6,675 research outputs found
Mineralization of an Axially Aligned Collagenous Matrix: A Morphological Study
Bone can be described as a highly ordered composite of type I collagen integrated with an inorganic mineral phase. In vitro models of bone mineralization using collagenous substrates have been reported in the literature. This study reports an in vitro system of mineralized reconstituted collagen fibers, with aligned fibrillar substructure. The collagen fibers were mineralized in a double diffusion chamber saturated with respect to calcium and phosphate. The morphology and ultrastructure of the mineral precipitate were evaluated as a function of the pH of the incubating media. Brushite crystal was observed at acidic pH. Large rectangular crystals formed at pH 5.15 and appear to associate with the collagen fibers. At neutral and alkaline pHs, hydroxyapatite crystals were observed in association with the collagen fibers . Spherical aggregates of hydroxyapatite crystals were seen at neutral and alkaline pHs, but these structures were reduced in size when formed on collagen at alkaline pH. On close examination these spherical structures were found to be hollow when viewed in cross section.
The crystals precipitated within the interior of the collagen fiber at neutral and alkaline pHs were comparable in both size and shape to crystals observed in mineralized turkey tendon and skeletal tissues. These preliminary observations indicate that with further refinement the reconstituted collagen fibers may prove useful in model systems for the study of collagen mediated mineralization in vitro. In addition, mineralization of collagenous matrices may lead to the development of biomaterials for bone repair and replacement
Alternate wet/dry irrigation in rice cultivation: a practical way to save water and control malaria and Japanese encephalitis?
Water management / Water scarcity / Water use efficiency / Water conservation / Irrigated farming / Waterborne diseases / Rice / Malaria / Disease vectors / Productivity / Flood irrigation / Environmental control / Climate / China / East Africa / India / Indonesia / Japan / Philippines / Portugal / USA
Magnetic Properties of the Second Mott Lobe in Pairing Hamiltonians
We explore the Mott insulating state of single-band bosonic pairing
Hamiltonians using analytical approaches and large scale density matrix
renormalization group calculations. We focus on the second Mott lobe which
exhibits a magnetic quantum phase transition in the Ising universality class.
We use this feature to discuss the behavior of a range of physical observables
within the framework of the 1D quantum Ising model and the strongly anisotropic
Heisenberg model. This includes the properties of local expectation values and
correlation functions both at and away from criticality. Depending on the
microscopic interactions it is possible to achieve either antiferromagnetic or
ferromagnetic exchange interactions and we highlight the possibility of
observing the E8 mass spectrum for the critical Ising model in a longitudinal
magnetic field.Comment: 14 pages, 15 figure
An inquiry-based learning approach to teaching information retrieval
The study of information retrieval (IR) has increased in interest and importance with the explosive growth of online information in recent years. Learning about IR within formal courses of study enables users of search engines to use
them more knowledgeably and effectively, while providing the starting point for the explorations of new researchers into novel search technologies. Although IR can be taught in a traditional manner of formal classroom instruction with students being led through the details of the subject and expected to reproduce this in assessment, the nature of IR as a topic makes it an ideal subject for inquiry-based learning approaches to teaching. In an inquiry-based learning approach students are introduced to the principles of a subject and then encouraged to develop their understanding by solving structured or open problems. Working through solutions in subsequent class discussions enables students to appreciate the availability of alternative solutions as proposed by their classmates. Following this approach students not only learn the details of IR techniques, but significantly, naturally learn to apply them in solution of problems. In doing this they not only gain an appreciation of alternative solutions to a problem, but also how to assess their relative strengths and weaknesses. Developing confidence and skills in problem solving enables student assessment to be structured around solution of problems. Thus students can be assessed on the basis of their understanding and ability to apply techniques, rather simply their skill at reciting facts. This has the additional benefit of encouraging general problem solving skills which can be of benefit in other subjects. This approach to teaching IR was successfully implemented in an undergraduate module where students were
assessed in a written examination exploring their knowledge and understanding of the principles of IR and their ability to apply them to solving problems, and a written assignment based on developing an individual research proposal
Calculation of Densities of States and Spectral Functions by Chebyshev Recursion and Maximum Entropy
We present an efficient algorithm for calculating spectral properties of
large sparse Hamiltonian matrices such as densities of states and spectral
functions. The combination of Chebyshev recursion and maximum entropy achieves
high energy resolution without significant roundoff error, machine precision or
numerical instability limitations. If controlled statistical or systematic
errors are acceptable, cpu and memory requirements scale linearly in the number
of states. The inference of spectral properties from moments is much better
conditioned for Chebyshev moments than for power moments. We adapt concepts
from the kernel polynomial approximation, a linear Chebyshev approximation with
optimized Gibbs damping, to control the accuracy of Fourier integrals of
positive non-analytic functions. We compare the performance of kernel
polynomial and maximum entropy algorithms for an electronic structure example.Comment: 8 pages RevTex, 3 postscript figure
Description of recent large- neutron inclusive scattering data from liquid He
We report dynamical calculations for large- structure functions of liquid
He at =1.6 and 2.3 K and compare those with recent MARI data. We extend
those calculations far beyond the experimental range q\le 29\Ain in order to
study the approach of the response to its asymptotic limit for a system with
interactions having a strong short-range repulsion. We find only small
deviations from theoretical behavior, valid for smooth . We repeat an
extraction by Glyde et al of cumulant coefficients from data. We argue that
fits determine the single atom momentum distribution, but express doubt as to
the extraction of meaningful Final State Interaction parameters.Comment: 37 pages, 13 postscript fig
New Thin-Film Tunnel Triode Using Amorphous Semiconductors
A new thin‐film tunnel triode is discussed which uses a p‐type amorphous film to achieve amplification of injected current from a tunnel cathode. It is not only the basis for a new semiconductor device but also suggests a novel method for measuring electrical properties of semiconductors
Calculating response functions in time domain with non-orthonormal basis sets
We extend the recently proposed order-N algorithms (cond-mat/9703224) for
calculating linear- and nonlinear-response functions in time domain to the
systems described by nonorthonormal basis sets.Comment: 4 pages, no figure
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