108 research outputs found
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Anderson localization of walking droplets
Understanding the ability of particles to maneuver through disordered
environments is a central problem in innumerable settings, from active matter
and biology to electronics. Macroscopic particles ultimately exhibit diffusive
motion when their energy exceeds the characteristic potential barrier of the
random landscape. In stark contrast, wave-particle duality causes subatomic
particles in disordered media to come to rest even when the potential is weak
-- a remarkable phenomenon known as Anderson localization. Here, we present a
hydrodynamic active system with wave-particle features, a millimetric droplet
self-guided by its own wave field over a submerged random topography, whose
dynamics exhibits localized statistics analogous to those of quantum systems.
Consideration of an ensemble of particle trajectories reveals a suppression of
diffusion when the guiding wave field extends over the disordered topography.
We rationalize mechanistically the emergent statistics by virtue of the
wave-mediated resonant coupling between the droplet and topography, which
produces an attractive wave potential about the localization region. This
hydrodynamic analog, which demonstrates how a classical particle may localize
like a wave, suggests new directions for future research in various areas,
including wave localization, many-body localization, and topological matter.Comment: Title changed, slight format change in figures, and text rewording,
no changes to argument or result
Environmental conical nozzle levitator equipped with dual lasers
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From the atomic scale to the bulk: Ultra high temperature evaluation of metal diborides MB2 (M = Ta, Ti, Hf, Zr, Nb)
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Electrical properties of methane hydrate + sediment mixtures
Knowledge of the electrical properties of multicomponent systems with gas hydrate, sediments, and pore water is needed to help relate electromagnetic (EM) measurements to specific gas hydrate concentration and distribution patterns in nature. Toward this goal, we built a pressure cell capable of measuring in situ electrical properties of multicomponent systems such that the effects of individual components and mixing relations can be assessed. We first established the temperature-dependent electrical conductivity (?) of pure, single-phase methane hydrate to be ~5 orders of magnitude lower than seawater, a substantial contrast that can help differentiate hydrate deposits from significantly more conductive water-saturated sediments in EM field surveys. Here we report ? measurements of two-component systems in which methane hydrate is mixed with variable amounts of quartz sand or glass beads. Sand by itself has low ? but is found to increase the overall ? of mixtures with well-connected methane hydrate. Alternatively, the overall ? decreases when sand concentrations are high enough to cause gas hydrate to be poorly connected, indicating that hydrate grains provide the primary conduction path. Our measurements suggest that impurities from sand induce chemical interactions and/or doping effects that result in higher electrical conductivity with lower temperature dependence. These results can be used in the modeling of massive or two-phase gas-hydrate-bearing systems devoid of conductive pore water. Further experiments that include a free water phase are the necessary next steps toward developing complex models relevant to most natural systems
Determinants of racial/ethnic differences in blood pressure management among hypertensive patients
BACKGROUND: Prior literature has shown that racial/ethnic minorities with hypertension may receive less aggressive treatment for their high blood pressure. However, to date there are few data available regarding the confounders of racial/ethnic disparities in the intensity of hypertension treatment. METHODS: We reviewed the medical records of 1,205 patients who had a minimum of two hypertension-related outpatient visits to 12 general internal medicine clinics during 7/1/01-6/30/02. Using logistic regression, we determined the odds of having therapy intensified by patient race/ethnicity after adjustment for clinical characteristics. RESULTS: Blacks (81.9%) and Whites (80.3%) were more likely than Latinos (71.5%) to have therapy intensified (P = 0.03). After adjustment for racial differences in the number of outpatient visits and presence of diabetes, there were no racial differences in rates of intensification. CONCLUSION: We found that racial/ethnic differences in therapy intensification were largely accounted for by differences in frequency of clinic visits and in the prevalence of diabetes. Given the higher rates of diabetes and hypertension related mortality among Hispanics in the U.S., future interventions to reduce disparities in cardiovascular outcomes should increase physician awareness of the need to intensify drug therapy more agressively in patients without waiting for multiple clinic visits, and should remind providers to treat hypertension more aggressively among diabetic patients
Inhibicija rasta plijesni Aspergillus ochraceus ZMPBF 318 i Penicillum expansum ZMPBF 565 djelovanjem Äetiriju eteriÄnih ulja
Fungi produce a large variety of extracellular proteins, organic acids, and other metabolites and can adapt to several environmental conditions. Mycotoxin-producing moulds of the genera Aspergillus and Penicillium are common food contaminants. One of the natural ways to protect food from mould contamination is to use essential oils. In this study, we evaluated the effect of essential oils of cinnamon, lavender, rosemary, and sage at 1 % (v/v) concentration in yeast media inoculated with spores (fi nal concentration 106 mL-1 media) of Aspergillus ochraceus ZMPBF 318 and Penicillium expansum ZMPBF 565, alone or in combination, on fungal biomass. Cinnamon showed the best inhibitory effect (100 %). Lavender oil best inhibited the growth of Aspergillus ochraceus (nearly 100 %), and was less successful with Penicillium expansum (having dropped to 57 % on day 28). With cultivation time the inhibitory effect of sage and rosemary oil grew for Aspergillus ochraceus and dropped for Penicillium expansum. These results suggest that fungi can be controlled with essential oils, especially with cinnamon oil.Plijesni su poznate po svojoj visokoj sposobnosti proizvodnje razliÄitih izvanstaniÄnih proteina, organskih kiselina i drugih metabolita i po svojoj moguÄnosti prilagodbe na nepovoljne okoliÅ”ne uvjete, a primjenjuju se i u obradi otpadnih voda. Plijesni iz rodova Aspergillus i Penicillium Äesti su kontaminanti u hrani i posebno opasne jer tvore toksiÄne metabolite mikotoksine. EteriÄna ulja mogu se primijeniti kao prirodna sredstva za zaÅ”titu hrane od kontaminacije plijesnima. U radu su prikazani rezultati istraživanja utjecaja eteriÄnih ulja cimeta, lavande, ružmarina i kadulje na kontrolu rasta biomase plijesni Aspergillus ochraceus ZMPBF 318 i Penicillium expansum ZMPBF 565, u obliku Äistih i mijeÅ”anih kultura. Ulja su dodavana u koncentraciji od 1 % (v/v), a podloga (kvaÅ”Äev ekstrakt) bila je nacijepljena suspenzijama spora plijesni
(106 mL-1 podloge). EteriÄno ulje cimeta pokazalo je najveÄi inhibitorni uÄinak (100 %). Inhibitorni uÄinak eteriÄnog ulja lavande bio je veÄi na rast Aspergillusa ochraceusa (skoro 100 %) nego Penicilliuma expansuma (57 %). EteriÄna ulja kadulje i ružmarina pokazala su suprotne uÄinke. Inhibitorni uÄinak na Aspergillus ochraceus tijekom perioda uzgoja je rastao, a na Penicillium expansum opadao.
Rezultati pokazuju da se rast plijesni može kontrolirati primjenom eteriÄnih ulja, a posebno uljem cimeta. TakoÄer upuÄuju na ekonomsku vrijednost takvih tretmana
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