1,709 research outputs found
Macroscopic Discontinuous Shear Thickening vs Local Shear Jamming in Cornstarch
We study the emergence of discontinuous shear-thickening (DST) in cornstarch,
by combining macroscopic rheometry with local Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)
measurements. We bring evidence that macroscopic DST is observed only when the
flow separates into a low-density flowing and a high-density jammed region. In
the shear-thickened steady state, the local rheology in the flowing region, is
not DST but, strikingly, is often shear-thinning. Our data thus show that the
stress jump measured during DST, in cornstach, does not capture a secondary,
high-viscosity branch of the local steady rheology, but results from the
existence of a shear jamming limit at volume fractions quite significantly
below random close packing.Comment: To be published in PR
Systematic Topology Analysis and Generation Using Degree Correlations
We present a new, systematic approach for analyzing network topologies. We
first introduce the dK-series of probability distributions specifying all
degree correlations within d-sized subgraphs of a given graph G. Increasing
values of d capture progressively more properties of G at the cost of more
complex representation of the probability distribution. Using this series, we
can quantitatively measure the distance between two graphs and construct random
graphs that accurately reproduce virtually all metrics proposed in the
literature. The nature of the dK-series implies that it will also capture any
future metrics that may be proposed. Using our approach, we construct graphs
for d=0,1,2,3 and demonstrate that these graphs reproduce, with increasing
accuracy, important properties of measured and modeled Internet topologies. We
find that the d=2 case is sufficient for most practical purposes, while d=3
essentially reconstructs the Internet AS- and router-level topologies exactly.
We hope that a systematic method to analyze and synthesize topologies offers a
significant improvement to the set of tools available to network topology and
protocol researchers.Comment: Final versio
Metallicity Evolution of Damped Lyman-Alpha Galaxies
We have reanalyzed the existing data on Zinc abundances in damped Ly-alpha
(DLA) absorbers to investigate whether their mean metallicity evolves with
time. Most models of cosmic chemical evolution predict that the mass- weighted
mean interstellar metallicity of galaxies should rise with time from a low
value ~ 1/30 solar at z ~ 3 to a nearly solar value at z ~ 0. However, several
previous analyses have suggested that there is little or no evolution in the
global metallicity of DLAs. We have used a variety of statistical techniques to
quantify the global metallicity-redshift relation and its uncertainties, taking
into account both measurement and sampling errors. Three new features of our
analysis are: (a) an unbinned N(H I)-weighted nonlinear chi-square fit to an
exponential relation; (b) survival analysis to treat the large number of limits
in the existing data; and (c) a comparison of the data with several models of
cosmic chemical evolution based on an unbinned N(H I)-weighted chi-square. We
find that a wider range of evolutionary rates is allowed by the present data
than claimed in previous studies. The slope of the exponential fit to the N(H
I)-weighted mean Zn metallicity vs. redshift relation is -0.20 plus minus 0.11
counting limits as detections and -0.27 plus minus 0.12 counting limits as
zeros. Similar results are also obtained if the data are binned in redshift,
and if survival analysis is used. These slopes are marginally consistent with
no evolution, but are also consistent with the rates predicted by several
models of cosmic chemical evolution. Finally, we outline some future
measurements necessary to improve the statistics of the global
metallicity-redshift relation.Comment: 25 pages, 1 figure, accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journa
Working Healthy Enrollees Report New and Persisting Challenges
Working Healthy participants are sent an annual satisfaction survey to evaluate their experiences with the program. Participants have consistently said that Working Healthy is a good program that allows them to work and maintain their health benefits, which reduces their stress and eliminates worry about whether or not they will be able to afford the health care and medication they need. Working Healthy not only benefits the state through premium collection and increased taxes paid, participants say it improves their mental health and quality of lif
Airborne Particles in Museums
Presents one in a series of research activities aimed at a better understanding of the origin and fate of air pollution within the built environment
Oscillations in the expression of a self-repressed gene induced by a slow transcriptional dynamics
We revisit the dynamics of a gene repressed by its own protein in the case
where the transcription rate does not adapt instantaneously to protein
concentration but is a dynamical variable. We derive analytical criteria for
the appearance of sustained oscillations and find that they require degradation
mechanisms much less nonlinear than for infinitely fast regulation.
Deterministic predictions are also compared with stochastic simulations of this
minimal genetic oscillator
Oscillations in the expression of a self-repressed gene induced by a slow transcriptional dynamics
We revisit the dynamics of a gene repressed by its own protein in the case
where the transcription rate does not adapt instantaneously to protein
concentration but is a dynamical variable. We derive analytical criteria for
the appearance of sustained oscillations and find that they require degradation
mechanisms much less nonlinear than for infinitely fast regulation.
Deterministic predictions are also compared with stochastic simulations of this
minimal genetic oscillator
Star formation thresholds and galaxy edges: why and where
We study global star formation thresholds in the outer parts of galaxies by
investigating the stability of disk galaxies embedded in dark halos. The disks
are self-gravitating, contain metals and dust, and are exposed to UV radiation.
We find that the critical surface density for the existence of a cold
interstellar phase depends only weakly on the parameters of the model and
coincides with the empirically derived surface density threshold for star
formation. Furthermore, it is shown that the drop in the thermal velocity
dispersion associated with the transition from the warm to the cold gas phase
triggers gravitational instability on a wide range of scales. The presence of
strong turbulence does not undermine this conclusion if the disk is
self-gravitating. Models based on the hypothesis that the onset of thermal
instability determines the star formation threshold in the outer parts of
galaxies can reproduce many observations, including the threshold radii, column
densities, and the sizes of stellar disks as a function of disk scale length
and mass. Finally, prescriptions are given for implementing star formation
thresholds in (semi-)analytic models and three-dimensional hydrodynamical
simulations of galaxy formation.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journal. Version 2: text significantly revised (major improvements), physics
unchanged. Version 3: minor correction
The Rest-Frame UV Luminosity Density of Star-Forming Galaxies at Redshifts z>3.5
We have measured the rest--frame lambda~1500 Ang comoving specific luminosity
density of star--forming galaxies at redshift 3.5<z<6.5 from deep images taken
with the Hubble Space Telescope (HST)and the Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS),
obtained as part of the Great Observatories Origins Deep Survey (GOODS). We
used color selection criteria to construct samples of star--forming galaxies at
redshifts z~4, 5 and 6, identified by the signature of the 912 Ang Lyman
continuum discontinuity and Lyman-alpha forest blanketing in their rest--frame
UV colors (Lyman--break galaxies). The ACS samples cover ~0.09 square degree,
and are also relatively deep, reaching between 0.2 and 0.5 L_3^*, depending on
the redshift, where is the characteristic UV luminosity of Lyman--break
galaxies at z~3. The specific luminosity density of Lyman--break galaxies
appears to be nearly constant with redshift from z~3 to z~6, although the
measure at z~6 remains relatively uncertain, because it depends on the accurate
estimate of the faint counts of the z~6 sample. If Lyman--break galaxies are
fair tracers of the cosmic star formation activity, our results suggest that at
z~6 the universe was already producing stars as vigorously as it did near its
maximum several Gyr later, at 1<~z<~3. Thus, the onset of large--scale star
formation in the universe is to be sought at around z~6 or higher, namely at
less than ~7% of the current cosmic age.Comment: AAS LaTeX macros 4.0, 11 pages, 1 postscript figure. Accepted for
publication in The Astrophysical Journal, Letter. Minor changes to the figure
caption. The data and the GOODS-group papers can be found at
http://www.stsci.edu/science/goods
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