611 research outputs found

    Electrothermal flow in Dielectrophoresis of Single-Walled Carbon Nanotubes

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    We theoretically investigate the impact of the electrothermal flow on the dielectrophoretic separation of single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNT). The electrothermal flow is observed to control the motions of semiconducting SWNTs in a sizeable domain near the electrodes under typical experimental conditions, therefore helping the dielectrophoretic force to attract semiconducting SWNTs in a broader range. Moreover, with the increase of the surfactant concentration, the electrothermal flow is enhanced, and with the change of frequency, the pattern of the electrothermal flow changes. It is shown that under some typical experimental conditions of dielectrophoresis separation of SWNTs, the electrothermal flow is a dominating factor in determining the motion of SWNTs.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, Submitted to PR

    On a theorem of Kang and Liu on factorised groups

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    [EN] Kang and Liu ['On supersolvability of factorized finite groups', Bull. Math. Sci. 3 (2013), 205-210] investigate the structure of finite groups that are products of two supersoluble groups. The goal of this note is to give a correct proof of their main theorem.The first author was supported by the grant MTM2014-54707-C3-1-P from the Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad, Spain, and FEDER, European Union, and a project of Natural Science Foundation of Guangdong Province (No. 2015A030313791).Ballester-Bolinches, A.; Pedraza Aguilera, MC. (2018). On a theorem of Kang and Liu on factorised groups. Bulletin of the Australian Mathematical Society. 97(1):54-56. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0004972717000363S5456971Ezquerro, L. M., & Soler-Escrivà, X. (2003). On MutuallyM-Permutable Products of Finite Groups. Communications in Algebra, 31(4), 1949-1960. doi:10.1081/agb-120018515Kang, P., & Liu, Q. (2013). On supersolvability of fatorized finite groups. Bulletin of Mathematical Sciences, 3(2), 205-210. doi:10.1007/s13373-013-0032-4Ballester-Bolinches, A., Esteban-Romero, R., & Asaad, M. (2010). Products of Finite Groups. de Gruyter Expositions in Mathematics. doi:10.1515/9783110220612Ballester-Bolinches, A., Cossey, J., & Pedraza-Aguilera, M. C. (2001). ON PRODUCTS OF FINITE SUPERSOLUBLE GROUPS. Communications in Algebra, 29(7), 3145-3152. doi:10.1081/agb-501

    Influence of Elastic Strains on the Adsorption Process in Porous Materials. An Experimental Approach

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    The experimental results presented in this paper show the influence of the elastic deformation of porous solids on the adsorption process. With p+-type porous silicon formed on highly boron doped (100) Si single crystal, we can make identical porous layers, either supported by or detached from the substrate. The pores are perpendicular to the substrate. The adsorption isotherms corresponding to these two layers are distinct. In the region preceding capillary condensation, the adsorbed amount is lower for the membrane than for the supported layer and the hysteresis loop is observed at higher pressure. We attribute this phenomenon to different elastic strains undergone by the two layers during the adsorption process. For the supported layer, the planes perpendicular to the substrate are constrained to have the same interatomic spacing as that of the substrate so that the elastic deformation is unilateral, at an atomic scale, and along the pore axis. When the substrate is removed, tridimensional deformations occur and the porous system can find a new configuration for the solid atoms which decreases the free energy of the system adsorbate-solid. This results in a decrease of the adsorbed amount and in an increase of the condensation pressure. The isotherms for the supported porous layers shift toward that of the membrane when the layer thickness is increased from 30 to 100 microns. This is due to the relaxation of the stress exerted by the substrate as a result of the breaking of Si-Si bonds at the interface between the substrate and the porous layer. The membrane is the relaxed state of the supported layer.Comment: Accepted in Langmui

    Mechanisms Underlying Heterogeneous Ca2+ Sparklet Activity in Arterial Smooth Muscle

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    In arterial smooth muscle, single or small clusters of Ca2+ channels operate in a high probability mode, creating sites of nearly continual Ca2+ influx (called “persistent Ca2+ sparklet” sites). Persistent Ca2+ sparklet activity varies regionally within any given cell. At present, the molecular identity of the Ca2+ channels underlying Ca2+ sparklets and the mechanisms that give rise to their spatial heterogeneity remain unclear. Here, we used total internal reflection fluorescence (TIRF) microscopy to directly investigate these issues. We found that tsA-201 cells expressing L-type Cavα1.2 channels recapitulated the general features of Ca2+ sparklets in cerebral arterial myocytes, including amplitude of quantal event, voltage dependencies, gating modalities, and pharmacology. Furthermore, PKCα activity was required for basal persistent Ca2+ sparklet activity in arterial myocytes and tsA-201 cells. In arterial myocytes, inhibition of protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) and 2B (PP2B; calcineurin) increased Ca2+ influx by evoking new persistent Ca2+ sparklet sites and by increasing the activity of previously active sites. The actions of PP2A and PP2B inhibition on Ca2+ sparklets required PKC activity, indicating that these phosphatases opposed PKC-mediated phosphorylation. Together, these data unequivocally demonstrate that persistent Ca2+ sparklet activity is a fundamental property of L-type Ca2+ channels when associated with PKC. Our findings support a novel model in which the gating modality of L-type Ca2+ channels vary regionally within a cell depending on the relative activities of nearby PKCα, PP2A, and PP2B

    In My View

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    Aip3p/Bud6p, a yeast actin-interacting protein that is involved in morphogenesis and the selection of bipolar budding sites.

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    A search for Saccharomyces cerevisiae proteins that interact with actin in the two-hybrid system and a screen for mutants that affect the bipolar budding pattern identified the same gene, AIP3/BUD6. This gene is not essential for mitotic growth but is necessary for normal morphogenesis. MATa/alpha daughter cells lacking Aip3p place their first buds normally at their distal poles but choose random sites for budding in subsequent cell cycles. This suggests that actin and associated proteins are involved in placing the bipolar positional marker at the division site but not at the distal tip of the daughter cell. In addition, although aip3 mutant cells are not obviously defective in the initial polarization of the cytoskeleton at the time of bud emergence, they appear to lose cytoskeletal polarity as the bud enlarges, resulting in the formation of cells that are larger and rounder than normal. aip3 mutant cells also show inefficient nuclear migration and nuclear division, defects in the organization of the secretory system, and abnormal septation, all defects that presumably reflect the involvement of Aip3p in the organization and/or function of the actin cytoskeleton. The sequence of Aip3p is novel but contains a predicted coiled-coil domain near its C terminus that may mediate the observed homo-oligomerization of the protein. Aip3p shows a distinctive localization pattern that correlates well with its likely sites of action: it appears at the presumptive bud site prior to bud emergence, remains near the tips of small bund, and forms a ring (or pair of rings) in the mother-bud neck that is detectable early in the cell cycle but becomes more prominent prior to cytokinesis. Surprisingly, the localization of Aip3p does not appear to require either polarized actin or the septin proteins of the neck filaments

    Prefactorized subgroups in pairwise mutually permutable products

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    The final publication is available at Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10231-012-0257-yWe continue here our study of pairwise mutually and pairwise totally permutable products. We are looking for subgroups of the product in which the given factorization induces a factorization of the subgroup. In the case of soluble groups, it is shown that a prefactorized Carter subgroup and a prefactorized system normalizer exist.Aless stringent property have F-residual, F-projector and F-normalizer for any saturated formation F including the supersoluble groups.The first and fourth authors have been supported by the grant MTM2010-19938-C03-01 from MICINN (Spain).Ballester-Bolinches, A.; Beidleman, J.; Heineken, H.; Pedraza Aguilera, MC. (2013). Prefactorized subgroups in pairwise mutually permutable products. Annali di Matematica Pura ed Applicata. 192(6):1043-1057. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10231-012-0257-yS104310571926Amberg B., Franciosi S., de Giovanni F.: Products of Groups. Clarendon Press, Oxford (1992)Ballester-Bolinches, A., Pedraza-Aguilera, M.C., Pérez-Ramos, M.D.: Totally and Mutually Permutable Products of Finite Groups, Groups St. Andrews 1997 in Bath I. London Math. Soc. Lecture Note Ser. 260, 65–68. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1999)Ballester-Bolinches A., Pedraza-Aguilera M.C., Pérez-Ramos M.D.: On finite products of totally permutable groups. Bull. Aust. Math. Soc. 53, 441–445 (1996)Ballester-Bolinches A., Pedraza-Aguilera M.C., Pérez-Ramos M.D.: Finite groups which are products of pairwise totally permutable subgroups. Proc. Edinb. Math. Soc. 41, 567–572 (1998)Ballester-Bolinches A., Beidleman J.C., Heineken H., Pedraza-Aguilera M.C.: On pairwise mutually permutable products. Forum Math. 21, 1081–1090 (2009)Ballester-Bolinches A., Beidleman J.C., Heineken H., Pedraza-Aguilera M.C.: Local classes and pairwise mutually permutable products of finite groups. Documenta Math. 15, 255–265 (2010)Beidleman J.C., Heineken H.: Mutually permutable subgroups and group classes. Arch. Math. 85, 18–30 (2005)Beidleman J.C., Heineken H.: Group classes and mutually permutable products. J. Algebra 297, 409–416 (2006)Carocca A.: p-supersolvability of factorized groups. Hokkaido Math. J. 21, 395–403 (1992)Carocca, A., Maier, R.: Theorems of Kegel-Wielandt Type Groups St. Andrews 1997 in Bath I. London Math. Soc. Lecture Note Ser. 260, 195–201. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, (1999)Doerk K., Hawkes T.: Finite Soluble Groups. Walter De Gruyter, Berlin (1992)Maier R., Schmid P.: The embedding of quasinormal subgroups in finite groups. Math. Z. 131, 269–272 (1973

    On sigma-subnormality criteria in finite sigma-soluble groups

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    [EN] Let sigma = {sigma(i) : i is an element of I} be a partition of the set P of all prime numbers. A subgroup X of a finite group G is called sigma-subnormal in G if there is a chain of subgroups X = X-0 subset of X-1 subset of center dot center dot center dot subset of X-n = G where for every j = 1,..., n the subgroup X j-1 is normal in X j or X j /CoreX j ( X j-1) is a si -group for some i. I. In the special case that s is the partition of P into sets containing exactly one prime each, the sigma-subnormality reduces to the familiar case of subnormality. In this paper some sigma-subnormality criteria for subgroups of s-soluble groups, or groups in which every chief factor is a sigma(i)-group, for some sigma(i) sigma s, are showed.The first and third authors are supported by the grant PGC2018-095140-B-I00 from the Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovacion y Universidades and the Agencia Estatal de Investigacion, Spain, and FEDER, European Union and Prometeo/2017/057 of Generalitat (Valencian Community, Spain). The second author was supported by the State Program of Science Researchers of the Republic of Belarus (Grant 19-54 "Convergence-2020").Ballester-Bolinches, A.; Kamornikov, SF.; Pedraza Aguilera, MC.; Pérez-Calabuig, V. (2020). On sigma-subnormality criteria in finite sigma-soluble groups. Revista de la Real Academia de Ciencias Exactas Físicas y Naturales Serie A Matemáticas. 114(2):1-9. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13398-020-00824-4S191142Amberg, B., Franciosi, S., De Giovanni, F.: Products of Groups. Oxford Mathematical Monographs. Clarendon Press, Oxford (1992)Ballester-Bolinches, A., Ezquerro, L.M.: Classes of Finite Groups, Vol. 584 of Mathematics and its Applications. Springer, New York (2006)Ballester-Bolinches, A., Kamornikov, S.F., Pedraza-Aguilera, M.C., Yi, X.: On -subnormal subgroups of factorised finite groups (Preprint)Casolo, C.: Subnormality in factorizable finite soluble groups. Arch. Math. 57, 12–13 (1991)Doerk, K., Hawkes, T.: Finite Soluble Groups. Walter De Gruyter, Berlin (1992)Fumagalli, Francesco: On subnormality criteria for subgroups in finite groups. J. Lond. Math. Soc. 76(2), 237–252 (2007)Kamornikov, S.F., Shemetkova, O.L.: On F{{\cal{F}}}-subnormal subgroups of a finite factorised group. Probl. Phys. Math. Tech. 1, 61–63 (2018)Khukhro, E.I., Mazurov, V.D.: Unsolved Problems in Group Theory. The Kourovka notebook. Institut Matematiki SO RAN, Novosibirsk, No. 19 (2018)Lennox, J.C., Stonehewer, S.E.: Subnormal Subgroups of Groups. Clarendon Press, Oxford (1987)Maier, R.: Um problema da teoria dos subgrupos subnormais. Bol. Soc. Bras. Mat. 8(2), 127–130 (1977)Maier, R., Sidki, R.: A note on subnormality in factorizable finite groups. Arch. Math. 42, 97–101 (1984)Skiba, A.N.: A generalization of a Hall theorem. J. Algebra Appl. 15(4), 13 (2016)Skiba, A.N.: On σ\sigma -subnormal and σ\sigma -permutable subgroups of finite groups. J. Algebra 436, 1–16 (2015)Skiba, A.N.: On -properties of finite groups I. Probl. Phys. Math. Tech. 4, 89–96 (2014)Skiba, A.N.: On -properties of finite groups II. Probl. Phys. Math. Tech. 3(24), 70–83 (2015)Skiba, A.N.: On some arithmetic properties of finite groups. Note Mat. 36, 65–89 (2016)Wielandt, H.: Subnormalität in faktorisierten endlichen Grupppen. J. Algebra 69, 305–311 (1981
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