485 research outputs found
A Model for the Elasticity of Compressed Emulsions
We present a new model to describe the unusual elastic properties of
compressed emulsions. The response of a single droplet under compression is
investigated numerically for different Wigner-Seitz cells. The response is
softer than harmonic, and depends on the coordination number of the droplet.
Using these results, we propose a new effective inter-droplet potential which
is used to determine the elastic response of a monodisperse collection of
disordered droplets as a function of volume fraction. Our results are in
excellent agreement with recent experiments. This suggests that anharmonicity,
together with disorder, are responsible for the quasi-linear increase of
and observed at .Comment: RevTeX with psfig-included figures and a galley macr
Photon Channelling in Foams
Experiments by Gittings, Bandyopadhyay, and Durian [Europhys. Lett.\
\textbf{65}, 414 (2004)] demonstrate that light possesses a higher probability
to propagate in the liquid phase of a foam due to total reflection. The authors
term this observation photon channelling which we investigate in this article
theoretically. We first derive a central relation in the work of Gitting {\em
et al.} without any free parameters. It links the photon's path-length fraction
in the liquid phase to the liquid fraction . We then construct
two-dimensional Voronoi foams, replace the cell edges by channels to represent
the liquid films and simulate photon paths according to the laws of ray optics
using transmission and reflection coefficients from Fresnel's formulas. In an
exact honeycomb foam, the photons show superdiffusive behavior. It becomes
diffusive as soon as disorder is introduced into the foams. The dependence of
the diffusion constant on channel width and refractive index is explained by a
one-dimensional random-walk model. It contains a photon channelling state that
is crucial for the understanding of the numerical results. At the end, we
shortly comment on the observation that photon channelling only occurs in a
finite range of .Comment: 9 pages, minor change
Green consumer markets in the fight against climate change
Climate change has become one of the greatest threats to environmental security, as attested by the growing frequency of severe flooding and storms, extreme temperatures and droughts. Accordingly, the European Unionâs (EU) 6th Environment Action Programme (2010) lists tackling climate change as its first priority. A key aim of the EU has been to cut CO2 emissions, a major factor in climate change, by 8% until 2012 and 20% until 2020. The European Commission has proposed the encouragement of private consumer market for green products and services as one of several solutions to this problem. However, existing research suggests that the market share of these products has been only 3%, although 30% of individuals favour environmental and ethical goods. This article uses Public Goods Theory to explain why the contribution of the green consumer market to fighting climate change has been and possibly may remain limited without further public intervention
Global Standards in Action: Insights from Anti-Money Laundering Regulation
As organizations have come under the increasing influence of global rules of all sorts, organization scholars have started studying the dynamics of global regulation. The purpose of this article is to identify and evaluate the contribution to this interdisciplinary field by the âStockholm Centre for Organisational Researchâ. The latterâs key proposition is that while global regulation often consists of voluntary best practice rules it can nevertheless become highly influential under certain conditions. We assess how innovative this approach is using as a benchmark the state of the art in another field of relevance to the study of global regulation, i.e. âInternational Relationsâ. Our discussion is primarily theoretical but we draw on the case of global anti-money laundering regulation to illustrate our arguments and for inspirations of how to further elaborate the approach
Autoantibodies against MDA-LDL in subjects with severe and minor atherosclerosis and healthy population controls
Autoantibodies against oxidized low-density lipoprotein (LDL) have been reported to be associated with atherosclerosis. However, data are not consistent. We compared the titres of autoantibodies to malondialdehyde-modified LDL in three groups, a case group with angiographically documented severe coronary stenosis (> 80% stenosis in at least 1 vessel, n = 47), a hospital control group with minor stenosis on the coronary angiography (< 50% stenosis in all three major vessels, n = 47) and a healthy population control group with no history of coronary heart disease (n = 49). Age ranged from 26 to 68 years. Subjects were frequency-matched for gender distribution and storage time of the blood samples. No relevant differences in autoantibody titre between case and control groups were found. The mean autoantibody titres (± S.D.) were 1.44 ± 1.82, 1.46 ± 1.40 and 1.62 ± 1.95 for cases, hospital controls and population controls, respectively. No correlations were found between autoantibody titre and age, number of cigarettes smoked and LDL or total cholesterol. Autoantibody titres were correlated wit
Mechanical tuning of the evaporation rate of liquid on crossed fibers
We investigate experimentally the drying of a small volume of perfectly
wetting liquid on two crossed fibers. We characterize the drying dynamics for
the three liquid morphologies that are encountered in this geometry: drop,
column and a mixed morphology, in which a drop and a column coexist. For each
morphology, we rationalize our findings with theoretical models that capture
the drying kinetics. We find that the evaporation rate depends significantly on
the liquid morphology and that the drying of liquid column is faster than the
evaporation of the drop and the mixed morphology for a given liquid volume.
Finally, we illustrate that shearing a network of fibers reduces the angle
between them, changes the morphology towards the column state, and so enhances
the drying rate of a volatile liquid deposited on it
Type-IV DCT, DST, and MDCT algorithms with reduced numbers of arithmetic operations
We present algorithms for the type-IV discrete cosine transform (DCT-IV) and
discrete sine transform (DST-IV), as well as for the modified discrete cosine
transform (MDCT) and its inverse, that achieve a lower count of real
multiplications and additions than previously published algorithms, without
sacrificing numerical accuracy. Asymptotically, the operation count is reduced
from ~2NlogN to ~(17/9)NlogN for a power-of-two transform size N, and the exact
count is strictly lowered for all N > 4. These results are derived by
considering the DCT to be a special case of a DFT of length 8N, with certain
symmetries, and then pruning redundant operations from a recent improved fast
Fourier transform algorithm (based on a recursive rescaling of the
conjugate-pair split radix algorithm). The improved algorithms for DST-IV and
MDCT follow immediately from the improved count for the DCT-IV.Comment: 11 page
Common Variants Associated With OSMR Expression Contribute to Carotid Plaque Vulnerability, but Not to Cardiovascular Disease in Humans
Background and Aims: Oncostatin M (OSM) signaling is implicated in atherosclerosis, however the mechanism remains unclear. We investigated the impact of common genetic variants in OSM and its receptors, OSMR and LIFR, on overall plaque vulnerability, plaque phenotype, intraplaque OSMR and LIFR expression, coronary artery calcification burden and cardiovascular disease susceptibility.
Methods and Results: We queried Genotype-Tissue Expression data and found that rs13168867 (C allele) was associated with decreased OSMR expression and that rs10491509 (A allele) was associated with increased LIFR expression in arterial tissues. No variant was significantly associated with OSM expression.
We associated these two variants with plaque characteristics from 1,443 genotyped carotid endarterectomy patients in the Athero-Express Biobank Study. After correction for multiple testing, rs13168867 was significantly associated with an increased overall plaque vulnerability (ÎČ = 0.118 ± s.e. = 0.040, p = 3.00 Ă 10â3, C allele). Looking at individual plaque characteristics, rs13168867 showed strongest associations with intraplaque fat (ÎČ = 0.248 ± s.e. = 0.088, p = 4.66 Ă 10â3, C allele) and collagen content (ÎČ = â0.259 ± s.e. = 0.095, p = 6.22 Ă 10â3, C allele), but these associations were not significant after correction for multiple testing. rs13168867 was not associated with intraplaque OSMR expression. Neither was intraplaque OSMR expression associated with plaque vulnerability and no known OSMR eQTLs were associated with coronary artery calcification burden, or cardiovascular disease susceptibility. No associations were found for rs10491509 in the LIFR locus.
Conclusions: Our study suggests that rs1316887 in the OSMR locus is associated with increased plaque vulnerability, but not with coronary calcification or cardiovascular disease risk. It remains unclear through which precise biological mechanisms OSM signaling exerts its effects on plaque morphology. However, the OSM-OSMR/LIFR pathway is unlikely to be causally involved in lifetime cardiovascular disease susceptibility
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