14,295 research outputs found
Limiting stable currents in bounded electron and ion streams
The classical static analysis of the infinite planar diode has been extended to include the effects of finite transverse beam size. Simple expressions have been found for the increase in maximum stable current density over that of an infinite stream for finite cylindrical and strip streams flowing between plates of infinite diodes. The results are also given in terms of stream perveance. The effect of a nonuniform distribution of current across the stream is shown to be relatively small. Experimental values of maximum stable current agree with those obtained from the analysis. A further extension of the static analysis has been made to include the effects of additional conducting plane boundaries parallel to the stream motion. For length-to-width ratios L/D less than 0.25 the tube is adequately described by the results for the infinite planar diode and for L/D greater than 4, the infinitely-long drift tube theory suffices. At intermediate values of L/D, the maximum amount of current that can be stably passed through the tube is greater than that predicted by either asymptotic theory
Universality classes in anisotropic non-equilibrium growth models
We study the effect of generic spatial anisotropies on the scaling behavior
in the Kardar-Parisi-Zhang equation. In contrast to its "conserved" variants,
anisotropic perturbations are found to be relevant in d > 2 dimensions, leading
to rich phenomena that include novel universality classes and the possibility
of first-order phase transitions and multicritical behavior. These results
question the presumed scaling universality in the strong-coupling rough phase,
and shed further light on the connection with generalized driven diffusive
systems.Comment: 4 pages, revtex, 2 figures (eps files enclosed
Global attractors and extinction dynamics of cyclically competing species
Transitions to absorbing states are of fundamental importance in nonequilibrium physics as well as ecology. In ecology, absorbing states correspond to the extinction of species. We here study the spatial population dynamics of three cyclically interacting species. The interaction scheme comprises both direct competition between species as in the cyclic Lotka-Volterra model, and separated selection and reproduction processes as in the May-Leonard model. We show that the dynamic processes leading to the transient maintenance of biodiversity are closely linked to attractors of the nonlinear dynamics for the overall species' concentrations. The characteristics of these global attractors change qualitatively at certain threshold values of the mobility and depend on the relative strength of the different types of competition between species. They give information about the scaling of extinction times with the system size and thereby the stability of biodiversity. We define an effective free energy as the negative logarithm of the probability to find the system in a specific global state before reaching one of the absorbing states. The global attractors then correspond to minima of this effective energy landscape and determine the most probable values for the species' global concentrations. As in equilibrium thermodynamics, qualitative changes in the effective free energy landscape indicate and characterize the underlying nonequilibrium phase transitions. We provide the complete phase diagrams for the population dynamics and give a comprehensive analysis of the spatio-temporal dynamics and routes to extinction in the respective phases
Physical limitations to the spatial resolution of solid-state detectors
In this paper we explore the effect of -ray emission, fluctuations in
th e signal deposition on the detection of charged particles in silicon-based
detec tors. We show that these two effects ultimately limit the resolution that
can be achieved by interpolation of the signal in finely segmented
position-sensitive solid-state devices.Comment: 5 page
Canonical phase space approach to the noisy Burgers equation
Presenting a general phase approach to stochastic processes we analyze in
particular the Fokker-Planck equation for the noisy Burgers equation and
discuss the time dependent and stationary probability distributions. In one
dimension we derive the long-time skew distribution approaching the symmetric
stationary Gaussian distribution. In the short time regime we discuss
heuristically the nonlinear soliton contributions and derive an expression for
the distribution in accordance with the directed polymer-replica model and
asymmetric exclusion model results.Comment: 4 pages, Revtex file, submitted to Phys. Rev. Lett. a reference has
been added and a few typos correcte
Renal handling of prednisolone/prednisone: effect of steroid dose and llβ-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase
The purposes of this study were: (1) to determine under steady-state conditions whether the renal clearance of prednisolone is concentration dependent, and (2) to establish whether the urinary excretion of prednisolone and its biologically inactive 11-dehydro metabolite prednisone depend upon the activity of 11β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (11β-OHSD). For that purpose 10 healthy volunteers were infused to steady state over a 13-h period either at a low (11 μg/h × kg) or a high (70 μg/h × kg) rate with prednisolone on two occasions, once without and once with administration of glycyrrhetinic acid, an inhibitor of 11β-OHSD. Prednisolone and prednisone were measured by high-pressure liquid chromatography. Mean renal clearance values of total or unbound prednisolone were several times higher during the high than the low infusion rate. The fractional renal clearance of unbound prednisolone during the high, but not during the low infusion rate exceeded 1. This indicates that in addition to unbound prednisolone, protein-bound prednisolone is excreted in urine at high plasma concentrations. Inhibition of 11β-OHSD increased the urinary ratios of prednisolone/prednisone in all subjects. Conclusions: (1) The renal clearance of prednisolone is concentration dependent; (2) there must be tubular secretion and/or glomerular filtration of prednisolone bound to plasma proteins; (3) the urinary excretion of prednisolone/prednisone is modulated by the activity of 11 β-OHS
Haemodialysis activates phospholipase A2 enzyme
Background Clinical and experimental evidence suggest that haemodialysis (HD) procedure is an inflammatory process. For the production of proinflammatory lipid mediators in many inflammatory reactions, the release of arachidonic acid by phospholipase A2 (PLA2 enzyme is a prerequisite. Therefore, the purpose of the present investigation was to establish whether the activity of PLA2 increases during HD and whether the increase depends on the type of dialyser used. Methods We performed dialysis in eight chronic HD patients. Blood samples entering and leaving the dialyser were obtained before and at 15, 60, 120 and 180 min after the dialysis was started, on one occasion using a cuprophane and on another occasion a cellulose triacetate dialyser. PLA2 activity was assessed in crude plasma and in plasma extract. Results PLA2 activity in plasma extract exhibited similar biochemical properties to that of inflammatory human synovial fluid PLA2 enzyme which is of group II PLA2. PLA2 activity in crude plasma represents a type of PLA2 other than the synovial type. In HD patients, baseline PLA2 activities in crude plasma and plasma extract were significantly increased when compared to normal subjects. An increase in PLA2 activity was observed in crude plasma with a peak appearing at 15 min when the patients were dialysed with cuprophane and cellulose triacetate membranes. This increase was observed in both arterial and venous blood samples and was more pronounced when the patients were dialysed with cuprophane than with cellulose triacetate membranes. When PLA2 was assessed in plasma extract, the activity increased only with cuprophane but not with cellulose triacetate membranes. Conclusions PLA2 activity in plasma is increased in HD patients and increases during the dialysis procedure to a greater extent with a less biocompatible membrane. Continuous activation of PLA2 might be relevant for long-term deleterious consequences of H
The arithmetic of genus two curves with (4,4)-split Jacobians
In this paper we study genus 2 curves whose Jacobians admit a polarized
(4,4)-isogeny to a product of elliptic curves. We consider base fields of
characteristic different from 2 and 3, which we do not assume to be
algebraically closed. We obtain a full classification of all principally
polarized abelian surfaces that can arise from gluing two elliptic curves along
their 4-torsion and we derive the relation their absolute invariants satisfy.
As an intermediate step, we give a general description of Richelot isogenies
between Jacobians of genus 2 curves, where previously only Richelot isogenies
with kernels that are pointwise defined over the base field were considered.
Our main tool is a Galois theoretic characterization of genus 2 curves
admitting multiple Richelot isogenies.Comment: 30 page
Nitrate source identification in the Baltic Sea using its isotopic ratios in combination with a Bayesian isotope mixing model
Nitrate (NO3-) is the major nutrient responsible for coastal eutrophication worldwide and its production is related to intensive food production and fossil-fuel combustion. In the Baltic Sea NO3- inputs have increased 4-fold over recent decades and now remain constantly high. NO3- source identification is therefore an important consideration in environmental management strategies. In this study focusing on the Baltic Sea, we used a method to estimate the proportional contributions of NO3- from atmospheric deposition, N-2 fixation, and runoff from pristine soils as well as from agricultural land. Our approach combines data on the dual isotopes of NO3- (delta N-15-NO3- and delta O-18-NO3-) in winter surface waters with a Bayesian isotope mixing model (Stable Isotope Analysis in R, SIAR). Based on data gathered from 47 sampling locations over the entire Baltic Sea, the majority of the NO3- in the southern Baltic was shown to derive from runoff from agricultural land (33-100 %), whereas in the northern Baltic, i.e. the Gulf of Bothnia, NO3- originates from nitrification in pristine soils (34-100 %). Atmospheric deposition accounts for only a small percentage of NO3- levels in the Baltic Sea, except for contributions from northern rivers, where the levels of atmospheric NO3- are higher. An additional important source in the central Baltic Sea is N-2 fixation by diazotrophs, which contributes 49-65% of the overall NO3- pool at this site. The results obtained with this method are in good agreement with source estimates based upon delta N-15 values in sediments and a three-dimensional ecosystem model, ERGOM. We suggest that this approach can be easily modified to determine NO3- sources in other marginal seas or larger near-coastal areas where NO3- is abundant in winter surface waters when fractionation processes are minor
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