1,913 research outputs found
Toward a structural understanding of turbulent drag reduction: nonlinear coherent states in viscoelastic shear flows
Nontrivial steady flows have recently been found that capture the main
structures of the turbulent buffer layer. We study the effects of polymer
addition on these "exact coherent states" (ECS) in plane Couette flow. Despite
the simplicity of the ECS flows, these effects closely mirror those observed
experimentally: Structures shift to larger length scales, wall-normal
fluctuations are suppressed while streamwise ones are enhanced, and drag is
reduced. The mechanism underlying these effects is elucidated. These results
suggest that the ECS are closely related to buffer layer turbulence.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, published version, Phys. Rev. Lett. 89, 208301
(2002
A descriptive study of mastitis in Australian breastfeeding women: incidence and determinants
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Mastitis is one of the most common problems experienced by women who are breastfeeding. Mastitis is an inflammation of breast tissue, which may or may not result from infection. The aims of this paper are to compare rates of mastitis in primiparous women receiving public hospital care (standard or birth centre) and care in a co-located private hospital, and to use multivariate analysis to explore other factors related to mastitis.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Data from two studies (a randomised controlled trial [RCT] and a survey) have been combined. The RCT (Attachment to the Breast and Family Attitudes to Breastfeeding, ABFAB) which was designed to test whether breastfeeding education in mid-pregnancy could increase breastfeeding duration recruited public patients at the Royal Women's Hospital at 18–20 weeks gestation. A concurrent survey recruited women planning to give birth in the Family Birth Centre (at 36 weeks gestation) and women in the postnatal wards of Frances Perry House (private hospital). All women were followed up by telephone at 6 months postpartum. Mastitis was defined as at least 2 breast symptoms (pain, redness or lump) AND at least one of fever or flu-like symptoms.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>The 6 month telephone interview was completed by 1193 women. Breastfeeding rates at 6 months were 77% in Family Birth Centre, 63% in Frances Perry House and 53% in ABFAB. Seventeen percent (n = 206) of women experienced mastitis. Family Birth Centre and Frances Perry House women were more likely to develop mastitis (23% and 24%) than women in ABFAB (15%); adjusted odds ratio (Adj OR) ~1.9. Most episodes occurred in the first 4 weeks postpartum: 53% (194/365). Nipple damage was also associated with mastitis (Adj OR 1.7, 95% CI, 1.14, 2.56). We found no association between breastfeeding duration and mastitis.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>The prevention and improved management of nipple damage could potentially reduce the risk of lactating women developing mastitis.</p> <p>Trial registration</p> <p>Trial registration (ABFAB): Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN21556494</p
Cognitive Organization, Perceptions of Parenting and Depression Symptoms in Early Adolescence
Despite its strong relation to depression and theorized development across childhood and adolescence, cognitive schema organization has not been explored in early adolescence, a sensitive developmental period for first depression onset. Schema organization is theorized to derive from childhood cognitive internalizations of caregiving relationships, such as critical parenting experiences (e.g., Young et al. in Schema therapy: a practitioner’s guide. Guilford Press, New York, 2003). Thus, the current investigation considers the organization of positive and negative schemas with youth’s perceptions of parental warmth and psychological control and self-reported emotional functioning. Participants were 198 boys and girls aged 9–14 years who completed the Psychological Distance Scaling Task, measures of perceptions of parenting behaviors, anxiety symptoms and depression symptoms. Consistent with hypotheses, higher depression, but not anxiety symptoms were associated with a loosely-interconnected positive schema organization and a tightly-interconnected negative schema organization. Parental responsiveness emerged as the strongest predictor of negative schema structure. Implications for cognitive-developmental theories of depression and early identification of depression risk are discussed
Dynamics of threads and polymers in turbulence: power-law distributions and synchronization
We study the behavior of threads and polymers in a turbulent flow. These
objects have finite spatial extension, so the flow along them differs slightly.
The corresponding drag forces produce a finite average stretching and the
thread is stretched most of the time. Nevertheless, the probability of
shrinking fluctuations is significant and is known to decay only as a
power-law. We show that the exponent of the power law is a universal number
independent of the statistics of the flow. For polymers the coil-stretch
transition exists: the flow must have a sufficiently large Lyapunov exponent to
overcome the elastic resistance and stretch the polymer from the coiled state
it takes otherwise. The probability of shrinking from the stretched state above
the transition again obeys a power law but with a non-universal exponent. We
show that well above the transition the exponent becomes universal and derive
the corresponding expression. Furthermore, we demonstrate synchronization: the
end-to-end distances of threads or polymers above the transition are
synchronized by the flow and become identical. Thus, the transition from
Newtonian to non-Newtonian behavior in dilute polymer solutions can be seen as
an ordering transition.Comment: 13 pages, version accepted to Journal of Statistical Mechanic
Vitamins and Perinatal Outcomes Among HIV-Negative Women in Tanzania.
Prematurity and low birth weight are associated with high perinatal and infant mortality, especially in developing countries. Maternal micronutrient deficiencies may contribute to these adverse outcomes. In a double-blind trial in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, we randomly assigned 8468 pregnant women (gestational age of fetus, 12 to 27 weeks) who were negative for human immunodeficiency virus infection to receive daily multivitamins (including multiples of the recommended dietary allowance) or placebo. All the women received prenatal supplemental iron and folic acid. The primary outcomes were low birth weight (<2500 g), prematurity, and fetal death. The incidence of low birth weight was 7.8% among the infants in the multivitamin group and 9.4% among those in the placebo group (relative risk, 0.82; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.70 to 0.95; P=0.01). The mean difference in birth weight between the groups was modest (67 g, P<0.001). The rates of prematurity were 16.9% in the multivitamin group and 16.7% in the placebo group (relative risk, 1.01; 95% CI, 0.91 to 1.11; P=0.87), and the rates of fetal death were 4.3% and 5.0%, respectively (relative risk, 0.87; 95% CI, 0.72 to 1.05; P=0.15). Supplementation reduced both the risk of a birth size that was small for gestational age (<10th percentile; 10.7% in the multivitamin group vs. 13.6% in the placebo group; relative risk, 0.77; 95% CI, 0.68 to 0.87; P<0.001) and the risk of maternal anemia (hemoglobin level, <11 g per deciliter; relative risk, 0.88; 95% CI, 0.80 to 0.97; P=0.01), although the difference in the mean hemoglobin levels between the groups was small (0.2 g per deciliter, P<0.001). Multivitamin supplementation reduced the incidence of low birth weight and small-for-gestational-age births but had no significant effects on prematurity or fetal death. Multivitamins should be considered for all pregnant women in developing countries. (ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00197548 [ClinicalTrials.gov].)
The sintering, sintered microstructure and mechanical properties of Ti-Fe-Si Alloys
A systematic study has been conducted of the sintering, sintered microstructure and tensile properties of a range of lower cost Ti-Fe-Si alloys, including Ti-3Fe-(0-4)Si, Ti-(3-6)Fe-0.5Si, and Ti-(3-6)Fe-1Si (in wt pct throughout). Small additions of Si (≤1 pct) noticeably improve the as-sintered tensile properties of Ti-3Fe alloy, including the ductility, with fine titanium silicides (TiSi) being dispersed in both the α and β phases. Conversely, additions of >1 pct Si produce coarse and/or networked TiSi silicides along the grain boundaries leading to predominantly intergranular fracture and, hence, poor ductility, although the tensile strength continues to increase because of the reinforcement by TiSi. Increasing the Fe content in the Ti-xFe-0.5/ 1.0Si alloys above 3 pct markedly increases the average grain size and changes the morphology of the α-phase phase to much thinner and more acicular laths. Consequently, the ductility drops t
Linear Stochastic Models of Nonlinear Dynamical Systems
We investigate in this work the validity of linear stochastic models for
nonlinear dynamical systems. We exploit as our basic tool a previously proposed
Rayleigh-Ritz approximation for the effective action of nonlinear dynamical
systems started from random initial conditions. The present paper discusses
only the case where the PDF-Ansatz employed in the variational calculation is
``Markovian'', i.e. is determined completely by the present values of the
moment-averages. In this case we show that the Rayleigh-Ritz effective action
of the complete set of moment-functions that are employed in the closure has a
quadratic part which is always formally an Onsager-Machlup action. Thus,
subject to satisfaction of the requisite realizability conditions on the noise
covariance, a linear Langevin model will exist which reproduces exactly the
joint 2-time correlations of the moment-functions. We compare our method with
the closely related formalism of principal oscillation patterns (POP), which,
in the approach of C. Penland, is a method to derive such a linear Langevin
model empirically from time-series data for the moment-functions. The
predictive capability of the POP analysis, compared with the Rayleigh-Ritz
result, is limited to the regime of small fluctuations around the most probable
future pattern. Finally, we shall discuss a thermodynamics of statistical
moments which should hold for all dynamical systems with stable invariant
probability measures and which follows within the Rayleigh-Ritz formalism.Comment: 36 pages, 5 figures, seceq.sty for sequential numbering of equations
by sectio
Universal long-time properties of Lagrangian statistics in the Batchelor regime and their application to the passive scalar problem
We consider transport of dynamically passive quantities in the Batchelor
regime of smooth in space velocity field. For the case of arbitrary temporal
correlations of the velocity we formulate the statistics of relevant
characteristics of Lagrangian motion. This allows to generalize many results
obtained previously for the delta-correlated in time strain, thus answering the
question of universality of these results.Comment: 11 pages, revtex; added references, typos correcte
The Scaling Structure of the Velocity Statistics in Atmospheric Boundary Layer
The statistical objects characterizing turbulence in real turbulent flows
differ from those of the ideal homogeneous isotropic model.They
containcontributions from various 2d and 3d aspects, and from the superposition
ofinhomogeneous and anisotropic contributions. We employ the recently
introduceddecomposition of statistical tensor objects into irreducible
representations of theSO(3) symmetry group (characterized by and
indices), to disentangle someof these contributions, separating the universal
and the asymptotic from the specific aspects of the flow. The different
contributions transform differently under rotations and so form a complete
basis in which to represent the tensor objects under study. The experimental
data arerecorded with hot-wire probes placed at various heights in the
atmospheric surfacelayer. Time series data from single probes and from pairs of
probes are analyzed to compute the amplitudes and exponents of different
contributions to the second order statistical objects characterized by ,
and . The analysis shows the need to make a careful distinction
between long-lived quasi 2d turbulent motions (close to the ground) and
relatively short-lived 3d motions. We demonstrate that the leading scaling
exponents in the three leading sectors () appear to be different
butuniversal, independent of the positions of the probe, and the large
scaleproperties. The measured values of the exponent are , and .
We present theoretical arguments for the values of these exponents usingthe
Clebsch representation of the Euler equations; neglecting anomalous
corrections, the values obtained are 2/3, 1 and 4/3 respectively.Comment: PRE, submitted. RevTex, 38 pages, 8 figures included . Online (HTML)
version of this paper is avaliable at http://lvov.weizmann.ac.il
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