1,083 research outputs found
Symmetry breaking results for problems with exponential growth in the unit disk
We investigate some asymptotic properties of extrema to a two-dimensional
variational problem in the unit disk. Some results about non-radialicity of
solutions are given.Comment: 17 page
Formation and Acceleration of Uniformly-Filled Ellipsoidal Electron Bunches Obtained via Space-Charge-Driven Expansion from a Cesium-Telluride Photocathode
We report the experimental generation, acceleration and characterization of a
uniformly-filled electron bunch obtained via space-charge-driven expansion
(often referred to as "blow-out regime") in an L-band (1.3-GHz) radiofrequency
photoinjector. The beam is photoemitted from a Cesium-Telluride semiconductor
photocathode using a short ( fs) ultraviolet laser pulse. The produced
electron bunches are characterized with conventional diagnostics and the
signatures of their ellipsoidal character is observed. We especially
demonstrate the production of ellipsoidal bunches with charges up to
nC corresponding to a -fold increase compared to previous experiments
with metallic photocathodes.Comment: 9, pages, 13 figure
What buoyancy really is. A generalized Archimedes' principle for sedimentation and ultracentrifugation
Particle settling is a pervasive process in nature, and centrifugation is a versatile separation technique. Yet, the results of settling and ultracentrifugation experiments often appear to contradict the very law on which they are based: Archimedes' principle - arguably, the oldest physical law. The purpose of this paper is delving into the very roots of the concept of buoyancy by means of a combined experimental-theoretical study on sedimentation profiles in colloidal mixtures. Our analysis shows that the standard Archimedes' principle is only a limiting approximation, valid for mesoscopic particles settling in a molecular fluid, and we provide a general expression for the actual buoyancy force. This "Generalized Archimedes' Principle" accounts for unexpected effects, such as denser particles floating on top of a lighter fluid, which in fact we observe in our experiments
Are all pastures eligible for conservation? A phytosociological survey of the Sardinian–Corsican Province as a basic tool for the Habitats Directive
A consistent vegetation classification is an essential tool for conservation and monitoring purposes, also for semi-natural habitats such as pastures and hay meadows that are linked to traditional land use and generally considered crucial to maintain biodiversity within agricultural systems. Indeed, these habitats can be strongly affected by land abandonment or agriculture intensification. Despite their importance in the framework of the EU Habitats Directive (43/92/EEC), information on distribution, species composition, and conservation status is still lacking for many regions. To fill these gaps, we investigated from a phytosociological point of view the sheep pastures of the North-Western Sardinian trachy-basaltic sector. Three main communities were described as new: (i) perennial montane (meso-supratemperate) cattle and sheep pastures (Loto alpini- Festucetum morisianae); (ii) mixed (annual and perennial) Mediterranean (lower Thermomediterranean to lower supratemperate) sheep pastures (Ornithogalo corsici-Poetum bulbosae); and (iii) annual ploughed subnitrophilous Mediterranean and Temperate pastures (Cynosuro polybracteati-Vulpietum ligusticae). As the first two host numerous endemic taxa and show a peculiar floristic composition, we assign them a higher conservation value, testified also by their classification in two new syntaxa: Danthonio decumbentis-Caricenion insularis (Molinio-Arrhenatheretea) and Ornithogalo corsici-Trifolienion subterranei (Poetea bulbosae), respectively
New, efficient, and accurate high order derivative and dissipation operators satisfying summation by parts, and applications in three-dimensional multi-block evolutions
We construct new, efficient, and accurate high-order finite differencing
operators which satisfy summation by parts. Since these operators are not
uniquely defined, we consider several optimization criteria: minimizing the
bandwidth, the truncation error on the boundary points, the spectral radius, or
a combination of these. We examine in detail a set of operators that are up to
tenth order accurate in the interior, and we surprisingly find that a
combination of these optimizations can improve the operators' spectral radius
and accuracy by orders of magnitude in certain cases. We also construct
high-order dissipation operators that are compatible with these new finite
difference operators and which are semi-definite with respect to the
appropriate summation by parts scalar product. We test the stability and
accuracy of these new difference and dissipation operators by evolving a
three-dimensional scalar wave equation on a spherical domain consisting of
seven blocks, each discretized with a structured grid, and connected through
penalty boundary conditions.Comment: 16 pages, 9 figures. The files with the coefficients for the
derivative and dissipation operators can be accessed by downloading the
source code for the document. The files are located in the "coeffs"
subdirector
Multiple solutions to a magnetic nonlinear Choquard equation
We consider the stationary nonlinear magnetic Choquard equation
[(-\mathrm{i}\nabla+A(x))^{2}u+V(x)u=(\frac{1}{|x|^{\alpha}}\ast |u|^{p})
|u|^{p-2}u,\quad x\in\mathbb{R}^{N}%] where is a real valued vector
potential, is a real valued scalar potential ,
and . \ We assume that both and are
compatible with the action of some group of linear isometries of
. We establish the existence of multiple complex valued
solutions to this equation which satisfy the symmetry condition where
is a given group homomorphism into the unit
complex numbers.Comment: To appear on ZAM
Generation of donor-specific Tr1 cells to be used after kidney transplantation and definition of the timing of their in vivo infusion in the presence of immunosuppression
Background: Operational tolerance is an alternative to lifelong immunosuppression after transplantation. One strategy to achieve tolerance is by T regulatory cells. Safety and feasibility of a T regulatory type 1 (Tr1)-cell-based therapy to prevent graft versus host disease in patients with hematological malignancies has been already proven. We are now planning to perform a Tr1-cell-based therapy after kidney transplantation. Methods: Upon tailoring the lab-grade protocol to patients on dialysis, aims of the current work were to develop a clinical-grade compatible protocol to generate a donor-specific Tr1-cell-enriched medicinal product (named T10 cells) and to test the Tr1-cell sensitivity to standard immunosuppression in vivo to define the best timing of cell infusion. Results: We developed a medicinal product that was enriched in Tr1 cells, anergic to donor-cell stimulation, able to suppress proliferation upon donor- but not third-party stimulation in vitro, and stable upon cryopreservation. The protocol was reproducible upon up scaling to leukapheresis from patients on dialysis and was effective in yielding the expected number of T10 cells necessary for the planned infusions. The tolerogenic gene signature of circulating Tr1 cells was minimally compromised in kidney transplant recipients under standard immunosuppression and it eventually started to recover 36weeks post-transplantation, providing rationale for selecting the timings of the cell infusions. Conclusions: These data provide solid ground for proceeding with the trial and establish robust rationale for defining the correct timing of cell infusion during concomitant immunosuppressive treatment
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