4,591 research outputs found
Lyapunov functionals for boundary-driven nonlinear drift-diffusions
We exhibit a large class of Lyapunov functionals for nonlinear
drift-diffusion equations with non-homogeneous Dirichlet boundary conditions.
These are generalizations of large deviation functionals for underlying
stochastic many-particle systems, the zero range process and the
Ginzburg-Landau dynamics, which we describe briefly. As an application, we
prove linear inequalities between such an entropy-like functional and its
entropy production functional for the boundary-driven porous medium equation in
a bounded domain with positive Dirichlet conditions: this implies exponential
rates of relaxation related to the first Dirichlet eigenvalue of the domain. We
also derive Lyapunov functions for systems of nonlinear diffusion equations,
and for nonlinear Markov processes with non-reversible stationary measures
Association between spondylolisthesis and L5 fracture in patients with osteogenesis imperfecta
To investigate if an association between spondylolisthesis and L5 fracture occurs in patients affected by Osteogenesis Imperfecta (O.I.).
Methods
Anteroposterior and lateral radiograms were performed on the sample (38 O.I. patients, of whom 19 presenting listhesis); on imaging studies spondylolisthesis was quantified according to the Meyerding classification. Genant’s semiquantitative classification was applied on lateral view to evaluate the L5 fractures; skeleton spinal morphometry (MXA) was carried out on the same images to collect quantitative data comparable and superimposable to Genant’s classification. The gathered information were analyzed through statistical tests (O.R., χ 2 test, Fisher’s test, Pearson’s correlation coefficient).
Results
The prevalence of L5 fractures is 73.7 % in O.I. patients with spondylolisthesis and their risk of experiencing such a fracture is twice than O.I. patients without listhesis (OR 2.04). Pearson’s χ 2 test demonstrates an association between L5 spondylolisthesis and L5 fracture, especially with moderate, posterior fractures (p = 0.017) and primarily in patients affected by type IV O.I.
Conclusions
Spondylolisthesis represents a risk factor for the development of more severe and biconcave/posterior type fractures of L5 in patients suffering from O.I., especially in type IV. This fits the hypothesis that the anterior sliding of the soma of L5 alters the dynamics of action of the load forces, localizing them on the central and posterior heights that become the focus of the stress due to movement of flexion–extension and twisting of the spine. As a result, there is greater probability of developing an important subsidence of the central and posterior walls of the soma
On the uniqueness for the spatially homogeneous Boltzmann equation with a strong angular singularity
We prove an inequality on the Wasserstein distance with quadratic cost
between two solutions of the spatially homogeneous Boltzmann equation without
angular cutoff, from which we deduce some uniqueness results. In particular, we
obtain a local (in time) well-posedness result in the case of (possibly very)
soft potentials. A global well-posedeness result is shown for all regularized
hard and soft potentials without angular cutoff. Our uniqueness result seems to
be the first one applying to a strong angular singularity, except in the
special case of Maxwell molecules.
Our proof relies on the ideas of Tanaka: we give a probabilistic
interpretation of the Boltzmann equation in terms of a stochastic process. Then
we show how to couple two such processes started with two different initial
conditions, in such a way that they almost surely remain close to each other
Uniqueness of bounded solutions for the homogeneous Landau equation with a Coulomb potential
We prove the uniqueness of bounded solutions for the spatially homogeneous
Fokker-Planck-Landau equation with a Coulomb potential. Since the local (in
time) existence of such solutions has been proved by Arsen'ev-Peskov (1977), we
deduce a local well-posedness result. The stability with respect to the initial
condition is also checked
On Strong Convergence to Equilibrium for the Boltzmann Equation with Soft Potentials
The paper concerns - convergence to equilibrium for weak solutions of
the spatially homogeneous Boltzmann Equation for soft potentials (-4\le
\gm<0), with and without angular cutoff. We prove the time-averaged
-convergence to equilibrium for all weak solutions whose initial data have
finite entropy and finite moments up to order greater than 2+|\gm|. For the
usual -convergence we prove that the convergence rate can be controlled
from below by the initial energy tails, and hence, for initial data with long
energy tails, the convergence can be arbitrarily slow. We also show that under
the integrable angular cutoff on the collision kernel with -1\le \gm<0, there
are algebraic upper and lower bounds on the rate of -convergence to
equilibrium. Our methods of proof are based on entropy inequalities and moment
estimates.Comment: This version contains a strengthened theorem 3, on rate of
convergence, considerably relaxing the hypotheses on the initial data, and
introducing a new method for avoiding use of poitwise lower bounds in
applications of entropy production to convergence problem
Exponential Runge-Kutta methods for stiff kinetic equations
We introduce a class of exponential Runge-Kutta integration methods for
kinetic equations. The methods are based on a decomposition of the collision
operator into an equilibrium and a non equilibrium part and are exact for
relaxation operators of BGK type. For Boltzmann type kinetic equations they
work uniformly for a wide range of relaxation times and avoid the solution of
nonlinear systems of equations even in stiff regimes. We give sufficient
conditions in order that such methods are unconditionally asymptotically stable
and asymptotic preserving. Such stability properties are essential to guarantee
the correct asymptotic behavior for small relaxation times. The methods also
offer favorable properties such as nonnegativity of the solution and entropy
inequality. For this reason, as we will show, the methods are suitable both for
deterministic as well as probabilistic numerical techniques
Selection of Lactobacillus strains from fermented sausages for their potential use as probiotics.
A rapid screening method was used to isolate potentially probiotic Lactobacillus strains from fermented sausages after enrichment in MRS broth at pH 2.5 followed by bile salt stressing (1% bile salts w/v). One hundred and fifty acid- and bile-resistant strains were selected, avoiding preliminary and time-consuming isolation steps. Strains were further characterized for survival at pH 2.5 for 3 h in phosphate-buffered saline and for growth in the presence of 0.3% bile salts with and without pre-exposure at low pH. Twentyeight strains showed a survival >80% at pH 2.5 for 3 h; moreover, most of the strains were able to grow in the presence of 0.3% bile salts. Low pH and bile resistance was shown to be dependent on both the species, identified by phenotypic and molecular methods, and the strain tested. This is the first report on the direct selection of potentially probiotic lactobacilli from dry fermented sausages. Technologically interesting strains may be used in the future as probiotic starter cultures for novel fermented sausage manufacture
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