2,914 research outputs found
A Model for Quantum Stochastic Absorption in Absorbing Disordered Media
Wave propagation in coherently absorbing disordered media is generally
modeled by adding a complex part to the real part of the potential. In such a
case, it is already understood that the complex potential plays a duel role; it
acts as an absorber as well as a reflector due to the mismatch of the phase of
the real and complex parts of the potential. Although this model gives expected
results for weakly absorbing disordered media, it gives unphysical results for
the strong absorption regime where it causes the system to behave like a
perfect reflector. To overcome this issue, we develop a model here using
stochastic absorption for the modeling of absorption by "fake", or "side",
channels obviating the need for a complex potential. This model of stochastic
absorption eliminates the reflection that is coupled with the absorption in the
complex potential model and absorption is proportional to the magnitude of the
absorbing parameter. Solving the statistics of the reflection coefficient and
its phase for both the models, we argue that stochastic absorption is a
potentially better way of modeling absorbing disordered media.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Significance of thermal fluctuations and hydrodynamic interactions in receptor-ligand mediated adhesive dynamics of a spherical particle in wall bound shear flow
The dynamics of adhesion of a spherical micro-particle to a ligand-coated
wall, in shear flow, is studied using a Langevin equation that accounts for
thermal fluctuations, hydrodynamic interactions and adhesive interactions.
Contrary to the conventional assumption that thermal fluctuations play a
negligible role at high Pclet numbers, we find that for particles
with low surface densities of receptors, rotational diffusion caused by
fluctuations about the flow and gradient directions aids in bond formation,
leading to significantly greater adhesion on average, compared to simulations
where thermal fluctuations are completely ignored. The role of wall
hydrodynamic interactions on the steady state motion of a particle, when the
particle is close to the wall, has also been explored. At high Pclet
numbers, the shear induced force that arises due to the stresslet part of the
Stokes dipole, plays a dominant role, reducing the particle velocity
significantly, and affecting the states of motion of the particle. The coupling
between the translational and rotational degrees of freedom of the particle,
brought about by the presence of hydrodynamic interactions, is found to have no
influence on the binding dynamics. On the other hand, the drag coefficient,
which depends on the distance of the particle from the wall, plays a crucial
role at low rates of bond formation. A significant difference in the effect of
both the shear force and the position dependent drag force, on the states of
motion of the particle, is observed when the Plet number is small.Comment: The manuscript has been accepted as an article in Physical Review E
Journa
Collective action for forest conservation: Does heterogeneity matter?
Community management of forests by Van Panchayats (forest councils) to meet local needs has a long history in the Indian Central Himalayas. This essay examines the effects of village-level heterogeneity in caste and land ownership, and of female membership in the Panchayats on collective action for forest conservation. There is no evidence that caste heterogeneity or female membership of the Panchayat have any effect. There is some evidence that greater equality in land ownership may enhance collective action and forest conservation in pine forests but not broadleaved forests. This is puzzling since villagers' interest in conservation is greater in broadleaved than in pine forests.
Tuberculosis - the continuing scourge of India
Epidemiological picture of tuberculosis in India is complex with wide variation in the annual risk of
infection and prevalence of disease. The concentration of the disease among younger age groups makes
tuberculosis a major socio-economic burden in India. The disability adjusted life years (DALYS) is
estimated to be around 63 and 46 lakhs of years of life lost in men and women respectively. The burden
is likely to increase with HIV epidemic with an increase of cases with dual infection, increase in
morbidity and mortality due to tuberculosis. Management of drug resistant tuberculosis is a major
hurdle in tuberculosis control and is a major step in cutting the chain of transmission to those with
HIV infection, AIDS and immunodeficiency. Development of new therapeutic modalities to address
this problem are also urgently required. Poor patient compliance has been the reason for failure of
many control programmes. Operational research studies conducted by the TRC have resulted in
elucidation of socio-behavioural aspects of patients’ which need further investigation for remedial
measures. Studies to improve drug delivery and to measure the impact of health education and mass
media on compliance are areas which need to be concentrated. Newer techniques such as DNA
fingerprinting need to employed to improve knowledge of the patterns of transmission in communities.
The impact of HIV infection on tuberculosis and the role of chemoprophylaxis in HIV infected
individuals in high risk populations, children in close contact with newly diagnosed patients and HIV
infected individuals need to be urgently explored. improved methods for diagnosis of Mycobacterium
tuberculosis infection must await considerable advance in the understanding of basic immunology,
mycobacterial antigenic structure and host-parasitic interaction
Needs in tuberculosis research
Tuberculosis is still a major health problem
in developing countries. It is also emerging as
a major infectious disease in the developed
countries due to AIDS epidemic. Its pathogenesis,
immunology and molecular biology are still
incompletely understood. The development of
new drugs to fight tuberculosis ceased over two
decades ago. The variable efficacy of BCG,
found in different trials, still remains an enigma.
And, it is likely that its epidemiology is also
different, in some aspects, in developing countries
compared with the developed ones. Sometime
ago, it was said that the application of current
knowledge about tuberculosis was lagging so far
behind its application in the field that the focus
should shift from more and more research in
tuberculosis. That saying appears to have lost its
validity under the present circumstances, especially
when the WHO has declared a global war on the
“neglected epidemic”. The following horizons in
different aspects of tuberculosis can be recognised
in respect of research needs in tuberculosis
Gaussian approximation for finitely extensible bead-spring chains with hydrodynamic interaction
The Gaussian Approximation, proposed originally by Ottinger [J. Chem. Phys.,
90 (1) : 463-473, 1989] to account for the influence of fluctuations in
hydrodynamic interactions in Rouse chains, is adapted here to derive a new
mean-field approximation for the FENE spring force. This "FENE-PG" force law
approximately accounts for spring-force fluctuations, which are neglected in
the widely used FENE-P approximation. The Gaussian Approximation for
hydrodynamic interactions is combined with the FENE-P and FENE-PG spring force
approximations to obtain approximate models for finitely-extensible bead-spring
chains with hydrodynamic interactions. The closed set of ODE's governing the
evolution of the second-moments of the configurational probability distribution
in the approximate models are used to generate predictions of rheological
properties in steady and unsteady shear and uniaxial extensional flows, which
are found to be in good agreement with the exact results obtained with Brownian
dynamics simulations. In particular, predictions of coil-stretch hysteresis are
in quantitative agreement with simulations' results. Additional simplifying
diagonalization-of-normal-modes assumptions are found to lead to considerable
savings in computation time, without significant loss in accuracy.Comment: 26 pages, 17 figures, 2 tables, 75 numbered equations, 1 appendix
with 10 numbered equations Submitted to J. Chem. Phys. on 6 February 200
DeepFuse: A Deep Unsupervised Approach for Exposure Fusion with Extreme Exposure Image Pairs
We present a novel deep learning architecture for fusing static
multi-exposure images. Current multi-exposure fusion (MEF) approaches use
hand-crafted features to fuse input sequence. However, the weak hand-crafted
representations are not robust to varying input conditions. Moreover, they
perform poorly for extreme exposure image pairs. Thus, it is highly desirable
to have a method that is robust to varying input conditions and capable of
handling extreme exposure without artifacts. Deep representations have known to
be robust to input conditions and have shown phenomenal performance in a
supervised setting. However, the stumbling block in using deep learning for MEF
was the lack of sufficient training data and an oracle to provide the
ground-truth for supervision. To address the above issues, we have gathered a
large dataset of multi-exposure image stacks for training and to circumvent the
need for ground truth images, we propose an unsupervised deep learning
framework for MEF utilizing a no-reference quality metric as loss function. The
proposed approach uses a novel CNN architecture trained to learn the fusion
operation without reference ground truth image. The model fuses a set of common
low level features extracted from each image to generate artifact-free
perceptually pleasing results. We perform extensive quantitative and
qualitative evaluation and show that the proposed technique outperforms
existing state-of-the-art approaches for a variety of natural images.Comment: ICCV 201
Does decentralization work? Forest conservation in the Himalayas
This paper studies the effect of decentralization of management and control on forest conservation in the central Himalayas. The density of forest cover (measured with satellite images and field surveys) in forests managed by village councils is compared with that in state-managed forests and in unmanaged village commons. Geographic proximity and historical and ecological information are used to identify the effects of the three types of management regimes. Village council management does no worse, and possibly better, at conservation than state management and costs an order of magnitude less per unit area. Relative to unmanaged commons, village council management raises crown cover in broadleaved forests (the type of forest that may provide the most benefits to villagers under the rules) but not in pine forests.
Fluctuation Theorems
Fluctuation theorems, which have been developed over the past 15 years, have
resulted in fundamental breakthroughs in our understanding of how
irreversibility emerges from reversible dynamics, and have provided new
statistical mechanical relationships for free energy changes. They describe the
statistical fluctuations in time-averaged properties of many-particle systems
such as fluids driven to nonequilibrium states, and provide some of the very
few analytical expressions that describe nonequilibrium states. Quantitative
predictions on fluctuations in small systems that are monitored over short
periods can also be made, and therefore the fluctuation theorems allow
thermodynamic concepts to be extended to apply to finite systems. For this
reason, fluctuation theorems are anticipated to play an important role in the
design of nanotechnological devices and in understanding biological processes.
These theorems, their physical significance and results for experimental and
model systems are discussed.Comment: A review, submitted to Annual Reviews in Physical Chemistry, July
2007 Acknowledgements corrected in revisio
Species diversity of birds in mangroves of Uran (Raigad), Navi Mumbai, Maharashtra, West coast of India
Mangroves are one of the most biologically diverse ecosystems in the world, providing shelter and feeding sites for many animal species. With continuing degradation and destruction of mangroves, there is a critical need to understand the biodiversity of the mangrove ecosystems. Birds are bio-indicators of habitat quality and are sensitive to any subtle changes takes place in the habitat. Monitoring of species diversity is a useful technique for assessing damage to the system and maintenance of good species diversity is a positive management objective. A total of 56 species of birds representing 11 orders, 29 families and 46 genera were recorded from the mangroves of Uran coast. Of the recorded species, 33.93 % belonged to Order Passeriformes, 26.79 % to Ciconiiformes, 8.93 % to Charadriiformes, 7.14 % to Anseriformes, 5.36 % each to Coraciiformes and Falconiformes, 3.57 % each to Columbiformes and Gruiformes and 1.79 % each to Cuculiformes, Pelecaniformes and Psittaciformes. Avifauna of the order Passeriformes is dominant in Uran mangroves and is represented by 11 families, followed by order Ciconiiformes with 5 families. The species diversity comprises 33 residents, 20 winter visitors and 3 occasional visitors. At present, ecological conditions in mangroves of Uran supports moderate density of birds but due to intense industrialization and urbanization, pollution of Uran coast cannot be ignored. Therefore, data presented in this paper can be taken as a base line data
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