3,198 research outputs found
Dry microfoams: Formation and flow in a confined channel
We present an experimental investigation of the agglomeration of microbubbles
into a 2D microfoam and its flow in a rectangular microchannel. Using a
flow-focusing method, we produce the foam in situ on a microfluidic chip for a
large range of liquid fractions, down to a few percent in liquid. We can
monitor the transition from separated bubbles to the desired microfoam, in
which bubbles are closely packed and separated by thin films. We find that
bubble formation frequency is limited by the liquid flow rate, whatever the gas
pressure. The formation frequency creates a modulation of the foam flow,
rapidly damped along the channel. The average foam flow rate depends
non-linearly on the applied gas pressure, displaying a threshold pressure due
to capillarity. Strong discontinuities in the flow rate appear when the number
of bubbles in the channel width changes, reflecting the discrete nature of the
foam topology. We also produce an ultra flat foam, reducing the channel height
from 250 m to 8 m, resulting in a height to diameter ration of 0.02;
we notice a marked change in bubble shape during the flow.Comment: 7 pages; 7 figures; 1 tex file+ 22 eps-file
Discrete rearranging disordered patterns, part I: Robust statistical tools in two or three dimensions
Discrete rearranging patterns include cellular patterns, for instance liquid
foams, biological tissues, grains in polycrystals; assemblies of particles such
as beads, granular materials, colloids, molecules, atoms; and interconnected
networks. Such a pattern can be described as a list of links between
neighbouring sites. Performing statistics on the links between neighbouring
sites yields average quantities (hereafter "tools") as the result of direct
measurements on images. These descriptive tools are flexible and suitable for
various problems where quantitative measurements are required, whether in two
or in three dimensions. Here, we present a coherent set of robust tools, in
three steps. First, we revisit the definitions of three existing tools based on
the texture matrix. Second, thanks to their more general definition, we embed
these three tools in a self-consistent formalism, which includes three
additional ones. Third, we show that the six tools together provide a direct
correspondence between a small scale, where they quantify the discrete
pattern's local distortion and rearrangements, and a large scale, where they
help describe a material as a continuous medium. This enables to formulate
elastic, plastic, fluid behaviours in a common, self-consistent modelling using
continuous mechanics. Experiments, simulations and models can be expressed in
the same language and directly compared. As an example, a companion paper
(Marmottant, Raufaste and Graner, joint paper) provides an application to foam
plasticity
Canonical Coordinates on Lie Groups and the Baker Campbell Hausdorff Formula
Lie Groups occur in math and physics as representations of continuous symmetries and are often described in terms of their Lie Algebra. This thesis is concerned with finding a concrete description of a Lie group given its associated Lie algebra. Several calculations toward this end are developed and then implemented in the Maple Differential Geometry package. Examples of the calculations are given
Biodiveristy – a service for humans or a right of every species and nature in itself?
Within the topic of sustainable development, the loss of biodiversity is one of the most urgent global
challenges of our time. We are in the midst of our planet’s sixth mass extinction, caused by human
activity, where we constantly lose more and more species. This led me to wonder how we as humans
view this issue and which aspects lies behind how we choose to work for biodiversity. The objective
of this study is therefore to identify different views on nature and to study the correlation between
these views and how the problem of biodiversity loss is represented in the work for biodiversity.
The research questions that led this investigation have been the following: What different views on
nature can be found in actors within environmental work for biodiversity? and What correlations
can be found between the actors’ view on nature and how they present their work for biodiversity?
To investigate these questions, a mix of semi-structured interviews and text/policy analysis have
been used to get a broad perspective of the actors. Five actors in the form of organizations and
agencies have been invesitgated, all within the field of working with biodiversity. To analyze the
gathered information, three theoretical frameworks have been used to shine the light on different
aspects of view on nature. These three are: environmental ethics, nature-culture dualism and Hillevi
Helmfrid’s categorizations.
In the analysis, multiple views on nature connected to the collected material from the organizations
and agencies were detected. Even if some of the actors clearly were tilted towards certain views, it
became clear that views on nature often contains contradictions and that it’s not easy to categorize
a whole establishment within a single view on nature. The correlation between view on nature and
work for biodiversity showed to be complex and was not always predictable
Robustness of force and stress inference in an epithelial tissue
During morphogenesis, the shape of a tissue emerges from collective cellular
behaviors, which are in part regulated by mechanical and biochemical
interactions between cells. Quantification of force and stress is therefore
necessary to analyze the mechanisms controlling tissue morphogenesis. Recently,
a mechanical measurement method based on force inference from cell shapes and
connectivity has been developed. It is non-invasive, and can provide space-time
maps of force and stress within an epithelial tissue, up to prefactors. We
previously performed a comparative study of three force-inference methods,
which differ in their approach of treating indefiniteness in an inverse problem
between cell shapes and forces. In the present study, to further validate and
compare the three force inference methods, we tested their robustness by
measuring temporal fluctuation of estimated forces. Quantitative data of
cell-level dynamics in a developing tissue suggests that variation of forces
and stress will remain small within a short period of time (minutes).
Here, we showed that cell-junction tensions and global stress inferred by the
Bayesian force inference method varied less with time than those inferred by
the method that estimates only tension. In contrast, the amplitude of temporal
fluctuations of estimated cell pressures differs less between different
methods. Altogether, the present study strengthens the validity and robustness
of the Bayesian force-inference method.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Swelling of phospholipid floating bilayers: the effect of chain length
The equilibrium distance between two lipid bilayers stable in bulk water and
in proximity of a substrate was investigated. Samples consisted of a
homogeneous lipid bilayer, floating near an identical bilayer deposited on the
hydrophilic surface of a silicon single crystal. Lipids were saturated di-acyl
phosphocholines, with the number of carbon atoms per chain, n, varying from 16
to 20. The average and r.m.s. positions of the floating bilayer were determined
by means of neutron specular reflectivity. Samples were prepared at room
temperature (i.e. with the lipids in the gel phase) and measurements performed
at various temperatures so that the whole region of transition from gel to
fluid phase was explored. Data have been interpreted in terms of competition
between the interbilayer potential and membrane fluctuations and used to
estimate the bending rigidity of the bilayer
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