110 research outputs found
Nonsteady condensation and evaporation waves
We study motion of a phase transition front at a constant temperature between
stable and metastable states in fluids with the universal Van der Waals
equation of state (which is valid sufficiently close to the fluid's critical
point). We focus on a case of relatively large metastability and low viscosity,
when it can be shown analytically that no steadily moving phase-transition
front exists. Numerically simulating a system of the one-dimensional
Navier-Stokes and continuity equations, we find that, in this case, the
nonsteady phase-transition front emits acoustic shocks in forward and backward
directions. Through this mechanism, the front drops its velocity and eventually
comes to a halt. The acoustic shock wave may shuttle, bouncing elastically from
the system's edge and strongly inelastically from the phase transition front.
Nonsteady rarefaction shock waves appear in the shuttle process, despite the
fact that the model does not admit steady rarefaction waves propagating between
stationary states. If the viscosity is below a certain threshold, an
instability sets in, driving the system into a turbulent state. This work was
supported by the Japan Society for Promotion of Science.Comment: revtex text file and four eps files with figures. Physical Review
Letters, in pres
Dynamics due to combined buoyancy- and Marangoni-driven convective flows around autocatalytic fronts
Heat transport by lattice and spin excitations in the spin chain compounds SrCuO_2 and Sr_2CuO_3
We present the results of measurements of the thermal conductivity of the
quasi one-dimensional spin S=1/2 chain compound SrCuO_2 in the temperature
range between 0.4 and 300 K along the directions parallel and perpendicular to
the chains. An anomalously enhanced thermal conductivity is observed along the
chains. The analysis of the present data and a comparison with analogous recent
results for Sr_2CuO_3 and other similar materials demonstrates that this
behavior is generic for cuprates with copper-oxygen chains and strong
intrachain interactions. The observed anomalies are attributed to the
one-dimensional energy transport by spin excitations (spinons), limited by the
interaction between spin and lattice excitations. The energy transport along
the spin chains has a non-diffusive character, in agreement with theoretical
predictions for integrable models.Comment: 12 pages (RevTeX), 8 figure
Inverse association of antioxidant and phytoestrogen nutrient intake with adult glioma in the San Francisco Bay Area: a case-control study
BACKGROUND: Increasing evidence from epidemiologic studies suggest that oxidative stress may play a role in adult glioma. In addition to dietary antioxidants, antioxidant and weak estrogenic properties of dietary phytoestrogens may attenuate oxidative stress. Our hypothesis is that long-term consumption of dietary antioxidants and phytoestrogens such as genistein, daidzein, biochanin A, formononetin, matairesinol, secoisolariciresinol and coumestrol, may reduce the risk of adult glioma. METHODS: Using unconditional logistic regression models, we compared quartiles of consumption for several specific antioxidants and phytoestrogens among 802 adult glioma cases and 846 controls from two study series from the San Francisco Bay Area Adult Glioma Study, 1991 – 2000, controlling for vitamin supplement usage, age, socioeconomic status, gender, ethnicity and total daily calories. For cases, dietary information was either self-reported or reported by a proxy. For controls, dietary information was self-reported. Gender- and series- specific quartiles of average daily nutrient intake, estimated from food-frequency questionnaires, were computed from controls. RESULTS: Significant p-values (trend test) were evaluated using significance levels of either 0.05 or 0.003 (the Bonferroni corrected significance level equivalent to 0.05 adjusting for 16 comparisons). For all cases compared to controls, statistically significant inverse associations were observed for antioxidant index (p < 0.003), carotenoids (alpha- and beta-carotene combined, p < 0.05), daidzein (p = 0.003), matairesinol (p < 0.05), secoisolariciresinol (p < 0.003), and coumestrol (p < 0.003). For self-reported cases compared to controls, statistically significant inverse associations were observed for antioxidant index (p < 0.05) and daidzein (p < 0.05). CONCLUSION: Our results support inverse associations of glioma with higher dietary antioxidant index and with higher intake of certain phytoestrogens, especially daidzein
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