87 research outputs found
Fractional bidromy in the vibrational spectrum of HOCl
We introduce the notion of fractional bidromy which is the combination of
fractional monodromy and bidromy, two recent generalizations of Hamiltonian
monodromy. We consider the vibrational spectrum of the HOCl molecule which is
used as an illustrative example to show the presence of nontrivial fractional
bidromy. To our knowledge, this is the first example of a molecular system
where such a generalized monodromy is exhibited.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figue
Simultaneous time-optimal control of the inversion of two spin 1/2 particles
We analyze the simultaneous time-optimal control of two-spin systems. The two
non coupled spins which differ in the value of their chemical offsets are
controlled by the same magnetic fields. Using an appropriate rotating frame, we
restrict the study to the case of opposite shifts. We then show that the
optimal solution of the inversion problem in a rotating frame is composed of a
pulse sequence of maximum intensity and is similar to the optimal solution for
inverting only one spin by using a non-resonant control field in the laboratory
frame. An example is implemented experimentally using techniques of Nuclear
Magnetic Resonance.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figure
Trapping polarization of light in nonlinear optical fibers: An ideal Raman polarizer
The main subject of this contribution is the all-optical control over the
state of polarization (SOP) of light, understood as the control over the SOP of
a signal beam by the SOP of a pump beam. We will show how the possibility of
such control arises naturally from a vectorial study of pump-probe Raman
interactions in optical fibers. Most studies on the Raman effect in optical
fibers assume a scalar model, which is only valid for high-PMD fibers (here,
PMD stands for the polarization-mode dispersion). Modern technology enables
manufacturing of low-PMD fibers, the description of which requires a full
vectorial model. Within this model we gain full control over the SOP of the
signal beam. In particular we show how the signal SOP is pulled towards and
trapped by the pump SOP. The isotropic symmetry of the fiber is broken by the
presence of the polarized pump. This trapping effect is used in experiments for
the design of new nonlinear optical devices named Raman polarizers. Along with
the property of improved signal amplification, these devices transform an
arbitrary input SOP of the signal beam into one and the same SOP towards the
output end. This output SOP is fully controlled by the SOP of the pump beam. We
overview the sate-of-the-art of the subject and introduce the notion of an
"ideal Raman polarizer"
Modulated patterns in a reduced model of a transitional shear flow
We consider a close relative of plane Couette flow called Waleffe flow in which the fluid is confined between two free-slip walls and the flow driven by a sinusoidal force. We use a reduced model of such flows constructed elsewhere to compute stationary exact coherent structures of Waleffe flow in periodic domains with a large spanwise period. The computations reveal the emergence of stationary states exhibiting strong amplitude and wavelength modulation in the spanwise direction. These modulated states lie on branches exhibiting complex dependence on the Reynolds number but no homoclinic snaking
EAGLE multi-object AO concept study for the E-ELT
EAGLE is the multi-object, spatially-resolved, near-IR spectrograph
instrument concept for the E-ELT, relying on a distributed Adaptive Optics,
so-called Multi Object Adaptive Optics. This paper presents the results of a
phase A study. Using 84x84 actuator deformable mirrors, the performed analysis
demonstrates that 6 laser guide stars and up to 5 natural guide stars of
magnitude R<17, picked-up in a 7.3' diameter patrol field of view, allow us to
obtain an overall performance in terms of Ensquared Energy of 35% in a 75x75
mas^2 spaxel at H band, whatever the target direction in the centred 5' science
field for median seeing conditions. The computed sky coverage at galactic
latitudes |b|~60 is close to 90%.Comment: 6 pages, to appear in the proceedings of the AO4ELT conference, held
in Paris, 22-26 June 200
Does a combined screw and dowel construct improve tibial fixation during anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction?
Purpose: The aims of the present study were to compare the biomechanical properties of tibial fixation in hamstring-graft ACL reconstruction using interference screw and a novel combination interference screw and dowel construct. Material and methods: We compared the fixation of 30 (2- and 4-stranded gracilis and semitendinosis tendons) in 15 fresh-frozen porcine tibiae with a biocomposite resorbable interference screw (Group 1) and a screw and dowel construct (Group 2). Each graft was subjected to load-to-failure testing (50 mm/min) to determine maximum load, displacement at failure and pullout strength.
Results: There were no significant differences between the biomechanical properties of the constructs. Multivariate analysis demonstrated that combination constructs (β = 140.20, p = 0.043), screw diameter (β = 185, p = 0.006) and 4-strand grafts (β = 51, p = 0.050) were associated with a significant increase in load at failure. Larger screw diameter was associated with increased construct stiffness (β = 20.15, p = 0.020).
Conclusion: The screw and dowel construct led to significantly increased fixation properties compared to interference screws alone in a porcine model. Increased screw diameter and utilization of 4-strand ACL grafts also led to improvement in load-to-failure of the construct. However, this is an in vitro study and additional investigations are needed to determine whether the results are reproducible in vivo.
Level of evidence: Level V; Biomechanical study
Order-of-magnitude speedup for steady states and traveling waves via Stokes preconditioning in Channelflow and Openpipeflow
Steady states and traveling waves play a fundamental role in understanding
hydrodynamic problems. Even when unstable, these states provide the
bifurcation-theoretic explanation for the origin of the observed states. In
turbulent wall-bounded shear flows, these states have been hypothesized to be
saddle points organizing the trajectories within a chaotic attractor. These
states must be computed with Newton's method or one of its generalizations,
since time-integration cannot converge to unstable equilibria. The bottleneck
is the solution of linear systems involving the Jacobian of the Navier-Stokes
or Boussinesq equations. Originally such computations were carried out by
constructing and directly inverting the Jacobian, but this is unfeasible for
the matrices arising from three-dimensional hydrodynamic configurations in
large domains. A popular method is to seek states that are invariant under
numerical time integration. Surprisingly, equilibria may also be found by
seeking flows that are invariant under a single very large Backwards-Euler
Forwards-Euler timestep. We show that this method, called Stokes
preconditioning, is 10 to 50 times faster at computing steady states in plane
Couette flow and traveling waves in pipe flow. Moreover, it can be carried out
using Channelflow (by Gibson) and Openpipeflow (by Willis) without any changes
to these popular spectral codes. We explain the convergence rate as a function
of the integration period and Reynolds number by computing the full spectra of
the operators corresponding to the Jacobians of both methods.Comment: in Computational Modelling of Bifurcations and Instabilities in Fluid
Dynamics, ed. Alexander Gelfgat (Springer, 2018
Participation of the Cell Polarity Protein PALS1 to T-Cell Receptor-Mediated NF-κB Activation
BACKGROUND: Beside their established function in shaping cell architecture, some cell polarity proteins were proposed to participate to lymphocyte migration, homing, scanning, as well as activation following antigen receptor stimulation. Although PALS1 is a central component of the cell polarity network, its expression and function in lymphocytes remains unknown. Here we investigated whether PALS1 is present in T cells and whether it contributes to T Cell-Receptor (TCR)-mediated activation. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: By combining RT-PCR and immunoblot assays, we found that PALS1 is constitutively expressed in human T lymphocytes as well as in Jurkat T cells. siRNA-based knockdown of PALS1 hampered TCR-induced activation and optimal proliferation of lymphocyte. We further provide evidence that PALS1 depletion selectively hindered TCR-driven activation of the transcription factor NF-κB. CONCLUSIONS: The cell polarity protein PALS1 is expressed in T lymphocytes and participates to the optimal activation of NF-κB following TCR stimulation
Dermatitis and Aging-Related Barrier Dysfunction in Transgenic Mice Overexpressing an Epidermal-Targeted Claudin 6 Tail Deletion Mutant
The barrier function of the skin protects the mammalian body against infection, dehydration, UV irradiation and temperature fluctuation. Barrier function is reduced with the skin's intrinsic aging process, however the molecular mechanisms involved are unknown. We previously demonstrated that Claudin (Cldn)-containing tight junctions (TJs) are essential in the development of the epidermis and that transgenic mice overexpressing Cldn6 in the suprabasal layers of the epidermis undergo a perturbed terminal differentiation program characterized in part by reduced barrier function. To dissect further the mechanisms by which Cldn6 acts during epithelial differentiation, we overexpressed a Cldn6 cytoplasmic tail deletion mutant in the suprabasal compartment of the transgenic mouse epidermis. Although there were no gross phenotypic abnormalities at birth, subtle epidermal anomalies were present that disappeared by one month of age, indicative of a robust injury response. However, with aging, epidermal changes with eventual chronic dermatitis appeared with a concomitant barrier dysfunction manifested in increased trans-epidermal water loss. Immunohistochemical analysis revealed aberrant suprabasal Cldn localization with marked down-regulation of Cldn1. Both the proliferative and terminal differentiation compartments were perturbed as evidenced by mislocalization of multiple epidermal markers. These results suggest that the normally robust injury response mechanism of the epidermis is lost in the aging Involucrin-Cldn6-CΔ196 transgenic epidermis, and provide a model for evaluation of aging-related skin changes
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