1,066 research outputs found
Dissipative periodic processes
General theory of dissipative periodic systems for dynamic systems defined by differential equation
Fast reconstruction of 3D volumes from 2D CT projection data with GPUs
cited By 0International audienceMeso-F.E. modelling of 3D textile composites is a powerful tool, which can help determine mechanical properties and permeability of the reinforcements or composites. The quality of the meso F.E. analyses depends on the quality of the initial model. A direct method based on X-ray tomography imaging is introduced to determine finite element models based on the real geometry of 3D composite reinforcements. The method is particularly suitable regarding 3D textile reinforcements for which internal geometries are numerous and complex. An analysis of the image's texture is performed. A hyperelastic model developed for fibre bundles is used for the simulation of the deformation of the 3D reinforcement. © EDP Sciences, 2016
Analisis terhadap Pemberian Opini Laporan Keuangan Pemerintah Daerah Kabupaten Pegunungan Bintang
The purpose of this study is to assess the influence of Internal Control System (SPI) and non-compliance to the opinion of Financial Audit Board (BPK) on Financial Report of Local Governments. We use BPK Audit Reports from 2011 to 2014 from District of Pegunungan Bintang. We analyse the data using descriptive and quantitative analysis. The results show that the type of cases was dominated by the findings of non-compliance with the regulation, as many as 614 cases, then followed by the weakness of SPI that is 184 cases. Non-compliance causes many results for frauds
Research in the general area of non-linear dynamical systems Final report, 8 Jun. 1965 - 8 Jun. 1967
Nonlinear dynamical systems research on systems stability, invariance principles, Liapunov functions, and Volterra and functional integral equation
Matrigel plug assay: evaluation of the angiogenic response by reverse transcription-quantitative PCR
The subcutaneous Matrigel plug assay in mice
is a method of choice for the in vivo evaluation of pro- and
anti-angiogenic molecules. However, quantification of the
angiogenic response in the plug remains a problematic task.
Here we report a simple, rapid, unbiased and reverse
transcription-quantitative PCR (RT-qPCR) method to
investigate the angiogenic process occurring in the Matrigel
plug in response to fibroblast growth factor-2 (FGF2).
To this purpose, a fixed amount of human cells were added
to harvested plugs at the end of the in vivo experimentation
as an external cell tracer. Then, mRNA levels of the panendothelial
cell markers murine CD31 and vascular
endothelial-cadherin were measured by species-specific
RT-qPCR analysis of the total RNA and data were normalized
for human GAPDH or b-actin mRNA levels. RTqPCR
was used also to measure the levels of expression in
the plug of various angiogenesis/inflammation-related
genes. The procedure allows the simultaneous, quantitative
evaluation of the newly-formed endothelium and of nonendothelial/
inflammatory components of the cellular infiltrate
in the Matrigel implant, as well as the expression of
genes involved in the modulation of the angiogenesis
process. Also, the method consents the quantitative
assessment of the effect of local or systemic administration
of anti-angiogenic compounds on the neovascular response
triggered by FGF
Collapse in the nonlocal nonlinear Schr\"odinger equation
We discuss spatial dynamics and collapse scenarios of localized waves
governed by the nonlinear Schr\"{o}dinger equation with nonlocal nonlinearity.
Firstly, we prove that for arbitrary nonsingular attractive nonlocal nonlinear
interaction in arbitrary dimension collapse does not occur. Then we study in
detail the effect of singular nonlocal kernels in arbitrary dimension using
both, Lyapunoff's method and virial identities. We find that for for a
one-dimensional case, i.e. for , collapse cannot happen for nonlocal
nonlinearity. On the other hand, for spatial dimension and singular
kernel , no collapse takes place if , whereas
collapse is possible if . Self-similar solutions allow us to find
an expression for the critical distance (or time) at which collapse should
occur in the particular case of kernels. Moreover, different
evolution scenarios for the three dimensional physically relevant case of Bose
Einstein condensate are studied numerically for both, the ground state and a
higher order toroidal state with and without an additional local repulsive
nonlinear interaction. In particular, we show that presence of an additional
local repulsive term can prevent collapse in those cases
Tracking the mind's image in the brain II: Differential effects of repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation of the right and left parietal lobe.
The functional relevance of brain activity during visuospatial tasks was investigated by combining functional magnetic resonance imaging with unilateral repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS). The cognitive tasks involved visuospatial operations on visually presented and mentally imagined material (“mental clock task”). While visuospatial operations were associated with activation of the intraparietal sulcus region bilaterally, only the group which received rTMS to the right parietal lobe showed an impairment of performance during and immediately after rTMS. This functional parietal asymmetry might indicate a capacity of the right parietal lobe to compensate for a temporary suppression of the left. This is compatible with current theories of spatial hemineglect and constitutes a constraint for models of distributed information processing in the parietal lobes
Dressing Up the Kink
Many quantum field theoretical models possess non-trivial solutions which are
stable for topological reasons. We construct a self-consistent example for a
self-interacting scalar field--the quantum (or dressed) kink--using a two
particle irreducible effective action in the Hartree approximation. This new
solution includes quantum fluctuations determined self-consistently and
nonperturbatively at the 1-loop resummed level and allowed to backreact on the
classical mean-field profile. This dressed kink is static under the familiar
Hartree equations for the time evolution of quantum fields. Because the quantum
fluctuation spectrum is lower lying in the presence of the defect, the quantum
kink has a lower rest energy than its classical counterpart. However its energy
is higher than well-known strict 1-loop results, where backreaction and
fluctuation self-interactions are omitted. We also show that the quantum kink
exists at finite temperature and that its profile broadens as temperature is
increased until it eventually disappears.Comment: 13 pages, latex, 3 eps figures; revised with yet additional
references, minor rewordin
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