2,127 research outputs found
Impact of truncation error and numerical scheme on the simulation of the early time growth of viscous fingering
The truncation error associated with different numerical schemes (first order finite volume, second order finite difference, control volume finite element) and meshes (fixed Cartesian, fixed structured triangular, fixed unstructured triangular and dynamically adapting unstructured triangular) is quantified in terms of apparent longitudinal and transverse diffusivity in tracer displacements and in terms of the early time growth rate of immiscible viscous fingers. The change in apparent numerical longitudinal diffusivity with element size agrees well with the predictions of Taylor series analysis of truncation error but the apparent, numerical transverse diffusivity is much lower than the longitudinal diffusivity in all cases. Truncation error reduces the growth rate of immiscible viscous fingers for wavenumbers greater than 1 in all cases but does not affect the growth rate of higher wavenumber fingers as much as would be seen if capillary pressure were present. The dynamically adapting mesh in the control volume finite element model gave similar levels of truncation error to much more computationally intensive fine resolution fixed meshes, confirming that these approaches have the potential to significantly reduce the computational effort required to model viscous fingering
Fully Latent Principal Stratification With Measurement Models
There is wide agreement on the importance of implementation data from
randomized effectiveness studies in behavioral science; however, there are few
methods available to incorporate these data into causal models, especially when
they are multivariate or longitudinal, and interest is in low-dimensional
summaries. We introduce a framework for studying how treatment effects vary
between subjects who implement an intervention differently, combining principal
stratification with latent variable measurement models; since principal strata
are latent in both treatment arms, we call it "fully-latent principal
stratification" or FLPS. We describe FLPS models including item-response-theory
measurement, show that they are feasible in a simulation study, and illustrate
them in an analysis of hint usage from a randomized study of computerized
mathematics tutors.Comment: In Submissio
Fine Needle Aspiration Cytology for Suspected Tuberculous Lymphadenitis: A Feasible Solution for a Diagnostic Dilemma in Sudan
Background: Tuberculosis is a common health problem in Sudan. Tuberculous lymphadenitis is one of the most frequent causes of lymphadenopathy. In most of these cases sputum as well as other diagnostic routine tests are negative.Objective: To evaluate the usefulness of fine needle aspiration cytology (FNAC) as a diagnostic tool for tuberculous lymphadenitis and to describe the cytomorphology of the smears.Material and Methods: This is a prospective hospital-based study conducted in Khartoum during the period from February 2011 to January 2012. Eighty five patients with a clinical suspicion of tuberculous lymphadenopathy were included. Direct smears were prepared and stained with Diff Quick (DQ) and Ziehl-Neelsen (ZN) stains.Results: of the 85 patients, 52 (61.2%) were females with 1.5:1 female to male ratio. The mean age was 31.6 years (range 2 - 70 years). The most frequent site involved was the cervical lymph node group,58 (68.2%) cases. Seventy five (88.3%) smears showed necrotizing granulomatous lymphadenitis (with or without detected epithelioid cells), and 10 (11.7%) smears were non necrotizing granulomatous lymphadenitis, only epithelioid and inflammatory cells detected. Positive smears for acid fast bacilli (AFB) by ZN stain were observed in 40 (47%) cases.Conclusion: FNAC is a simple and inexpensive method for diagnosis of tuberculous lymphadenitis, and can obviate the need for surgical excision. Combination of FNAC with ZN stain is valuable and recommended as first line diagnostic modality in suspected cases.Keywords: Fine Needle Aspiration Cytology, Tuberculous lymphadenitis, Acid fast bacilli
RNA-Containing Cytoplasmic Inclusion Bodies in Ciliated Bronchial Epithelium Months to Years after Acute Kawasaki Disease
Kawasaki Disease (KD) is the most common cause of acquired heart disease in children in developed nations. The KD etiologic agent is unknown but likely to be a ubiquitous microbe that usually causes asymptomatic childhood infection, resulting in KD only in genetically susceptible individuals. KD synthetic antibodies made from prevalent IgA gene sequences in KD arterial tissue detect intracytoplasmic inclusion bodies (ICI) resembling viral ICI in acute KD but not control infant ciliated bronchial epithelium. The prevalence of ICI in late-stage KD fatalities and in older individuals with non-KD illness should be low, unless persistent infection is common.Lung tissue from late-stage KD fatalities and non-infant controls was examined by light microscopy for the presence of ICI. Nucleic acid stains and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) were performed on tissues that were strongly positive for ICI. ICI were present in ciliated bronchial epithelium in 6/7 (86%) late-stage KD fatalities and 7/27 (26%) controls ages 9-84 years (p = 0.01). Nucleic acid stains revealed RNA but not DNA within the ICI. ICI were also identified in lung macrophages in some KD cases. TEM of bronchial epithelium and macrophages from KD cases revealed finely granular homogeneous ICI.These findings are consistent with a previously unidentified, ubiquitous RNA virus that forms ICI and can result in persistent infection in bronchial epithelium and macrophages as the etiologic agent of KD
Combining Islamic Equity Portfolios and Digital Currencies: Evidence from Portfolio Diversification
Digital currencies are unregulated and potentially have a destabilizing effect coupled with increased concerns over capital gains and losses in a high volatility environment. When added to a portfolio, this currency may have certain driving factors in terms of return and risks in the case of portfolio diversification. In this study, from the Sharia angle, we follow the position of Monzer Kahf (Fatwa on Bitcoin (by Monzer Kahf). http://lightuponlight.com/blog/fatwa-on-bitcoin-by-monzer-kahf/. Accessed 03 Feb 2020, 2017) who explained that Bitcoin is considered “Like any other currency”. It should be used under the “same conditions of exchanging currencies”. Therefore, we explore the effects of adding digital currencies to an Islamic portfolio by relying on a mean-variance efficient frontier and comparing the risk-return of portfolios with and without digital currencies for different scenarios. The results show that by adding digital currencies to Shariah-compliant portfolios, its performance improves; but this depends more or less on the increase in returns than in the reduction of total risk. Specifically, digital currencies may have a big role in bringing high risks with speculative effect in portfolio diversification. Therefore, we provide some recommendations to investors and regulators to secure these currencies in Islamic capital markets
Sub-wavelength terahertz beam profiling of a THz source via an all-optical knife-edge technique
Terahertz technologies recently emerged as outstanding candidates for a variety of applications in such sectors as security, biomedical, pharmaceutical, aero spatial, etc. Imaging the terahertz field, however, still remains a challenge, particularly when sub-wavelength resolutions are involved. Here we demonstrate an all-optical technique for the terahertz near-field imaging directly at the source plane. A thin layer (<100 nm-thickness) of photo carriers is induced on the surface of the terahertz generation crystal, which acts as an all-optical, virtual blade for terahertz near-field imaging via a knife-edge technique. Remarkably, and in spite of the fact that the proposed approach does not require any mechanical probe, such as tips or apertures, we are able to demonstrate the imaging of a terahertz source with deeply sub-wavelength features (<30 μm) directly in its emission plane
Broken symmetry states and divergent resistance in suspended bilayer graphene
Graphene [1] and its bilayer have generated tremendous excitement in the
physics community due to their unique electronic properties [2]. The intrinsic
physics of these materials, however, is partially masked by disorder, which can
arise from various sources such as ripples [3] or charged impurities [4].
Recent improvements in quality have been achieved by suspending graphene flakes
[5,6], yielding samples with very high mobilities and little charge
inhomogeneity. Here we report the fabrication of suspended bilayer graphene
devices with very little disorder. We observe fully developed quantized Hall
states at magnetic fields of 0.2 T, as well as broken symmetry states at
intermediate filling factors , , and . The
devices exhibit extremely high resistance in the state that grows
with magnetic field and scales as magnetic field divided by temperature. This
resistance is predominantly affected by the perpendicular component of the
applied field, indicating that the broken symmetry states arise from many-body
interactions.Comment: 23 pages, including 4 figures and supplementary information; accepted
to Nature Physic
Daily life stress and the cortisol awakening response : testing the anticipation hypothesis
Acknowledgments We thank Paul Stewart for his contribution to data collection and Dr Matthew Jones for programming the handheld computers. Author Contributions Conceived and designed the experiments: WS DJP. Performed the experiments: DJP. Analyzed the data: WS. Wrote the paper: WS DJP.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
The nature of localization in graphene under quantum Hall conditions
Particle localization is an essential ingredient in quantum Hall physics
[1,2]. In conventional high mobility two-dimensional electron systems Coulomb
interactions were shown to compete with disorder and to play a central role in
particle localization [3]. Here we address the nature of localization in
graphene where the carrier mobility, quantifying the disorder, is two to four
orders of magnitude smaller [4,5,6,7,8,9,10]. We image the electronic density
of states and the localized state spectrum of a graphene flake in the quantum
Hall regime with a scanning single electron transistor [11]. Our microscopic
approach provides direct insight into the nature of localization. Surprisingly,
despite strong disorder, our findings indicate that localization in graphene is
not dominated by single particle physics, but rather by a competition between
the underlying disorder potential and the repulsive Coulomb interaction
responsible for screening.Comment: 18 pages, including 5 figure
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