7,831 research outputs found
Molecular theory of solvation: Methodology summary and illustrations
Integral equation theory of molecular liquids based on statistical mechanics
is quite promising as an essential part of multiscale methodology for chemical
and biomolecular nanosystems in solution. Beginning with a molecular
interaction potential force field, it uses diagrammatic analysis of the
solvation free energy to derive integral equations for correlation functions
between molecules in solution in the statistical-mechanical ensemble. The
infinite chain of coupled integral equations for many-body correlation
functions is reduced to a tractable form for 2- or 3-body correlations by
applying the so-called closure relations. Solving these equations produces the
solvation structure with accuracy comparable to molecular simulations that have
converged but has a critical advantage of readily treating the effects and
processes spanning over a large space and slow time scales, by far not feasible
for explicit solvent molecular simulations. One of the versions of this
formalism, the three-dimensional reference interaction site model (3D-RISM)
integral equation complemented with the Kovalenko-Hirata (KH) closure
approximation, yields the solvation structure in terms of 3D maps of
correlation functions, including density distributions, of solvent interaction
sites around a solute (supra)molecule with full consistent account for the
effects of chemical functionalities of all species in the solution. The
solvation free energy and the subsequent thermodynamics are then obtained at
once as a simple integral of the 3D correlation functions by performing
thermodynamic integration analytically.Comment: 24 pages, 10 figures, Revie
Pathophysiological aspects of the problem of prolonged hypokinesia
The changes in man's acitivity due to modern life with automation and sedentary activities and man's exploration of space in a state of weightlessness have accentuated the importance of hypokinesia. The pathogenesis of hypokinesia is discussed. Experiments and results made on man and animals are included
Life in motion, in motion!
A 120 day limited mobility experiment with young male rats and its results, including retarded growth and degenerative changes in the cardiac muscle, are described. A 120 day strict bedrest experiment with 10 human volunteers and its results are described and discussed. Early subjective complaints, subsequent adaptation and eventual progressive changes in excitability and reactivity, reduction in functional capability of the cerebral cortex, and disturbances in water-salt, protein and fat metabolism, including development of precursors of atherosclerosis, as well as poor results of the orthostatic test after 4 months, are presented. These results are explained as applied to sedentary workers and recommendations are given for such persons to exercise in the morning, at work and in the evening in order to prevent hypokinesis and its physical, mental and physiological effects
Can the "standard" unitarized Regge models describe the TOTEM data?
The standard Regge poles are considered as inputs for two unitarization
methods: eikonal and U-matrix. It is shown that only models with three input
pomerons and two input odderons can describe the high energy data on and
elastic scattering including the new data from Tevatron and LHC.
However, it seems that the both considered models (eikonal and U-matrix)
require a further modification (e.g., to explore nonlinear reggeon trajectories
and/or nonexponential vertex functions) for a more satisfactory description of
the data at 19.0 GeV 7 TeV and 0.01 14.2
GeV.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, typos are corrected, minor corrections in the
text, No changes in results and conclusion. To appear in EP
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