843 research outputs found
A search for diffuse band profile variations in the rho Ophiuchi cloud
High signal-to-noise profiles of the broad diffuse interstellar band at 4430 A were obtained on the 2.2-m telescope at the Mauna Kea Observatory, using the newly-developed pulse-counting multi-anode microchannel array detector system in an effort to determine whether the band profile varies with mean grain size as expected if the band is produced by absorbers embedded in grain lattices. The lack of profile variability over several lines of sight where independent evidence indicates that the mean grain size varies shows that lambda 4430 is probably not formed by the same grains that are responsible for interstellar extinction at visible wavelengths. The possibility that this band is created by a population of very small ( approximately 100 A) grains is still viable, as is the hypothesis that it has a molecular origin
Flory-Huggins theory for athermal mixtures of hard spheres and larger flexible polymers
A simple analytic theory for mixtures of hard spheres and larger polymers
with excluded volume interactions is developed. The mixture is shown to exhibit
extensive immiscibility. For large polymers with strong excluded volume
interactions, the density of monomers at the critical point for demixing
decreases as one over the square root of the length of the polymer, while the
density of spheres tends to a constant. This is very different to the behaviour
of mixtures of hard spheres and ideal polymers, these mixtures although even
less miscible than those with polymers with excluded volume interactions, have
a much higher polymer density at the critical point of demixing. The theory
applies to the complete range of mixtures of spheres with flexible polymers,
from those with strong excluded volume interactions to ideal polymers.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure
Specific protein-protein binding in many-component mixtures of proteins
Proteins must bind to specific other proteins in vivo in order to function.
The proteins must bind only to one or a few other proteins of the of order a
thousand proteins typically present in vivo. Using a simple model of a protein,
specific binding in many component mixtures is studied. It is found to be a
demanding function in the sense that it demands that the binding sites of the
proteins be encoded by long sequences of bits, and the requirement for specific
binding then strongly constrains these sequences. This is quantified by the
capacity of proteins of a given size (sequence length), which is the maximum
number of specific-binding interactions possible in a mixture. This calculation
of the maximum number possible is in the same spirit as the work of Shannon and
others on the maximum rate of communication through noisy channels.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figures (changes for v2 mainly notational - to be more in
line with notation in information theory literature
Controlling the crystal polymorph by exploiting the time dependence of nucleation rates
Most substances can crystallise into two or more different crystal lattices,
called polymorphs. Despite this, there are no systems in which we can
quantitatively predict the probability of one competing polymorph forming,
instead of the other. We address this problem using large scale (hundreds of
events) studies of the competing nucleation of the alpha and gamma polymorphs
of glycine. In situ Raman spectroscopy is used to identify the polymorph of
each crystal. We find that the nucleation kinetics of the two polymorphs is
very different. Nucleation of the alpha polymorph starts off slowly but
accelerates, while nucleation of the gamma polymorph starts off fast but then
slows. We exploit this difference to increase the purity with which we obtain
the gamma polymorph by a factor of ten. The statistics of the nucleation of
crystals is analogous to that of human mortality, and using a result from
medical statistics we show that conventional nucleation data can say nothing
about what, if any, are the correlations between competing nucleation
processes. Thus we can show that, with data of our form, it is impossible to
disentangle the competing nucleation processes. We also find that the growth
rate and the shape of a crystal depends on when it nucleated. This is new
evidence that nucleation and growth are linked.Comment: 8 pages, plus 17 pages of supplementary materia
Are mothers less likely to breastfeed in harsh environments? Physical environmental quality and breastfeeding in the Born in Bradford study.
We use the United Kingdom's Born in Bradford study to investigate whether women in lower quality environments are less likely to breastfeed. We use measures of physical environmental quality (water disinfectant by-products [DBPs], air pollution, passive cigarette smoke, and household condition) alongside socio-economic indicators, to explore in detail how different exposures influence breastfeeding. Drawing on evolutionary life history theory, we predict that lower environmental quality will be associated with lower odds of initiating, and higher hazards of stopping, breastfeeding. As low physical environmental quality may increase the risk of adverse birth outcomes, which may in turn affect breastfeeding chances, we also test for mediation by gestational age, birthweight, head circumference, and abdominal circumference. Our sample is composed of mothers who gave birth at the Bradford Royal Infirmary in West Yorkshire between March 2007 and December 2010 for whom breastfeeding initiation data was available. Analyses were stratified by the two largest ethnic groups: White British (n = 3,951) and Pakistani-origin (n = 4,411) mothers. After controlling for socio-economic position, Pakistani-origin mothers had lower chances of initiating and higher chances of stopping breastfeeding with increased water DBP exposure (e.g., OR for 0.03-0.61 vs. <0.02 μg/day dibromochloromethane exposure 0.70 [0.58-0.83], HR 1.16 [0.99-1.36]), greater air pollution exposure predicted lower chances of initiation for both ethnic groups (e.g., OR for 10 μg/m3 increase in nitrogen dioxide 0.81 [0.66-0.99] for White British mothers and 0.79 [0.67-0.94] for Pakistani-origin mothers) but also a reduced hazard of stopping breastfeeding for White British mothers (HR 0.65 [0.52-0.80]), and exposure to household damp/mould predicted higher chances of breastfeeding initiation amongst White British mothers (OR 1.66 [1.11-2.47]). We found no evidence that physical environmental quality effects on breastfeeding were mediated through birth outcomes amongst Pakistani-origin mothers and only weak evidence (p < 0.10) amongst White British mothers (exposure to passive cigarette smoke was associated with having lower birthweight infants who were in turn less likely to be breastfed whereas greater air pollution exposure was associated with longer gestations and in turn reduced hazards of stopping breastfeeding). Overall, our findings suggest that there is differential susceptibility to environmental exposures according to ethnicity. Although the water DBP results for Pakistani-origin mothers and air pollution-initiation results for both ethnic groups support our hypothesis that mothers exhibit reduced breastfeeding in poorer quality environments, several physical environmental quality indicators showed null or positive associations with breastfeeding outcomes. We consider physiological explanations for our findings and their implications for life history theory and public health policy
Phase separation in mixtures of colloids and long ideal polymer coils
Colloidal suspensions with free polymer coils which are larger than the
colloidal particles are considered. The polymer-colloid interaction is modeled
by an extension of the Asakura-Oosawa model. Phase separation occurs into
dilute and dense fluid phases of colloidal particles when polymer is added. The
critical density of this transition tends to zero as the size of the polymer
coils diverges.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Demixing in a single-peak distributed polydisperse mixture of hard spheres
An analytic derivation of the spinodal of a polydisperse mixture is
presented. It holds for fluids whose excess free energy can be accurately
described by a function of a few moments of the size distribution. It is shown
that one such mixture of hard spheres in the Percus-Yevick approximation never
demixes, despite its size distribution. In the
Boublik-Mansoori-Carnahan-Starling-Leland approximation, though, it demixes for
a sufficiently wide log-normal size distribution. The importance of this result
is twofold: first, this distribution is unimodal, and yet it phase separates;
and second, log-normal size distributions appear in many experimental contexts.
The same phenomenon is shown to occur for the fluid of parallel hard cubes.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, needs revtex, multicol, epsfig and amstex style
file
Fluid-fluid phase separation in hard spheres with a bimodal size distribution
The effect of polydispersity on the phase behaviour of hard spheres is
examined using a moment projection method. It is found that the
Boublik-Mansoori-Carnahan-Starling-Leland equation of state shows a spinodal
instability for a bimodal distribution if the large spheres are sufficiently
polydisperse, and if there is sufficient disparity in mean size between the
small and large spheres. The spinodal instability direction points to the
appearance of a very dense phase of large spheres.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, moderately REVISED following referees' comments
(original was 4 pages, 3 postscript figures
Recommended from our members
Drought risk management in southern Africa. The potential of long lead climate forecasts for improved drought management
Although climate variability is the single most important factor affecting the livelihood of the people of southern Africa, there is no country in which drought risk is managed well. This mission set out to determine whether the social and economic benefits from making use of long lead climate forecast techniques for managing drought risk in southern Africa would justify investment directed towards bringing forward the techniques into operational usage. The four person mission consulted a wide range of decision makers, weather information users and technical specialists in Botswana, Malawi, South Africa and Zimbabwe during the month of July 1995. The views of those consulted were markedly positive and convergent. Reliable drought prediction is a very high priority for the people and economies of southern Africa. The mission found that: while climates are always changing, southern Africa does indeed appear to be becoming increasingly drought affected; for many governments, people and purposes in the region, reliable indication of the quality of the next wet season is probably the most useful single item of information that could be provided; ongoing climate research is much closer than is generally appreciated to being able to provide reliable and timely information of this kind; It is not logical to wait for forecast skill to be 100% reliable before beginning to incorporate forecasts into decision making meteorological institutions in the region are not capable of realising the full potential of their global links in their present state: they need both investment and development; while improved long lead forecasts offer the prospect of significant benefits, these will not be fully realised without a number of concurrent developments across the economy. The mission concludes that relatively modest investment towards both improving climate prediction and strengthening information dissemination and uptake pathways could revolutionise drought risk 'management-enhancing economic responsibility, food security and natural resource management throughout the region. Benefits from the better management of strategic grain reserves alone would justify the necessary investment. The mission recommends that ODA, the World Bank and other development organisations recognise the important potential of these techniques for mitigating many of the effects of recurrent drought, and seek the means to ensure their broad multi-disciplinary implementation for maximum impact and benefit
Heterogeneous nucleation near a metastable vapour-liquid transition: the effect of wetting transitions
Phase transformations such as freezing typically start with heterogeneous
nucleation. Heterogeneous nucleation near a wetting transition, of a
crystalline phase is studied. The wetting transition occurs at or near a
vapour-liquid transition which occurs in a metastable fluid. The fluid is
metastable with respect to crystallisation, and it is the crystallisation of
this fluid phase that we are interested in. At a wetting transition a thick
layer of a liquid phase forms at a surface in contact with the vapour phase.
The crystalline nucleus is then immersed in this liquid layer, which reduces
the free energy barrier to nucleation and so dramatically increases the
nucleation rate. The variation in the rate of heterogeneous nucleation close to
wetting transitions is calculated for systems in which the longest-range forces
are dispersion forces.Comment: 11 pages including 3 figure
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