15,202 research outputs found
Viscosity measurement in thin lubricant films using shear ultrasonic reflection
When a shear ultrasonic wave is incident on a solid and liquid boundary, the proportion that is reflected depends on the liquid viscosity. This is the basis for some instruments for on-line measurement of bulk liquid viscosity. In machine elements, the lubricant is usually present in a thin layer between two rubbing solid surfaces. The thin film has a different response to an ultrasonic shear wave than liquid in bulk. In this work, this response is investigated with the aim of measuring viscosity in situ in a lubricating film. The proportion of the wave reflected at a thin layer depends on the layer stiffness. A shear wave is reflected by the shear stiffness of the thin layer. For a thin viscous liquid layer, the stiffness is a complex quantity dependent on the viscosity, wave frequency, and film thickness. This stiffness is incorporated into a quasi-static spring model of ultrasonic reflection. In this way, the viscosity can be determined from shear-wave reflection if the oil-film thickness is known. The approach has been experimentally evaluated on some static oil film between Perspex plates. Predictions of the spring model gave good measurement up to layer thicknesses of around 15 μm. For thicker layers, the shear stiffness reduces to such an extent that almost all the wave is reflected and the difference associated with the layer response is hard to distinguish from background noise
Controlled evolution of an RNA enzyme
It is generally thought that prior to the origin of protein synthesis, life on earth was based on self-replicating RNA molecules. This idea has become especially popular recently due to the discovery of catalytic RNA (ribozymes). RNA has both genotypic and phenotypic properties, suggesting that it is capable of undergoing Darwinian evolution. RNA evolution is likely to have played a critical role in the early history of life on earth, and thus is important in considering the possibility of life elsewhere in the solar system. We have constructed an RNA-based evolving system in the laboratory, combining amplification and mutation of an RNA genotype with selection of a corresponding RNA phenotype. This system serves as a functional model of a primitive organism. It can also be used as a tool to explore the catalytic potential of RNA. By altering the selection constraints, we are attempting to modify the substrate specificity of an existing ribozyme in order to develop ribozymes with novel catalytic function. In this way, we hope to gain a better understanding of RNA's catalytic versatility and to assess its suitability for the role of primordial catalyst. All of the RNA enzymes that are known to exist in contemporary biology carry out cleavage/ligation reactions involving RNA substrates. The Tetrahymena ribozyme, for example, catalyzes phosphoester transfer between a guanosine containing and an oligopyrimidine containing substrate. We tested the ability of mutant forms of the Tetrahymena ribozyme to carry out a comparable reaction using DNA, rather than RNA substrate. An ensemble of structural variants of the ribozyme was prepared and tested for their ability to specifically cleave d(GGCCCTCT-A3TA3TA) at the phosphodiester bond following the sequence CCCTCT. We recovered a mutant form of the enzyme that cleaves DNA more efficiently than does the wild-type. Beginning with this selected mutant we have now scattered random mutations throughout the ribozyme and have begun an evolutionary search to further expand the catalytic repertoire of RNA
Shock-like solutions of the electrostatic Vlasov equation
Shock like solutions of electrostatic Vlasov equatio
Supersymmetry of Noncompact MQCD-like Membrane Instantons and Heat Kernel Asymptotics
We perform a heat kernel asymptotics analysis of the nonperturbative
superpotential obtained from wrapping of an M2-brane around a supersymmetric
noncompact three-fold embedded in a (noncompact) G_2-manifold as obtained in
[1], the three-fold being the one relevant to domain walls in Witten's MQCD
[2], in the limit of small "zeta", a complex constant that appears in the
Riemann surfaces relevant to defining the boundary conditions for the domain
wall in MQCD. The MQCD-like configuration is interpretable, for small but
non-zero zeta as a noncompact/"large" open membrane instanton, and for
vanishing zeta, as the type IIA D0-brane (for vanishing M-theory cicle radius).
We find that the eta-function Seeley de-Witt coefficients vanish, and we get a
perfect match between the zeta-function Seeley de-Witt coefficients (up to
terms quadratic in zeta) between the Dirac-type operator and one of the two
Laplace-type operators figuring in the superpotential. This is an extremely
strong signature of residual supersymmetry for the nonperturbative
configurations in M-theory considered in this work.Comment: 21 pages, LaTeX; v3: several clarifying remarks added, to appear in
JHE
Magnetic dynamo action in two-dimensional turbulent magneto-hydrodynamics
Two-dimensional magnetohydrodynamic turbulence is explored by means of numerical simulation. Previous analytical theory, based on non-dissipative constants of the motion in a truncated Fourier representation, is verified by following the evolution of highly non-equilibrium initial conditions numerically. Dynamo action (conversion of a significant fraction of turbulent kinetic energy into long-wavelength magnetic field energy) is observed. It is conjectured that in the presence of dissipation and external forcing, a dual cascade will be observed for zero-helicity situations. Energy will cascade to higher wave numbers simultaneously with a cascade of mean square vector potential to lower wave numbers, leading to an omni-directional magnetic energy spectrum which varies as 1/k 3 at lower wave numbers, simultaneously with a buildup of magnetic excitation at the lowest wave number of the system. Equipartition of kinetic and magnetic energies is expected at the highest wave numbers in the system
The Cepheid Distance Scale: recent progress in fundamental techniques
This review examines progress on the Pop I, fundamental-mode Cepheid distance
scale with emphasis on recent developments in geometric and quasi-geometric
techniques for Cepheid distance determination. Specifically I examine the
surface brightness method, interferometric pulsation method, and trigonometric
measurements. The three techniques are found to be in excellent agreement for
distance measures in the Galaxy. The velocity p-factor is of crucial importance
in the first two of these methods. A comparison of recent determinations of the
p-factor for Cepheids demonstrates that observational measures of p and
theoretical predictions agree within their uncertainties for Galactic Cepheids.Comment: An invited review at the Santa Fe, NM, conference -- Stellar
Pulsation: Challenges for Theory and Observation; May 31-June 5, 2009 10
pages, 8 figure
Kinetic description of fermion flavor mixing and CP-violating sources for baryogenesis
We derive transport equations for fermionic systems with a space-time
dependent mass matrix in flavor space allowing for complex elements leading to
CP violation required for electroweak baryogenesis. By constructing appropriate
projectors in flavor space of the relevant tree level Kadanoff-Baym equations,
we split the constraint equations into "diagonal" and "transversal" parts in
flavor space, and show that they decouple. While the diagonal densities exhibit
standard dispersion relations at leading order in gradients, the transverse
densities exhibit a novel on-shell structure. Next, the kinetic equations are
considered to second order in gradients and the CP-violating source terms are
isolated. This requires a thorough discussion of a flavor independent
definition of charge-parity symmetry operation. To make a link with
baryogenesis in the supersymmetric extension of the Standard Model, we
construct the Green functions for the leading order kinetic operator and solve
the kinetic equations for two mixing fermions (charginos). We take account of
flavor blind damping, and consider the cases of inefficient and moderate
diffusion. The resulting densities are the CP-violating chargino currents that
source baryogenesis.Comment: 33 pages, 6 figure
Luminosity density estimation from redshift surveys and the mass density of the Universe
In most direct estimates of the mass density (visible or dark) of the
Universe, a central input parameter is the luminosity density of the Universe.
Here we consider the measurement of this luminosity density from red-shift
surveys, as a function of the yet undetermined characteristic scale R_H at
which the spatial distribution of visible matter tends to a well defined
homogeneity. Making the canonical assumption that the cluster mass to
luminosity ratio M/L is the universal one, we can estimate the total mass
density as a function \Omega_m(R_H,M/L). Taking the highest estimated cluster
value M/L ~300h and a conservative lower limit R_H > 20 Mpc/h, we obtain the
upper bound \Omega_m < 0.1 . We note that for values of the homogeneity scale
R_H in the range R_H ~ (90 +/- 45) hMpc, the value of \Omega_m may be
compatible with the nucleosynthesis inferred density in baryons.Comment: 16 pages, latex, no figures. To be published in Astrophysical Journal
Letter
The origin of turtles: A paleontological perspective
The origin of turtles and their unusual body plan has fascinated scientists for the last two centuries. Over the course of the last decades, a broad sample of molecular analyses have favored a sister group relationship of turtles with archosaurs, but recent studies reveal that this signal may be the result of systematic biases affecting molecular approaches, in particular sampling, non-randomly distributed rate heterogeneity among taxa, and the use of concatenated data sets. Morphological studies, by contrast, disfavor archosaurian relationships for turtles, but the proposed alternative topologies are poorly supported as well. The recently revived paleontological hypothesis that the Middle Permian Eunotosaurus africanus is an intermediate stem turtle is now robustly supported by numerous characters that were previously thought to be unique to turtles and that are now shown to have originated over the course of tens of millions of years unrelated to the origin of the turtle shell. Although E. africanus does not solve the placement of turtles within Amniota, it successfully extends the stem lineage of turtles to the Permian and helps resolve some questions associated with the origin of turtles, in particular the non-composite origin of the shell, the slow origin of the shell, and the terrestrial setting for the origin of turtles
Evidence against the Detectability of a Hippocampal Place Code Using Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Individual hippocampal neurons selectively increase their firing rates in specific spatial locations. As a population, these neurons provide a decodable representation of space that is robust against changes to sensory- and path-related cues. This neural code is sparse and distributed, theoretically rendering it undetectable with population recording methods such as functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Existing studies nonetheless report decoding spatial codes in the human hippocampus using such techniques. Here we present results from a virtual navigation experiment in humans in which we eliminated visual- and path-related confounds and statistical limitations present in existing studies, ensuring that any positive decoding results would represent a voxel-place code. Consistent with theoretical arguments derived from electrophysiological data and contrary to existing fMRI studies, our results show that although participants were fully oriented during the navigation task, there was no statistical evidence for a place code
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