328 research outputs found

    The meillers Autunian hydrothermal chalcedony : first evidence of a similar to 295 Ma auriferous epithermal sinter in the Frech Massif Central.

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    The Meillers "quartzite" deposit represents a major hydrothermal siliceous sinter, some 50 m thick and covering an area of some 30 ha within Autunian sandstone of the northern Massif Central. This siliceous sinter comprises three facies of microcrystalline quartz: (i) a dark-colored facies (black chalcedony), locally rich in pyrite, at the base, (ii) a gray-brown fairly massive facies (gray-brown chalcedony) in the middle; and (iii) a white, finely banded, facies (white chalcedony) at the top. Orientation measurements of the banding have revealed the paleo-flow channels of the silica-saturated fluids. The geochemistry of the deposits shows modest metal values, in particular for gold (average of 0.58 g/t Au, giving a gold metal content of some 20 t). The hydrothermal event is stratigraphically well correlated with the basal Autunian (around 295 Ma); an age that has been confirmed through radiochronological determination (300±21 Ma; SHRIMP on hydrothermal zircon). The lead isotopic composition is not very radiogenic (206Pb/204Pb=18.20) and is similar to that of the Late Hercynian gold lodes in the Massif Central. The mineralized sinter appears to have derived from a geyser-type hot springs. This hydrothermal activity coincides with the auriferous metallogenic peak that occurred in the Hercynides around 300 Ma. This is the first known epithermal-type surface manifestation described for the Hercynian gold event

    Comparison of PBO solvers in a dependency solving domain

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    Linux package managers have to deal with dependencies and conflicts of packages required to be installed by the user. As an NP-complete problem, this is a hard task to solve. In this context, several approaches have been pursued. Apt-pbo is a package manager based on the apt project that encodes the dependency solving problem as a pseudo-Boolean optimization (PBO) problem. This paper compares different PBO solvers and their effectiveness on solving the dependency solving problem.Comment: In Proceedings LoCoCo 2010, arXiv:1007.083

    Wave-breaking and generic singularities of nonlinear hyperbolic equations

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    Wave-breaking is studied analytically first and the results are compared with accurate numerical simulations of 3D wave-breaking. We focus on the time dependence of various quantities becoming singular at the onset of breaking. The power laws derived from general arguments and the singular behavior of solutions of nonlinear hyperbolic differential equations are in excellent agreement with the numerical results. This shows the power of the analysis by methods using generic concepts of nonlinear science

    On the Floquet Theory of Delay Differential Equations

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    We present an analytical approach to deal with nonlinear delay differential equations close to instabilities of time periodic reference states. To this end we start with approximately determining such reference states by extending the Poincar'e Lindstedt and the Shohat expansions which were originally developed for ordinary differential equations. Then we systematically elaborate a linear stability analysis around a time periodic reference state. This allows to approximately calculate the Floquet eigenvalues and their corresponding eigensolutions by using matrix valued continued fractions

    SAT based Enforcement of Domotic Effects in Smart Environments

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    The emergence of economically viable and efficient sensor technology provided impetus to the development of smart devices (or appliances). Modern smart environments are equipped with a multitude of smart devices and sensors, aimed at delivering intelligent services to the users of smart environments. The presence of these diverse smart devices has raised a major problem of managing environments. A rising solution to the problem is the modeling of user goals and intentions, and then interacting with the environments using user defined goals. `Domotic Effects' is a user goal modeling framework, which provides Ambient Intelligence (AmI) designers and integrators with an abstract layer that enables the definition of generic goals in a smart environment, in a declarative way, which can be used to design and develop intelligent applications. The high-level nature of domotic effects also allows the residents to program their personal space as they see fit: they can define different achievement criteria for a particular generic goal, e.g., by defining a combination of devices having some particular states, by using domain-specific custom operators. This paper describes an approach for the automatic enforcement of domotic effects in case of the Boolean application domain, suitable for intelligent monitoring and control in domotic environments. Effect enforcement is the ability to determine device configurations that can achieve a set of generic goals (domotic effects). The paper also presents an architecture to implement the enforcement of Boolean domotic effects, and results obtained from carried out experiments prove the feasibility of the proposed approach and highlight the responsiveness of the implemented effect enforcement architectur

    Geometric Friction Directs Cell Migration

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    In the absence of environmental cues, a migrating cell performs an isotropic random motion. Recently, the breaking of this isotropy has been observed when cells move in the presence of asymmetric adhesive patterns. However, up to now the mechanisms at work to direct cell migration in such environments remain unknown. Here, we show that a nonadhesive surface with asymmetric microgeometry consisting of dense arrays of tilted micropillars can direct cell motion. Our analysis reveals that most features of cell trajectories, including the bias, can be reproduced by a simple model of active Brownian particle in a ratchet potential, which we suggest originates from a generic elastic interaction of the cell body with the environment. The observed guiding effect, independent of adhesion, is therefore robust and could be used to direct cell migration both in vitro and in vivo

    Confinement and Low Adhesion Induce Fast Amoeboid Migration of Slow Mesenchymal Cells

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    The mesenchymal-amoeboid transition (MAT) was proposed as a mechanism for cancer cells to adapt their migration mode to their environment. While the molecular pathways involved in this transition are well documented, the role of the microenvironment in the MAT is still poorly understood. Here, we investigated how confinement and adhesion affect this transition. We report that, in the absence of focal adhesions and under conditions of confinement, mesenchymal cells can spontaneously switch to a fast amoeboid migration phenotype. We identified two main types of fast migration-one involving a local protrusion and a second involving a myosin-II-dependent mechanical instability of the cell cortex that leads to a global cortical flow. Interestingly, transformed cells are more prone to adopt this fast migration mode. Finally, we propose a generic model that explains migration transitions and predicts a phase diagram of migration phenotypes based on three main control parameters: confinement, adhesion, and contractility

    Spatiotemporal communication with synchronized optical chaos

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    We propose a model system that allows communication of spatiotemporal information using an optical chaotic carrier waveform. The system is based on broad-area nonlinear optical ring cavities, which exhibit spatiotemporal chaos in a wide parameter range. Message recovery is possible through chaotic synchronization between transmitter and receiver. Numerical simulations demonstrate the feasibility of the proposed scheme, and the benefit of the parallelism of information transfer with optical wavefronts.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
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