Search results for "fluidit"
showing 10 items of 239 documents
Pairing in a three-component Fermi gas
2006
We consider pairing in a three-component gas of degenerate fermions. In particular, we solve the finite temperature mean-field theory of an interacting gas for a system where both interaction strengths and fermion masses can be unequal. At zero temperature we find a a possibility of a quantum phase transition between states associated with pairing between different pairs of fermions. On the other hand, finite temperature behavior of the three-component system reveals some qualitative differences from the two-component gas: for a range of parameters it is possible to have two different critical temperatures. The lower one corresponds to a transition between different pairing channels, while …
Beyond the dilute Bose gas
2006
Abstract We discuss problems of three dimensional Bose gases in interaction but non-dilute. We then use the theory of a “weakly interacting” Bose gas recently analyzed as an attempt to obtain further insights into non-dilute systems. In particular, we develop the theory with additional remarks, discussions and a slight modification. The article concludes with a much more detailed analysis of the Bose condensate depletion, as well as a study of the two-fluid model of Tisza and Landau: the coexistence of normal and superfluid liquids at sufficiently low temperatures. In fact, even if it is based on one debatable hypothesis, this non-dilute gas qualitatively leads, up to Landau's “ T 4 law”, t…
Supersolid Behavior of Light
2008
We will show how light can form stationary structures on dielectric periodic media such that their dynamics present simultaneous features of spatial long range order and superfluidity. This phenomenon is normally referred to as supersolidity.
Spatial dependence of the pairing field calculated with bare and induced interactions
2009
The interaction induced by the exchange of low-lying surface vibrations between pairs of orbitals close to the Fermi surface provides an important contribution to pairing correlations in superfluid nuclei. We study the spatial dependence of the pairing field obtained adding the bare and induced interaction in 120Sn.
Observation of a superfluid component within solid helium
2011
We demonstrate by neutron scattering that a localized superfluid component exists at high pressures within solid helium in aerogel. Its existence is deduced from the observation of two sharp phonon-roton spectra which are clearly distinguishable from modes in bulk superfluid helium. These roton excitations exhibit different roton gap parameters than the roton observed in the bulk fluid at freezing pressure. One of the roton modes disappears after annealing the samples. Comparison with theoretical calculations suggests that the model that reproduces the observed data best is that of superfluid double layers within the solid and at the helium-substrate interface. peerReviewed
Sublimazione e repressione: la crisi delle scienze europee e la musica barocca
2009
Dopo la Controriforma continua l'espansione e la sublimazione dell'eros, tipica del Rinascimento: fino al 1683 circa; quindi predomina la repressione dell'eros e lo sfruttamento delle energie vitali per la produzione industriale. Alla fluidità sonora della musica rinascimentale e barocca subentra improvvisamente la rigidezza sonora della musica dell'illuminismo e del rococò.
Structure Of Complexes Of Helix-5 From Bax With Lipid Membranes
2009
Bax is a proapoptotic protein implicated in the release of cell-death activating factors from the mitochondrial intermembrane space. Although the structure of the membrane-bound forms of Bax is unknown, it has been proposed to form proteolipidic pores. Studies with synthetic lipid vesicles have shown that fragments encompassing helix-5 of Bax retain a membrane permeabilization ability that is similar to that of the full-length protein. Here we report on the structure of peptide-membrane complexes formed by a Bax helix-5 peptide and lipid bilayers. The relative orientation of the peptide and the lipids are determined using site-specific infrared spectroscopy, assisted by isotopic labeling of…
Cyclopropanation of Membrane Unsaturated Fatty Acids Is Not Essential to the Acid Stress Response of Lactococcus lactis subsp. cremoris
2011
ABSTRACT Cyclopropane fatty acids (CFAs) are synthetized in situ by the transfer of a methylene group from S -adenosyl- l -methionine to a double bond of unsaturated fatty acid chains of membrane phospholipids. This conversion, catalyzed by the Cfa synthase enzyme, occurs in many bacteria and is recognized to play a key role in the adaptation of bacteria in response to a drastic perturbation of the environment. The role of CFAs in the acid tolerance response was investigated in the lactic acid bacterium Lactococcus lactis MG1363. A mutant of the cfa gene was constructed by allelic exchange. The cfa gene encoding the Cfa synthase was cloned and introduced into the mutant to obtain the comple…
Hong Kong-Palermo | Fluid Cities
2018
Being a modern university does not mean simply carrying out with rigor and commitment the role of an educational and research agency, but increasingly requires the need to open up to the city, the region and the world. It means extending our relationships by letting people and ideas navigate the long networks of knowledge, comparison and collaboration. For this reason the University of Palermo is decisively increasing its activity of internationalization and of openness to the inputs that come from the society of widespread knowledge in which we are immersed. In the liquid society also the university must change its mission, capturing the transformations of the contemporary, renewing the mo…
Vibrio cholerae cytolysin: assembly and membrane insertion of the oligomeric pore are tightly linked and are not detectably restricted by membrane fl…
2000
AbstractHemolytic strains of Vibrio cholerae secrete a cytolysin that, upon binding as a monomer, forms pentameric pores in animal cell membranes. Pore formation is inhibited at low temperature and in the absence of cholesterol. We here posed the following questions: firstly, can oligomerization be observed in the absence of pore formation? Secondly, is membrane fluidity responsible for the effect of temperature or of cholesterol upon pore formation? The first issue was approached by chemical cross-linking, by electrophoretic heteromer analysis, and by electron microscopy. None of these methods yielded any evidence of a non-lytic pre-pore oligomer. The second question was addressed by the u…