehen. Darüber hinaus ist die Sonne auch ein einzigartiges Plasmalabor mit Plasmaprozessen unter Bedingungen die man nicht in irdischen Laboren findet. Aufgrund ihres vergleichsweise geringen Abstands kann man die Sonne wesentlich genauer beobachten als andere Sterne, aber neue Erkenntnisse von ihr auf andere Sterne übertragen. Diese “Solare-Stellare Verbindung” ist wichtig um Prozesse auf anderen Sternen zu verstehen. Das neue Radiointerferometer LOFAR bietet abbildende und spektroskopische Möglichkeiten, um diese Prozesse bei niedrigen Frequenzen zu untersuchen und wurde hier für Sonnenbeobachtungen genutzt. LOFAR, die Besonderheiten seiner Sonnendaten sowie das Verarbeiten und Analysieren dieser Daten mit der Solar Imaging Pipeline und dem Solar Data Center werden beschrieben. Die Solar Imaging Pipeline ist die zentrale Software, die die Nutzung von LOFAR für Sonnenbeobachtungen ermöglicht. Daher war deren Entwicklung für die Analyse von Sonnendaten notwendig und ist im Rahmen dieser Arbeit erfolgt. Außerdem wurde ein neues Dichtemodell mit Wärmeleitung und Alfvén-Wellen entwickelt, welches die Bestimmung der Entfernung von Radiobursts zur Sonne mittels dynamischer Spektren ermöglicht. Die Anwendung auf dynamische Spektren eines LOFAR Typ III Bursts am 16. März 2016 zeigt eine radiale, ungleichförmige Ausbreitungsgeschwindigkeit der Radioemission. Die Analyse einer abbildenden Beobachtung von Typ III Bursts am 23. Juni 2012 zeigt den Burst als helle, kompakte Region in der Korona die sich in radiale Richtung entlang magnetischer Feldlinien mit einer durchschnittlichen Geschwindigkeit von 0.23c (c, Lichtgeschwindigkeit) bewegt. Die Geschwindigkeit ist nicht gleichförmig. Ein neues Beammodell wird vorgestellt, dass diese ungleichförmige Geschwindigkeit als Ausbreitungseffekt eines Elektronenensemble mit einer ausgedehnten Geschwindigkeitsverteilung erklärt und eine monoenergetische Elektronenverteilung ausschließt. Die koronale Elektronenzahldichte wird in der Region von 1.5 bis 2.5 R☉ ermittelt und ein Fit mit dem neuen Dichtemodell durchgeführt. Dadurch ist die Plasmadichte im ganzen interplanetaren Raum zwischen Sonne und Erde bestimmt. Die Werte entsprechen jeweils einem 1.25- und 5-fachen Newkirk Modell im Fall von fundamentaler und harmonischer Emission. Im Vergleich zu Daten von anderen Radioinstrumenten haben LOFAR-Daten eine hohe Empfindlichkeit und Auflösung in Raum, Zeit und Frequenz. Die neuen Ergebnisse von LOFARs hochauflösender, abbildender Spektroskopie stimmen mit derzeitigen Theorien von solaren Typ III Radiobursts überein und zeigen die Möglichkeit, schnell bewegliche Radioquellen in der Korona zu verfolgen. LOFAR Sonnendaten wurden als wertvolle Quelle für solare Radiophysik erkannt und öffnen eine neues Fenster zur Untersuchung von Plasmaprozessen hochenergetischer Elektronen in der Korona. KW - sun KW - type III KW - radio burst KW - LOFAR KW - plasma physics KW - Sonne KW - Typ III KW - Radioburst KW - Plasmaphysik Y1 - 2016 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-396893 ER - TY - THES A1 - Fournier, Yori T1 - Dynamics of the rise of magnetic flux tubes in stellar interiors BT - a numerical study of compressible non-axisymmetric flux tubes N2 - In sonnenähnlichen Sternen erhält ein Dynamo-Mechanismus die Magnetfelder. Der Babcock-Leighton-Dynamo beruht auf einem solchen Mechanismus und erfordert insbesondere die Existenz von magnetischen Flussröhren. Man nimmt an, dass magnetische Flussröhren am Boden der Konvetionszone entstehen und durch Auftrieb bis zur Oberfläche steigen. Es wird ein spezielles Dynamomodell vorgeschlagen, in dem der Verzögerungseffekt durch das Aufsteigen der Flussröhren berücksichtigt wird. Die vorliegende Dissertation beschäftigt sich mit der Anwendbarkeit des Babcock-Leighton-Dynamos auf andere Sterne. Zu diesem Zweck versuchen wir, die Aufstiegszeiten von magnetischen Flussröhren mit Hilfe von kompressiblen MHD-Simulationen in spärischen Kugelschalen mit Dichteschichtung zu bestimmen und einzugrenzen. Derartige Simulationen sind allerdings nur in einem unrealistischen Parameterbereich möglich. Deshalb ist eine Skalierungsrelation nötig, die die Ergebnisse auf realistische physikalische Regimes überträgt. Wir erweitern frühere Arbeiten zu Skalierungsrelationen in 2D und leiten ein allgemeines Skalierungsgesetz ab, das für 2D- und 3D-Flussröhren gültig ist. In einem umfangreichen Satz von numerischen Simulationen zeigen wir, dass die abgeleitete Skalierungsrelation auch im vollständig nichtlinearen Fall gilt. Wir haben damit ein Gesetz für die Aufstiegszeit von magnetischen Flussröhren gefunden, dass in jedem sonnenähnlichen Stern Gültigkeit hat. Schließlich implementieren wir dieses Gesetz in einem Dynamomodell mit Verzögerungsterm. Die Simulationen eines solchen verzögerten Flussröhren/Babcock-Leighton-Dynamos auf der Basis der Meanfield-Formulierung führten auf ein neues Dynamo-Regime, das nur bei Anwesenheit der Verzögerung existiert. Die erforderlichen Verzögerungen sind von der Gröÿenordnung der Zykluslänge, die resultierenden Magnetfelder sind schwächer als die Äquipartitions-Feldstärke. Dieses neue Regime zeigt, dass auch bei sehr langen Aufstiegszeiten der Flussröhren/Babcock-Leighton-Dynamo noch nichtzerfallende Lösungen liefern und daher auf ein breites Spektrum von Sternen anwendbar sein kann. N2 - Solar-like stars maintain their magnetic fields thanks to a dynamo mechanism. The Babcock-Leighton dynamo is one possible dynamo that has the particularity to require magnetic flux tubes. Magnetic flux tubes are assumed to form at the bottom of the convective zone and rise buoyantly to the surface. A delayed dynamo model has been suggested, where the delay accounts for the rise time of the magnetic flux tubes; a time, that has been ignored by former studies. The present thesis aims to study the applicability of the flux tube/Babcock-Leighton dynamo to other stars. To do so, we attempt to constrain the rise time of magnetic flux tubes thanks to the first fully compressible MHD simulations of rising magnetic flux tubes in stratified rotating spherical shells. Such simulations are limited to an unrealistic parameter space, therefore, a scaling relation is required to scale the results to realistic physical regimes. We extended earlier works on 2D scaling relations and derived a general scaling law valid for both 2D and 3D. We then carried out two large series of numerical experiments and verified that the scaling law we have derived indeed applies to the fully non-linear case. It allowed us to extract a constraint for the rise time of magnetic flux tubes that is valid for any solar-like star. We finally introduced this constraint to a delayed dynamo model. By carrying out simulations of a mean-field, delayed, flux tube/Babcock-Leighton dynamo, we were able to identify a new dynamo regime resulting from the delay. This regime requires delays about an entire cycle and exhibits subequipartition magnetic activity. Revealing this new regime shows that even for long delays the flux tube/Babcock-Leighton dynamo can still deliver non-decaying solutions and remains a good candidate for a wide range of solar-like stars. KW - astrophysics KW - stellar physics KW - magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) KW - numerical experiments KW - magnetic flux tubes KW - dynamo theory Y1 - 2016 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-394533 ER - TY - THES A1 - Schulz, Alexander T1 - Untersuchung der Wechselwirkung synoptisch-skaliger mit orographisch bedingten Prozessen in der arktischen Grenzschicht über Spitzbergen N2 - In der vorliegenden Arbeit wird die planetare Grenzschicht in Ny-Ålesund, Spitzbergen, sowohl bezüglich kleinskaliger („mikrometeorologischer“) Effekte als auch in ihrer Kopplung mit der Synoptik untersucht. Dazu werden verschiedene Beobachtungsdaten aus der Säule und in Bodennähe zusammengezogen und bewertet. Die so gewonnenen Datensätze werden dann zur Validierung eines nicht-hydrostatischen, regionalen Klimamodells genutzt. Weiterhin werden orographisch bedingte Einflüsse, die Untergrundbeschaffenheit und die lokale Heterogenität der Unterlage untersucht. Hierzu werden meteorologische Größen, wie die Variabilität der Temperatur und insbesondere die jährliche Windverteilung in Bodennähe untersucht und es erfolgt ein Vergleich von in-situ gemessenen turbulenten Flüssen von den Eddy-Kovarianz-Messkomplexen bei Ny-Ålesund und im Bayelva-Tal unter demselben Aspekt. Es zeigt sich, dass der Eddy-Kovarianz-Messkomplex im Bayelva-Tal sehr stark durch eine orographisch bedingte Kanalisierung der Strömung beeinflusst ist und sich nicht für Vergleiche mit regionalen Klimamodellen mit horizontalen Auflösungen von <1km eignet. Die hohe Bodenfeuchte im Bayelva-Tal führt zudem zu einem deutlich kleineren Bowen-Verhältnis, als es für diese Region zu erwarten ist. Der Eddy-Kovarianz-Messkomplex bei Ny-Ålesund erweist sich hingegen als geeigneter für solche Modellvergleiche, aufgrund der typischen, küstennahen Windverteilung und des repräsentativen Footprints. Letzteres wird durch die Bestimmung der Footprint-Klimatologie des Jahres 2013 mit einem aktuellen Footprint-Modell erarbeitet. Weiterhin wird die Auswirkung von (Anti-) Zyklonen über den Archipel auf die zeitliche Variabilität der lokalen Grenzschichteigenschaften untersucht und bewertet. Dazu wird ein Zyklonen-Detektions-Algorithmus auf ERA-Interim-Reanalysedatensätze angewendet, wodurch die Häufigkeit von nahezu ideal konzentrischen Hoch- und die Tiefdruckgebieten für drei Jahre bestimmt wird. Aus dieser Verteilung werden insgesamt drei interessante Zeiträume zu verschiedenen Jahreszeiten ausgewählt und im Rahmen von Prozessstudien die lokalen bodennahen meteorologischen Messungen, der turbulente Austausch an der Oberfläche und die Grenzschichtdynamik in der Säule untersucht. Die zeitliche Variabilität der dynamischen Grenzschichtstabilität in der Säule wird anhand von zeitlich hoch aufgelösten vertikalen Profilen der Bulk-Richardson-Zahl aus Kompositprofilen aus Fernerkundungsinstrumenten (Radiometer, Wind-LIDAR) sowie Mastdaten (BSRN-Mast) untersucht und die Grenzschichthöhe ermittelt. Aus diesen Analysen ergibt sich eine deutliche Abhängigkeit der thermischen Stabilität beim Durchzug von Fronten, eine damit einhergehende erhebliche Abhängigkeit der Grenzschichtdynamik und der Grenzschichthöhe sowie des turbulenten Austauschs von der zeitlichen Variabilität der Windgeschwindigkeit in der Säule. Auf Grundlage der Standortanalysen und Prozessstudien erfolgt ein Vergleich der bodennahen Messungen und den Beobachtungen aus der Säule, sowohl von den genannten Fernerkundungsinstrumenten als auch von In-situ-Messungen (Radiosonden) für den Zeitraum einer Radiosondierungskampagne mit dem nicht-hydrostatischen, regionalen Klimamodel WRF (ARW). Auf Grundlage der Fragestellung, inwieweit aktuelle Schemata die Grenzschichtcharakteristika in orographisch stark gegliedertem Gelände in der Arktis reproduzieren können, werden zwei Grenzschichtparametrisierungsschemata mit verschiedenen Ordnungen der Schließung validiert. Hierzu wird die zeitliche Variabilität der Temperatur, der Feuchte und des Windfeldes in der Säule bis 2000m in den Simulationen mit den Beobachtungsdaten vergleichen. Es wird gezeigt, dass durch Modifikation der Initialwertfelder eine sehr gute Übereinstimmung zwischen den Simulationen und den Beobachtungen bereits bei einer horizontalen Auflösung von 1km erreicht werden kann und die Wahl des Grenzschichtschemas nur untergeordneten Einfluss hat. Hieraus werden Ansätze der Weiterentwicklung der Parametrisierungen, aber auch Empfehlungen bezüglich der Initialwertfelder, wie der Landmaske und der Orographie, vorgeschlagen. N2 - In this work, the planetary boundary layer in Ny-Ålesund, Svalbard is investigated both in terms of small scale (“micrometeorological”) effects and its connection to synoptic scale processes. Therefore several observational data from the lower troposphere and near the surface are added together and evaluated. These datasets are used to validate a non-hydrostatic, regional climate model. Furthermore orographically induced influences and the character of the surface and its local heterogeneity are investigated. To this, meteorological quantities like the temperature variability and the annual wind distribution near the surface are analysed and a comparison of in-situ measurements of the turbulent fluxes from the eddy covariance measuring complexes near Ny-Ålesund and in the Bayelva valley are conducted accordingly. It is shown that the eddy-covariance measuring complex in the Bayelva valley is influenced considerably by local channelling of the flow. Therefore this station is not suitable for comparisons with a regional climate model with horizontal resolutions ≥1km. In addition, higher soil moisture results in lower Bowen-ratio than expected for this site. It turned out that the eddy-covariance measuring complex near Ny-Ålesund is more appropriate for such model studies due to typical coastal wind distribution and a representative footprint. The latter is calculated by determining the footprint climatology of the year 2013 with a current footprint model. Furthermore the impact of (anti-) cyclones over the archipelago on the temporal variability of boundary layer characteristics is investigated and evaluated. For this purpose, a cyclone detection algorithm is applied to ERA-Interim reanalysis data which determines the frequency of nearly ideal concentric high and low pressure systems for three years. From this distribution, three interesting time periods are selected at different seasons and the local near surface meteorological measurements, the turbulent fluxes at the surface and the boundary layer dynamics in the column are examined in case studies. The temporal variability of the dynamic stability of the planetary boundary layer in the column is examined by temporally high resolved vertical profiles of the bulk Richardson number from composite profiles compiled from remote sensing data (radiometer, wind LIDAR) as well as data from the BSRN mast. From these analyses, a clear dependence of the thermal stability during the passage of fronts, a corresponding dependence of the boundary layer dynamics and the boundary layer height as well as the turbulent exchange from the temporal variability of the wind speed in the column results. On the basis of the site analyses and the case studies, a comparison of near surface measurements and observations from the column is made, both from the above-mentioned remote sensing instruments and in-situ measurements (radio soundings) for the period of an intense radio sounding campaign with the non-hydrostatic regional climate model WRF (ARW). On the basis of the question as to how far current schemes can reproduce the boundary layer characteristics in complex terrain in the Arctic, two boundary layer parameterization schemes with different orders of closure are validated. For this purpose, the temporal variability of the temperature, humidity and wind field in the column up to 2000m height in the simulations is compared with observational data. It is shown that by modifying fields of initial value, a very good agreement between the simulations and the observations can already be achieved with a horizontal resolution of 1km. The choice of the boundary layer scheme has only a minor influence. From this, approaches to the further development of the parameterizations as well as recommendations concerning the initial value fields, such as the land mask and the orography, are proposed. KW - atmosphärische Grenzschicht KW - atmospheric boundary layer KW - Mikrometeorologie KW - micrometeorology KW - regionale Klimamodellierung KW - regional climate modelling KW - Turbulenzmessung KW - turbulence measurement KW - arktische Atmosphäre KW - Arctic atmosphere Y1 - 2017 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-400058 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Nagornov, Roman A1 - Osipoy, Grigory A1 - Komarov, Maxim A1 - Pikovskij, Arkadij A1 - Shilnikov, Andrey T1 - Mixed-mode synchronization between two inhibitory neurons with post-inhibitory rebound JF - Communications in nonlinear science & numerical simulation N2 - We study an array of activity rhythms generated by a half-center oscillator (HCO), represented by a pair of reciprocally coupled neurons with post-inhibitory rebounds (PIR). Such coupling induced bursting possesses two time scales, one for fast spiking and another for slow quiescent periods, is shown to exhibit an array of synchronization properties. We discuss several HCO configurations constituted by two endogenous bursters, by tonic-spiking and quiescent neurons, as well as mixed-mode configurations composed of neurons of different type. We demonstrate that burst synchronization can be accompanied by complex, often chaotic, interactions of fast spikes within synchronized bursts. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. KW - Synchronization KW - Hodgkin-Huxley model KW - Half-center oscillator KW - Post-inhibitory rebound Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cnsns.2015.11.024 SN - 1007-5704 SN - 1878-7274 VL - 36 SP - 175 EP - 191 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Pikovskij, Arkadij T1 - Reconstruction of a neural network from a time series of firing rates JF - Physical review : E, Statistical, nonlinear and soft matter physics N2 - Randomly coupled neural fields demonstrate irregular variation of firing rates, if the coupling is strong enough, as has been shown by Sompolinsky et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 61, 259 (1988)]. We present a method for reconstruction of the coupling matrix from a time series of irregular firing rates. The approach is based on the particular property of the nonlinearity in the coupling, as the latter is determined by a sigmoidal gain function. We demonstrate that for a large enough data set and a small measurement noise, the method gives an accurate estimation of the coupling matrix and of other parameters of the system, including the gain function. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.93.062313 SN - 2470-0045 SN - 2470-0053 VL - 93 PB - American Physical Society CY - College Park ER -