1,101 research outputs found
Pinching instabilities in superconducting strings
Superconducting cosmic strings can exhibit longitudinal, pinching
instabilities in some regions of the parameter space. We make predictions about
the onset of this instability using the thin string approximation (TSA) and
develop an improved analysis that remains applicable for small wavelength
perturbations, where the TSA breaks down. We use simulations of perturbed
strings to assess the accuracy of the TSA, test the predictions of our new
analysis and demonstrate an improvement over previous methods in the
literature. Notably, it appears that the instabilities are typically present
for a larger range of magnetic strings than previously expected, and we show
examples of pinching instabilities also occurring in electric strings. However,
both our simulations and predictions agree that strings near the chiral limit
are free from pinching instabilities and in particular our results support our
previously published claim that vortons can be stable to all classical
perturbations if they are sufficiently large.Comment: 14 pages, 7 figure
Annealing of defects in Fe after MeV Heavy ion irradiation
We report study of recovery dynamics, followed by in-situ resistivity
measurement after 100 MeV oxygen ion irradiation, in cold rolled Fe at 300K.
Scaling behavior with microstructural density and temperature of sample have
been used to establish stress induced defects formed during irradiation as a
new type of sink. The dynamics after irradiation has been shown to be due to
migration of defects to two types of sinks i.e. stress induced defect as
variable sinks and internal surfaces as fixed sinks. Experimental data obtained
under various experimental conditions have been fitted to theoretical curves.
Parameters thus obtained from fitting are employed to establish effect of
electronic energy loss and temperature on recovery dynamics and stress
associated with variable sinks.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures. Europhysics Letter (in press
Melting as a String-Mediated Phase Transition
We present a theory of the melting of elemental solids as a
dislocation-mediated phase transition. We model dislocations near melt as
non-interacting closed strings on a lattice. In this framework we derive simple
expressions for the melting temperature and latent heat of fusion that depend
on the dislocation density at melt. We use experimental data for more than half
the elements in the Periodic Table to determine the dislocation density from
both relations. Melting temperatures yield a dislocation density of (0.61\pm
0.20) b^{-2}, in good agreement with the density obtained from latent heats,
(0.66\pm 0.11) b^{-2}, where b is the length of the smallest
perfect-dislocation Burgers vector. Melting corresponds to the situation where,
on average, half of the atoms are within a dislocation core.Comment: 18 pages, LaTeX, 3 eps figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Socio-economic utility and chemical potential
In statistical physics, the conservation of particle number results in the
equalization of the chemical potential throughout a system at equilibrium. In
contrast, the homogeneity of utility in socio-economic models is usually
thought to rely on the competition between individuals, leading to Nash
equilibrium. We show that both views can be reconciled by introducing a notion
of chemical potential in a wide class of socio-economic models, and by relating
it in a direct way to the equilibrium value of the utility. This approach also
allows the dependence of utility across the system to be determined when agents
take decisions in a probabilistic way. Numerical simulations of a urban
economic model also suggest that our result is valid beyond the initially
considered class of solvable models.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, final versio
Suppressor of cytokine signalling protein SOCS3 expression is increased at sites of acute and chronic inflammation.
Treatment of cells with cytokines and growth factors leads to the synthesis of Suppressor of Cytokine Signalling (SOCS) proteins that act as potent negative regulators of signalling via the Jak/STAT pathway. We used immunohistochemistry to identify cells and pathologies where SOCS3 expression might influence acute and chronic inflammatory responses in human tissues. Epitope and GFP tagged SOCS3 fusion proteins were localised predominantly in the nucleus of transfected cells and a validated anti SOCS3 antiserum revealed the expression of SOCS3 in the nucleus and cytoplasm of macrophages, endothelial and epithelial cells in a wide range of normal tissues in tissue microarrays (n = 31 different tissues). Nuclear SOCS3 was only seen in cells expressing a high level of the protein. Comparative immunostaining of acute, chronically and granulomatously inflamed human tissues revealed higher levels of nuclear and cytoplasmic SOCS3 expression in inflamed than in corresponding normal tissues, particularly in recruited leukocyte populations, but also in epithelia. The staining appeared more intense, suggesting higher expression levels, in areas where inflammation was more acute, consistent with the time course of SOCS3 induction described in vitro. Expression of SOCS3 protein by leucocytes and other cell types in tissue sections could be a useful marker of cells undergoing acute or chronic stimulation by cytokines in vivo
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