1,720 research outputs found
Application of the penalty coupling method for the analysis of blood vessels
Due to the significant health and economic impact of blood vessel diseases on modern society, its analysis is becoming of increasing importance for the medical sciences. The complexity of the vascular system, its dynamics and material characteristics all make it an ideal candidate for analysis through fluid structure interaction (FSI) simulations. FSI is a relatively new approach in numerical analysis and enables the multi-physical analysis of problems, yielding a higher accuracy of results than could be possible when using a single physics code to analyse the same category of problems. This paper introduces the concepts behind the Arbitrary Lagrangian Eulerian (ALE) formulation using the penalty coupling method. It moves on to present a validation case and compares it to available simulation results from the literature using a different FSI method. Results were found to correspond well to the comparison case as well as basic theory
Resource utilization and trophic position of nematodes and harpacticoid copepods in and adjacent to Zostera noltii beds
This study examines the resource use and trophic
position of nematodes and harpacticoid copepods at the
genus/species level in an estuarine food web in Zostera noltii
beds and in adjacent bare sediments using the natural abundance
of stable carbon and nitrogen isotopes. Microphytobenthos
and/or epiphytes are among the main resources of
most taxa, but seagrass detritus and sediment particulate organic
matter contribute as well to meiobenthos nutrition,
which are also available in deeper sediment layers and in
unvegetated patches close to seagrass beds. A predominant
dependence on chemoautotrophic bacteria was demonstrated
for the nematode genus Terschellingia and the copepod family
Cletodidae. A predatory feeding mode is illustrated for
Paracomesoma and other Comesomatidae, which were previously
considered first-level consumers (deposit feeders) according
to their buccal morphology. The considerable variation
found in both resource use and trophic level among nematode
genera from the same feeding type, and even among
congeneric nematode species, shows that the interpretation
of nematode feeding ecology based purely on mouth morphology
should be avoided
Scraping the Social? Issues in live social research
What makes scraping methodologically interesting for social and cultural research? This paper seeks to contribute to debates about digital social research by exploring how a âmedium-specificâ technique for online data capture may be rendered analytically productive for social research. As a device that is currently being imported into social research, scraping has the capacity to re-structure social research, and this in at least two ways. Firstly, as a technique that is not native to social research, scraping risks to introduce âalienâ methodological assumptions into social research (such as an pre-occupation with freshness). Secondly, to scrape is to risk importing into our inquiry categories that are prevalent in the social practices enabled by the media: scraping makes available already formatted data for social research. Scraped data, and online social data more generally, tend to come with âexternalâ analytics already built-in. This circumstance is often approached as a âproblemâ with online data capture, but we propose it may be turned into virtue, insofar as data formats that have currency in the areas under scrutiny may serve as a source of social data themselves. Scraping, we propose, makes it possible to render traffic between the object and process of social research analytically productive. It enables a form of âreal-timeâ social research, in which the formats and life cycles of online data may lend structure to the analytic objects and findings of social research. By way of a conclusion, we demonstrate this point in an exercise of online issue profiling, and more particularly, by relying on Twitter to profile the issue of âausterityâ. Here we distinguish between two forms of real-time research, those dedicated to monitoring live content (which terms are current?) and those concerned with analysing the liveliness of issues (which topics are happening?)
Taxonomic study of entomopathogenic nematodes (Nematoda : Steinernematidae, Heterorhabditidae) from Benin
A study on the biodiversity of entomopathogenic nematodes was conducted during 2010 and 2011 in South Benin. Soil samples from eight sites production of annual and perennial crops were analysed. We obtained 13.21 % of positive soil samples out of 280. We here report on the identification of six of these isolates. Molecular, morphometrical and morphological observations classified the isolates within the genus Heterorhabditis ; one isolate was conspecific with H. indica and two other isolates with H. sonorensis. More information is needed for effective identification of the remaining three isolates. Phylogenic analysis based on sequences of ITS regions of rDNA grouped our isolates with H. sonorensis and H. taysearae with bootstrap support values of 94 and 99 % in Maximum Parsimony and Neighbour Joining trees, respectively. Morphological characters of the infective juveniles and males did not correspond to those of H. taysearae, but were close to H. sonorensis. In contrast, the female of the H. sonorensis populations did show some minor differences with the originally described one. No progeny was obtained from the crossbreeding of Beninese isolates and H. taysearae. Crossing with an isolate of H. sonorensis would have been more conclusive, but no isolates were available even for specimenâs morphological comparison.Keywords : Survey, identification, Molecular, cross-hybridization, Heterorhabditis.Etude taxonomique desnematodes entomopathogenes (Nematoda : Steinernematidae, Heterorhabditidae) du BeninUne Ă©tude diagnostique rĂ©alisĂ©e sur les nĂ©matodes entomopathogĂšnes (NEP) en 2010 et 2011 dans le Sud- BĂ©nin sur huit sites de production de cultures annuelles et pĂ©rennes a conduit Ă 13,21 % dâĂ©chantillons de sols positifs sur 280. Le prĂ©sent travail a portĂ© sur lâidentification de six des isolats de NEP extraits. Les Ă©tudes molĂ©culaires, morphologiques, morphomĂ©triques et dâhybridation effectuĂ©es utilisant les stades dĂ©veloppementaux des nĂ©matodes ont rĂ©vĂ©lĂ© un isolat dâH. indica, deux dâH. sonorensis. Pour les autres isolats, des informations complĂ©mentaires sont nĂ©cessaires pour une identification complĂšte. Le sĂ©quençage et lâanalyse phylogĂ©nĂ©tique de la rĂ©gion interspĂ©cifique de lâADN ribosomal ont groupĂ© nos isolats avec H. sonorensis et H. Taysearae dans les arbres de parcimonie maximale et de Neighbour Joining avec les supports respectifs 94 et 99 %. Les caractĂšres morphologiques des juvĂ©niles infectieux et des mĂąles ne correspondent pas Ă ceux de la premiĂšre description dâH. taysearae, mais sont proches dâH. sonorensis. Cependant, certaines femelles avec bouchon copulatoire ne correspondent pas Ă H. sonorensis. Nos isolats nâont pas Ă©tĂ© fĂ©conds avec H. taysearae. Un croisement avec H. sonorensis population type serait plus concluant, mais il nây avait aucun isolat disponible dans la base de gĂšnes.Mots-clĂ©s : Etude, identification, molĂ©culaire, hybridation-croisĂ©e, Heterorhabditis
Method and new tabulations for flux-weighted line opacity and radiation line force in supersonic media
In accelerating and supersonic media, the interaction of photons with
spectral lines can be of ultimate importance. However, fully accounting for
such line forces currently can only be done by specialised codes in 1-D
steady-state flows. More general cases and higher dimensions require
alternative approaches. We presented a comprehensive and fast method for
computing the radiation line-force using tables of spectral line-strength
distribution parameters, which can be applied in arbitrary (multi-D,
time-dependent) simulations, including those accounting for the
line-deshadowing instability, to compute the appropriate opacities. We assumed
local thermodynamic equilibrium to compute a flux-weighted line opacity from
million spectral lines. We derived the spectral line strength and
tabulated the corresponding line-distribution parameters for a range of input
densities and temperatures
. We found that the variation of the line distribution
parameters plays an essential role in setting the wind dynamics in our models.
In our benchmark study, we also found a good overall agreement between the
O-star mass-loss rates of our models and those derived from steady-state
studies using more detailed radiative transfer. Our models reinforce that
self-consistent variation of the line-distribution parameters is important for
the dynamics of line-driven flows. Within a well-calibrated O-star regime, our
results support the proposed methodology. In practice, utilising the provided
tables, yielded a factor speed-up in computational time compared to
specialised 1-D model-atmosphere codes of line-driven winds, which constitutes
an important step towards efficient multi-D simulations. We conclude that our
method and tables are ready to be exploited in various radiation-hydrodynamic
simulations where the line force is important
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