10,904 research outputs found

    Fast High Resolution Echelle Spectroscopy Of A Laboratory Plasma

    Get PDF
    An echelle diffraction grating and a multianode photomultiplier tube are paired to construct a high resolution (R=lambda/delta lambda approximate to 2.5x10(4)) spectrograph with fast time response for use from the UV through the visible. This instrument has analyzed the line shape of C III impurity ion emission at 229.687 nm over the lifetime (approximate to 100 mu s) of the hydrogen plasmas produced at SSX. The ion temperature and line of sight average velocity are inferred from the observed thermal broadening and Doppler shift of the line. The time resolution of these measurements is about 1 mu s, sufficient to observe the fastest magnetohydrodynamic activity

    Richardson's pair diffusion and the stagnation point structure of turbulence

    Get PDF
    DNS and laboratory experiments show that the spatial distribution of straining stagnation points in homogeneous isotropic 3D turbulence has a fractal structure with dimension D_s = 2. In Kinematic Simulations the time exponent gamma in Richardson's law and the fractal dimension D_s are related by gamma = 6/D_s. The Richardson constant is found to be an increasing function of the number of straining stagnation points in agreement with pair duffusion occuring in bursts when pairs meet such points in the flow.Comment: 4 pages; Submitted to Phys. Rev. Let

    Turbulent Pair Diffusion

    Full text link
    Kinematic Simulations of turbulent pair diffusion in planar turbulence with a -5/3 energy spectrum reproduce the results of the laboratory measurements of Jullien Phys. Rev. Lett. 82, 2872 (1999), in particular the stretched exponential form of the PDF of pair separations and their correlation functions. The root mean square separation is found to be strongly dependent on initial conditions for very long stretches of times. This dependence is consistent with the topological picture of turbulent pair diffusion where pairs initially close enough travel together for long stretches of time and separate violently when they meet straining regions around hyperbolic points. A new argument based on the divergence of accelerations is given to support this picture

    Comparative long-term evaluation of tacrolimus and cyclosporine in pediatric liver transplantation

    Get PDF
    Background. In this report, we compare the long-term outcome of pediatric liver transplantation (LTx) patients maintained with tacrolimus-based and with cyclosporine (CsA)-based immunosuppressive therapy. We examine long-term patient and graft survival, the incidence of rejection, and immunosuppression-related complications. Method. There were 233 consecutive primary LTx in children (ages <18 years) performed between October 1989 and December 1994 with tacrolimus-based immunosuppressive therapy (Group I). These were compared with 120 consecutive primary LTx performed with CsA-based immunosuppressive therapy between January 1988 and October 1989(Group II). Children in both groups were followed until July 1999. Mean follow-up was 91.41±17.7 months (range 55.6-117.8) for Group I, and 128±6.1 months (range 116.7-138.6) for Group II. Results. At 9 years of follow-up, actuarial patient and graft survival were significantly improved (patient survival 85.4% in Group I vs. 63.8% in Group II, P=0.0001; graft survival Group I 78.9% vs. 60.8% Group II, P=0.0003) and the rate of re -transplantation was significantly lower among patients in Group I (12% in Group I vs. 22.5% in Group II P=0.01). Children in Group I also experienced a significantly reduced incidence of acute rejection (0.97 per patient Group I vs. 1.5 per patient Group II P=0.002) and significantly less steroid resistant acute rejection episodes (3.1% in Group I vs. 8.6% in Group II P=0.0001). The mean steroid dose was significantly lower in Group I compared with Group II at all time points (P=0.0001) after LTx. Freedom from steroid was also significantly higher in Group I compared with Group H at all time points after LTx (ranging from 78% to 84% in Group I and 9% to 32% in Group H during a 1- to 7-year posttransplant period P=0.0001). The rate of hypertension was significantly lower in Group I than Group II (P=0.0001), and the severity of hypertension (need for more than one anti-hypertensive medication) was also significantly lower in Group I than Group II (P=0.0001). Although the rate of posttransplant lymphoproliferative disorder (PTLD) was not significantly different (13.7% Group I vs.8.3% Group II, P=0.13), the survival after PTLD was significantly better for Group I at 81.2% than for Group II at 50% after 5 years (P=0.034). Conclusion. The results suggest that tacrolimus-based therapy provides significant long-term benefit to pediatric LTx patients, evidenced by significantly improved patient and graft survival, reduced rate of rejection, and hypertension with lower steroid doses

    Dynamical regimes and hydrodynamic lift of viscous vesicles under shear

    Get PDF
    The dynamics of two-dimensional viscous vesicles in shear flow, with different fluid viscosities ηin\eta_{\rm in} and ηout\eta_{\rm out} inside and outside, respectively, is studied using mesoscale simulation techniques. Besides the well-known tank-treading and tumbling motions, an oscillatory swinging motion is observed in the simulations for large shear rate. The existence of this swinging motion requires the excitation of higher-order undulation modes (beyond elliptical deformations) in two dimensions. Keller-Skalak theory is extended to deformable two-dimensional vesicles, such that a dynamical phase diagram can be predicted for the reduced shear rate and the viscosity contrast ηin/ηout\eta_{\rm in}/\eta_{\rm out}. The simulation results are found to be in good agreement with the theoretical predictions, when thermal fluctuations are incorporated in the theory. Moreover, the hydrodynamic lift force, acting on vesicles under shear close to a wall, is determined from simulations for various viscosity contrasts. For comparison, the lift force is calculated numerically in the absence of thermal fluctuations using the boundary-integral method for equal inside and outside viscosities. Both methods show that the dependence of the lift force on the distance ycmy_{\rm {cm}} of the vesicle center of mass from the wall is well described by an effective power law ycm2y_{\rm {cm}}^{-2} for intermediate distances 0.8Rpycm3Rp0.8 R_{\rm p} \lesssim y_{\rm {cm}} \lesssim 3 R_{\rm p} with vesicle radius RpR_{\rm p}. The boundary-integral calculation indicates that the lift force decays asymptotically as 1/[ycmln(ycm)]1/[y_{\rm {cm}}\ln(y_{\rm {cm}})] far from the wall.Comment: 13 pages, 13 figure

    Evidence for engraftment of human bone marrow cells in non-lethally irradiated baboons

    Get PDF
    Background. Prior to organ harvesting, an attempt was made to modulate the donor's immune responses against prospective xenogeneic recipients by infusion of 'recipient-type' bone marrow. Methods. For this purpose, baboons conditioned with total lymphoid irradiation were given 6x108 unmodified human bone marrow cells/kg body weight with no subsequent treatment. Results. Animals survived until they were euthanized at 18 months. Using primers specific for human chorionic gonadotrophin gene, the presence of human DNA was confirmed by polymerase chain reaction in the blood of one animal for up to 18 months after cell transplantation; in the other animal, xenogeneic chimerism became undetectable in the blood at 6 months after bone marrow infusion. However, tissue samples obtained from both animals at the time they were euthanized bad evidence of donor (human) DNA. Additionally, the presence of donor DNA in individually harvested colonies of erythroid and myeloid lineages suggested that infused human bone marrow cells had engrafted across the xenogeneic barrier in both baboons. Conclusions. Bone marrow transplantation from human to baboon leads to establishment of chimerism and modulation of donor-specific immune reactivity, which suggests that this strategy could be reproducibly employed to crease 'surrogate' tolerogenesis in prospective donors for subsequent organ transplantation across xenogeneic barriers
    corecore