313 research outputs found
A systematic correlation between two-dimensional flow topology and the abstract statistics of turbulence
Velocity differences in the direct enstrophy cascade of two-dimensional
turbulence are correlated with the underlying flow topology. The statistics of
the transverse and longitudinal velocity differences are found to be governed
by different structures. The wings of the transverse distribution are dominated
by strong vortex centers, whereas, the tails of the longitudinal differences
are dominated by saddles. Viewed in the framework of earlier theoretical work
this result suggests that the transfer of enstrophy to smaller scales is
accomplished in regions of the flow dominated by saddles.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Costs of Locomotion in Polar Bears: When do the Costs Outweigh the Benefits of Chasing Down Terrestrial Prey?
Trade-offs between locomotory costs and foraging gains are key elements in determining constraints on predator–prey interactions. One intriguing example involves polar bears pursuing snow geese on land. As climate change forces polar bears to spend more time ashore, they may need to expend more energy to obtain land-based food. Given that polar bears are inefficient at terrestrial locomotion, any extra energy expended to pursue prey could negatively impact survival. However, polar bears have been regularly observed engaging in long pursuits of geese and other land animals, and the energetic worth of such behaviour has been repeatedly questioned. We use data-driven energetic models to examine how energy expenditures vary across polar bear mass and speed. For the first time, we show that polar bears in the 125–235 kg size range can profitably pursue geese, especially at slower speeds. We caution, however, that heat build-up may be the ultimate limiting factor in terrestrial chases, especially for larger bears, and this limit would be reached more quickly with warmer environmental temperatures
Quasilinear theory of the 2D Euler equation
We develop a quasilinear theory of the 2D Euler equation and derive an
integro-differential equation for the evolution of the coarse-grained
vorticity. This equation respects all the invariance properties of the Euler
equation and conserves angular momentum in a circular domain and linear impulse
in a channel. We show under which hypothesis we can derive a H-theorem for the
Fermi-Dirac entropy and make the connection with statistical theories of 2D
turbulence.Comment: 4 page
Rapid environmental degradation in a subarctic ecosystem influences resource use of a keystone avian herbivore
Summary 1. Environmental degradation can change resource use strategies of animals and thereby affect survival and fitness. Arctic herbivores may be especially susceptible to the effects of such environmental change because their rapid growth rates demand high-quality forage, which may be limited as environmental conditions deteriorate. We studied the consequences of a trophic cascade, driven by Lesser Snow Goose (Chen caerulescens caerulescens) overgrazing on the south-west coast of Hudson Bay, Canada, which has caused tidal marsh (TM) degradation and the reduction in highquality forage plants, on gosling growth and resource use. 2. We compared resource use and body size of goslings that inhabited tidal and freshwater marsh (FM) to determine how current foraging strategies influence growth and to test the hypothesis that during early growth goslings require and so consume high-quality TM plants, but that during later growth they may switch to foraging in lower-quality FM. 3. To investigate gosling resource use throughout growth, we measured once a week for 28 days the body size of goslings as well as stable isotope ratios (d C) in multiple tissues of goslings that were collected from both TM and nearby FM. We also measured the stable isotope ratios in forage plants sampled along transects and from gosling foreguts. We used an isotopemixing model to determine the contribution of FM plants to gosling tissues. 4. Contrary to the proposed hypothesis, goslings inhabiting FM or TM primarily consumed FM plants during early growth. Furthermore, goslings that foraged extensively in FM had similar growth rates and grew to a similar size and body mass, as goslings that foraged in the degraded TM. However, goslings that currently inhabit freshwater or TM were significantly smaller than goslings that inhabited TM in the 1980s prior to habitat degradation. 5. Consequences of smaller overall body size include decreased survival and fecundity for arcticnesting geese. The ability of phenotypically plastic responses to sustain persistence is limited by reaction norms and the extent of environmental change. Current research is assessing whether those limits have been reached in this system
Offsprings of a point vortex
The distribution engendered by successive splitting of one point vortex are
considered. The process of splitting a vortex in three using a reverse
three-point vortex collapse course is analysed in great details and shown to be
dissipative. A simple process of successive splitting is then defined and the
resulting vorticity distribution and vortex populations are analysed
Scaling laws and vortex profiles in 2D decaying turbulence
We use high resolution numerical simulations over several hundred of turnover
times to study the influence of small scale dissipation onto vortex statistics
in 2D decaying turbulence. A self-similar scaling regime is detected when the
scaling laws are expressed in units of mean vorticity and integral scale, as
predicted by Carnevale et al., and it is observed that viscous effects spoil
this scaling regime. This scaling regime shows some trends toward that of the
Kirchhoff model, for which a recent theory predicts a decay exponent .
In terms of scaled variables, the vortices have a similar profile close to a
Fermi-Dirac distribution.Comment: 4 Latex pages and 4 figures. Submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
Destruction of large-scale magnetic field in non-linear simulations of the shear dynamo
The Sun's magnetic field exhibits coherence in space and time on much larger scales than the turbulent convection that ultimately powers the dynamo. In the past the α-effect (mean-field) concept has been used to model the solar cycle, but recent work has cast doubt on the validity of the mean-field ansatz under solar conditions. This indicates that one should seek an alternative mechanism for generating large-scale structure. One possibility is the recently proposed ‘shear dynamo’ mechanism where large-scale magnetic fields are generated in the presence of a simple shear. Further investigation of this proposition is required, however, because work has been focused on the linear regime with a uniform shear profile thus far. In this paper we report results of the extension of the original shear dynamo model into the nonlinear regime. We find that whilst large-scale structure can initially persist into the saturated regime, in several of our simulations it is destroyed via large increase in kinetic energy. This result casts doubt on the ability of the simple uniform shear dynamo mechanism to act as an alternative to the α-effect in solar conditions.This work was supported by the Science and Technology Facilities Council, grant ST/L000636/1.This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Oxford University Press via http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stw49
Multi-Institutional experience with FOLFIRINOX in pancreatic adenocarcinoma
Combination chemotherapy with FOLFIRINOX (oxaliplatin, irinotecan, fluorouracil, and leucovorin) was shown to be effective in a large phase III trial.
The purpose of this study was to examine the tolerance and effectiveness of FOLFIRINOX as practiced outside of the confines of a clinical trial and to document any dose modifications used by practicing oncologists.
Data on patients with all stages of pancreatic adenocarcinoma treated with FOLFIRINOX at three institutions was analyzed for efficacy, tolerance, and use of any dose modifications.
Total of 61 patients was included in this review. Median age was 58 years (range: 37 to 72 years), 33 were male (54.1%) and majority had ECOG performance of 0 or 1 (86.9%, 53 patients). Thirty-eight (62.3%) had metastatic disease, while 23 (37.7%) were treated for locally advanced or borderline resectable disease. Patients were treated with a median number of four cycles of FOLFIRINOX, with dose modifications in 58.3% (176/302) of all cycles. Ten patients had stable disease (16.4%), four had a partial response (6.6%) while eight had progressive disease (13.1%) on best imaging following therapy. Median progression-free survival and overall survival were 7.5 months and 13.5 months, respectively. The most common grade 3-4 adverse event was neutropenia at 19.7% (12 cases), with 4.9% (3 cases) rate of febrile neutropenia. Twenty-one patients (34.4%) were hospitalized as a result of therapy but there were no therapy-related deaths. Twenty-three (37.7%) had therapy eventually discontinued as a result of adverse events.
Despite substantial rates of adverse events and use of dose modifications, FOLFIRINOX was found to be clinically effective in both metastatic and non-metastatic patients. Regimen toxicity did not detract from overall response and survival
Phase III Prospective Randomized Comparison Trial of Depot Octreotide Plus Interferon Alfa-2b Versus Depot Octreotide Plus Bevacizumab in Patients With Advanced Carcinoid Tumors: SWOG S0518
Purpose
Treatment options for neuroendocrine tumors (NETs) remain limited. This trial assessed the progression-free survival (PFS) of bevacizumab or interferon alfa-2b (IFN-α-2b) added to octreotide among patients with advanced NETs.
Patients and Methods
Southwest Oncology Group (SWOG) S0518, a phase III study conducted in a US cooperative group system, enrolled patients with advanced grades 1 and 2 NETs with progressive disease or other poor prognostic features. Patients were randomly assigned to treatment with octreotide LAR 20 mg every 21 days with either bevacizumab 15 mg/kg every 21 days or 5 million units of IFN-α-2b three times per week. The primary end point was centrally assessed PFS. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov as NCT00569127.
Results
A total of 427 patients was enrolled, of whom 214 were allocated to bevacizumab and 213 to IFN-α-2b. The median PFS by central review was 16.6 months (95% CI, 12.9 to 19.6 months) in the bevacizumab arm and was 15.4 months (95% CI, 9.6 to 18.6 months) in the IFN arm (hazard ratio [HR], 0.93; 95% CI, 0.73 to 1.18; P = .55). By site review, the median PFS times were 15.4 months (95% CI, 12.6 to 17.2 months) for bevacizumab and 10.6 months (95% CI, 8.5 to 14.4 months) for interferon (HR, 0.90; 95% CI, 0.72 to 1.12; P = .33). Time to treatment failure was longer with bevacizumab than with IFN (HR, 0.72; 95% CI, 0.58 to 0.89; P = .003). Confirmed radiologic response rates were 12% (95% CI, 8% to 18%) for bevacizumab and 4% (95% CI, 2% to 8%) for IFN. Common adverse events with bevacizumab and octreotide included hypertension (32%), proteinuria (9%), and fatigue (7%); with IFN and octreotide, they included fatigue (27%), neutropenia (12%), and nausea (6%).
Conclusion
No significant differences in PFS were observed between the bevacizumab and IFN arms, which suggests that these agents have similar antitumor activity among patients with advanced NETs
Vortices in (2+1)d Conformal Fluids
We study isolated, stationary, axially symmetric vortex solutions in
(2+1)-dimensional viscous conformal fluids. The equations describing them can
be brought to the form of three coupled first order ODEs for the radial and
rotational velocities and the temperature. They have a rich space of solutions
characterized by the radial energy and angular momentum fluxes. We do a
detailed study of the phases in the one-parameter family of solutions with no
energy flux. This parameter is the product of the asymptotic vorticity and
temperature. When it is large, the radial fluid velocity reaches the speed of
light at a finite inner radius. When it is below a critical value, the velocity
is everywhere bounded, but at the origin there is a discontinuity. We comment
on turbulence, potential gravity duals, non-viscous limits and non-relativistic
limits.Comment: 39 pages, 10 eps figures, v2: Minor changes, refs, preprint numbe
- …