1,032 research outputs found
Rossby waves and -effect
Rossby waves drifting in the azimuthal direction are a common feature at the
onset of thermal convective instability in a rapidly rotating spherical shell.
They can also result from the destabilization of a Stewartson shear layer
produced by differential rotation as expected in the liquid sodium experiment
(DTS) working in Grenoble, France. A usual way to explain why Rossby waves can
participate to the dynamo process goes back to Busse (1975). In his picture,
the flow geometry is a cylindrical array of parallel rolls aligned with the
rotation axis. The axial flow component (the component parallel to the rotation
axis) is (i) maximum in the middle of each roll and changes its sign from one
roll to the next. It is produced by the Ekman pumping at the fluid containing
shell boundary. The corresponding dynamo mechanism can be explained in terms of
an -tensor with non-zero coefficients on the diagonal. In rapidly
rotating objects like the Earth's core (or in a fast rotating experiment),
Rossby waves occur in the limit of small Ekman number (). In
that case, the main source of the axial flow component is not the Ekman pumping
but rather the ``geometrical slope effect'' due to the spherical shape of the
fluid containing shell. This implies that the axial flow component is (ii)
maximum at the borders of the rolls and not at the centers. If assumed to be
stationary, such rolls would lead to zero coefficients on the diagonal of the
-tensor, making the dynamo probably less efficient if possible at all.
Actually, the rolls are drifting as a wave, and we show that this drift implies
non--zero coefficients on the diagonal of the -tensor. These new
coefficients are in essence very different from the ones obtained in case (i)
and cannot be interpreted in terms of the heuristic picture of Busse (1975)
Kinetics of Particles Adsorption Processes Driven by Diffusion
The kinetics of the deposition of colloidal particles onto a solid surface is
analytically studied. We take into account both the diffusion of particles from
the bulk as well as the geometrical aspects of the layer of adsorbed particles.
We derive the first kinetic equation for the coverage of the surface (a
generalized Langmuir equation) whose predictions are in agreement with recent
simulation results where diffusion of particles from the bulk is explicitly
considered.Comment: 4 page
Histogram Reweighting Method for Dynamic Properties
The histogram reweighting technique, widely used to analyze Monte Carlo data,
is shown to be applicable to dynamic properties obtained from Molecular
Dynamics simulations. The theory presented here is based on the fact that the
correlation functions in systems in thermodynamic equilibrium are averages over
initial conditions of functions of the trajectory of the system in phase-space,
the latter depending on the volume, the total number of particles and the
classical Hamiltonian. Thus, the well-known histogram reweighting method can
almost straightforwardly be applied to reconstruct the probability distribution
of initial states at different thermodynamic conditions, without extra
computational effort. Correlation functions and transport coefficients are
obtained with this method from few simulation data sets.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Drug-associated histiocytoid Sweet’s syndrome: a true neutrophilic maturation arrest variant
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/73962/1/j.1600-0560.2007.00780.x.pd
Dissipative Particle Dynamics with Energy Conservation
The stochastic differential equations for a model of dissipative particle
dynamics with both total energy and total momentum conservation in the
particle-particle interactions are presented. The corresponding Fokker-Planck
equation for the evolution of the probability distribution for the system is
deduced together with the corresponding fluctuation-dissipation theorems
ensuring that the ab initio chosen equilibrium probability distribution for the
relevant variables is a stationary solution. When energy conservation is
included, the system can sustain temperature gradients and heat flow can be
modeled.Comment: 7 pages, submitted to Europhys. Let
Particle-Based Mesoscale Hydrodynamic Techniques
Dissipative particle dynamics (DPD) and multi-particle collision (MPC)
dynamics are powerful tools to study mesoscale hydrodynamic phenomena
accompanied by thermal fluctuations. To understand the advantages of these
types of mesoscale simulation techniques in more detail, we propose new two
methods, which are intermediate between DPD and MPC -- DPD with a multibody
thermostat (DPD-MT), and MPC-Langevin dynamics (MPC-LD). The key features are
applying a Langevin thermostat to the relative velocities of pairs of particles
or multi-particle collisions, and whether or not to employ collision cells. The
viscosity of MPC-LD is derived analytically, in very good agreement with the
results of numerical simulations.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures, 1 tabl
Visualizing Diffusion Tensor Images of the Mouse Spinal Cord
Within biological systems water molecules undergo continuous stochastic Brownian motion. The rate of this diffusion can give clues to the structure of underlying tissues. In some tissues the rate is anisotropic - faster in some directions than others. Diffusion-rate images are second-order tensor fields and can be calculated from diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance images. A 2D diffusion tensor image (DTI) and an associated anatomical scalar field, created during the tensor calculation, define seven dependent values at each spatial location. Understanding the interrelationships among these values is necessary to understand the data. We present two new methods for visually representing DTIs. The first method displays an array of ellipsoids where the shape of each ellipsoid represents one tensor value. The novel aspect of this representation is that the ellipsoids are all normalized to approximately the same size so that they can be displayed in context. The second method uses concepts from oil painting to represent the seven-valued data with multiple layers of varying brush strokes. Both methods successfully display most or all of the information in DTIs and provide exploratory methods for understanding them. The ellipsoid method has a simpler interpretation and explanation than the painting-motivated method; the painting-motivated method displays more of the information and is easier to read quantitatively. We demonstrate the methods on images of the mouse spinal cord. The visualizations show significant differences between spinal cords from mice suffering from Experimental Allergic Encephalomyelitis (EAE) and spinal cords from wild-type mice. The differences are consistent with pathology differences shown histologically and suggest that our new non-invasive imaging methodology and visualization of the results could have early diagnostic value for neurodegenerative diseases
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