4,101 research outputs found
Documentation of model components EXPAMOD and CAPRI
ISBN no.: 978-90-8585-129-
Effective capillary interaction of spherical particles at fluid interfaces
We present a detailed analysis of the effective force between two smooth
spherical colloids floating at a fluid interface due to deformations of the
interface. The results hold in general and are applicable independently of the
source of the deformation provided the capillary deformations are small so that
a superposition approximation for the deformations is valid. We conclude that
an effective long--ranged attraction is possible if the net force on the system
does not vanish. Otherwise, the interaction is short--ranged and cannot be
computed reliably based on the superposition approximation. As an application,
we consider the case of like--charged, smooth nanoparticles and
electrostatically induced capillary deformation. The resulting long--ranged
capillary attraction can be easily tuned by a relatively small external
electrostatic field, but it cannot explain recent experimental observations of
attraction if these experimental systems were indeed isolated.Comment: 23 page
Microbiota composition of the dorsal patch of reproductive male Leptonycteris yerbabuenae.
Bacteria and other types of microbes interact with their hosts in several ways, including metabolic pathways, development, and complex behavioral processes such as mate recognition. During the mating season, adult males of the lesser long-nosed agave pollinator bat Leptonycteris yerbabuenae (Phyllostomidae: Glossophaginae) develop a structure called the dorsal patch, which is located in the interscapular region and may play a role in kin recognition and mate selection. Using high-throughput sequencing of the V4 region of the 16S rRNA gene, we identified a total of 2,847 microbial phylotypes in the dorsal patches of eleven specimens. Twenty-six phylotypes were shared among all the patches, accounting for 30 to 75% of their relative abundance. These shared bacteria are distributed among 13 families, 10 orders, 6 classes and 3 phyla. Two of these common bacterial components of the dorsal patch are Lactococcus and Streptococcus. Some of them-Helcococcus, Aggregatibacter, Enterococcus, and Corynebacteriaceae-include bacteria with pathogenic potential. Half of the shared phylotypes belong to Gallicola, Anaerococcus, Peptoniphilus, Proteus, Staphylococcus, Clostridium, and Peptostreptococcus and specialize in fatty acid production through fermentative processes. This work lays the basis for future symbiotic microbe studies focused on communication and reproduction strategies in wildlife
Transverse depinning and melting of a moving vortex lattice in driven periodic Josephson junction arrays
We study the effect of thermal fluctuations in a vortex lattice driven in the
periodic pinning of a Josephson junction array. The phase diagram current ()
vs. temperature () is studied. Above the critical current we find a
moving vortex lattice (MVL) with anisotropic Bragg peaks. For large currents
, there is a melting transition of the MVL at . When
applying a small transverse current to the MVL, there is no dissipation at low
. We find an onset of transverse vortex motion at a transverse depinning
temperature .Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, Figure 2 changed, added new reference
Fluorescence decay in aperiodic Frenkel lattices
We study motion and capture of excitons in self-similar linear systems in
which interstitial traps are arranged according to an aperiodic sequence,
focusing our attention on Fibonacci and Thue-Morse systems as canonical
examples. The decay of the fluorescence intensity following a broadband pulse
excitation is evaluated by solving the microscopic equations of motion of the
Frenkel exciton problem. We find that the average decay is exponential and
depends only on the concentration of traps and the trapping rate. In addition,
we observe small-amplitude oscillations coming from the coupling between the
low-lying mode and a few high-lying modes through the topology of the lattice.
These oscillations are characteristic of each particular arrangement of traps
and they are directly related to the Fourier transform of the underlying
lattice. Our predictions can be then used to determine experimentally the
ordering of traps.Comment: REVTeX 3.0 + 3PostScript Figures + epsf.sty (uuencoded). To appear in
Physical Review
Herschel Far-IR counterparts of SDSS galaxies: Analysis of commonly used Star Formation Rate estimates
We study a hundred of galaxies from the spectroscopic Sloan Digital Sky
Survey with individual detections in the Far-Infrared Herschel PACS bands (100
or 160 m) and in the GALEX Far-UltraViolet band up to z0.4 in the
COSMOS and Lockman Hole fields. The galaxies are divided into 4 spectral and 4
morphological types. For the star forming and unclassifiable galaxies we
calculate dust extinctions from the UV slope, the H/H ratio and
the ratio. There is a tight correlation between the
dust extinction and both and metallicity. We calculate
SFR and compare it with other SFR estimates (H, UV, SDSS)
finding a very good agreement between them with smaller dispersions than
typical SFR uncertainties. We study the effect of mass and metallicity, finding
that it is only significant at high masses for SFR. For the AGN and
composite galaxies we find a tight correlation between SFR and L
(0.29), while the dispersion in the SFR - L relation is
larger (0.57). The galaxies follow the prescriptions of the
Fundamental Plane in the M-Z-SFR space.Comment: 24 pages, 23 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
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