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  • Oxford University Press  (75,518)
  • American Institute of Physics (AIP)  (49,884)
  • National Academy of Sciences  (33,252)
  • American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
  • American Meteorological Society
  • 2005-2009  (84,537)
  • 1995-1999  (110,810)
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  • 1
    Unknown
    Washington, DC : National Academy of Sciences
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  • 2
    Unknown
    New York : Oxford University Press
    Keywords: Inorganic polymers.
    Pages: xiv, 338 p.
    Edition: 2nd ed
    ISBN: 1-423-71993-X
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2021-06-08
    Description: The Aegean water masses and circulation structure are studied via two large-scale surveys performed during the late winters of 1988 and 1990 by the R/V Yakov Gakkel of the former Soviet Union. The analysis of these data sheds light on the mechanisms of water mass formation in the Aegean Sea that triggered the outflow of Cretan Deep Water (CDW) from the Cretan Sea into the abyssal basins of the eastern Mediterranean Sea (the so-called Eastern Mediterranean Transient). It is found that the central Aegean Basin is the site of the formation of Aegean Intermediate Water, which slides southward and, depending on their density, renews either the intermediate or the deep water of the Cretan Sea. During the winter of 1988, the Cretan Sea waters were renewed mainly at intermediate levels, while during the winter of 1990 it was mainly the volume of CDW that increased. This Aegean water mass redistribution and formation process in 1990 differed from that in 1988 in two major aspects: (i) during the winter of 1990 the position of the front between the Black Sea Water and the Levantine Surface Water was displaced farther north than during the winter of 1988 and (ii) heavier waters were formed in 1990 as a result of enhanced lateral advection of salty Levantine Surface Water that enriched the intermediate waters with salt. In 1990 the 29.2 isopycnal rose to the surface of the central basin and a large volume of CDW filled the Cretan Basin. It is found that, already in 1988, the 29.2 isopycnal surface, which we assume is the lowest density of the CDW, was shallower than the Kassos Strait sill and thus CDW egressed into the Eastern Mediterranean.
    Description: Published
    Description: 1841-1859
    Description: JCR Journal
    Description: reserved
    Keywords: Aegean Sea ; Water Masses ; 03. Hydrosphere::03.03. Physical::03.03.03. Interannual-to-decadal ocean variability
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: article
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2021-06-01
    Description: Five non-eddy-resolving oceanic general circulation models driven by atmospheric fluxes derived from the NCEP reanalysis are used to investigate the link between the Gulf Stream (GS) variability, the atmospheric circulation, and the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC). Despite the limited model resolution, the temperature at the 200-m depth along the mean GS axis behaves similarly in most models to that observed, and it is also well correlated with the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO), indicating that a northward (southward) GS shift lags a positive (negative) NAO phase by 0–2 yr. The northward shift is accompanied by an increase in the GS transport, and conversely the southward shift with a decrease in the GS transport. Two dominant time scales appear in the response of the GS transport to the NAO forcing: a fast time scale (less than 1 month) for the barotropic component, and a slower one (about 2 yr) for the baroclinic component. In addition, the two components are weakly coupled. The GS response seems broadly consistent with a linear adjustment to the changes in the wind stress curl, and evidence for baroclinic Rossby wave propagation is found in the southern part of the subtropical gyre. However, the GS shifts are also affected by basin-scale changes in the oceanic conditions, and they are well correlated in most models with the changes in the AMOC. A larger AMOC is found when the GS is stronger and displaced northward, and a higher correlation is found when the observed changes of the GS position are used in the comparison. The relation between the GS and the AMOC could be explained by the inherent coupling between the thermohaline and the wind-driven circulation, or by the NAO variability driving them on similar time scales in the models.
    Description: This research was supported by the PREDICATE project of the European Community, and for M. Bentsen by the Research Council of Norway through RegClim, NOClim, and the Programme of Supercomputing.
    Description: Published
    Description: 2119–2135
    Description: 3.7. Dinamica del clima e dell'oceano
    Description: JCR Journal
    Description: reserved
    Keywords: ocean modelling ; gulf stream variability ; 03. Hydrosphere::03.01. General::03.01.03. Global climate models
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: article
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2020-11-19
    Description: A land surface model (LSM) has been included in the ECMWF Hamburg version 4 (ECHAM4) atmospheric general circulation model (AGCM). The LSM is an early version of the Organizing Carbon and Hydrology in Dynamic Ecosystems (ORCHIDEE) and it replaces the simple land surface scheme previously included in ECHAM4. The purpose of this paper is to document how a more exhaustive consideration of the land surface–vegetation processes affects the simulated boreal summer surface climate. To investigate the impacts on the simulated climate, different sets of Atmospheric Model Intercomparison Project (AMIP)-type simulations have been performed with ECHAM4 alone and with the AGCM coupled with ORCHIDEE. Furthermore, to assess the effects of the increase in horizontal resolution the coupling of ECHAM4 with the LSM has been implemented at different horizontal resolutions. The analysis reveals that the LSM has large effects on the simulated boreal summer surface climate of the atmospheric model. Considerable impacts are found in the surface energy balance due to changes in the surface latent heat fluxes over tropical and midlatitude areas covered with vegetation. Rainfall and atmospheric circulation are substantially affected by these changes. In particular, increased precipitation is found over evergreen and summergreen vegetated areas. Because of the socioeconomical relevance, particular attention has been devoted to the Indian summer monsoon (ISM) region. The results of this study indicate that precipitation over the Indian subcontinent is better simulated with the coupled ECHAM4–ORCHIDEE model compared to the atmospheric model alone.
    Description: Published
    Description: 255–278
    Description: 3.7. Dinamica del clima e dell'oceano
    Description: JCR Journal
    Description: partially_open
    Keywords: Land Atmosphere interactions ; Global climate models ; 01. Atmosphere::01.01. Atmosphere::01.01.02. Climate
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2017-04-04
    Description: In this paper results from the application of an ocean data assimilation (ODA) system, combining a multivariate reduced-order optimal interpolator (OI) scheme with a global ocean general circulation model (OGCM), are described. The present ODA system, designed to assimilate in situ temperature and salinity observations, has been used to produce ocean reanalyses for the 1962–2001 period. The impact of assimilating observed hydrographic data on the ocean mean state and temporal variability is evaluated. A special focus of this work is on the ODA system skill in reproducing a realistic ocean salinity state. Results from a hierarchy of different salinity reanalyses, using varying combinations of assimilated data and background error covariance structures, are described. The impact of the space and time resolution of the background error covariance parameterization on salinity is addressed.
    Description: This work has been funded by the ENACT Project (Contract EVK2-CT2001-00117) for A. Bellucci and P. Di Pietro, and partially by the ENSEMBLES Project (Contract GOCE-CT-2003-505539) for A. Bellucci.
    Description: Published
    Description: 3785-3807
    Description: 3.7. Dinamica del clima e dell'oceano
    Description: JCR Journal
    Description: reserved
    Keywords: ocean modelling ; data assimilation ; reanalysis ; upper ocean variability ; temperature ; Salinity ; 03. Hydrosphere::03.01. General::03.01.04. Ocean data assimilation and reanalysis
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2017-04-04
    Description: The effect of horizontal resolution on tropical variability is investigated within the modified SINTEX model, SINTEX-F, developed jointly at INGV, IPSL and at the Frontier Research System. The horizontal resolutions T30 and T106 are investigated in terms of the coupling characteristics, frequency and variability of the tropical ocean-atmosphere interactions. It appears that the T106 resolution is generally beneficial even if it does not eliminate all the major systematic errors of the coupled model. There is an excessive shift west of the cold tongue and ENSO variability, and high resolution has also a somewhat negative impact to the variability in the East Indian Ocean. A dominant two-year peak for the NINO3 variabilty in the T30 model is moderated in the T106 as it shifts to longer time scale. At high resolution new processes come into play, as the coupling of tropical instability waves, the resolution of coastal flows at the Pacific Mexican coasts and improved coastal forcing along the coast of South America. The delayed oscillator seems the main mechanism that generates the interannual variability in both models, but the models realize it in different ways. In the T30 model it is confined close to the equator, involving relatively fast equatorial and near-equatorial modes, in the high resolution, it involves a wider latitudinal region and slower waves. It is speculated that the extent of the region that is involved in the interannual variability may be linked to the time scale of the variability itself.
    Description: This research was partially supported by the Italy–USA Cooperation Program of the Italian Ministry of Environment and by the EU projects ENSEMBLES and DYNAMITE.
    Description: Published
    Description: 730-750
    Description: 3.7. Dinamica del clima e dell'oceano
    Description: JCR Journal
    Description: reserved
    Keywords: coupled models ; tropical variability ; ENSO system ; 03. Hydrosphere::03.01. General::03.01.03. Global climate models
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2017-04-04
    Description: The Indian Summer Monsoon (ISM) is one of the main components of the Asian summer monsoon. It is well known that one of the starting mechanisms of a summer monsoon is the thermal contrast between land and ocean and that sea surface temperature (SST) and moisture are crucial factors for its evolution and intensity. The Indian Ocean, therefore, may play a very important role in the generation and evolution of the ISM itself. A coupled general circulation model, implemented with a high resolution atmospheric component, appears to be able to simulate the Indian summer monsoon in a realistic way. In particular, the features of the simulated ISM variability are similar to the observations. In this study, the relationships between ISM and Tropical Indian Ocean (TIO) SST anomalies are investigated, as well as the ability of the coupled model to capture those connections. The recent discovery of the Indian Ocean Dipole Mode (IODM) may suggest new perspectives in the relationship between ISM and TIO SST. A new statistical technique, the Coupled Manifold, is used to investigate the TIO SST variability and its relation with the Tropical Pacific Ocean (TPO). The analysis shows that the SST variability in the TIO contains a significant portion that is independent from the TPO variability. The same technique is used to estimate the amount of Indian rainfall variability that can be explained by the Tropical Indian Ocean SST. Indian Ocean SST anomalies are separated in a part remotely forced from the Tropical Pacific Ocean variability and a part independent from that. The relationships between the two SSTA components and the Indian monsoon variability are then investigated in detail.
    Description: Published
    Description: 3083-3105
    Description: 3.7. Dinamica del clima e dell'oceano
    Description: JCR Journal
    Description: reserved
    Keywords: Indian Ocean ; monsoon ; 01. Atmosphere::01.01. Atmosphere::01.01.02. Climate
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2017-04-04
    Description: An assessment of the present European operational marine monitoring and forecasting systems shows how observations, atmospheric forcing fields and ocean models combine to make useful oceanographic products possible.
    Description: Published
    Description: 1081-1090
    Description: open
    Keywords: MARINE ENVIRONMENT ; 03. Hydrosphere::03.01. General::03.01.05. Operational oceanography
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2017-04-04
    Description: Ensemble experiments are performed with five coupled atmosphere–ocean models to investigate the potential for initial-value climate forecasts on interannual to decadal time scales. Experiments are started from similar model-generated initial states, and common diagnostics of predictability are used. We find that variations in the ocean meridional overturning circulation (MOC) are potentially predictable on interannual to decadal time scales, a more consistent picture of the surface temperature impact of decadal variations in the MOC is now apparent, and variations of surface air temperatures in the North Atlantic Ocean are also potentially predictable on interannual to decadal time scales, albeit with potential skill levels that are less than those seen for MOC variations. This intercomparison represents a step forward in assessing the robustness of model estimates of potential skill and is a prerequisite for the development of any operational forecasting system.
    Description: Published
    Description: 1195-1203
    Description: JCR Journal
    Description: reserved
    Keywords: Decadal Climate ; North Atlantic ; 03. Hydrosphere::03.01. General::03.01.03. Global climate models ; 03. Hydrosphere::03.02. Hydrology::03.02.05. Models and Forecasts ; 03. Hydrosphere::03.03. Physical::03.03.03. Interannual-to-decadal ocean variability
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 11
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    American Meteorological Society
    In:  EPIC3Journal of Atmospheric and Oceanic Technology, American Meteorological Society, 25(2), pp. 149-166, ISSN: 0739-0572
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: The accuracy of all types of Vaisala radiosondes and two types of Snow White chilled-mirror hygrosondes was assessed in an intensive in situ comparison with reference hygrometers. Fourteen nighttime reference comparisons were performed to determine a working reference for the radiosonde comparisons. These showed that the night version of the Snow White agreed best with the references [i.e., the NOAA frost-point hygrometer (FPH) and University of Colorado cryogenic frost-point hygrometer (CFH)], but that the daytime version had severe problems with contamination in the humid upper troposphere. Since the RS92 performance was superior to the other radiosondes and to the day version of the Snow White, it was selected to be the working reference. According to the reference comparison, the RS92 has no bias in the mid- and lower troposphere, with deviations 〈±5% in relative humidity (RH). In the upper troposphere, the RS92 has a 5% RH wet bias, which is partly due to the RS92 time lag error and the termination of the heating cycle. It was shown that the time lag effects relating to Vaisala radiosondes can be corrected. Because these were nighttime comparisons, they can be considered to be free from solar radiation effects. Neither the radiosondes nor the Snow White succeeded in reproducing reference class hygrometer profiles in the stratosphere. According to the 29 radiosonde intercomparisons, the RS92 and the modified RS90 (FN) had the best mutual agreement and no bias. The disagreement is largest (〈±10% RH) at low temperatures (T ≪ −30°C), where the FN underestimated (overestimated) in high (low) ambient RH. In comparison with the RS92, the RS90 had a semilinearly increasing wet bias with decreasing temperature, where the bias was 10% RH at −60°C. The RS80-A suffers from a large temperature-dependent dry bias in high RH conditions, being over 30% RH at −60°C and 5% RH near 0°C. The RS80-A dry bias can be almost totally removed with the correction algorithm by Leiterer et al., which was chosen as the best available. The other approach tested tends to overcorrect in high RH conditions when T 〈 −50°C. For T 〉 −30°C it is ineffective and does not correct the RS80-A dry bias in high ambient RH.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , isiRev
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  • 12
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    American Meteorological Society
    Publication Date: 2021-05-19
    Description: In this study we show a teleconnection pattern relating Outgoing Longwave Radiation (OLR) anomalies over the western Pacific Ocean and sea surface temperature anomalies (SSTA) over the western Indian Ocean over two seasons (Sept-Oct-Nov and Dec-Jan-Feb) at zero lag from observations and atmospheric general circulation model (AGCM) integrations. This teleconnection pattern suggests that a positive SSTA in Sept-Oct-Nov (SON) and Dec-Jan-Feb (DJF) seasons over the western Indian Ocean increases the contemporaneous positive OLR anomalies over the western Pacific Ocean. This teleconnection pattern is also simulated by the Center for Ocean-Land- Atmosphere studies (COLA) AGCM forced with observed SST’s. From the experimental COLA AGCM runs (wherein the Pacific Ocean SST variability is suppressed except for the climatological annual cycle) it is diagnosed that the interannual variability of OLR over the western Pacific Ocean persists because of this teleconnection. In relation to this teleconnection pattern it is shown that there is a significant linear response of the SON and DJF equatorial zonal wind anomaly over the Pacific Ocean to contemporaneous SSTA over the western Indian Ocean which is comparable to that of the eastern and western Pacific Oceans. The experimental AGCM runs clearly show that this response of the equatorial zonal wind anomaly to the western Indian Ocean forcing shifts westward towards the Indian Ocean in the absence of Pacific SST variability.
    Description: Published
    Keywords: Sea surface temperature ; Atmospheric conditions ; Teleconnections
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Journal Contribution , Refereed , Article
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  • 13
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    American Meteorological Society
    Publication Date: 2021-05-19
    Description: Skill in ensemble-mean dynamical seasonal climate hindcasts with a coupled land-atmosphere model and specified observed sea surface temperature is compared to that for long multi-decade integrations of the same model where the initial conditions are far removed from the seasons of validation. The evaluations are performed for surface temperature and compared among all seasons. Skill is found to be higher in the seasonal simulations than the multi-decadal integrations except during boreal winter. The higher skill is prominent even beyond the first month when the direct influence of the atmospheric initial state elevates model skill. Skill is generally found to be lowest during the winter season for the dynamical seasonal forecasts, equal to that of the long integrations, which show some of the highest skill during winter. The reason for the differences in skill during the non-winter months is attributed to the severe climate drift in the long simulations, manifest through errors in downward fluxes of water and energy over land and evident in soil wetness. The drift presses the land surface to extreme dry or wet states over much of the globe, into a range where there is little sensitivity of evaporation to fluctuations in soil moisture. Thus, the land-atmosphere feedback is suppressed, which appears to lessen the model’s ability to respond correctly over land to remote ocean temperature anomalies.
    Description: Center for Ocean-Land-Atmosphere Studies
    Description: Published
    Keywords: Atmosphere-ocean system
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Journal Contribution , Refereed , Article
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  • 14
    Publication Date: 2021-05-19
    Description: In this paper, the circulations driven by deep heating and shallow heating are investigated through analytically solving a set of linear equations and examining circulations simulated by a dry primitive equation model. Special emphasis is placed on the low-level mass (moisture) convergence associated with the forced circulation and the maintenance of the shallow and deep heat sources. It is found that the forced circulation driven by shallow heating is more likely to be trapped horizontally near the heating area but relatively extended in the vertical. As a consequence, diabatic heating can not balance adiabatic cooling due to upward motion. At the levels slightly above the top of the heating, a negative vertical gradient of temperature perturbation appears. For the atmosphere driven by deep heating, however, the temperature perturbation cannot accumulate because the heating signals propagate away very fast, allowing an approximate equilibrium between the convective diabatic heating and adiabatic cooling due to upward motion. The converged moisture associated with circulation driven by shallow heating exceeds the amount needed to maintain the heat source. However, the circulation driven by deep heating does not feed back effectively to the moisture convergence, and thus can not be self-sustaining.
    Description: Center for Ocean-Land-Atmosphere Studies - Calverton
    Description: Published
    Keywords: Atmospheric circulation
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Journal Contribution , Refereed , Article
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  • 15
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: Author Posting. © National Academy of Sciences, 2006. This article is posted here by permission of National Academy of Sciences for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 103 (2006): 3675-3680, doi:10.1073/pnas.0600160103.
    Description: We investigated whether the evolution of electric organs and electric signal diversity in two independently evolved lineages of electric fishes was accompanied by convergent changes on the molecular level. We found that a sodium channel gene (Nav1.4a) that is expressed in muscle in nonelectric fishes has lost its expression in muscle and is expressed instead in the evolutionarily novel electric organ in both lineages of electric fishes. This gene appears to be evolving under positive selection in both lineages, facilitated by its restricted expression in the electric organ. This view is reinforced by the lack of evidence for selection on this gene in one electric species in which expression of this gene is retained in muscle. Amino acid replacements occur convergently in domains that influence channel inactivation, a key trait for shaping electric communication signals. Some amino acid replacements occur at or adjacent to sites at which disease-causing mutations have been mapped in human sodium channel genes, emphasizing that these replacements occur in functionally important domains. Selection appears to have acted on the final step in channel inactivation, but complementarily on the inactivation "ball" in one lineage, and its receptor site in the other lineage. Thus, changes in the expression and sequence of the same gene are associated with the independent evolution of signal complexity.
    Description: This work was funded by National Institutes of Health Grant R01 NS025513 (to H.H.Z. and Y.L.) and National Science Foundation Integrative Graduate Education and Research Traineeship Program DGE-0114387 (to D.J.Z. and D.M.H.).
    Keywords: Animal communication ; Electric organ ; Channel inactivation ; Protein evolution ; Positive selection
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Article
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  • 16
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: Author Posting. © National Academy of Sciences, 2006. This article is posted here by permission of National Academy of Sciences for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 103 (2006): 6448-6453, doi:10.1073/pnas.0600830103.
    Description: Submersible exploration of the Samoan hotspot revealed a new, 300-m-tall, volcanic cone, named Nafanua, in the summit crater of Vailulu'u seamount. Nafanua grew from the 1,000-m-deep crater floor in 〈4 years and could reach the sea surface within decades. Vents fill Vailulu'u crater with a thick suspension of particulates and apparently toxic fluids that mix with seawater entering from the crater breaches. Low-temperature vents form Fe oxide chimneys in many locations and up to 1-m-thick layers of hydrothermal Fe floc on Nafanua. High-temperature (81°C) hydrothermal vents in the northern moat (945-m water depth) produce acidic fluids (pH 2.7) with rising droplets of (probably) liquid CO2. The Nafanua summit vent area is inhabited by a thriving population of eels (Dysommina rugosa) that feed on midwater shrimp probably concentrated by anticyclonic currents at the volcano summit and rim. The moat and crater floor around the new volcano are littered with dead metazoans that apparently died from exposure to hydrothermal emissions. Acid-tolerant polychaetes (Polynoidae) live in this environment, apparently feeding on bacteria from decaying fish carcasses. Vailulu'u is an unpredictable and very active underwater volcano presenting a potential long-term volcanic hazard. Although eels thrive in hydrothermal vents at the summit of Nafanua, venting elsewhere in the crater causes mass mortality. Paradoxically, the same anticyclonic currents that deliver food to the eels may also concentrate a wide variety of nektonic animals in a death trap of toxic hydrothermal fluids.
    Description: This work was supported by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Oceans Exploration and the Hawaii Undersea Research Laboratory–NOAA Undersea Research Program, the National Science Foundation, the Australian Research Council, and the SERPENT program.
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
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  • 17
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: © 2008 The Authors. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License. The definitive version was published in Nucleic Acids Research 37 (2009): D526-D530, doi:10.1093/nar/gkn631.
    Description: GiardiaDB (http://GiardiaDB.org) and TrichDB (http://TrichDB.org) house the genome databases for Giardia lamblia and Trichomonas vaginalis, respectively, and represent the latest additions to the EuPathDB (http://EuPathDB.org) family of functional genomic databases. GiardiaDB and TrichDB employ the same framework as other EuPathDB sites (CryptoDB, PlasmoDB and ToxoDB), supporting fully integrated and searchable databases. Genomic-scale data available via these resources may be queried based on BLAST searches, annotation keywords and gene ID searches, GO terms, sequence motifs and other protein characteristics. Functional queries may also be formulated, based on transcript and protein expression data from a variety of platforms. Phylogenetic relationships may also be interrogated. The ability to combine the results from independent queries, and to store queries and query results for future use facilitates complex, genome-wide mining of functional genomic data.
    Description: Federal funds from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases; Department of Health and Human Services, National Institutes of Health (HHSN266200400037C). Funding for open access charge: National Institutes of Health (HHSN266200400037C).
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
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  • 18
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: Author Posting. © National Academy of Sciences, 2006. This article is posted here by permission of National Academy of Sciences for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 103 (2006): 3846-3851, doi:10.1073/pnas.0600035103.
    Description: Studies of deeply buried, sedimentary microbial communities and associated biogeochemical processes during Ocean Drilling Program Leg 201 showed elevated prokaryotic cell numbers in sediment layers where methane is consumed anaerobically at the expense of sulfate. Here, we show that extractable archaeal rRNA, selecting only for active community members in these ecosystems, is dominated by sequences of uncultivated Archaea affiliated with the Marine Benthic Group B and the Miscellaneous Crenarchaeotal Group, whereas known methanotrophic Archaea are not detectable. Carbon flow reconstructions based on stable isotopic compositions of whole archaeal cells, intact archaeal membrane lipids, and other sedimentary carbon pools indicate that these Archaea assimilate sedimentary organic compounds other than methane even though methanotrophy accounts for a major fraction of carbon cycled in these ecosystems. Oxidation of methane by members of Marine Benthic Group B and the Miscellaneous Crenarchaeotal Group without assimilation of methane–carbon provides a plausible explanation. Maintenance energies of these subsurface communities appear to be orders of magnitude lower than minimum values known from laboratory observations, and ecosystem-level carbon budgets suggest that community turnover times are on the order of 100–2,000 years. Our study provides clues about the metabolic functionality of two cosmopolitan groups of uncultured Archaea.
    Description: This work was supported by Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (to J.S.L., R.A., M.E., and K.-U.H. at Research Center for Ocean Margins and Grant Hi 616/4 to K.U.-H.); National Aeronautics and Space Administration Astrobiology Institute Grants NNA04CC06A (to J.E.B. and C.H.H. at Pennsylvania State University), NCC 2-1275 (to M.A.L., K.G.L., K.B.S., H.F.F., A.T., and K.-U.H. at the University of Rhode Island), and NCC 2-1054 (to M.L.S. and A.T. at the Marine Biological Laboratory); the G. Unger Vetlesen Foundation; U.S. Department of Energy Grant DE-FG02-93ER20117; and NSF Grant MCB03-48492. J.F.B. was supported by NSF Integrative Graduate Education and Research Traineeship Program Grant DGE-9972759 and a Schlanger fellowship from the Joint Oceanographic Institutions (JOI). M.A.L. was supported in part by postcruise support from JOI.
    Keywords: Anaerobic methanotrophy ; Deep biosphere ; FISH–secondary ion MS ; Intact polar lipids ; Stable carbon isotopes
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
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  • 19
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: © 2007 The Author et al. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/ by-nc/2.0/uk/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. The definitive version was published in Nucleic Acids Research 35 (2007): 2107-2115, doi:10.1093/nar/gkm049.
    Description: Trypanosomatids contain an unusual DNA base J (ß-D-glucosylhydroxymethyluracil), which replaces a fraction of thymine in telomeric and other DNA repeats. To determine the function of base J, we have searched for enzymes that catalyze J biosynthesis. We present evidence that a protein that binds to J in DNA, the J-binding protein 1 (JBP1), may also catalyze the first step in J biosynthesis, the conversion of thymine in DNA into hydroxymethyluracil. We show that JBP1 belongs to the family of Fe2+ and 2-oxoglutarate-dependent dioxygenases and that replacement of conserved residues putatively involved in Fe2+ and 2-oxoglutarate-binding inactivates the ability of JBP1 to contribute to J synthesis without affecting its ability to bind to J-DNA. We propose that JBP1 is a thymidine hydroxylase responsible for the local amplification of J inserted by JBP2, another putative thymidine hydroxylase.
    Description: This work was funded by a grant from the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research and Chemical Sciences (NWO-CW) to P.B., NIH grant A1063523 to R.S. and NIH grant GM063584 to R.P.H.
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    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: © 2006 The Authors. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/uk/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. The definitive version was published in Molecular Biology and Evolution 23(2006): 2090-2100, doi:10.1093/molbev/msl080.
    Description: We have characterized the relationship between accurate phylogenetic reconstruction and sequence similarity, testing whether high levels of sequence similarity can consistently produce accurate evolutionary trees. We generated protein families with known phylogenies using a modified version of the PAML/EVOLVER program that produces insertions and deletions as well as substitutions. Protein families were evolved over a range of 100–400 point accepted mutations; at these distances 63% of the families shared significant sequence similarity. Protein families were evolved using balanced and unbalanced trees, with ancient or recent radiations. In families sharing statistically significant similarity, about 60% of multiple sequence alignments were 95% identical to true alignments. To compare recovered topologies with true topologies, we used a score that reflects the fraction of clades that were correctly clustered. As expected, the accuracy of the phylogenies was greatest in the least divergent families. About 88% of phylogenies clustered over 80% of clades in families that shared significant sequence similarity, using Bayesian, parsimony, distance, and maximum likelihood methods. However, for protein families with short ancient branches (ancient radiation), only 30% of the most divergent (but statistically significant) families produced accurate phylogenies, and only about 70% of the second most highly conserved families, with median expectation values better than 10–60, produced accurate trees. These values represent upper bounds on expected tree accuracy for sequences with a simple divergence history; proteins from 700 Giardia families, with a similar range of sequence similarities but considerably more gaps, produced much less accurate trees. For our simulated insertions and deletions, correct multiple sequence alignments did not perform much better than those produced by T-COFFEE, and including sequences with expressed sequence tag–like sequencing errors did not significantly decrease phylogenetic accuracy. In general, although less-divergent sequence families produce more accurate trees, the likelihood of estimating an accurate tree is most dependent on whether radiation in the family was ancient or recent. Accuracy can be improved by combining genes from the same organism when creating species trees or by selecting protein families with the best bootstrap values in comprehensive studies.
    Description: This work was supported by National Institutes of Health grant AI1058054 to M. Sogin.
    Keywords: Simulation ; Phylogenetic analysis ; Accuracy ; Sequence similarity
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    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: Author Posting. © National Academy of Sciences, 2002. This article is posted here by permission of National Academy of Sciences for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 99 (2002): 14694-14699, doi:10.1073/pnas.232562899.
    Description: The aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AHR) is a ligand-inducible transcription factor that is best known because it mediates the actions of polycyclic and halogenated aromatic hydrocarbon environmental toxicants such as 3-methylcholanthrene and 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin. We report here the successful identification of an endogenous ligand for this receptor; {approx}20 µg was isolated in pure form from 35 kg of porcine lung. Its structure was deduced as 2-(1'H-indole-3'-carbonyl)-thiazole-4-carboxylic acid methyl ester from extensive physical measurements and quantum mechanical calculations. In a reporter gene assay, this ligand activates the AHR with a potency five times greater than that of {beta}-naphthoflavone, a prototypical synthetic AHR ligand. 2-(1'H-indole-3'-carbonyl)-thiazole-4-carboxylic acid methyl ester competes with 2,3,7,8-[3H]tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin for binding to human, murine, and fish AHRs, thus showing that AHR activation is caused by direct receptor binding, and that recognition of this endogenous ligand is conserved from early vertebrates (fish) to humans.
    Description: This work was supported by the Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation, the University of Wisconsin Sea Grant Institute, and the National Institutes of Health.
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  • 22
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: Author Posting. © National Academy of Sciences, 2006. This article is posted here by permission of National Academy of Sciences for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 103 (2006): 6252-6257, doi:10.1073/pnas.0509950103.
    Description: 2,3,7,8-Tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD) and related halogenated aromatic hydrocarbons (HAHs) are highly toxic to most vertebrate animals, but there are dramatic differences in sensitivity among species and strains. Aquatic birds including the common tern (Sterna hirundo) are highly exposed to HAHs in the environment, but are up to 250-fold less sensitive to these compounds than the typical avian model, the domestic chicken (Gallus gallus). The mechanism of HAH toxicity involves altered gene expression subsequent to activation of the aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AHR), a basic helix–loop–helix-PAS transcription factor. AHR polymorphisms underlie mouse strain differences in sensitivity to HAHs and polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbons, but the role of the AHR in species differences in HAH sensitivity is not well understood. Here, we show that although chicken and tern AHRs both exhibit specific binding of [3H]TCDD, the tern AHR has a lower binding affinity and exhibits a reduced ability to support TCDD-dependent transactivation as compared to AHRs from chicken or mouse. We further show through use of chimeric AHR proteins and site-directed mutagenesis that the difference between the chicken and tern AHRs resides in the ligand-binding domain and that two amino acids (Val-325 and Ala-381) are responsible for the reduced activity of the tern AHR. Other avian species with reduced sensitivity to HAHs also possess these residues. These studies provide a molecular understanding of species differences in sensitivity to dioxin-like compounds and suggest an approach to using the AHR as a marker of dioxin susceptibility in wildlife.
    Description: This research was supported by the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration National Sea Grant College Program, Department of Commerce, under Grants NA46RG0470 and NA16RG2273.
    Keywords: Basic helix–loop–helix-PAS ; Comparative toxicology ; Mechanisms ; Risk assessment ; Susceptibility
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    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: This paper is not subject to U.S. copyright. The definitive version was published in Journal of Atmospheric and Oceanic Technology 21 (2004): 1448–1461, doi:10.1175/1520-0426(2004)021〈1448:AOAPAD〉2.0.CO;2.
    Description: The accuracy of velocities measured by a pulse-coherent acoustic Doppler profiler (PCADP) in the bottom boundary layer of a wave-dominated inner-shelf environment is evaluated. The downward-looking PCADP measured velocities in eight 10-cm cells at 1 Hz. Velocities measured by the PCADP are compared to those measured by an acoustic Doppler velocimeter for wave orbital velocities up to 95 cm s−1 and currents up to 40 cm s−1. An algorithm for correcting ambiguity errors using the resolution velocities was developed. Instrument bias, measured as the average error in burst mean speed, is −0.4 cm s−1 (standard deviation = 0.8). The accuracy (root-mean-square error) of instantaneous velocities has a mean of 8.6 cm s−1 (standard deviation = 6.5) for eastward velocities (the predominant direction of waves), 6.5 cm s−1 (standard deviation = 4.4) for northward velocities, and 2.4 cm s−1 (standard deviation = 1.6) for vertical velocities. Both burst mean and root-mean-square errors are greater for bursts with ub ≥ 50 cm s−1. Profiles of burst mean speeds from the bottom five cells were fit to logarithmic curves: 92% of bursts with mean speed ≥ 5 cm s−1 have a correlation coefficient R2 〉 0.96. In cells close to the transducer, instantaneous velocities are noisy, burst mean velocities are biased low, and bottom orbital velocities are biased high. With adequate blanking distances for both the profile and resolution velocities, the PCADP provides sufficient accuracy to measure velocities in the bottom boundary layer under moderately energetic inner-shelf conditions.
    Description: This work was funded by the U.S. Geological Survey as part of the Southwest Washington Coastal Erosion Study
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
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    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: © 2007 The Author(s) This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/uk/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. The definitive version was published in Nucleic Acids Research 36 (2008): D607-D611, doi:10.1093/nar/gkm941.
    Description: The starlet sea anemone, Nematostella vectensis, is a basal metazoan organism that has recently emerged as an important model system in developmental biology and evolutionary genomics. StellaBase, the Nematostella Genomics Database (http://stellabase.org), was developed in 2005 as a resource to support the Nematostella research community. Recently, it has become apparent that Nematostella may be a particularly useful system for studying (i) microevolutionary variation in natural populations, and (ii) the functional evolution of human disease genes. We have developed two new databases that will foster such studies: StellaBase Disease (http://stellabase.org/disease) is a relational database that houses 155 904 invertebrate homologous isoforms of human disease genes from four leading genomic model systems (fly, worm, yeast and Nematostella), including 14 874 predicted genes from the sea anemone itself. StellaBase SNP (http://stellabase.org/SNP) is a relational database that describes the location and underlying type of mutation for 20 063 single nucleotide polymorphisms.
    Description: This work was supported by NSF grant FP-91656101-0 to J.C.S. and J.R.F. and EPA Grant F5E11155 to A.R.M. and J.R.F. and by a Postdoctoral Scholar Program at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, with funding provided by The Beacon Institute for Rivers and Estuaries, and the J. Seward Johnson Fund to A.M.R.
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
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    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: © 2009 The Authors. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License. The definitive version was published in ICES Journal of Marine Science: Journal du Conseil 67 (2010): 379-394, doi:10.1093/icesjms/fsp242.
    Description: In principle, measurements of high-frequency acoustic scattering from oceanic microstructure and zooplankton across a broad range of frequencies can reduce the ambiguities typically associated with the interpretation of acoustic scattering at a single frequency or a limited number of discrete narrowband frequencies. With this motivation, a high-frequency broadband scattering system has been developed for investigating zooplankton and microstructure, involving custom modifications of a commercially available system, with almost complete acoustic coverage spanning the frequency range 150–600 kHz. This frequency range spans the Rayleigh-to-geometric scattering transition for some zooplankton, as well as the diffusive roll-off in the spectrum for scattering from turbulent temperature microstructure. The system has been used to measure scattering from zooplankton and microstructure in regions of non-linear internal waves. The broadband capabilities of the system provide a continuous frequency response of the scattering over a wide frequency band, and improved range resolution and signal-to-noise ratios through pulse-compression signal-processing techniques. System specifications and calibration procedures are outlined and the system performance is assessed. The results point to the utility of high-frequency broadband scattering techniques in the detection, classification, and under certain circumstances, quantification of zooplankton and microstructure.
    Description: The work was supported by the US Office of Naval Research (Grant # N000140210359).
    Keywords: Broadband acoustic scattering ; Internal waves ; Oceanic microstructure ; Zooplankton
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
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  • 26
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: Author Posting. © Society of Systematic Biologists, 2006. This article is posted here by permission of Oxford University Press for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Systematic Biology 55 (2006): 875-885, doi:10.1080/10635150601077683.
    Description: Penelope-like elements (PLEs) are a relatively little studied class of eukaryotic retroelements, distinguished by the presence of the GIY-YIG endonuclease domain, the ability of some representatives to retain introns, and the similarity of PLE-encoded reverse transcriptases to telomerases. Although these retrotransposons are abundant in many animal genomes, the reverse transcriptase moiety can also be found in several protists, fungi, and plants, indicating its ancient origin. A comprehensive phylogenetic analysis of PLEs was conducted, based on extended sequence alignments and a considerably expanded data set. PLEs exhibit the pattern of evolution similar to that of non-LTR retrotransposons, which form deep-branching clades dating back to the Precambrian era. However, PLEs seem to have experienced a much higher degree of lineage losses than non-LTR retrotransposons. It is suggested that PLEs and non-LTR retrotransposons are included into a larger eTPRT (eukaryotic target-primed) group of retroelements, characterized by 5' truncation, variable target-site duplication, and the potential of the 3' end to participate in formation of non-autonomous derivatives.
    Description: This work was supported by the U.S. National Science Foundation (MCB 0614142).
    Keywords: Penelope-like elements ; Retrotransposons ; Reverse transcriptase ; GIY-YIG endonuclease
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
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  • 27
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: © 2007 The Author(s). This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/uk/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. The definitive version was published in Bioinformatics 23 (2007): 1434-1436, doi:10.1093/bioinformatics/btm109.
    Description: Web content syndication through standard formats such as RSS and ATOM has become an increasingly popular mechanism for publishers, news sources, and blogs to disseminate regularly updated content. These standardized syndication formats deliver content directly to the subscriber, allowing them to locally aggregate content from a variety of sources instead of having to find the information on multiple websites. The uBioRSS application is a "taxonomically intelligent" service customized for the biological sciences. It aggregates syndicated content from academic publishers and science news feeds, then uses a taxonomic name entity recognition algorithm to identify and index taxonomic names within those data streams. The resulting name index is cross-referenced to current global taxonomic datasets to provide context for browsing the publications by taxonomic group. This process, called taxonomic indexing, draws upon services developed specifically for biological sciences, collectively referred to as "taxonomic intelligence." Such value-added enhancements can provide biologists with accelerated and improved access to current biological content.
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
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  • 28
    Publication Date: 2022-05-26
    Description: © 2008 The Authors. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. The definitive version was published in Nucleic Acids Research 36 (2008): 2522-2529, doi:10.1093/nar/gkm1166
    Description: Penelope-like elements (PLEs) represent a new class of retroelements identified in more than 80 species belonging to at least 10 animal phyla. Penelope isolated from Drosophila virilis is the only known transpositionally active representative of this class. Although the size and structure of the Penelope major transcript has been previously described in both D. virilis and D. melanogaster transgenic strains, the architecture of the Penelope regulatory region remains unknown. In order to determine the localization of presumptive Penelope promoter and enhancer-like elements, segments of the putative Penelope regulatory region were linked to a CAT reporter gene and introduced into D. melanogaster by P-element-mediated transformation. The results obtained using ELISA to measure CAT expression levels and RNA studies, including RT–PCR, suggest that the active Penelope transposon contains an internal promoter similar to the TATA-less promoters of LINEs. The results also suggest that some of the Penelope regulatory sequences control the preferential expression in the ovaries of the adult flies by enhancing expression in the ovary and reducing expression in the carcass. The possible significance of the intron within Penelope for the function and evolution of PLEs, and the effect of Penelope insertions on adjacent genes, are discussed.
    Description: This work was supported by grants from Russian Academy of Sciences (Cell and Molecular Biology to M.E.), and Welcome Trust Grant (075698) to M.E and D.J.F.
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    Publication Date: 2022-05-26
    Description: This paper is not subject to U.S. copyright. The definitive version was published in ICES Journal of Marine Science: Journal du Conseil 67 (2010): 1-9, doi:10.1093/icesjms/fsp221.
    Description: Effective marine ecosystem-based management (EBM) requires understanding the key processes and relationships controlling the aspects of biodiversity, productivity, and resilience to perturbations. Unfortunately, the scales, complexity, and non-linear dynamics that characterize marine ecosystems often confound managing for these properties. Nevertheless, scientifically derived decision-support tools (DSTs) are needed to account for impacts resulting from a variety of simultaneous human activities. Three possible methodologies for revealing mechanisms necessary to develop DSTs for EBM are: (i) controlled experimentation, (ii) iterative programmes of observation and modelling ("learning by doing"), and (iii) comparative ecosystem analysis. We have seen that controlled experiments are limited in capturing the complexity necessary to develop models of marine ecosystem dynamics with sufficient realism at appropriate scales. Iterative programmes of observation, model building, and assessment are useful for specific ecosystem issues but rarely lead to generally transferable products. Comparative ecosystem analyses may be the most effective, building on the first two by inferring ecosystem processes based on comparisons and contrasts of ecosystem response to human-induced factors. We propose a hierarchical system of ecosystem comparisons to include within-ecosystem comparisons (utilizing temporal and spatial changes in relation to human activities), within-ecosystem-type comparisons (e.g. coral reefs, temperate continental shelves, upwelling areas), and cross-ecosystem-type comparisons (e.g. coral reefs vs. boreal, terrestrial vs. marine ecosystems). Such a hierarchical comparative approach should lead to better understanding of the processes controlling biodiversity, productivity, and the resilience of marine ecosystems. In turn, better understanding of these processes will lead to the development of increasingly general laws, hypotheses, functional forms, governing equations, and broad interpretations of ecosystem responses to human activities, ultimately improving DSTs in support of EBM.
    Keywords: Comparative marine ecosystem analysis ; Decision-support tools ; EAM ; EBM ; Ecological modelling ; Ecosystem approaches to management ; Ecosystem-based management
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  • 30
    Publication Date: 2022-05-26
    Description: © The Author 2006. This article is posted here by permission of Oxford University Press. The definitive version was published in Nucleic Acids Research 34 (2006): 1-9, doi:10.1093/nar/gkj405.
    Description: The goal of this group project has been to coordinate and bring up-to-date information on all genes of Escherichia coli K-12. Annotation of the genome of an organism entails identification of genes, the boundaries of genes in terms of precise start and end sites, and description of the gene products. Known and predicted functions were assigned to each gene product on the basis of experimental evidence or sequence analysis. Since both kinds of evidence are constantly expanding, no annotation is complete at any moment in time. This is a snapshot analysis based on the most recent genome sequences of two E.coli K-12 bacteria. An accurate and up-to-date description of E.coli K-12 genes is of particular importance to the scientific community because experimentally determined properties of its gene products provide fundamental information for annotation of innumerable genes of other organisms. Availability of the complete genome sequence of two K-12 strains allows comparison of their genotypes and mutant status of alleles.
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
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    Publication Date: 2022-05-26
    Description: Author Posting. © National Academy of Sciences, 1997. This article is posted here by permission of National Academy of Sciences for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 94 (1997): 13743-13748.
    Description: The aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AHR) is a ligand-activated transcription factor through which halogenated aromatic hydrocarbons such as 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD) cause altered gene expression and toxicity. The AHR belongs to the basic helix-loop-helix/Per-ARNT-Sim (bHLH-PAS) family of transcriptional regulatory proteins, whose members play key roles in development, circadian rhythmicity, and environmental homeostasis; however, the normal cellular function of the AHR is not yet known. As part of a phylogenetic approach to understanding the function and evolutionary origin of the AHR, we sequenced the PAS homology domain of AHRs from several species of early vertebrates and performed phylogenetic analyses of these AHR amino acid sequences in relation to mammalian AHRs and 24 other members of the PAS family. AHR sequences were identified in a teleost (the killifish Fundulus heteroclitus), two elasmobranch species (the skate Raja erinacea and the dogfish Mustelus canis), and a jawless fish (the lamprey Petromyzon marinus). Two putative AHR genes, designated AHR1 and AHR2, were found both in Fundulus and Mustelus. Phylogenetic analyses indicate that the AHR2 genes in these two species are orthologous, suggesting that an AHR gene duplication occurred early in vertebrate evolution and that multiple AHR genes may be present in other vertebrates. Database searches and phylogenetic analyses identified four putative PAS proteins in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, including possible AHR and ARNT homologs. Phylogenetic analysis of the PAS gene family reveals distinct clades containing both invertebrate and vertebrate PAS family members; the latter include paralogous sequences that we propose have arisen by gene duplication early in vertebrate evolution. Overall, our analyses indicate that the AHR is a phylogenetically ancient protein present in all living vertebrate groups (with a possible invertebrate homolog), thus providing an evolutionary perspective to the study of dioxin toxicity and AHR function.
    Description: This work was supported in part by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (Grants R29 ES06272, F32 ES05644, and P42 ES07381), the Donaldson Charitable Trust, and a Christopher Haebler Frantz Fellowship (to M.A.S.).
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
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  • 32
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    American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
    In:  EPIC3Science, American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), 310(5752), pp. 1299-1299, ISSN: 0036-8075
    Publication Date: 2023-06-13
    Description: 〈jats:p〉Sustained harmonic tremor signals were recorded by the seismographs of the German Neumayer Base seismological network in western Dronning Maud Land, Antarctica. These tremor episodes, lasting up to 16 hours, were recorded up to 820 kilometers from the source. Their spectra show narrow peaks with fundamental frequencies ranging from 0.5 to 6 hertz, more than 30 integer harmonic overtones, and frequency gliding, resembling volcanic tremor. Frequency‐wave number analysis suggested a moving source, which was recognized as iceberg B-09A traveling along the coast of eastern Antarctica. The most probable tremor sources are fluid-flow‐induced vibrations inside the iceberg's tunnel/crevasse systems.〈/jats:p〉
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 33
    facet.materialart.
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    Oxford University Press
    In:  Handbook of Avian Hybrids of the World vol. 76, 1, pp. 59-61
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Keywords: book review ; geographic distribution ; hybridisation ; birds
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/review
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  • 34
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    College Park, Md. : American Institute of Physics (AIP)
    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 3820-3831 
    ISSN: 1089-7690
    Source: AIP Digital Archive
    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: In this paper we apply the recently developed state-specific multireference coupled-cluster and perturbation theories to calculate electrical properties such as dipole moment and static polarizability using perturbed orbitals in finite fields. The theories are built on complete active space reference functions, and are designed to treat quasidegeneracy of varying degrees while bypassing the intruder problem. Numerical results are presented for the model systems H4 with trapezoidal geometry and the lowest two singlet states of CH2. Both the systems require a multireference formulation due to quasidegeneracy. In the field-free situation, the former encounters intruders at an intermediate trapezoidal geometry in the traditional treatment using effective Hamiltonians, while the latter shows a pronounced multireference character in the two singlet states. This affects the response properties in the presence of a perturbing field. A comparison with the full CI results in the same basis indicates the efficacy of the state-specific methods in wide ranges of geometries, even when the traditional effective Hamiltonian based methods fail due to intruders. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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  • 35
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    College Park, Md. : American Institute of Physics (AIP)
    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 3812-3819 
    ISSN: 1089-7690
    Source: AIP Digital Archive
    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: A compact basis set is constructed for the water dimer by focusing directly on an optimal description of the counterpoise-corrected interaction energy (ΔE) rather than on the total energy of the fragments. The optimization criterion is that the basis set should be of uniform accuracy, i.e., the truncation error in ΔE due to the basis set incompleteness should be the same for all symmetry types at all sites. Aiming at a truncation error of 10 μhartree per symmetry at the SCF+MP2 (self-consistent field+Møller–Plesset second-order) frozen core level the resulting interaction optimized basis set comprises 249 functions. The composition of this IO249 set is O/5s3p4d3f2g1h, H(donor)/2s4p1d, H(else)/2s3p, bond function set/3s3p2d1f. An all-electron variant, IO275, is described as well. A recipe to obtain interaction optimized sets for other systems is given. The set IO249 yields a ΔE(fc) value at the Feller–Frisch geometry of −4.87 kcal/mol. Of the many orbital-based calculations that have been reported for this system only Schütz' 1046-function calculation [J. Chem. Phys. 107, 4597 (1997)] was more accurate. The small size of the interaction optimized sets opens the possibility for high-accuracy SCF+MP2 work on larger systems than have been accessible before. It also brings higher-level correlated treatments within reach. An Appendix summarizes two additivity rules which allow the ΔE for a larger basis set to be estimated to very high accuracy from the results of smaller basis sets. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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  • 36
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    College Park, Md. : American Institute of Physics (AIP)
    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 3832-3836 
    ISSN: 1089-7690
    Source: AIP Digital Archive
    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: In this paper we present Z-vector formalism for the Fock space multireference coupled cluster framework. We present detailed equations describing the derivative effective Hamiltonian, where the response amplitudes of the highest Fock sector are eliminated. We discuss the conditions and approximations under which the formalism is possible. We also discuss the implications and comparison with the similar formalism in the single reference framework. The computational advantages and feasibility are also commented upon in this paper. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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  • 37
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    College Park, Md. : American Institute of Physics (AIP)
    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 3837-3845 
    ISSN: 1089-7690
    Source: AIP Digital Archive
    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Ten low-lying electronic states of Fe(II) porphine, 5A1g, 5Eg, 5B2g, 3A2g, 3B2g, 3Eg(A), 3Eg(B), 1A1g, 1B2g, and 1Eg states, are studied with multiconfigurational second-order perturbation (CASPT2) calculations with complete active space self-consistent field (CASSCF) reference functions with larger active space and basis sets. The enlargement of active space and basis sets has no influence on the conclusion of a previous multireference Møller–Plesset perturbation (MRMP) study. The present CASPT2 calculation concludes that the 5A1g state is the ground state. A relativistic correction has been performed by the relativistic scheme of eliminating small components (RESC). For energetics, no significant contribution from the relativistic correction was found. The relative energies and orbital energies are not changed appreciably by the introduction of a relativistic correction. The present result does not agree with all the spectroscopic observations, but is consistent with a magnetic moment study. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 3846-3854 
    ISSN: 1089-7690
    Source: AIP Digital Archive
    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: The two-body interaction energies of the cyclic (C3h) and noncyclic (C2) trimers at the basis set limit (15.55 and 16.55 kJ/mol) were estimated by means of second-order Møller–Plesset perturbation theory including terms linear in the interelectronic distance (MP2-R12 approach). Coupled cluster calculations with single and double substitutions and with noniterative triple excitations [CCSD(T)] were carried out to correct the MP2-R12 two-body interaction energies for the effect of higher excitations, and also for the evaluation of the three-body interaction energies. The calculated bonding energies of the trimers using this model calculation (16.82 and 17.20 kJ/mol) suggest that the two isomers are nearly isoenergetic. The three-body terms are small (only of the order of 1 kJ/mol), stabilizing the cyclic trimer, but destabilizing the noncyclic trimer. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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  • 39
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 3855-3861 
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    Source: AIP Digital Archive
    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: The structure and the relative stability of the ethanol dimer and the cyclic ethanol trimer were studied using density functional theory methods. The geometries of the different dimers and trimers were optimized at the B3LYP/6-311+G(d,p) level of theory, while the final energies were obtained at the B3LYP/6-311+G(3df,2p) level. Four different (ethanol)2 complexes were found to be local minima of the potential energy surface, the global minimum being that in which both monomers exhibit a trans conformation. The hydrogen bond (HB) in ethanol dimer is slightly stronger than in methanol dimer, reflecting the enhanced intrinsic basicity of ethanol with regards to methanol. The OH donor stretch appears redshifted by 161 cm−1, while the redshifting undergone by the OH acceptor stretch is negligibly small. The relative stability of the trimers is a function of the number of monomers with a gauche conformation, the global minimum being that in which the three monomers have a trans conformation. As for water and methanol trimers, the three HBs in the cyclic ethanol trimer are not strictly equivalent. Consistently, the redshiftings of the OH stretching frequencies are different. Cooperative effects are sizably large, as reflected in the O(centered ellipsis)O distances, the elongation of the OH donor groups, the charge density at the bond critical points, the frequency shiftings of the OH stretches, and the additivity interaction energy. The most significant features of the vibrational spectra of the monomers, the dimers, and the trimers in the 800–1200 cm−1 region are reasonably well reproduced by our calculations.© 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 3862-3873 
    ISSN: 1089-7690
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    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: A new potential energy surface for the lowest 3A″ electronic state of the O(3P)+HCl system is presented. This surface is based on electronic energies calculated at the multireference configuration interaction level of theory with the Davidson correction (MR-CI+Q) using the Dunning cc-pVTZ one-electron basis sets. The ab initio energies thus obtained are scaled using the scaled external correlation (SEC) method of Brown and Truhlar. The SEC-scaled energies are fitted to a simple analytical expression to yield a potential energy surface which correlates the reactants O(3P)+HCl(1Σ+) to the products OH(2Π)+Cl(2P). The reaction barrier on this surface lies at an O–H–Cl angle of 131.4° at an energy of 9.78 kcal/mol above the asymptotic O+HCl minimum. This barrier is 1.3 kcal/mol higher than that on the potential energy surface obtained by Koizumi, Schatz, and Gordon (KSG) [J. Chem. Phys. 95, 6421 (1991)] and 1.1 kcal/mol lower than the S2 surface of Ramachandran, Senekowitsch, and Wyatt (RSW) [J. Mol. Struct. (Theochem) 454, 307 (1998)]. The dynamics of the reaction O(3P)+HCl(v=2; j=1,6,9)→OH(v′,j′)+Cl on this potential surface is studied using quasi-classical trajectory (QCT) propagation and the results are compared to the experimental observations of Zhang et al. [R. Zhang, W. J. van der Zande, M. J. Bronikowski, and R. N. Zare, J. Chem. Phys. 94, 2704 (1991)]. The broad distribution of collision energies in the experiment is modeled by computing weighted averages of the quantities of interest with the weighting factor at each collision energy determined by the collision energy distribution. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 2103-2108 
    ISSN: 1089-7690
    Source: AIP Digital Archive
    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: The vapor–liquid coexistence densities for water near the critical point were determined using a polarizable ab initio based model and grand canonical Monte Carlo simulations combined with the histogram reweighting technique. The predictions of the model used, which is found to give good agreement with experimental data at ambient conditions, are far below the experimental critical temperature and density. The saturation pressure is also overestimated. The source of this discrepancy may be related to the high pressure that the model exhibits even for liquid water. Since there is no fitting to experimental data, it is possible to refine the potential in a systematic way. In particular, an improvement in the sampling of the ab initio calculation for the repulsive part of the intermolecular potential is suggested in order to obtain better agreement with experiment at high temperatures and pressures. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 2143-2150 
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    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: A model to investigate a gel-to-zeolite transformation as a possible growth mechanism through association and rearrangements of extended precursor structures is developed and solved via continuum time lattice Monte Carlo simulations. The model is used to study the morphology of zeolite L nanocrystals grown from an initial amorphous microporous precursor gel. The model considers gel dissolution to release growth precursor extended structures, precursor migration, precursor–precursor association, precursor incorporation into zeolite nanoparticles, and zeolite dissolution. It is shown that the gel-to-zeolite transformation can occur when dissolved precursor migration is slow compared to precursor incorporation and zeolite dissolution. Under these conditions, the initial gel microstructure (intraparticle porosity) has a significant effect on the zeolite morphology and on the crystallization kinetics. This transformation proceeds in two stages: A zeolitic framework forms initially without long-range order, followed by slow rearrangement of building units into nanocrystalline particles with possible defects. Finally different growth modes are identified as a function of microkinetic parameters and gel morphology. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 2157-2163 
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    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: The electronic structure of tris(8-hydroxyquinoline) aluminum (Alq3) has been studied in the pristine molecular solid state as well as upon interaction (doping) with potassium and lithium. We discuss the results of a joint theoretical and experimental investigation, based on a combination of x-ray and ultraviolet photoelectron spectroscopies with quantum-chemical calculations at the density functional theory level. Upon doping, each electron transferred from an alkali metal atom is stored on one of the three ligands of the Alq3 molecule, resulting in a new spectral feature (peak) in the valence band that evolves uniformly when going from a doping level of one to three metal atoms per Alq3 molecule. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 2151-2156 
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    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: A fluid with an interaction potential consisting of a hard core and an attractive Yukawa tail is considered. The strength of the attraction is taken to depend both on density and temperature in order to take into account the state dependence of the effective interaction suggested by the analysis of structural data of several colloidal suspensions, in particular microemulsions of AOT reverse micelles. The thermodynamics of this fluid is investigated starting from the inverse temperature expansion of the free energy in the mean spherical approximation. The temperature and density dependence of the interaction is incorporated in consistent expressions for the pressure, isothermal compressibility, and chemical potential. The phase diagram predicted by this method is in agreement with experimental data on AOT reverse micelles analyzed in the effective one component approach. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 2176-2180 
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    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: The size-dependent melting temperature and the size-dependent melting entropy of organic nanocrystals are predicted by use of our simple model being free of any adjustable parameter. The model predictions for the size-dependent melting temperature and the size-dependent melting entropy are supported by the experimental results on benzene, chlorobenzene, heptane, and naphthalene nanocrystals. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 2169-2175 
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    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: The O2 adsorption on Ag(111) single crystal in the range of 300–500 K has been studied by XPS, ADXPS, and TPD. At room temperature, the O1s line observed at 530.0 eV goes down to 528.2 eV when the sample is heated to 420 K. The comparison of XPS and TPD data indicates that both lines can be assigned to chemisorbed atomic oxygen. The depth concentration profiles calculated on the basis of the angular-dependent XPS data show that the line at 530.0 eV is responsible for oxygen adsorbed at the surface, as opposed to that at 528.2 eV which is assigned to oxygen between the top and second silver layers. The formation of surface silver oxide is concluded in the latter case. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 2181-2189 
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    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: We report the results of self-consistent quantum Monte Carlo simulations of the structure of the liquid-vapor interface of the alloy Sn0.09Ga0.81. Our calculations are in very good agreement with the experimental results reported by Lei, Huang and Rice [J. Chem. Phys. 107, 4051 (1997)]. In particular, our calculations confirm the experimentally inferred existence of a partial second layer of Sn below the complete outermost layer of Sn in the stratified liquid-vapor interface of this alloy. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 3929-3939 
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    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: In this paper, we present detailed quantum treatment of the semirigid vibrating rotor target (SVRT) model for reaction dynamics involving polyatomic molecules. In the SVRT model, the reacting (target) molecule is treated as a semirigid vibrating rotor which can be considered as a three-dimensional generalization of the diatomic molecule. This model provides a realistic framework to treat reaction dynamics of polyatomic systems. Using the SVRT model, it becomes computationally practical to carry out quantitatively accurate quantum dynamics calculation for a variety of dynamics problems in which the reacting molecule is a polyatomic or complex molecule. In this work, specific theoretical treatment and mathematical formulation of the SVRT model are presented for three general classes of reaction systems: (1) reaction of an atom with a polyatomic molecule (atom–polyatom reaction), (2) reaction between two polyatomic molecules (polyatom–polyatom reaction), and (3) polyatomic reaction with a rigid surface (polyatom–surface reaction). Since the number of dynamical degrees of freedom in the SVRT model for the above three classes of dynamical problems is limited, accurate quantum (both ab initio and dynamical) calculations are possible for many reactions of practical chemical interest. In this paper, a time-dependent wave packet approach is employed to implement the SVRT model for dynamics calculation of polyatomic reactions. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 3919-3928 
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    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: A pulsed molecular beam cavity Fourier transform microwave spectrometer was used to measure pure rotational spectra of nine isotopomers of Ne2–N2O, and of three isotopomers of the Ar2–N2O van der Waals trimer. For Ne2–N2O, these are 20Ne20Ne–14N14N16O, 20Ne22Ne–14N14N16O, 22Ne22Ne–14N14N16O, 20Ne20Ne–15N14N16O, 20Ne22Ne–15N14N16O, 22Ne22Ne–15N14N16O, 20Ne20Ne–14N15N16O, 20Ne22Ne–14N15N16O, and 22Ne22Ne–14N15N16O. Those for Ar2–N2O are 40Ar40Ar–14N14N16O, 40Ar40Ar–15N14N16O, and 40Ar40Ar–14N15N16O. The spectra were measured in the frequency range between 3 and 18 GHz. Both a- and c-type transitions were measured for all Ne2–N2O isotopomers. In the case of the mixed, 20Ne22Ne containing, isotopomers a small b-dipole moment occurs and two b-type transitions were measured. In the spectra of Ar2–N2O only b- and c-type transitions were measured. Rotational and centrifugal distortion constants were determined for all the isotopomers of each complex. The spectral analyses show that Ne2–N2O is a highly asymmetric prolate rotor (κ=−0.158 for 20Ne20Ne–14N14N16O) while Ar2–N2O is a highly asymmetric oblate rotor (κ=0.285 for 40Ar40Ar–14N14N16O). Both trimers were found to have distorted tetrahedral structures with the rare gases tilted towards the O atom of the N2O subunit. Nuclear quadrupole hyperfine structures due to both terminal and central 14N nuclei were observed and analyzed to give the nuclear quadrupole coupling constants, χaa(1), χbb(1) and χaa(2), χbb(2). The resulting spectroscopic constants were utilized to derive ground state effective structures, ground state average structures, and partial substitution structures. Harmonic force field analyses were performed for each complex using the obtained quartic centrifugal distortion constants. The results of the spectroscopic analyses are discussed in the light of possible three-body nonadditive interactions. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 3940-3945 
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    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Photodissociation of the H2S molecule at 157.6 nm was studied experimentally using the Rydberg tagging technique. Translational energy distributions of the H-atom product from the H2S photodissociation were measured, and the SH(X 2Π)+H(2S) channel was found to be the dominant dissociation process. Spin-orbit and rovibrational state distributions were also obtained for the SH product, which was found to be both vibrationally and rotationally excited. An intriguing bimodal rotational distribution in the lowest two vibrational states, v=0 and 1, has been clearly observed for the SH product, indicating that there are two distinctive dissociation mechanisms involved in the photodissociation of H2S at 157 nm excitation. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 2242-2254 
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    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: The reactions of HOCl with HCl on water clusters have been theoretically investigated. Ab initio calculations indicate that hydrogen bond and cooperative effect play an essential role in the reactions; that the reaction barrier of HOCl with cyclic (H2O)n.HCl cluster is the least at n=3 and that the ionization of HCl and HOCl on ice surfaces may not be complete but partly at very low temperatures. Two cases a and b of the model reactions are considered for detailed analysis. On the surface of ice, the barrier energies are about 4 and 6 kcal/mol for cases a and b, respectively, at the MP2//HF/6-31G(d) level, which is close to an experimental estimation. This study suggests a similar previously reported mechanism that the heterogeneous reaction of HOCl with HCl on ice is catalyzed at the stratospheric conditions through structure catalysis and hydration that enhances ion character of species. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 2235-2241 
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    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: A newly developed "interrupted creep" experiment has been used to study the physical aging of a low molecular weight polystyrene, Tg∼69 °C. The results of the new experiment are compared to those obtained from traditional "periodic creep" experiments. The interrupted creep experiment provides information about the viscosity, the recoverable creep compliance and the steady-state compliance, Js, during aging. Low molecular weight polystyrene was chosen because it exhibits a steady-state compliance that is a strong function of temperature. Aging was conducted at three temperatures, 68.2, 65.7 and 61.0 °C, using both down-jump and up-jump experiments. The behavior observed in the new experiments mirrors the behavior observed in the traditional experiments. In addition, the new experiments allow the first ever determination of how Js evolves during aging. The change of Js with aging time was calculated using the relationship between the shift factors, obtained from the recoverable creep compliance data, and the average relaxation times, obtained from the viscosity. The advantage of the new experiment is that it provides both the short-time recoverable creep compliance information and the long-time viscous flow. By combining these contributions to the creep compliance in a simple additive fashion, one can obtain a more complete picture of how the material is behaving during aging. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 2259-2269 
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    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: The effect of a patterned surface on the phase separation kinetics of a thin polymer film has been investigated using the Cahn–Hilliard–Cook model in three dimensions with the addition of a short range surface potential. We have observed pattern-induced spinodal waves perpendicular to the surface creating "checkerboard"-like composition fluctuations for a wide range of patterns used in this study. The number of such layers strongly depends on the magnitude of the thermal noise. For sufficiently thin films, where the film thickness is smaller than the spinodal wavelength, spinodal decomposition can be arrested if the surface potential and the characteristic size of the pattern are chosen accordingly, enabling the transfer of surface patterns to the film material. The kinetic pathways through which the equilibrium states are reached delicately depend on the particular pattern, its size, and the film thickness. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 4013-4024 
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    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Exact and approximate quantum mechanical calculations of reaction probabilities and cumulative reaction probabilities have been carried out for the F+H2 reaction on the ab initio adiabatic potential energy surfaces by Stark and Werner (SW) and by Hartke, Stark, and Werner (HSW), the latter including spin–orbit corrections in the entrance channel. These data have been employed to obtain thermal rate constants for the title reaction in the temperature range 200–700 K. The exact and approximate results have been compared with experimental determinations and previous theoretical predictions. In particular, the reaction probabilities obtained on the HSW surface are found to be in very good agreement with recent calculations by Alexander et al. [J. Chem. Phys. 109, 5710 (1998)] based on the exact treatment of spin–orbit and Coriolis coupling for this system. However, the rate constants calculated on the HSW PES are systematically lower than the experimental values, which indicates that the height of the adiabatic potential energy surface is too high. Furthermore, an estimate of cross sections from the reaction probabilities calculated by Alexander et al. shows that the contribution to the low temperature rate constants from spin–orbit excited F(2P1/2) atoms through nonadiabatic channels is very small and, thus, nonadiabatic effects are not sufficient to bring the calculated rate constants to a better agreement with the experimental measurements. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 4068-4076 
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    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: The rate coefficients of reactions that occur on potential energy surfaces without a barrier often exhibit a negative temperature dependence at low temperatures. Generally, this behavior is modeled with either the Harcourt–Essen equation, k(T)=AT−m, or a "negative" activation energy, k(T)=ATm exp{ΔE/kBT}. Neither of these expressions is consistent with the Wigner threshold law. The general expression k(T)=(1+T/TW)−m∑l=0∞Al(1+T/TW)−l(T/TW)l is proposed where the relative angular momentum of the reacting species is l, TW and m are independent parameters to be extracted from the data, and the amplitude of each partial wave is Al. This expression may be approximated by k(T)=A0(1+T/TW)−m exp[(T/TW)/(1+T/TW)]. For CN+O2→ NCO+O and CO+NO the above expression reproduces the rate data, the branching ratio to the CO+NO channel, and the reactive cross section for the NCO+O channel. The rate coefficient for the NCO+O channel is given by k(cm3 s−1)=1.79×10−10(+T/21.7)−1.38{exp[(T/21.7)/(1+T/21.7)]−1}+4.62×10−12 exp[(T/21.7)/(1+T/21.7)] while for CO+NO we obtain k(cm3 s−1)=1.79×10−10(1+T/21.7)−1.38. An analytic form of the C–O bonding potential and the electric dipole–quadrupole interaction is used to show that the quantum threshold region extends up to 7 K. These results demonstrate the need of a complete quantum treatment for reactions that proceed on potential surfaces without a barrier. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 4077-4086 
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    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: The first optical investigation of the spectra of diatomic PdC has revealed that the ground state has Ω=0+, with a bond length of r0=1.712 Å. The Hund's case (a) nature of this state could not be unambiguously determined from the experimental data, but dispersed fluorescence studies to be reported in a separate publication, in combination with a comparison to theoretical calculations, demonstrate that it is the 2δ4 12σ2, 1Σ0++ state, which undergoes spin–orbit mixing with a low-lying 2δ4 12σ1 6π1, 3Π0+ state. An excited 3Σ+ state with re=1.754±0.003 Å (r0=1.758±0.002 Å) and ΔG1/2=794 cm−1 is found at T0=17 867 cm−1. Although only the Ω=1 component of this state is directly observed, the large hyperfine splitting of this state for the 105Pd 12C isotopomer implies that an unpaired electron occupies an orbital that is primarily of 5s character on Pd. Comparison to ab initio calculations identifies this state as 2δ4 12σ1 13σ1, 3Σ1+. To higher wavenumbers a number of transitions to states with Ω=0+ have been observed and rotationally analyzed. Two groups of these have been organized into band systems, despite the clear presence of homogeneous perturbations between states with Ω=0+ in the region between 22 000 and 26 000 cm−1. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 4087-4100 
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    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: An intramolecular theory of the unusual mass-independent isotope effect for ozone formation and dissociation is described. The experiments include the enrichment factor, its dependence on the ambient pressure, the ratio of the formation rates of symmetric and asymmetric ozone isotopomers, the enrichment of ozone formed from heavily enriched oxygen isotopes, the comparison of that enrichment to that when the heavy isotopes are present in trace amounts, the isotopic exchange rate constant, and the large mass-dependent effect when individual rate constants are measured, in contrast with the mass-independent effect observed for scrambled mixtures. To explain the results it is suggested that apart from the usual symmetry number ratio of a factor of 2, the asymmetric ozone isotopomers have a larger density of reactive (coupled) quantum states, compared with that for the symmetric isotopomers (about 10%), due to being more "RRKM-like" (Rice–Ramsperger–Kessel–Marcus): Symmetry restricts the number of intramolecular resonances and coupling terms in the Hamiltonian which are responsible for making the motion increasingly chaotic and, thereby, increasingly statistical. As a result the behavior occurs regardless of whether the nuclei are bosons (16O, 18O) or fermions (17O). Two alternative mechanisms are also considered, one invoking excited electronic states and the other invoking symmetry control in the entrance channel. Arguments against each are given. An expression is given relating the mass-independent rates of the scrambled systems to the mass-dependent rates of the unscrambled ones, and the role played by a partitioning term in the latter is described. Different definitions for the enrichment factor for heavily enriched isotopic systems are also considered. In the present paper attention is focused on setting up theoretical expressions and discussing relationships. They provide a basis for future detailed calculations. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 4300-4309 
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    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Thermodynamic and structural properties of an asymmetric electrolyte containing macroions with 60 elementary charges and monovalent counterions in aqueous solution at different concentrations have been studied by means of Monte Carlo (MC) simulations and molecular dynamics (MD) employing two different short-range potentials. The long-range Coulombic interactions were handled by using Ewald summation and the MC simulations were accelerated by a cluster-move technique, which was found to be two orders of magnitude more efficient for this system than the standard MC method. An effective repulsion was found to operate between the macroions at all concentrations. The electrostatic screening of the macroion repulsion by the counterions was stronger in the hard-sphere model as compared to a soft-sphere model. The origin of this difference arises primarily from the deeper macroion–ion potential in the former model. The results of the hard-sphere model have been compared with different more approximate theories such as the cell model solved by MC simulations, the cell model solved by the Poisson–Boltzmann (PB) equation, and the Derjaguin–Landau–Vervey–Overbeek (DLVO) theory. We have found that the cell model solved by MC simulations and combined with a charge renormalization approach is superior to the other simplified approaches and its predictions are in excellent agreement with the exact simulation results. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 4334-4342 
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    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: We present calculations of the anisotropy of the tension of interfaces separating an isotropic phase rich in a flexible polymer from a nematic phase rich in a semiflexible polymer. We find that the interfacial tension is always lower when the director is parallel to the plane of the interface than when it is perpendicular. The ratio of the tension in the perpendicular to parallel case can be quite large, of order 5 or so, depending on the strength of the nematic interactions. We also find that the interfacial width is always lower in the parallel case even though the tension is lower; this is because the orientational density prefers parallel alignment of chains at the interface. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 1501-1510 
    ISSN: 1089-7690
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    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: We compute the melting curve of n-octane using Molecular Dynamics simulations with a realistic all-atom molecular model. Thermodynamic integration methods are used to calculate the free energy of the system in both the crystalline solid and isotropic liquid phases. The Gibbs–Duhem integration procedure is used to calculate the melting curve, starting with an initial point obtained from the free energy calculations. The calculations yield quantitatively accurate results: in the pressure range of 0–100 MPa, the calculated melting curve deviates by only 3 K from the experimental curve. This deviation falls just within the range of uncertainty of the calculations. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 1511-1519 
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    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: We develop the average Hamiltonian theory of a class of symmetrical radio-frequency pulse sequences in the NMR of rotating solids. Theorems are presented which allow one to predict the elimination of many average Hamiltonian terms, without detailed calculation. These results are applied to the problem of heteronuclear decoupling in the presence of rapid magic angle spinning. We present sequences which minimize the number of heteronuclear terms at the same time as recoupling the homonuclear interactions of the irradiated spins. The performance of the new sequences is tested on 13C labeled calcium formate. Experimental measurements of double-quantum 1H excitation indicate a relationship between good heteronuclear decoupling of the observed spin species and efficient recoupling of the irradiated spin species. The heteronuclear decoupling performance of the new sequences is significantly better than that obtained with an unmodulated radio-frequency field. The decoupling performance is improved further by breaking the pulse sequence symmetry in a controlled fashion. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 3349-3356 
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    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: We revisit the far from equilibrium escape problem across a fluctuating potential barrier that is driven by asymmetric, unbiased dichotomous noise. Our closed analytical solution for arbitrary noise strengths reveals new aspects of the so-called "resonant-activation" effect and leads to interesting implications regarding far from equilibrium or externally controlled chemical reaction processes. Specifically, a genuine asymmetry-induced variant of resonant activation within the constant intensity scaling scheme is discovered, and a new possibility to manipulate reaction rates and yields, as well as the balance between reactants and products, is put forward. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 3357-3364 
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    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: The performance of current density functionals is analyzed in detail for the electric field gradients (EFG) of hydrogen chloride and copper chloride by comparison with ab initio methods and available experimental data. The range of density functionals applied shows good agreement with coupled cluster H and Cl field gradients for HCl, as has been demonstrated previously for other main-group element containing compounds. However, the performance of most density functionals is very poor for the Cu EFG in CuCl (EFG for Cu -0.44 a.u. at the coupled-cluster singles and doubles with perturbative triples [CCSD(T)] level, compared to, e.g., +0.54 a.u. at the B-LYP level). Only the "half-and-half" hybrid functionals give field gradients with the correct sign. The reason for the poor performance of the density functional theory is analyzed in detail comparing density functional with ab initio total electronic densities ρ(r). Due to the conservation of the number of particles, a change in the valence part of the electron density can lead to changes in the core part of the density. Errors in valence electronic properties like the dipole moment and in core properties like the Cu and Cl EFGs may therefore be connected. In fact the errors in both properties show a distinct linear relationship, indicating that if the dipole moment is correctly described by density functionals, the Cu and Cl EFGs may be accurate as well. Furthermore, at the atomic level, electric field gradients are described with reasonable accuracy by current density functionals as calculations for the Cu 2P excited state and the Cu2+ 2D ground state show. A comparison between the different density functionals shows that the incorrect behavior of the electronic density appears to be mainly due to defects in the exchange part of the functional.© 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 1580-1586 
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    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Theoretical expressions for the ultrasonically induced birefringence of liquids are obtained in the frame work of de Gennes' phenomenological theory. The intensity and frequency dependence of ultrasonically induced birefringence in the isotropic phase of p-n-pentyl p′-cyanobiphenyl (5CB) was measured in order to examine the usefulness of birefringence measurements for investigating dynamical properties liquids. The observed birefringence was proportional to the square root of ultrasonic intensity. The birefringence divided by the square root of ultrasonic intensity increases with increasing frequency and appears to saturate when the ultrasonic frequency approaches the relaxation frequency of molecular reorientation. The observed values of birefringence were reproduced satisfactorily by the expression derived in this paper. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 1592-1594 
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    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: The noisy dynamic behavior of a surface catalytic reaction model to describe the oxidation of carbon monoxide is investigated when the control parameter is perturbed by external noise near a supercritical Hopf bifurcation point. Noise induced coherent oscillation (NICO) is observed and the NICO strength goes through two maxima with the increment of the noise intensity D from zero, characteristic of the occurrence of stochastic multiresonance without external signal. The frequency of the NICO also increases with the increment of D. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 1595-1607 
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    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: The structural, dynamical, and electronic properties of solid HBr at high pressure are investigated using the ab initio constant pressure molecular dynamics method. A detailed analysis of the orientational distribution, and the reorientational and vibrational dynamics of the disordered phase I at ambient temperature showed that this phase can be described as a rotator phase with fluctuating hydrogen bonds up to pressures well over 10 GPa. We predict that the disorder at higher densities leads to cooperative proton-transfer dynamics. The approach to hydrogen-bond symmetrization is studied in phase I and the high pressure ordered phase III. The simulation results for phase III also indicate that this phase develops dielectric instabilities at high density. At pressures over 40 GPa we observe spontaneous formation of H2 with rearrangement of the Br lattice from fcc to hcp. The chemical reactivity is rationalized in terms of the electronic structure under conditions of near symmetrical hydrogen bonding. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 1608-1614 
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    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: The effect of attractive interactions on the behavior of polymers between surfaces is studied using Monte Carlo simulations. The molecules are modeled as fused sphere freely rotating chains with fixed bond lengths and bond angles; wall–fluid and fluid–fluid site–site interaction potentials are of the hard sphere plus Yukawa form. For athermal chains the density at the surface (relative to the bulk) is depleted at low densities and enhanced at high densities. The introduction of a fluid–fluid attraction causes a reduction of site density at the surface, and an introduction of a wall–fluid attraction causes an enhancement of site density at the surface, compared to when these interactions are absent. When the wall–fluid and fluid–fluid attractions are of comparable strength, however, the depletion mechanism due to the fluid–fluid attraction dominates. The center of mass profiles show the same trends as the site density profiles. Near the surface, the parallel and the perpendicular components of chain dimensions are different, which is explained in terms of a reorientation of chains. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 1615-1627 
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    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: The dynamical properties of an oscillating tip–cantilever system are now widely used in the field of scanning force microscopy. The aim of the present work is to get analytical expressions describing the nonlinear dynamical properties of the oscillator in noncontact and intermittent contact situations in the tapping mode. Three situations are investigated: the pure attractive interaction, the pure repulsive interaction, and a mixing of the two. The analytical solutions obtained allow general trends to be extracted: the noncontact and the intermittent contact show a very discriminate variation of the phase. Therefore the measurement of the phase becomes a simple way to identify whether or not the tip touches the surface during the oscillating period. It is also found that the key parameter governing the structure of the dynamical properties is the product of the quality factor by a reduced stiffness. In the attractive regime, the reduced stiffness is the ratio of an attractive effective stiffness and the cantilever one. In the repulsive regime, the reduced stiffness is the ratio between the contact stiffness and the cantilever one. The quality factor plays an important role. For large values of the quality factor; it is predicted that a pure topography can be obtained whatever the value of the contact stiffness. For a smaller quality factor, the oscillator becomes more sensitive to change of the local mechanical properties. As a direct consequence, varying the quality factor, for example with a vacuum chamber, would be a very interesting way to investigate soft materials either to access topographic information or nanomechanical properties. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 3468-3478 
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    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Inner shell electron energy spectroscopy (ISEELS) was used to study HBS, HBO, and H3B3O3, reactive, transient species generated in situ. The reaction of H2S with crystalline boron in a quartz tube was used to produce thioborine (HBS) at ∼1100 °C, and borine (HBO) at ∼1200 °C. The reaction of H2O vapor with crystalline boron in a quartz tube at ∼1200 °C was used to produce boroxine (H3B3O3). These species were identified from their inner shell excitation spectra and mass spectrometry. The B 1s, S 2s, and S 2p ISEEL spectra of HBS, and the B 1s and O 1s spectra of HBO and H3B3O3 are reported and analyzed with the help of GSCF3 ab initio calculations. A reaction scheme is proposed for the generation of HBO from the reaction of H2S and boron in a heated quartz tube. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 3494-3497 
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    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Transitions into the doubly excited Na2 1 3Σg− state have been analyzed using near-dissociation expansions (NDE) to represent the vibrational energies and inertial rotational constants, while the centrifugal distortion constants were held fixed at "mechanically consistent" values calculated from the Rydberg–Klein–Rees (RKR) potential implied by those G(v) and Bv functions. The input data cover the range v=0 to 57 and N up to 47, and the fit yields vD=61.41(±0.10) and D0=3385.70(±0.2) cm−1. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 3508-3516 
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    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Time-independent quantum scattering calculations have been performed to study the H+CH4→H2+CH3 reaction, using the analytic potential-energy surface developed by Jordan and Gilbert. A rotating bond umbrella (RBU) approximation with the implementation of a guided spectral transform subspace iteration technique has been applied together with a log-derivative method in hyperspherical coordinates. A single sector hyperspherical projection method was used to apply the boundary conditions to extract the S matrix at a large hyperradius. The results show that the H+CH4→H2+CH3 reaction occurs via a direct mechanism. The tunneling effect is pronounced, while there is little recrossing. Vibrational excitation of the C–H stretch and/or the H–CH3 bending modes of CH4 significantly enhance the reactivity. Exciting the umbrella mode of CH4 also enhance the reactivity, although less efficiently. The calculated thermal rate constants are larger than the experimental ones. However, good agreement has been obtained by including a barrier height correction of the potential function to make it agree with ab initio results. Finally, vibrational and rotational distributions of the reaction products are discussed in detail. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 3517-3525 
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    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: We report experiments that investigate the influence of long-range attractive forces on collisional energy loss from highly vibrationally excited molecules. State-resolved studies of energy transfer from highly vibrationally excited pyridine (μ=2.2 D) to water (μ=1.8 D) in a low-pressure environment at 298 K have been performed using high-resolution transient absorption spectroscopy of water at λ(approximate)2.7 μm. Pyridine in its ground electronic state with 37 900 cm−1 of vibrational energy was prepared by absorption of pulsed ultraviolet light (λ=266 nm) to the S1 state, followed by rapid internal conversion to the S0 state. Collisions between vibrationally excited pyridine and water that result in rotational and translational excitation of the ground vibrationless state of H2O (000) were investigated by monitoring the populations of individual rotational states of H2O (000) at short times following pyridine excitation. The infrared probe of water was the highly allowed asymmetric stretching (000→001) transition. The nascent distribution of rotationally excited H2O (000) states is well described by a thermal distribution with a rotational temperature of Trot=770±80 K. Doppler-broadened transient linewidth measurements yield the velocity distributions of the recoiling H2O (000) molecules that correspond to center-of-mass translational temperatures of Ttrans∼515 K for all water rotational states investigated. Additionally, rate constants for energy gain in individual water states were determined, yielding an integrated rate constant of k2int=1.1×10−11 cm3 mol−1 s−1 for the appearance of H2O (000) with Erot=1000–2000 cm−1. These results are compared with previous relaxation studies of excited pyrazine (μ=0 D) with water and of excited pyridine with CO2 (μ=0 D), and the influence of electrostatic attraction on the relaxation dynamics is discussed. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    Notes: We study theoretically the generation of coherent, anharmonic phonon-polariton responses through impulsive stimulated Raman scattering with intense, crossed ultrafast excitation pulses. We find that the refractive index appears modulated at the stimulated scattering wave vector and the corresponding phonon-polariton frequency, and, due to anharmonicity, at stimulated scattering wave vector overtones and their corresponding frequencies. A realistic model of the soft lattice vibrational mode of the ferroelectric crystal lithium tantalate is considered in detail. Specific predictions for the magnitudes of different wave vector overtone contributions to the lattice displacement are made compared to experimental observations of anharmonic lattice responses. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 3548-3558 
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    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Highly monochromatized electrons (with energy distributions of less than 30 meV FWHM) are used in a crossed beam experiments to investigate electron attachment to oxygen clusters (O2)n at electron energies from approximately zero eV up to several eV. At energies close to zero the attachment cross section for the reaction (O2)n+e→(O2)m− (for m=1, 2, and 3) rises strongly with decreasing electron energy compatible with s-wave electron capture to (O2)n. Peaks in the oxygen attachment cross sections present at higher energies ((approximate)80 meV, 193 meV, 302 meV) can be ascribed to vibrational levels of the anion populated by attachment of an electron to a single oxygen molecule within the target cluster via a direct Franck–Condon transition from the ground vibrational state v=0 to a vibrational excited state v′=7,8,9,... of the anion produced. The vibrational structures observed here for the first time can be quantitatively accounted for by model calculations using a microscopic model to examine the attachment of an electron to an oxygen molecule inside a cluster. This involves (i) molecular dynamics simulations to calculate the structure of neutral clusters prior to the attachment process and (ii) calculation of the solvation energy of an oxygen anion in the cluster from the electrostatic polarization of the molecules of the cluster. The occurrence of this polarization energy at the surface of larger clusters explains the appearance of an s-wave capturing cross section at 0 eV and the slightly smaller spacings (compared to the monomer case) between the peaks at finite energy, as observed experimentally. The relative transition probabilities from the ground state of the neutral oxygen molecule to the different vibrational levels of the anion are obtained by calculating the corresponding Franck–Condon factors thereby resulting in a reasonable theoretical fit to the observed yields of negatively charged oxygen molecules and clusters. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 3581-3589 
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    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Umbrella sampling Monte Carlo simulations are used to calculate free energy barriers to homogeneous liquid–vapor nucleation in the superheated Lennard-Jones fluid. The calculated free energy barriers decrease with increased superheating and vanish at the spinodal curve. A statistical geometric analysis reveals the existence of two types of voids: Small interstitial cavities, which are present even in the equilibrium liquid, and much larger cavities that develop as the system climbs the nucleation free energy barrier. The geometric analysis also shows that the average cavity size within the superheated liquid is a function of density but not of temperature. The critical nucleus for the liquid–vapor transition is found to be a large system-spanning cavity that grows as the free energy barrier is traversed. The weblike cavity is nonspherical at all superheatings studied here, suggesting a phenomenological picture quite different from that of classical nucleation theory. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 3612-3615 
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    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: High-resolution Stark effect measurements on the S1←S0(ππ*) origin of cis-free base isobacteriochlorin in single crystals of n-octane at 5 K are reported. The spectral splittings of the band at 15 822 cm−1 are linearly dependent on the applied electric field. The change in dipole moment (Δμ) was found to be 1.32 D and is parallel to the crystal's b-axis. This band blueshifted as the polarity of the solvents at room temperature was increased, which implies that Δμ is negative. To rationalize the large magnitudes and opposite signs of the cis and trans tautomers' Δμ values, we propose a simple valence-bond model based on ionic resonance structures. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 1784-1785 
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    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: The relative mixing coefficients of the zero-order 1B1(n,0,0) vibrational levels present in the hybrid 1A2–1B1 wave functions are estimated according to the observed Franck–Condon patterns in dispersed fluorescence spectra. Non-Condon effects and spin–orbit coupling have been ignored in the treatment. The data cover nearly 50 cold vibronic bands in the 32 895–34 040 cm−1 region in addition to 9 vibronic bands in the 32 185–32 559 cm−1 region. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 3668-3674 
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    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: We study the drift mobility of a molecular polaron in the presence of an external applied field and Coulomb traps. The model is based on one previously developed for geminate recombination of photogenerated charge carriers. It is shown that the unusual combination of Poole–Frenkel-like field dependence and non-Arrhenius temperature dependence of the mobility, measured experimentally in molecular films, is well reproduced by this model. Our key result is that this nearly universal experimental behavior of the mobility arises from competition between rates of polaron trapping and release from a very low density of Coulomb traps. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 3675-3678 
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    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: It is known that the presence of cations like Ca++ or Pb++ in the water subphase alters the pressure-area isotherms for fatty acid monolayers. The corresponding lattice constant changes have been studied using x-ray diffraction. Reflection-absorption spectroscopy has been used to probe the chemical composition of the film. We report on the first measurements of the time evolution of the shear viscosity of arachidic acid monolayers in the presence of Ca++ ions in the subphase. We find that the introduction of Ca++ ions to the water subphase results in an increase of the film's viscosity by at least three orders of magnitude. This increase occurs in three distinct stages. First, there is a rapid change in the viscosity of up to one order of magnitude. This is followed by two periods, with very different time constants, of a relatively slow increase in the viscosity over the next 10 or more hours. The corresponding time constants for this rise decrease as either the subphase pH or Ca++ concentration is increased. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 3679-3695 
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    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: In the interaction of low energy F2 with Si(100) at 250 K, a dissociative chemisorption mechanism called atom abstraction is identified in which only one of the F atoms is adsorbed while the other F atom is scattered into the gas phase. The dynamics of atom abstraction are characterized via time-of-flight measurements of the scattered F atoms. The F atoms are translationally hyperthermal but only carry a small fraction (∼3%) of the tremendous exothermicity of the reaction. The angular distribution of F atoms is unusually broad for the product of an exothermic reaction. These results suggest an "attractive" interaction potential between F2 and the Si dangling bond with a transition state that is not constrained geometrically. These results are in disagreement with the results of theoretical investigations implying that the available potential energy surfaces are inadequate to describe the dynamics of this gas–surface interaction. In addition to single atom abstraction, two atom adsorption, a mechanism analogous to classic dissociative chemisorption in which both F atoms are adsorbed onto the surface, is also observed. The absolute probability of the three scattering channels (single atom abstraction, two atom adsorption, and unreactive scattering) for an incident F2 are determined as a function of F2 exposure. The fluorine coverage is determined by integrating the reaction probabilities over F2 exposure, and the reaction probabilities are recast as a function of fluorine coverage. Two atom adsorption is the dominant channel [P2=0.83±0.03(95%, N=9)] in the limit of zero coverage and decays monotonically to zero. Single atom abstraction is the minor channel (P1=0.13±0.03) at low coverage but increases to a maximum (P1=0.35±0.08) at about 0.5 monolayer (ML) coverage before decaying to zero. The reaction ceases at 0.94±0.11(95%, N=9) ML. Thermal desorption and helium diffraction confirm that the dangling bonds are the abstraction and adsorption sites. No Si lattice bonds are broken, in contrast to speculation by other investigators that the reaction exothermicity causes lattice disorder. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 3714-3719 
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    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: The dissociative photoionization channels of gaseous Si(CH3)Cl3 and ion desorption mechanisms of solid-state analogs following valence-level excitation have been investigated by means of photoionization mass spectroscopy, threshold photoelectron spectroscopy (TPES), and photon-stimulated ion desorption (PSID) using synchroton radiation. The adiabatic ionization threshold of the parent molecular ion was determined to be 11.18 eV, consistent with the value of 11.16 eV obtained from the TPES spectrum. An energy shift ∼0.8 eV toward lower binding energies for the orbitals of solid Si(CH3)Cl3 with respect to the gas phase values was observed. Two thresholds at 14.97 and 17.51 eV in the CH3+ photoionization efficiency spectrum are probably associated with the ionization of 2e″ and 11a1 orbitals, respectively. The H+ desorption threshold at 20.1 eV in the PSID spectrum may be attributed to the excitation of C 2s electron correlation states to the unoccupied states. The Cl+ desorption threshold at 19.9 eV is likely initiated by an Auger-stimulated desorption process.© 1999 American Institute of Physics. [S0021-9606(99)70731-2]
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 3720-3727 
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    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: A study of the reorientational segmental dynamics in supercooled poly(vinyl acetate) is presented, yielding detailed information about geometry and time scale of the motion close to the glass transition. The geometry information is derived from systematic variation of the evolution time in 13C 2D echo NMR measurements. The dynamics can be described as a superposition of angular jumps of approximately 10° and rotational diffusional processes. Both processes are related to the macroscopic α-relaxation. On the time scale of one jump process the orientation of a segment changes by about 2° via small step diffusion (〈0.6°). Furthermore the temperature dependence of this reorientatinal scenario is analyzed within the limits imposed by the experiment. All results are compared with previous 2H 2D NMR measurements on low-molecular glass formers. In both cases the loss of correlation, as described by conventional correlation times, results from a sequence of many distinct reorientational steps. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 3744-3752 
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    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: In this paper we complete the study of the phase diagram and conformational states of a stiff homopolymer. It is known that folding of a sufficiently stiff chain results in formation of a torus. We find that the phase diagram obtained from the Gaussian variational treatment actually contains not one, but several distinct toroidal states distinguished by the winding number. Such states are separated by first order transition curves terminating in critical points at low values of the stiffness. These findings are further supported by the off-lattice Monte Carlo simulation. Moreover, the simulation shows that the kinetics of folding of a stiff chain passes through various metastable states corresponding to hairpin conformations with abrupt U-turns. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 3761-3768 
    ISSN: 1089-7690
    Source: AIP Digital Archive
    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Gel-type electrolytes based on fluorinated polymers are of interest for electrochemical devices. We present a 7Li–13C solid-state NMR and modulated differential scanning calorimetry (MDSC) study of gel electrolytes based on a copolymer poly(vinylidene fluoride) (PVdF)–hexafluoropropylene (HFP) activated with a nonaqueous solution ethylene carbonate (EC)–propylene carbonate (PC)–LiN(CF3SO2)2. We show that the narrowing of the Li lineshape is decoupled from the glass transition. The behavior of the longitudinal relaxation times, T1, confirms that the host polymer matrix simply behaves like a quasiinert cage for the solution. These results are confirmed by 13C NMR at the magic angle (MAS) data, which show that the presence of the polymer does not significantly affect the chemical shift changes induced in the EC/PC carbons by the imide salt. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 3572-3580 
    ISSN: 1089-7690
    Source: AIP Digital Archive
    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: We study, from first principles, structural, electronic, and bonding properties of liquid water. Our system is twice as large as that used in previous ab initio simulations and our computed structural properties are in good agreement with the most recent neutron scattering experiments. Moreover, the use of a novel technique, based on the generation of maximally localized Wannier functions, allowed us to describe the molecular charge distribution and the polarization effects in liquid water with a degree of accuracy not previously possible. We find that, in the liquid phase, the water molecule dipole moment has a broad distribution around an average value of about 3.0 D. This value is 60% higher than that of the gas phase and significantly larger than most previous estimates. A considerable increase is also observed in the magnitude of the average eigenvalues of the quadrupole moment tensor. We also find that the anisotropy of the electronic charge distribution of the water molecule is reduced in the liquid. The relevance of these results for current modeling of liquid water is discussed. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 3769-3770 
    ISSN: 1089-7690
    Source: AIP Digital Archive
    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: We examine recently obtained expressions for the reversible work required to form a noncritical nucleus in a metastable vapor. We demonstrate that the expression obtained in by Debenedetti and Reiss [J. Chem. Phys. 108, 5498 (1998)] is identical to that in by Nishioka and Kusaka [J. Chem. Phys. 96, 5370 (1992)], thereby resolving the apparent contradiction between these two papers. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 2853-2856 
    ISSN: 1089-7690
    Source: AIP Digital Archive
    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: We study the dynamics in optical collisions of Na with Ne, Ar, Kr, and Xe in a differential scattering experiment. We report the observation of nonadiabatic transitions in the excited collisional quasimolecule based on measurements of the population ratio of the Na(3p)2P1/2 and 2P3/2 fine-structure levels. Comparison with theoretical results shows a generally very good agreement over the range of collision energies (0.01–0.3 eV) scanned in our experiment, using the best available potentials. For the heavier rare-gas systems a strong influence of the BΣ–AΠ crossing on the population ratios is observed. We further extract a universal function for the nonadiabatic transition probability for these systems. In the thermal energy range, our results are in good qualitative agreement with data from gas phase optical collision experiments. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 2857-2860 
    ISSN: 1089-7690
    Source: AIP Digital Archive
    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: The chemical dynamics to form cyanopropyne, CH3CCCN (X 1A1), and cyanoallene, H2CCCHCN (X 1A′), via the neutral–neutral reaction of the cyano radical, CN (X 2Σ+), with methylacetylene, CH3CCH (X 1A1), is investigated under single collision conditions in a crossed molecular beam experiment at a collision energy of 24.7 kJ mol−1. The laboratory angular distribution and time-of-flight spectra of the C4H3N products are recorded at m/e=65, 64, 63, and 62. The reaction of d3-methylacetylene, CD3CCH (X 1A1), with CN radicals yields reactive scattering signal at m/e=68 and m/e=67 demonstrating that two distinct H(D) atom loss channels are open. Forward-convolution fitting of the laboratory data reveal that the reaction dynamics are indirect and governed by an initial attack of the CN radical to the π electron density of the β carbon atom of the methylacetylene molecule to form a long lived CH3CCHCN collision complex. The latter decomposes via two channels, i.e., H atom loss from the CH3 group to yield cyanoallene, and H atom loss from the acetylenic carbon atom to form cyanopropyne. The explicit identification of the CN vs H exchange channel and two distinct product isomers cyanoallene and cyanopropyne strongly suggests the title reaction as a potential route to form these isomers in dark molecular clouds, the outflow of dying carbon stars, hot molecular cores, as well as the atmosphere of hydrocarbon rich planets and satellites such as the Saturnian moon Titan. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 2878-2888 
    ISSN: 1089-7690
    Source: AIP Digital Archive
    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: A time-dependent density-functional theory for systems in periodic external potentials in time is formulated on the assumption of the existence of the Floquet states from the quasienergy viewpoint. Coupling strength integration, which connects a noninteracting system with an interacting system, is introduced by using the time-dependent Hellmann–Feynman theorem. Coupled perturbed time-dependent Kohn–Sham equations are derived from the variational condition to the quasienergy functional with respect to parameters. Explicit expressions for frequency-dependent polarizability and first hyperpolarizability are given by the quasienergy derivative method. Excitation energies and transition moments are defined from poles and residues of frequency-dependent polarizabilities, respectively. In contrast to the previous theory, our formulation has the following three advantages: (1) The time-dependent exchange-correlation potential is defined by the functional derivative of the exchange-correlation quasienergy. (2) The formal expression for frequency-dependent polarizability, which corresponds to the exact sumover-states expression, can be obtained. (3) Explicit expressions for response properties which satisfy the 2n+1 rule can be automatically obtained. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 2900-2909 
    ISSN: 1089-7690
    Source: AIP Digital Archive
    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: We present analytical calculations of the electronic spin–orbit interaction contribution to nuclear magnetic shielding tensors using linear and quadratic response theory. The effects of the Fermi contact and the spin-dipole interactions with both the one- and two-electron spin–orbit Hamiltonians, included as first-order perturbations, are studied for the H2X (X=O, S, Se, and Te), HX (X=F, Cl, Br, and I), and CH3X (X=F, Cl, Br, and I) systems using nonrelativistic multiconfiguration self-consistent field reference states. We also present the first correlated study of the spin–orbit-induced contributions to shielding tensors arising from the magnetic field dependence of the spin–orbit Hamiltonian. While the terms usually considered are formally calculated using third-order perturbation theory, the magnetic-field dependent spin-orbit Hamiltonian requires a second-order calculation only. For the hydrogen chalcogenides, we show that contributions often neglected in studies of spin–orbit effects on nuclear shieldings, the spin-dipole coupling mechanism and the coupling of the two-electron spin–orbit Hamiltonian to the Fermi-contact operator, are important for the spin–orbit effect on the heavy-atom shielding, adding up to about half the value of the one-electron spin–orbit interaction with the Fermi-contact contribution. Whereas the second-order spin-orbit-induced shieldings of light ligands are small, the effect is larger for the heavy nuclei themselves and of opposite sign compared to the third-order contribution. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 2392-2400 
    ISSN: 1089-7690
    Source: AIP Digital Archive
    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: The Peierls–Hubbard model applied to N-membered ring-shaped molecules is investigated numerically and analytically. The bond configurations minimizing the total energy at half-filling of the electronic states are determined by a self-consistent method for N≤8 in a wide range of the electron–lattice and electron–electron coupling parameters. In the even-N case, only dimerized and homogeneous configurations have been found to be stable. Odd-N rings show three types of bond configurations depending on the coupling parameters. Two of these configurations have reflection symmetry whereas the third one is irregular.© 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 2401-2406 
    ISSN: 1089-7690
    Source: AIP Digital Archive
    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: A new semiclassical decoupling procedure for rotational projection states in rovibrationally inelastic atom-diatom and diatom-diatom collisions is developed. Computed vibrational self-relaxation rate constants for para-H2 and ortho-H2 are in good quantitative agreement (within a factor of 1.5, except for the lowest temperatures) with experimental data over the investigated temperature range 50–2000 K. This allows us to hope that also more detailed (nonmeasured) rate constants for rovibrational state-to-state transitions in molecular hydrogen, calculated by our new model, are sufficiently accurate for astrophysical applications. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    College Park, Md. : American Institute of Physics (AIP)
    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 2407-2413 
    ISSN: 1089-7690
    Source: AIP Digital Archive
    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: The Kr2 interaction potential is studied by ab initio calculations using several large basis sets containing high polarization functions and/or bond functions. It is shown that the addition of bond functions results in a dramatic improvement for the convergence of the calculated interaction energies. At the frozen-core MP4 level, the large atomic basis set such as [9s7p4d3f2g] recovered less than 75% of the experimental well depth. In contrast, the bond function basis set such as [9s7p4d3f]-{3s3p2d1f} produced a well depth of 617 μhartrees, over 99% of the experimental well depth. The frozen-core MP4 calculation appears to overestimate the well depth by about 25 μhartrees as compared to the calculation at the CCSD(T) level. On the other hand, the inclusion of core electron correlation at the MP4 level may contribute 13 μhartrees to the well depth. Beyond the potential minimum, the use of bond functions consistently gives significant improvement in the calculated potential from the highly repulsive wall to the attractive tail region. Final remarks are made about the counterpoise method and the use of bond functions. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 2414-2422 
    ISSN: 1089-7690
    Source: AIP Digital Archive
    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: The kinetics of fluorescence quenching by reversible excimer formation has been studied theoretically on the basis of generalized, non-Markovian rate equations derived from a diffusion-kinetic hierarchy approach in the low-reactant density limit. It is demonstrated that, in contrast to the case of reversible excitation transfer [W. Naumann, J. Chem. Phys. 110, 3926 (1999)], compact rate kernel expressions can be derived not only for contact encounters but also for more realistic, longer-range reactivities. Given as functionals of so-called phenomenological excimer formation and dissociation coefficients, the rate kernel expressions allow a critical assessment of approximations based on time-scale separation arguments. An effective excimer formation coefficient is defined, which leads to simple and physically transparent formulas for the Laplace transforms of the excited monomer and excimer concentrations. The effect of the back reaction on the total fluorescence yield is discussed. The study also includes a critical comparison to analogous results obtained for the case of reversible energy transfer quenching. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 2423-2435 
    ISSN: 1089-7690
    Source: AIP Digital Archive
    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: This paper considers the practical utility of quantum fluid dynamics (QFD) whereby the time-dependent Schrödinger's equation is transformed to observing the dynamics of an equivalent "gas continuum." The density and velocity of this equivalent gas continuum are respectively the probability density and the gradient of the phase of the wave function. The numerical implementation of the QFD equations is carried out within the Lagrangian approach, which transforms the solution of Schrödinger's equation into following the trajectories of a set of mass points, i.e., subparticles, obtained by discretization of the continuum equations. The quantum dynamics of the subparticles which arise in the present formalism through numerical discretization are coupled by the density and the quantum potential. Numerical illustrations are performed for photodissociation of NOCl and NO2 treated as two-dimensional models. The dissociation cross sections σ(ω) are evaluated in the dramatically short CPU times of 33 s for NOCl and 40 s for NO2 on a Pentium-200 MHz PC machine. The computational efficiency comes from a combination of (a) the QFD representation dealing with the near monotonic amplitude and phase as dependent variables, (b) the Lagrangian description concentrating the computation effort at all times into regions of highest probability as an optimal adaptive grid, and (c) the use of an explicit time integrator whereby the computational effort grows only linearly with the number of discrete points. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 2436-2443 
    ISSN: 1089-7690
    Source: AIP Digital Archive
    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Infrared molecular beam depletion spectroscopy of small methanol and acetonitrile clusters embedded in large helium clusters has been studied in the spectral region of the CO stretch and the CH3 rock mode from 1023 to 1059 cm−1. The results are compared with the experimental spectra of the corresponding free clusters generated in adiabatic expansions and calculations based on density functional theory or empirical potential models. For methanol clusters, the two types of experimental results are the same for the dimer and trimer structure. Different isomers are found in cold helium for the tetramer and pentamer, namely a monomer and dimer attached to a cyclic trimer. For acetonitrile clusters in helium, aside from the dimer, different structures are observed. The spectra from the trimer to the hexamer are dominated by structures which contain the antiparallel dimer as building block with D2d symmetry for the tetramer. They do not correspond to the minimum configurations observed for the free clusters. The fragmentation of the two cluster groups in helium droplets by electron impact ionization is discussed. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 3051-3057 
    ISSN: 1089-7690
    Source: AIP Digital Archive
    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: The nuclear wave packet dynamics in the potential well of a bound molecule can be controlled by an intense infrared (IR)-laser pulse. The phase of the nuclear wave packet motion is shown to depend on the phase of the laser field and the initial orientation of the molecule. We demonstrate, for diatomic heteronuclear molecules, that these spatial effects can be used to control the angular distribution of photofragments by selective dissociation of molecules with a given initial orientation from a sample of randomly oriented molecules. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 3077-3082 
    ISSN: 1089-7690
    Source: AIP Digital Archive
    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Three methods for two-dimensional correlation nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy at zero field are discussed. All three involve coherence transfer via longitudinal polarization, double quantum coherence, or both in parallel. The double quantum pulse sequences exploit the spinor property of spin states. These sequences have been applied to connected Δm=1 transitions, as well as for the indirect detection of forbidden or nearly forbidden Δm〉1 transitions. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 3083-3094 
    ISSN: 1089-7690
    Source: AIP Digital Archive
    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Collective excitations in liquid water are investigated using the recently developed theory for dynamics of molecular liquids which is based on the interaction-site model for polyatomic fluids, the projection-operator formalism of Zwanzig and Mori, and the simple approximation scheme for memory functions. It is shown that all the essential features of collective excitations in water, reported previously by neutron-scattering experiments, molecular dynamics simulations and dielectric theories, are well reproduced by the present theory. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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    The Journal of Chemical Physics 111 (1999), S. 3070-3076 
    ISSN: 1089-7690
    Source: AIP Digital Archive
    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: For the open shell van der Waals molecule, CAr, the potential energy curves (PECs) for the B 3Π and 1 5Σ− states, the B 3Π–1 5Σ− spin–orbit coupling and the B 3Π fine structure splitting are determined using multireference configuration interaction wave functions as large as ∼8 million configuration state functions. The B 3Π state is strongly bound, with De=5100 cm−1. Re(B 3Π)=3.7a0 and is considerably shorter than Re(X 3Σ−)=6.07 a0. The PEC for the repulsive 1 5Σ− state crosses that of the B 3Π state at Rx(1 5Σ−,B 3Π)=3.31a0 leading to spin–orbit induced predissociation. The B 3Π–1 5Σ− spin–orbit coupling is the result of valence-Ryberg mixing in the B 3Π state and is considerably enhanced by the heavy atom effect. The heavy atom effect is also reflected in a marked decrease in the fine structure splitting of the B 3Π state with increasing vibrational level. The implications of these results for using CAr(B 3Π) in laser induced fluorescence detection of CAr(X 3Σ−,v) are discussed. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
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