2,247 research outputs found
The onset of a small-scale turbulent dynamo at low magnetic Prandtl numbers
We study numerically the dependence of the critical magnetic Reynolds number
Rmc for the turbulent small-scale dynamo on the hydrodynamic Reynolds number
Re. The turbulence is statistically homogeneous, isotropic, and
mirror--symmetric. We are interested in the regime of low magnetic Prandtl
number Pm=Rm/Re<1, which is relevant for stellar convective zones, protostellar
disks, and laboratory liquid-metal experiments. The two asymptotic
possibilities are Rmc->const as Re->infinity (a small-scale dynamo exists at
low Pm) or Rmc/Re=Pmc->const as Re->infinity (no small-scale dynamo exists at
low Pm). Results obtained in two independent sets of simulations of MHD
turbulence using grid and spectral codes are brought together and found to be
in quantitative agreement. We find that at currently accessible resolutions,
Rmc grows with Re with no sign of approaching a constant limit. We reach the
maximum values of Rmc~500 for Re~3000. By comparing simulations with Laplacian
viscosity, fourth-, sixth-, and eighth-order hyperviscosity and Smagorinsky
large-eddy viscosity, we find that Rmc is not sensitive to the particular form
of the viscous cutoff. This work represents a significant extension of the
studies previously published by Schekochihin et al. 2004, PRL 92, 054502 and
Haugen et al. 2004, PRE, 70, 016308 and the first detailed scan of the
numerically accessible part of the stability curve Rmc(Re).Comment: 4 pages, emulateapj aastex, 2 figures; final version as published in
ApJL (but with colour figures
Beta lives - some statistical perspectives on the capital asset pricing model
This note summarizes some technical issues relevant to the use of the idea of excess return in empirical modelling. We cover the case where the aim is to construct a measure of expected return on an asset and a model of the CAPM type is used. We review some of the problems and show examples where the basic CAPM may be used to develop other results which relate the expected returns on assets both to the expected return on the market and other factors
The scaling properties of dissipation in incompressible isotropic three-dimensional magnetohydrodynamic turbulence
The statistical properties of the dissipation process constrain the analysis
of large scale numerical simulations of three dimensional incompressible
magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) turbulence, such as those of Biskamp and Muller
[Phys. Plasmas 7, 4889 (2000)]. The structure functions of the turbulent flow
are expected to display statistical self-similarity, but the relatively low
Reynolds numbers attainable by direct numerical simulation, combined with the
finite size of the system, make this difficult to measure directly. However, it
is known that extended self-similarity, which constrains the ratio of scaling
exponents of structure functions of different orders, is well satisfied. This
implies the extension of physical scaling arguments beyond the inertial range
into the dissipation range. The present work focuses on the scaling properties
of the dissipation process itself. This provides an important consistency check
in that we find that the ratio of dissipation structure function exponents is
that predicted by the She and Leveque [Phys. Rev. Lett 72, 336 (1994)] theory
proposed by Biskamp and Muller. This supplies further evidence that the cascade
mechanism in three dimensional MHD turbulence is non-linear random eddy
scrambling, with the level of intermittency determined by dissipation through
the formation of current sheets.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures. Figures embedded in text. Typos corrected in text
and references. Published in Physics of Plasmas. Abstract can be found
at:http://link.aip.org/link/?php/12/02230
SPECIFICATION AND PROCUREMENT OF CP-5 FUEL TUBES.
Contains the specifications of CP-5 fuel tubes
Hydrodynamic and hydromagnetic energy spectra from large eddy simulations
Direct and large eddy simulations of hydrodynamic and hydromagnetic
turbulence have been performed in an attempt to isolate artifacts from real and
possibly asymptotic features in the energy spectra. It is shown that in a
hydrodynamic turbulence simulation with a Smagorinsky subgrid scale model using
512^3 meshpoints two important features of the 4096^3 simulation on the Earth
simulator (Kaneda et al. 2003, Phys. Fluids 15, L21) are reproduced: a k^{-0.1}
correction to the inertial range with a k^{-5/3} Kolmogorov slope and the form
of the bottleneck just before the dissipative subrange. Furthermore, it is
shown that, while a Smagorinsky-type model for the induction equation causes an
artificial and unacceptable reduction in the dynamo efficiency,
hyper-resistivity yields good agreement with direct simulations. In the
large-scale part of the inertial range, an excess of the spectral magnetic
energy over the spectral kinetic energy is confirmed. However, a trend towards
spectral equipartition at smaller scales in the inertial range can be
identified. With magnetic fields, no explicit bottleneck effect is seen.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figs, Phys. Fluids (in press
Fetal liver blood flow distribution: role in human developmental strategy to prioritize fat deposition versus brain development
Among primates, human neonates have the largest brains but also the highest proportion of body fat. If placental nutrient supply is limited, the fetus faces a dilemma: should resources be allocated to brain growth, or to fat deposition for use as a potential postnatal energy reserve? We hypothesised that resolving this dilemma operates at the level of umbilical blood distribution entering the fetal liver. In 381 uncomplicated pregnancies in third trimester, we measured blood flow perfusing the fetal liver, or bypassing it via the ductus venosus to supply the brain and heart using ultrasound techniques. Across the range of fetal growth and independent of the mother's adiposity and parity, greater liver blood flow was associated with greater offspring fat mass measured by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry, both in the infant at birth (r = 0.43, P<0.001) and at age 4 years (r = 0.16, P = 0.02). In contrast, smaller placentas less able to meet fetal demand for essential nutrients were associated with a brain-sparing flow pattern (r = 0.17, p = 0.02). This flow pattern was also associated with a higher degree of shunting through ductus venosus (P = 0.04). We propose that humans evolved a developmental strategy to prioritize nutrient allocation for prenatal fat deposition when the supply of conditionally essential nutrients requiring hepatic inter-conversion is limited, switching resource allocation to favour the brain if the supply of essential nutrients is limited. Facilitated placental transfer mechanisms for glucose and other nutrients evolved in environments less affluent than those now prevalent in developed populations, and we propose that in circumstances of maternal adiposity and nutrient excess these mechanisms now also lead to prenatal fat deposition. Prenatal developmental influences play important roles in the human propensity to deposit fa
Two-stage dissipation in a superconducting microbridge: Experiment and modeling
Using fluorescent microthermal imaging we have investigated the origin of
"two-step" behavior in I-V curves for a current-carrying YBa_2Cu_3O_x
superconducting bridge. High resolution temperature maps reveal that as the
applied current increases the first step in the voltage corresponds to local
dissipation (hot spot), whereas the second step is associated with onset of
global dissipation throughout the entire bridge. A quantitative explanation of
the experimental results is provided by a simple model for an inhomogeneous
superconductor, assuming that the hot spot nucleates at a location with
slightly depressed superconducting properties.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Decline of nucleotide excision repair capacity in aging Caenorhabditis elegans
Repair of UVC-induced DNA damage in Caenorhabditis elegans is similar kinetically and genetically to repair in humans, and it slows significantly in aging C. elegans
Strength and conditioning practices of Brazilian Olympic sprint and jump coaches
Olympic coaches are likely to have adequate knowledge and implement effective training programs. This study aimed to describe and critically examine the strength and conditioning practices adopted by Brazilian Olympic sprint and jump coaches. Nineteen Olympic coaches (age: 50.2 ± 10.8 years; professional experience: 25.9 ± 13.1 years) completed a survey consisting of eight sections: 1) background information; 2) strength-power development; 3) speed training; 4) plyometrics; 5) flexibility training; 6) physical testing; 7) technology use; and 8) programming. It was noticed that coaches prioritized the development of explosiveness, power, and sprinting speed in their training programs, given the specific requirements of sprint and jump events. Nevertheless, unexpectedly, we observed: (1) large variations in the number of repetitions performed per set during resistance training in the off-season period, (2) a higher volume of resistance training prescribed during the competitive period (compared to other sports), and (3) infrequent use of traditional periodization models. These findings are probably related to the complex characteristics of modern competitive sports (e.g., congested competitive schedule) and the individual needs of sprinters and jumpers. Identification of training practices commonly used by leading track and field coaches may help practitioners and sport scientists create more effective research projects and training programs
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