1,660 research outputs found
Detection of differential rotation in psi Cap with profile analysis
We report detection of differential rotation on the F5 dwarf psi Cap using
line profile analysis. The Fourier transform of both FeI lambda 5775 and SiI
lambda 5772 are used to obtain a projected rotational velocity of v sini =
(42+-1)km/s. Modelling of the Fourier transformed profiles shows that the
combined effects of equatorial velocity, inclination and differential rotation
dominate the line profile while limb darkening and turbulence velocities have
only minor effects. Rigid rotation is shown to be inconsistent with the
measured profiles. Modelling the line profiles analogous to solar differential
rotation we find a differential rotation parameter of alpha = 0.15+-0.1
(15+-10%) comparable to the solar case. To our knowledge this is the first
successful measurement of differential rotation through line profile analysis.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in A&A Letter
Particle monolayer assembly in evaporating salty colloidal droplets
Ring-shaped deposits can be often found after a droplet evaporates on a
substrate. If the fluid in the droplet is a pure liquid and its contact line
remains pinned during the process, the mechanism behind such ring-shaped
deposition is the well-known coffee-stain effect. However, adding small amounts
of salt to such a droplet can change the internal flow dramatically and
consequently change the deposition mechanism. Due to an increase of surface
tension in the contact line region, a Marangoni flow arises which is directed
from the apex of the droplet towards the contact line. As a result, particles
arrive at the contact line following the liquid-air interface of the droplet.
Interestingly, the deposit is also ring-shaped, as in the classical
coffee-stain effect, but with a radically different morphology: particles form
a monolayer along the liquid-air interface of the droplet, instead of a compact
three-dimensional deposit. Using confocal microscopy, we study
particle-per-particle how the assembly of the colloidal monolayer occurs during
the evaporation of droplets for different initial concentration of sodium
chloride and initial particle dilution. Our results are compared with classical
diffusion-limited deposition models and open up an interesting scenario of
deposits via interfacial particle assembly, which can easily yield homogeneous
depositions by manipulating the initial salt and particle concentration in the
droplet.Comment: 15 pages, 12 figure
Diffusion due to the Beam-Beam Interaction and Fluctuating Fields in Hadron Colliders
Random fluctuations in the tune, beam offsets and beam size in the presence
of the beam-beam interaction are shown to lead to significant particle
diffusion and emittance growth in hadron colliders. We find that far from
resonances high frequency noise causes the most diffusion while near resonances
low frequency noise is responsible for the large emittance growth observed.
Comparison of different fluctuations shows that offset fluctuations between the
beams causes the largest diffusion for particles in the beam core.Comment: 5 pages, 3 postscript figure
Turning drops into bubbles: Elastic cavitation by diffusion
Some members of the vegetal kingdom can achieve surprisingly fast movements
making use of a clever combination of evaporation, elasticity and cavitation.
In this process, enthalpic energy is transformed into elastic energy and
suddenly released in a cavitation event which produces kinetic energy. Here we
study this uncommon energy transformation by a model system: a droplet in an
elastic medium shrinks slowly by diffusion and eventually transforms into a
bubble by a rapid cavitation event. The experiments reveal the cavity dynamics
over the extremely disparate timescales of the process, spanning 9 orders of
magnitude. We model the initial shrinkage as a classical diffusive process,
while the sudden bubble growth and oscillations are described using an
inertial-(visco)elastic model, in excellent agreement with the experiments.
Such a model system could serve as a new paradigm for motile synthetic
materials.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
Renewable biocatalyst for swine manure treatment and mitigation of odorous VOCs, ammonia and hydrogen sulfide emissions: Review
Comprehensive control of odors, hydrogen sulfide (H2S), ammonia (NH3), and greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions associated with swine production is a critical need. The objective of this paper is to review the use of soybean peroxidase (SBP) and peroxides as a manure additive to mitigate emissions of odorous volatile organic compounds (VOC), NH3, H2S, and GHGs. Soybean peroxidase plus peroxide (SBPP) was tested as a mitigation technology for swine manure emissions on three scales (lab, pilot and farm). Several laboratory scale experiments were completed to assess SBPP dosages and type of oxygen source mixed into swine manure and surface application. A pilot scale experiment was done with surface application of SBPP and multiple dosages to observe scale up effects. Finally, a farm scale trial was completed to assess the SBPP treatment to a swine manure surface under a fully slatted barn floor. The ‘gated‘ approach to testing SBPP from lab- to pilot- and finally the farm-scale was appropriate and allowed for controlled experiments with sufficient replication. This approach resulted in gradual decrease of the dose of SBP, decreasing the cost of treatment, increase of treatment longevity, inclusion of many key gases of concern to the experimental protocol, and finally testing the treatment on farm-scale. To date, the farm-scale results indicate that SBPP can be effective in mitigating many important odorous gas emissions without increasing GHGs. Specifically, a 2.28 kg m-2 SBP dose mixed with 4.2% CaO2 added by weight and added to manure surface resulted in significant reductions in gaseous emissions of NH3(21.7%), H2S (79.7%), n-butyric acid (37.2%), valeric acid (47.7%), isovaleric acid (39.3%), indole (31.2%), and skatole (43.5%). Emissions of DMDS/MT increased by 30.6%. Emissions of p-cresol were reduced by 14.4% but were not statistically significant. There were no significant changes to the GHG emissions of CH4, CO2 and N2O. The treatment cost (SBP+CaO2) was $1.45 per marketed pig of which the cost of SBP was only ~40%. Thus, further research is needed to optimize the dose and the cost of catalysts
Left atrial diverticula: Innocent bystanders or wolves in sheep's clothing?
Introduction: The finding of left atria diverticula (LAD) on cardiac computed tomography images obtained from patients with atrial fibrillation (AF) referred for pulmonary vein isolation is not uncommon. Prior studies reporting on LAD do not always provide definitions of LAD resulting in confusion with other anatomical structures such as left atrial accessory appendages (LAAA) and atrial aneurysms. The aim of this review is to identify an accurate definition of LAD and to describe distinctive properties between LAD and other left atrial structures, such as LAAA and aneurysms. Also, the relation between LAD and development of atrial tachyarrhythmias is discussed. Methods: PubMed was searched for studies reporting on atrial aneurysms, left atrial diverticula, left atrial accessory appendages and atrial congenital aneurysms, resulting in 36 papers. Results: LAD can be distinguished from LAAA by taking into account embryologic origins of the left atrium and their locations, resulting in the following definitions: (a) LAAA are contractile, trabeculated structures with circumscriptive ostia and narrow necks, originating from the primitive atria, (b) LAD are contractile, sac like structures with either smooth or trabeculated inner surfaces, circumscriptive ostia, narrow necks, and variable morphologies, originating from the embryologic common pulmonary vein, that incorporates into the LA, and (c) atrial aneurysms are non-contractile structures with wide necks and sac like bodies. There are no differences in prevalences of LAD between patients with sinus rhythm and AF. Conclusion: The pathophysiology of LAD is not yet fully understood. It is unlikely, that LAD are related to the development of atrial tachycardia's and AF by either being a source of ectopic activity or being part of an arrhythmogenic substrate. No differences in LAD prevalences between patients with sinus rhythm and AF have been found. Thus, it is unlikely that LAD could potentially be wolves in sheep's clothing
SigWinR; the SigWin-detector updated and ported to R
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Our SigWin-detector discovers significantly enriched windows of (genomic) elements in any sequence of values (genes or other genomic elements in a DNA sequence) in a fast and reproducible way. However, since it is grid based, only (life) scientists with access to the grid can use this tool. Therefore and on request, we have developed the SigWinR package which makes the SigWin-detector available to a much wider audience. At the same time, we have introduced several improvements to its algorithm as well as its functionality, based on the feedback of SigWin-detector end users.</p> <p>Findings</p> <p>To allow usage of the SigWin-detector on a desktop computer, we have rewritten it as a package for R: SigWinR. R is a free and widely used multi platform software environment for statistical computing and graphics. The package can be installed and used on all platforms for which R is available. The improvements involve: a visualization of the input-sequence values supporting the interpretation of Ridgeograms; a visualization allowing for an easy interpretation of enriched or depleted regions in the sequence using windows of pre-defined size; an option that allows the analysis of circular sequences, which results in rectangular Ridgeograms; an application to identify regions of co-altered gene expression (ROCAGEs) with a real-life biological use-case; adaptation of the algorithm to allow analysis of non-regularly sampled data using a constant window size in physical space without resampling the data. To achieve this, support for analysis of windows with an even number of elements was added.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>By porting the SigWin-detector as an R package, SigWinR, improving its algorithm and functionality combined with adequate performance, we have made SigWin-detector more useful as well as more easily accessible to scientists without a grid infrastructure.</p
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