182 research outputs found
Instability of dilute granular flow on rough slope
We study numerically the stability of granular flow on a rough slope in
collisional flow regime in the two-dimension. We examine the density dependence
of the flowing behavior in low density region, and demonstrate that the
particle collisions stabilize the flow above a certain density in the parameter
region where a single particle shows an accelerated behavior. Within this
parameter regime, however, the uniform flow is only metastable and is shown to
be unstable against clustering when the particle density is not high enough.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figures, submitted to J. Phys. Soc. Jpn.; Fig. 2 replaced;
references added; comments added; misprints correcte
Granular Flows in a Rotating Drum: the Scaling Law between Velocity and Thickness of the Flow
The flow of dry granular material in a half-filled rotating drum is studied.
The thickness of the flowing zone is measured for several rotation speeds, drum
sizes and beads sizes (size ratio between drum and beads ranging from 47 to
7400). Varying the rotation speed, a scaling law linking mean velocity vs
thickness of the flow, , is deduced for each couple (beads, drum).
The obtained exponent is not always equal to 1, value previously reported
in a drum, but varies with the geometry of the system. For small size ratios,
exponents higher than 1 are obtained due to a saturation of the flowing zone
thickness. The exponent of the power law decreases with the size ratio, leading
to exponents lower than 1 for high size ratios. These exponents imply that the
velocity gradient of a dry granular flow in a rotating drum is not constant.
More fundamentally, these results show that the flow of a granular material in
a rotating drum is very sensible to the geometry, and that the deduction of the
``rheology'' of a granular medium flowing in such a geometry is not obvious
Diphasic non-local model for granular surface flows
Considering recent results revealing the existence of multi-scale rigid
clusters of grains embedded in granular surface flows, i.e. flows down an
erodible bed, we describe here the surface flows rheology through a non-local
constitutive law. The predictions of the resulting model are compared
quantitatively to experimental results: The model succeeds to account for the
counter-intuitive shape of the velocity profile observed in experiments, i.e. a
velocity profile decreasing exponentially with depth in the static phase and
remaining linear in the flowing layer with a velocity gradient independent of
both the flowing layer thickness, the angle between the flow and the
horizontal, and the coefficient of restitution of the grains. Moreover, the
scalings observed in rotating drums are recovered, at least for small rotating
speed.Comment: 7 pages, submitted to Europhys. Let
Thick surface flows of granular materials: The effect of the velocity profile on the avalanche amplitude
A few years ago, Bouchaud al. introduced a phenomenological model to describe
surface flows of granular materials [J. Phys. Fr. I, 4, 1383 (1994)]. According
to this model, one can distinguish between a static phase and a rolling phase
that are able to exchange grains through an erosion/accretion mechanism.
Boutreux et al. [Phys. Rev. E, 58, 4692 (1998)] proposed a modification of the
exchange term in order to describe thicker flows where saturation effects are
present. However, these approaches assumed that the downhill convection
velocity of the grains is constant inside the rolling phase, a hypothesis that
is not verified experimentally. In this article, we therefore modify the above
models by introducing a velocity profile in the flow, and study the physical
consequences of this modification in the simple situation of an avalanche in an
open cell. We present a complete analytical description of the avalanche in the
case of a linear velocity profile, and generalize the results for a power-law
dependency. We show, in particular, that the amplitude of the avalanche is
strongly affected by the velocity profile.Comment: 7 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Estrategias didácticas aplicadas en enseñanza de las actividades prácticas de asignaturas relacionadas con la macroscopia del cuerpo humano, en distintas carreras de la Facultad de Ciencias Médicas de la UNLP
La Facultad de Ciencias Médicas de la UNLP forma profesionales en diferentes campos de la salud. En los planes de estudio de las carreras, que forman a dichos profesionales, se encuentran como asignaturas básicas las Ciencias Morfológicas. La AnatomÃa se instala como asignatura, del área de las Ciencias Básicas, en las distintas carreras de formación de las Ciencias de la Salud. Este trabajo tiene como intención referir la percepción de los docentes, de los trabajos prácticos de AnatomÃa, de distintos programas de AnatomÃa de diferentes carreras de la Facultad de Ciencias Medicas, incluyendo la EURHES.Facultad de Ciencias Médica
Estrategias didácticas aplicadas en enseñanza de las actividades prácticas de asignaturas relacionadas con la macroscopia del cuerpo humano, en distintas carreras de la Facultad de Ciencias Médicas de la UNLP
La Facultad de Ciencias Médicas de la UNLP forma profesionales en diferentes campos de la salud. En los planes de estudio de las carreras, que forman a dichos profesionales, se encuentran como asignaturas básicas las Ciencias Morfológicas. La AnatomÃa se instala como asignatura, del área de las Ciencias Básicas, en las distintas carreras de formación de las Ciencias de la Salud. Este trabajo tiene como intención referir la percepción de los docentes, de los trabajos prácticos de AnatomÃa, de distintos programas de AnatomÃa de diferentes carreras de la Facultad de Ciencias Medicas, incluyendo la EURHES.Facultad de Ciencias Médica
Fluorescence polarisation activity-based protein profiling for the identification of deoxynojirimycin-type inhibitors selective for lysosomal retaining alpha- and beta-glucosidases
Lysosomal exoglycosidases are responsible for processing endocytosed glycans from the non-reducing end to produce the corresponding monosaccharides. Genetic mutations in a particular lysosomal glycosidase may result in accumulation of its particular substrate, which may cause diverse lysosomal storage disorders. The identification of effective therapeutic modalities to treat these diseases is a major yet poorly realised objective in biomedicine. One common strategy comprises the identification of effective and selective competitive inhibitors that may serve to stabilize the proper folding of the mutated enzyme, either during maturation and trafficking to, or residence in, endo-lysosomal compartments. The discovery of such inhibitors is greatly aided by effective screening assays, the development of which is the focus of the here-presented work. We developed and applied fluorescent activity-based probes reporting on either human GH30 lysosomal glucosylceramidase (GBA1, a retaining & beta;-glucosidase) or GH31 lysosomal retaining & alpha;-glucosidase (GAA). FluoPol-ABPP screening of our in-house 358-member iminosugar library yielded compound classes selective for either of these enzymes. In particular, we identified a class of N-alkyldeoxynojirimycins that inhibit GAA, but not GBA1, and that may form the starting point for the development of pharmacological chaperone therapeutics for the lysosomal glycogen storage disease that results from genetic deficiency in GAA: Pompe disease.NWOChemThemMedical BiochemistryBio-organic Synthesi
Characterization of street food consumption in palermo: possible effects on health
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Street Food (SF) consists of out-of-home food consumption and has old, historical roots with complex social-economic and cultural implications. Despite the emergence of modern fast food, traditional SF persists worldwide, but the relationship of SF consumption with overall health, well-being, and obesity is unknown.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>This is an observational, cross-sectional study. The study was performed in Palermo, the largest town of Sicily, Italy. Two groups were identified: consumers of SF (n = 687) and conventional restaurant food (RES) consumers (n = 315). Study subjects answered a questionnaire concerning their health conditions, nutritional preferences, frequency of consumption of SF and a score relative to SF consumption ranging from 0 to 20 was calculated.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Body mass index (BMI, kg/m<sup>2</sup>) was significantly and independently correlated with the score of street food consumption (r = 0,103; p < 0.002). The prevalence of different diseases, including hypertension and type 2 diabetes, and the use of medications did not differ between the two groups. Milza (a sandwich stuffed with thin slice of bovine spleen and lung) consumers had a significantly higher prevalence of hypertension (12.2% vs 6.2% in non consumers; p < 0.005) and in this subgroup the use of anti-hypertensive drugs was inversely correlated with the frequency of milza consumption (r = 0.11; P = 0.010).</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>This study suggests that SF consumption in Palermo is associated with a higher BMI and higher prevalence of hypertension in milza consumers. Further studies should evaluate whether frequent SF consumers have unfavourable metabolic and cardiovascular profile.</p
Static Magnetic Field Exposure Reproduces Cellular Effects of the Parkinson's Disease Drug Candidate ZM241385
This study was inspired by coalescing evidence that magnetic therapy may be a viable treatment option for certain diseases. This premise is based on the ability of moderate strength fields (i.e., 0.1 to 1 Tesla) to alter the biophysical properties of lipid bilayers and in turn modulate cellular signaling pathways. In particular, previous results from our laboratory (Wang et al., BMC Genomics, 10, 356 (2009)) established that moderate strength static magnetic field (SMF) exposure altered cellular endpoints associated with neuronal function and differentiation. Building on this background, the current paper investigated SMF by focusing on the adenosine A(2A) receptor (A(2A)R) in the PC12 rat adrenal pheochromocytoma cell line that displays metabolic features of Parkinson's disease (PD).SMF reproduced several responses elicited by ZM241385, a selective A(2A)R antagonist, in PC12 cells including altered calcium flux, increased ATP levels, reduced cAMP levels, reduced nitric oxide production, reduced p44/42 MAPK phosphorylation, inhibited proliferation, and reduced iron uptake. SMF also counteracted several PD-relevant endpoints exacerbated by A(2A)R agonist CGS21680 in a manner similar to ZM241385; these include reduction of increased expression of A(2A)R, reversal of altered calcium efflux, dampening of increased adenosine production, reduction of enhanced proliferation and associated p44/42 MAPK phosphorylation, and inhibition of neurite outgrowth.When measured against multiple endpoints, SMF elicited qualitatively similar responses as ZM241385, a PD drug candidate. Provided that the in vitro results presented in this paper apply in vivo, SMF holds promise as an intriguing non-invasive approach to treat PD and potentially other neurological disorders
Tras los pasos de la SÃlfide. Imaginarios españoles del ballet romántico a la danza moderna
La publicación que tiene la persona lectora entre sus manos realiza un recorrido de cien años de historia de la danza, un camino que toma como punto de partida la cultura visual del Romanticismo y que se ramifica fuera del ámbito geográfico de nuestro paÃs, analizando los rasgos que definen y construyen la danza española y cómo estos se difundieron en los bailes en el extranjero.Las investigaciones contenidas en este libro son resultado del proyecto Tras los pasos de la SÃlfide. Una historia de la danza en España, 1836-1936 (PGC2018-093710-A-I00)Peer reviewe
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