11,417 research outputs found
On the Properties of a Bundle of Flexible Actin Filaments in an Optical Trap
We establish the Statistical Mechanics framework for a bundle of Nf living
and uncrosslinked actin filaments in a supercritical solution of free monomers
pressing against a mobile wall. The filaments are anchored normally to a fixed
planar surface at one of their ends and, because of their limited flexibility,
they grow almost parallel to each other. Their growing ends hit a moving
obstacle, depicted as a second planar wall, parallel to the previous one and
subjected to a harmonic compressive force. The force constant is denoted as
trap strength while the distance between the two walls as trap length to make
contact with the experimental optical trap apparatus. For an ideal solution of
reactive filaments and free monomers at fixed free monomers chemical potential,
we obtain the general expression for the grand potential from which we derive
averages and distributions of relevant physical quantities, namely the obstacle
position, the bundle polymerization force and the number of filaments in direct
contact with the wall. The grafted living filaments are modeled as discrete
Wormlike chains, with Factin persistence length, subject to discrete contour
length variations to model single monomer (de)polymerization steps. Rigid
filaments, either isolated or in bundles, all provide average values of the
stalling force in agreement with Hill's predictions, independent of the average
trap length. Flexible filaments instead, for values of the trap strength
suitable to prevent their lateral escape, provide an average bundle force and
an average trap length slightly larger than the corresponding rigid cases (few
percents). Still the stalling force remains nearly independent on the average
trap length, but results from the product of two strongly L dependent
contributions: the fraction of touching filaments and the single filament
buckling force.Comment: 21 pages, 8 figure
Genetical stability and osteogenic ability of mesenchimal stem cells on demineralized bone matrices
Journal of Osseointegration
Volume 7, Issue 1, 1 March 2015, Pages 2-7
Open Access
Genetical stability and osteogenic ability of mesenchimal stem cells on demineralized bone matrices (Article)
Pozzuoli, A.a,
Gardin, C.b,
Aldegheri, R.a,
Bressan, E.c,
Isola, M.d,
Calvo-Guirado, J.L.e,
Biz, C.a,
Arrigoni, P.a,
Feroni, L.b,
Zavan, B.b
a Department of Surgical,Oncological and Gastroenterological Sciences, University of Padua, Padua, Italy
b Department of Biomedical Sciences, University of Padua, Padua, Italy
c Department of Neurosciences, University of Padua, Padua, Italy
d Department of Animal Medicine, Production and Health (MAPS), Italy
e Department of General Dentistry, Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry, University of Murcia, Murcia, Spain
Hide additional affiliations
View references (44)
Abstract
Aim: Tissue engineering is a rapidly expanding field with regard to the use of biomaterials and stem cells in the orthopedic surgery. Many experimental studies have been done to understand the best characteristics of cells, materials and laboratory methods for safe clinical applications. The aim of this study was to compare the ability of 2 different human demineralized bone matrices (DBMs), the one enriched and the other not enriched with hyaluronic acid, to stimulate in vitro the proliferation and the osteogenic differentiation of human adipose-derived stem cells (ADSCs) seeded onto an osteoconductive scaffold. Materials and Methods: ADSCs were isolated, by enzymatic digestion, from abdominal adipose tissue of 5 patients undergoing cosmetic lipoaspiration surgery. ADSCs were then seeded onto a 3D scaffold in the presence of the two different osteoinductive matrices of human demineralized bone and evaluated for proliferation and osteogenic differentiation. The safety of the methods was verified using array-Comparative Genomic Hybridization (array-CGH). Results: ADSCs were able to differentiate in osteogenic sense. Both DBMs showed the ability to induce osteogenic differentiation of the cells. Conclusion: array-CGH showed no changes at genome level, thus confirming the safety of materials and method
Minimal Models for a Superconductor-Insulator Conformal Quantum Phase Transition
Conformal field theories do not only classify 2D classical critical behavior
but they also govern a certain class of 2D quantum critical behavior. In this
latter case it is the ground state wave functional of the quantum theory that
is conformally invariant, rather than the classical action. We show that the
superconducting-insulating (SI) quantum phase transition in 2D Josephson
junction arrays (JJAs) is a (doubled) Gaussian conformal quantum critical
point. The quantum action describing this system is a doubled
Maxwell-Chern-Simons model in the strong coupling limit. We also argue that the
SI quantum transitions in frustrated JJAs realize the other possible
universality classes of conformal quantum critical behavior, corresponding to
the unitary minimal models at central charge .Comment: 4 pages, no figure
Study of the ground state properties of using SR
is an insulating system where the magnetic Ho ions
have an Ising character, and interact mainly through magnetic dipolar fields.
We used the muon spin relaxation technique to study the nature of the ground
state for samples with x=0.25, 0.12, 0.08, 0.045 and 0.018. In contrast with
some previous works, we have not found any signature of canonical spin glass
behavior down to 15mK. Instead, below 300mK we observed
dynamic magnetism characterized by a single correlation time with a temperature
independent fluctuation rate. We observed that this low temperature fluctuation
rate increases with x up to 0.08, above which it levels off. The 300mK energy
scale corresponds to the Ho3+ hyperfine interaction strength, suggesting that
the hyperfine interaction may be intimately involved with the spin dynamics in
this system
MuSR studies of RE(O,F)FeAs (RE = La, Nd, Ce) and LaOFeP systems: possible incommensurate/stripe magnetism and superfluid density
Muon spin relaxation (MuSR) measurements in iron oxy-pnictide systems have
revealed: (1) commensurate long-range order in undoped LaOFeAs; (2) Bessel
function line shape in La(O0.97F0.03)FeAs which indicates possible
incommensurate or stripe magnetism; (3) anomalous weak magnetism existing in
superconducting LaOFeP, Ce(O0.84F0.16)FeAs, and Nd(O0.88F0.12)FeAs but absent
in superconducting La(O0.92F0.08)FeAs; and (4) scaling of superfluid density
and Tc in the Ce, La, and Nd-FeAs superconductors following a nearly linear
relationship found in cuprates.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures (color
Spectrum of turbulent Kelvin-waves cascade in superfluid helium
To explain the observed decay of superfluid turbulence at very low
temperature, it has been proposed that a cascade of Kelvin waves (analogous to
the classical Kolmogorov cascade) transfers kinetic energy to length scales
which are small enough that sound can be radiated away. We report results of
numerical simulations of the interaction of quantized vortex filaments. We
observe the development of the Kelvin-waves cascade, and compute the statistics
of the curvature, the amplitude spectrum (which we compare with competing
theories) and the fractal dimension.Comment: 32 pages, 22 figure
Physics with nonperturbative quantum gravity: radiation from a quantum black hole
We study quantum gravitational effects on black hole radiation, using loop
quantum gravity. Bekenstein and Mukhanov have recently considered the
modifications caused by quantum gravity on Hawking's thermal black-hole
radiation. Using a simple ansatz for the eigenstates the area, they have
obtained the intriguing result that the quantum properties of geometry affect
the radiation considerably, yielding a definitely non-thermal spectrum. Here,
we replace the simple ansatz employed by Bekenstein and Mukhanov with the
actual eigenstates of the area, computed using the loop representation of
quantum gravity. We derive the emission spectra, using a classic result in
number theory by Hardy and Ramanujan. Disappointingly, we do not recover the
Bekenstein-Mukhanov spectrum, but --effectively-- a Hawking's thermal spectrum.
The Bekenstein-Mukhanov result is therefore likely to be an artefact of the
naive ansatz, rather than a robust result. The result is an example of concrete
(although somewhat disappointing) application of nonperturbative quantum
gravity.Comment: 4 pages, latex-revtex, no figure
Test engineering education in Europe: the EuNICE-Test project
The paper deals with a European experience of education in industrial test of ICs and SoCs using remote testing facilities. The project addresses the problem of the shortage in microelectronics engineers aware with the new challenge of testing mixed-signal SoCs far multimedia/telecom market. It aims at providing test training facilities at a European scale in both initial and continuing education contexts. This is done by allowing the academic and industrial partners of the consortium to train engineers using the common test resources center (CRTC) hosted by LIRMM (Laboratoire d'Informatique, de Robotique et de Microelectronique de Montpellier, France). CRTC test tools include up-to-date/high-tech testers that are fully representative of real industrial testers as used on production testfloors. At the end of the project, it is aimed at reaching a cruising speed of about 16 trainees per year per center. Each trainee will have attend at least one one-week training using the remote test facilities of CRTC
Muon Spin Rotation Measurement of the Magnetic Field Penetration Depth in Ba(Fe0.93 Co0.07)2 As2 : Evidence for Multiple Superconducting Gaps
We have performed transverse field muon spin rotation measurements of single
crystals of Ba(FeCoAs with the applied magnetic field
along the direction. Fourier transforms of the measured spectra
reveal an anisotropic lineshape characteristic of an Abrikosov vortex lattice.
We have fit the SRSR spectra to a microscopic model in terms of the
penetration depth and the Ginzburg-Landau parameter .
We find that as a function of temperature, the penetration depth varies more
rapidly than in standard weak coupled BCS theory. For this reason we first fit
the temperature dependence to a power law where the power varies from 1.6 to
2.2 as the field changes from 200G to 1000G. Due to the surprisingly strong
field dependence of the power and the superfluid density we proceeded to fit
the temperature dependence to a two gap model, where the size of the two gaps
is field independent. From this model, we obtained gaps of
and , corresponding to roughly 6 meV
and 3 meV respectively
- …