19,157 research outputs found

    Molecular dynamics simulations of the evaporation of particle-laden droplets

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    We use molecular dynamics simulations to study the evaporation of particle-laden droplets on a heated surface. The droplets are composed of a Lennard-Jones fluid containing rigid particles which are spherical sections of an atomic lattice, and heating is controlled through the temperature of an atomistic substrate. We observe that sufficiently large (but still nano-sized) particle-laden drops exhibit contact line pinning, measure the outward fluid flow field which advects particle to the drop rim, and find that the structure of the resulting aggregate varies with inter-particle interactions. In addition, the profile of the evaporative fluid flux is measured with and without particles present, and is also found to be in qualitative agreement with earlier theory. The compatibility of simple nanoscale calculations and micron-scale experiments indicates that molecular simulation may be used to predict aggregate structure in evaporative growth processes

    Translocation Dynamics with Attractive Nanopore-Polymer Interactions

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    Using Langevin dynamics simulations, we investigate the influence of polymer-pore interactions on the dynamics of biopolymer translocation through nanopores. We find that an attractive interaction can significantly change the translocation dynamics. This can be understood by examining the three components of the total translocation time τ≈τ1+τ2+τ3\tau \approx \tau_1+\tau_2+\tau_3 corresponding to the initial filling of the pore, transfer of polymer from the \textit{cis} side to the \textit{trans} side, and emptying of the pore, respectively. We find that the dynamics for the last process of emptying of the pore changes from non-activated to activated in nature as the strength of the attractive interaction increases, and τ3\tau_3 becomes the dominant contribution to the total translocation time for strong attraction. This leads to a new dependence of τ\tau as a function of driving force and chain length. Our results are in good agreement with recent experimental findings, and provide a possible explanation for the different scaling behavior observed in solid state nanopores {\it vs.} that for the natural α\alpha-hemolysin channel.Comment: 8 pages, 11 figure

    A Differential X-Ray Gunn-Peterson Test Using a Giant Cluster Filament

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    Using CCD detectors onboard the forthcoming X-ray observatories Chandra and XMM, it is possible to devise a measurement of the absolute density of heavy elements in the hypothetical warm gas filling intercluster space. This gas may be the largest reservoir of baryonic matter in the Universe, but even its existence has not been proven observationally at low redshifts. The proposed measurement would make use of a unique filament of galaxy clusters spanning over 700 Mpc (0.1<z<0.2) along the line of sight in a small area of the sky in Aquarius. The surface density of Abell clusters there is more than 6 times the sky average. It is likely that the intercluster matter column density is enhanced by a similar factor, making its detection feasible under certain optimistic assumptions about its density and elemental abundances. One can compare photoabsorption depth, mostly in the partially ionized oxygen edges, in the spectra of clusters at different distances along the filament, looking for a systematic increase of depth with the distance. The absorption can be measured by the same detector and through the same Galactic column, hence the differential test. A CCD moderate energy resolution (about 100 eV) is adequate for detecting an absorption edge at a known redshift.Comment: Latex, 4 pages, 3 figures, uses emulateapj.sty. ApJ Letters in pres

    Surface tension of the isotropic-nematic interface

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    We present the first calculations of the pressure tensor profile in the vicinity of the planar interface between isotropic liquid and nematic liquid crystal, using Onsager's density functional theory and computer simulation. When the liquid crystal director is aligned parallel to the interface, the situation of lowest free energy, there is a large tension on the nematic side of the interface and a small compressive region on the isotropic side. By contrast, for perpendicular alignment, the tension is on the isotropic side. There is excellent agreement between theory and simulation both in the forms of the pressure tensor profiles, and the values of the surface tension.Comment: Minor changes; to appear in Phys. Rev.

    Polymer translocation out of confined environments

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    We consider the dynamics of polymer translocation out of confined environments. Analytic scaling arguments lead to the prediction that the translocation time scales like τ∼Nβ+ν2DR1+(1−ν2D)/ν\tau\sim N^{\beta+\nu_{2D}}R^{1+(1-\nu_{2D})/\nu} for translocation out of a planar confinement between two walls with separation RR into a 3D environment, and τ∼Nβ+1R\tau \sim N^{\beta+1}R for translocation out of two strips with separation RR into a 2D environment. Here, NN is the chain length, ν\nu and ν2D\nu_{2D} are the Flory exponents in 3D and 2D, and β\beta is the scaling exponent of translocation velocity with NN, whose value for the present choice of parameters is β≈0.8\beta \approx 0.8 based on Langevin dynamics simulations. These scaling exponents improve on earlier predictions.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures. To appear in Phys. Rev.

    Probing the dark matter profile of hot clusters and the M-T relation with XMM-Newton

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    We present results based on XMM-Newton observations of a small sample of hot galaxy clusters. Making a full use of XMM-Newton's spectro-imaging capabilities, we have extracted the radial temperature profile and gas density profile, and with this information, calculated the total mass profile of each cluster (under the assumption of hydrostatic equilibrium and spherical symmetry). Comparing the individual scaled total mass profiles, we have probed the Universality of rich cluster mass profiles over a wide range of radii (from 0.01 to 0.7 the virial radius). We have also tested the shape of cluster mass profiles by comparing with the predicted profiles from numerical simulations of hierarchical structure formation. We also derived the local mass-temperature (M-T) scaling relation over a range of temperature going from 4 to 9 keV, that we compare with theoretical predictions.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures, Advances in Space Research in press (proceedings of the COSPAR 2004 Assembly, Paris

    Weather Impacts the Agricultural Production Efficiency of Wheat: The Importance of Precipitation Shocks

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    Many studies have explored the determinants of technical efficiency in crop production, but fewer have examined how weather might change technical efficiency over time. We estimate weather effects on technical efficiency using data from 540 Kansas winter wheat farms from 2007/08 to 2016/17 using a panel stochastic frontier model that controls for farm-specific heterogeneity with farm fixed effects. Results show that precipitation is nonlinearly related to technical efficiency and that extreme temperature is associated with lower technical efficiency. Improving resilience to precipitation shocks is key to sustained efficient wheat production in Kansas

    Weather Impacts the Agricultural Production Efficiency of Wheat: The Importance of Precipitation Shocks

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    Weather affects the production environment that farmers face and, in some cases, can affect their ability to efficiently convert production inputs into outputs. Despite that the effect of weather shocks on agricultural production has been well documented (Donaldson, 1968; Ito and Kurosaki, 2009; Schlenker and Roberts, 2009; Tack, Barkley, and Nalley, 2015), few studies have accounted for the weather as a source of production inefficiency or lower agricultural productivity. In a recently published paper, we showed the effects that weather has on the production efficiency of winter wheat farms and discussed some of the implications that climate change could have on the future production efficiency of farms
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