1,286 research outputs found
Bulk and Interfacial Shear Thinning of Immiscible Polymers
Nonequilibrium molecular dynamics simulations are used to study the shear
thinning behavior of immiscible symmetric polymer blends. The phase separated
polymers are subjected to a simple shear flow imposed by moving a wall parallel
to the fluid-fluid interface. The viscosity begins to shear thin at much lower
rates in the bulk than at the interface. The entire shear rate dependence of
the interfacial viscosity is consistent with a shorter effective chain length
that also describes the width of the interface. This is independent
of chain length and is a function only of the degree of immiscibility of
the two polymers. Changes in polymer conformation are studied as a function of
position and shear rate.Shear thinning correlates more closely with a decrease
in the component of the radius of gyration along the velocity gradient than
with elongation along the flow. At the interface, this contraction of chains is
independent of and consistent with the bulk behavior for chains of length
. The distribution of conformational changes along chains is also studied.
Central regions begin to stretch at a shear rate that decreases with increasing
, while shear induced changes at the ends of chains are independent of .Comment: 8 pages, 8 figure
Income, personality, and subjective financial well-being: the role of gender in their genetic and environmental relationships
Citation: Zyphur, M. J., Li, W. D., Zhang, Z., Arvey, R. D., & Barsky, A. P. (2015). Income, personality, and subjective financial well-being: the role of gender in their genetic and environmental relationships. Frontiers in Psychology, 6, 16. doi:10.3389/fpsyg.2015.01493Increasing levels of financial inequality prompt questions about the relationship between income and well-being. Using a twins sample from the Survey of Midlife Development in the U. S. and controlling for personality as core self-evaluations (CSE), we found that men, but not women, had higher subjective financial well-being (SFWB) when they had higher incomes. This relationship was due to 'unshared environmental' factors rather than genes, suggesting that the effect of income on SFWB is driven by unique experiences among men. Further, for women and men, we found that CSE influenced income and SFWB, and that both genetic and environmental factors explained this relationship. Given the relatively small and male-specific relationship between income and SFWB, and the determination of both income and SFWB by personality, we propose that policy makers focus on malleable factors beyond merely income in order to increase SFWB, including financial education and building self-regulatory capacity
Driving under the influence of alcohol: a sequence analysis approach
Driving under the influence of alcohol: A sequence analysis approac
Random solids and random solidification: What can be learned by exploring systems obeying permanent random constraints?
In many interesting physical settings, such as the vulcanization of rubber,
the introduction of permanent random constraints between the constituents of a
homogeneous fluid can cause a phase transition to a random solid state. In this
random solid state, particles are permanently but randomly localized in space,
and a rigidity to shear deformations emerges. Owing to the permanence of the
random constraints, this phase transition is an equilibrium transition, which
confers on it a simplicity (at least relative to the conventional glass
transition) in the sense that it is amenable to established techniques of
equilibrium statistical mechanics. In this Paper I shall review recent
developments in the theory of random solidification for systems obeying
permanent random constraints, with the aim of bringing to the fore the
similarities and differences between such systems and those exhibiting the
conventional glass transition. I shall also report new results, obtained in
collaboration with Weiqun Peng, on equilibrium correlations and
susceptibilities that signal the approach of the random solidification
transition, discussing the physical interpretation and values of these
quantities both at the Gaussian level of approximation and, via a
renormalization-group approach, beyond.Comment: Paper presented at the "Unifying Concepts in Glass Physics" workshop,
International Centre for Theoretical Physics, Trieste, Italy (September
15-18, 1999
The scaling limit of the incipient infinite cluster in high-dimensional percolation. II. Integrated super-Brownian excursion
For independent nearest-neighbour bond percolation on Z^d with d >> 6, we
prove that the incipient infinite cluster's two-point function and three-point
function converge to those of integrated super-Brownian excursion (ISE) in the
scaling limit. The proof is based on an extension of the new expansion for
percolation derived in a previous paper, and involves treating the magnetic
field as a complex variable. A special case of our result for the two-point
function implies that the probability that the cluster of the origin consists
of n sites, at the critical point, is given by a multiple of n^{-3/2}, plus an
error term of order n^{-3/2-\epsilon} with \epsilon >0. This is a strong
statement that the critical exponent delta is given by delta =2.Comment: 56 pages, 3 Postscript figures, in AMS-LaTeX, with graphicx, epic,
and xr package
Connecting the vulcanization transition to percolation
The vulcanization transition is addressed via a minimal
replica-field-theoretic model. The appropriate long-wave-length behavior of the
two- and three-point vertex functions is considered diagrammatically, to all
orders in perturbation theory, and identified with the corresponding quantities
in the Houghton-Reeve-Wallace field-theoretic approach to the percolation
critical phenomenon. Hence, it is shown that percolation theory correctly
captures the critical phenomenology of the vulcanization transition associated
with the liquid and critical states.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figure
Positive Health and Health Assets: Re-analysis of Longitudinal Datasets
Most approaches to health over the centuries have focused on the absence of illness. In contrast, we are investigating Positive Health —well-being beyond the mere absence of disease. In this article, we describe our theoretical framework and empirical work to date on Positive Health. Positive Health empirically identifies health assets by determining factors that predict health and illness over and above conventional risk factors. Biological health assets might include, for example, high heart rate variability, high levels of HDL, and cardiorespiratory fitness. Subjective health assets might include positive emotions, life satisfaction, hope, optimism, and a sense of meaning and purpose. Functional health assets might include close friends and family members; a stable marriage; meaningful work; participation in a social community; and the ability to carry out work, family, and social roles
0.1 µm InP HEMT devices and MMICs for cryogenic low noise amplifiers from X-band to W-band
We present the TRW 0.1 µm InP HEMT MMIC production technology that has been developed and used for state-of-the-art cryogenic LNA applications. The 0.1 µm InP HEMT devices typically show cutoff frequency above 200 GHz and transconductance above 1000 mS/mm. Aspects of device design and fabrication are presented which impact important parameters including the InP HEMT device gain, gate leakage current, and parasitic capacitance. One example of state-of-the-art cryogenic MMIC performance is a W-band cryogenic MMIC LNA operated at 20 degrees Kelvin that shows above 23 dB gain and a noise temperature of 30 to 40 K (0.45 to 0.6 dB noise figure) over the band of 80-105 GHz
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A NON-CLEAVABLE UmuD VARIANT THAT ACTS AS A UmuD' MIMIC
UmuD{sub 2} cleaves and removes its N-terminal 24 amino acids to form UmuD'{sub 2}, which activates UmuC for its role in UV-induced mutagenesis in E. coli. Cells with a non-cleavable UmuD exhibit essentially no UV-induced mutagenesis and are hypersensitive to killing by UV light. UmuD has been shown to bind to the beta processivity clamp (''beta'') of the replicative DNA polymerase, pol III. A possible beta-binding motif has been predicted in the same region of UmuD shown to be important for its interaction with beta. We performed alanine-scanning mutagenesis of this motif (14-TFPLF-18) in UmuD and showed that it has a moderate influence on UV-induced mutagenesis but is required for the cold sensitive phenotype caused by elevated levels of wild-type UmuD and UmuC. Surprisingly, the wild-type and the beta-binding motif variant bind to beta with similar K{sub d} values as determined by changes in tryptophan fluorescence. However, this data also implies that the single tryptophan in beta is in strikingly different environments in the presence of the wild-type versus the variant UmuD proteins, suggesting a distinct change in some aspect of the interaction with little change in its strength. Despite the fact that this novel UmuD variant is noncleavable, we find that cells harboring it exhibit phenotypes more consistent with the cleaved form UmuD', such as resistance to killing by UV light and failure to exhibit the cold sensitive phenotype. Cross-linking and chemical modification experiments indicate that the N-terminal arms of the UmuD variant are less likely to be bound to the globular domain than those of the wild-type, which may be the mechanism by which this UmuD variant acts as a UmuD' mimic
Randomly Crosslinked Macromolecular Systems: Vulcanisation Transition to and Properties of the Amorphous Solid State
As Charles Goodyear discovered in 1839, when he first vulcanised rubber, a
macromolecular liquid is transformed into a solid when a sufficient density of
permanent crosslinks is introduced at random. At this continuous equi- librium
phase transition, the liquid state, in which all macromolecules are
delocalised, is transformed into a solid state, in which a nonzero fraction of
macromolecules have spontaneously become localised. This solid state is a most
unusual one: localisation occurs about mean positions that are distributed
homogeneously and randomly, and to an extent that varies randomly from monomer
to monomer. Thus, the solid state emerging at the vulcanisation transition is
an equilibrium amorphous solid state: it is properly viewed as a solid state
that bears the same relationship to the liquid and crystalline states as the
spin glass state of certain magnetic systems bears to the paramagnetic and
ferromagnetic states, in the sense that, like the spin glass state, it is
diagnosed by a subtle order parameter.
In this review we give a detailed exposition of a theoretical approach to the
physical properties of systems of randomly, permanently crosslinked
macromolecules. Our primary focus is on the equilibrium properties of such
systems, especially in the regime of Goodyear's vulcanisation transition.Comment: Review Article, REVTEX, 58 pages, 3 PostScript figure
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