111 research outputs found
Farley-Buneman Instability in the Solar Chromosphere
The Farley-Buneman instability is studied in the partially ionized plasma of
the solar chromosphere taking into account the finite magnetization of the ions
and Coulomb collisions. We obtain the threshold value for the relative velocity
between ions and electrons necessary for the instability to develop. It is
shown that Coulomb collisions play a destabilizing role in the sense that they
enable the instability even in the regions where the ion magnetization is
greater than unity. By applying these results to chromospheric conditions, we
show that the Farley-Buneman instability can not be responsible for the
quasi-steady heating of the solar chromosphere. However, in the presence of
strong cross-field currents it can produce small-scale, m, density
irregularities in the solar chromosphere. These irregularities can cause
scintillations of radio waves with similar wave lengths and provide a tool for
remote chromospheric sensing
Excitation of kinetic Alfvén turbulence by MHD waves and energization of space plasmas
International audienceThere is abundant observational evidence that the energization of plasma particles in space is correlated with an enhanced activity of large-scale MHD waves. Since these waves cannot interact with particles, we need to find ways for these MHD waves to transport energy in the dissipation range formed by small-scale or high-frequency waves, which are able to interact with particles. In this paper we consider the dissipation range formed by the kinetic Alfvén waves (KAWs) which are very short- wavelengths across the magnetic field irrespectively of their frequency. We study a nonlocal nonlinear mechanism for the excitation of KAWs by MHD waves via resonant decay AW(FW)?KAW1+KAW2, where the MHD wave can be either an Alfvén wave (AW), or a fast magneto-acoustic wave (FW). The resonant decay thus provides a non-local energy transport from large scales directly in the dissipation range. The decay is efficient at low amplitudes of the magnetic field in the MHD waves, B/B0~10-2. In turn, KAWs are very efficient in the energy exchange with plasma particles, providing plasma heating and acceleration in a variety of space plasmas. An anisotropic energy deposition in the field-aligned degree of freedom for the electrons, and in the cross-field degrees of freedom for the ions, is typical for KAWs. A few relevant examples are discussed concerning nonlinear excitation of KAWs by the MHD wave flux and consequent plasma energization in the solar corona and terrestrial magnetosphere
Charge carrier injection into insulating media: single-particle versus mean-field approach
Self-consistent, mean-field description of charge injection into a dielectric
medium is modified to account for discreteness of charge carriers. The improved
scheme includes both the Schottky barrier lowering due to the individual image
charge and the barrier change due to the field penetration into the injecting
electrode that ensures validity of the model at both high and low injection
rates including the barrier dominated and the space-charge dominated regimes.
Comparison of the theory with experiment on an unipolar ITO/PPV/Au-device is
presented.Comment: 32 pages, 9 figures; revised version accepted to PR
Functional Characterization of Lamina X Neurons in ex-Vivo Spinal Cord Preparation
Functional properties of lamina X neurons in the spinal cord remain unknown despite
the established role of this area for somatosensory integration, visceral nociception,
autonomic regulation and motoneuron output modulation. Investigations of neuronal
functioning in the lamina X have been hampered by technical challenges. Here we
introduce an ex-vivo spinal cord preparation with both dorsal and ventral roots still
attached for functional studies of the lamina X neurons and their connectivity using an
oblique LED illumination for resolved visualization of lamina X neurons in a thick tissue.
With the elaborated approach, we demonstrate electrophysiological characteristics
of lamina X neurons by their membrane properties, firing pattern discharge and
fiber innervation (either afferent or efferent). The tissue preparation has been also
probed using Ca2+ imaging with fluorescent Ca2+ dyes (membrane-impermeable or
-permeable) to demonstrate the depolarization-induced changes in intracellular calcium
concentration in lamina X neurons. Finally, we performed visualization of subpopulations
of lamina X neurons stained by retrograde labeling with aminostilbamidine dye to
identify sympathetic preganglionic and projection neurons in the lamina X. Thus, the
elaborated approach provides a reliable tool for investigation of functional properties
and connectivity in specific neuronal subpopulations, boosting research of lamina X of
the spinal cord
Distinct mechanisms of signal processing by lamina I spino-parabrachial neurons
Lamina I spino-parabrachial neurons (SPNs) receive peripheral nociceptive input, process it and transmit to the supraspinal centres. Although responses of SPNs to cutaneous receptive field stimulations have been intensively studied, the mechanisms of signal processing in these neurons are poorly understood. Therefore, we used an ex-vivo spinal cord preparation to examine synaptic and cellular mechanisms determining specific input-output characteristics of the neurons. The vast majority of the SPNs received a few direct nociceptive C-fiber inputs and generated one spike in response to saturating afferent stimulation, thus functioning as simple transducers of painful stimulus. However, 69% of afferent stimulation-induced action potentials in the entire SPN population originated from a small fraction (19%) of high-output neurons. These neurons received a larger number of direct Ad- and C-fiber inputs, generated intrinsic bursts and efficiently integrated a local network activity via NMDA-receptor-dependent mechanisms. The high-output SPNs amplified and integrated the nociceptive input gradually encoding its intensity into the number of generated spikes. Thus, different mechanisms of signal processing allow lamina I SPNs to play distinct roles in nociception.The authors thank Mr. Andrew Dromaretsky for the technical assistance. P.B. was supported by the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine (NASU), grant NASU # 0116U004470, grant NASU#67/15-Н. N.V. was supported by the NASU Biotechnology and NASU-KNU grants; NIH 1R01NS113189-01. B.V.S. was supported by the FEDER funds through the COMPETE 2020 (POCI), Portugal 2020, and by the FCT project PTDC/NEU-NMC/1259/2014 (POCI-01-0145-FEDER-016588
Redox-Driven Transformation of a Discrete Molecular Cage into an Infinite 3D Coordination Polymer
Two M12L6 redox‐active self‐assembled cages constructed from an electron‐rich ligand based on the extended tetrathiafulvalene framework (exTTF) and metal complexes with a linear geometry (PdII and AgI) are depicted. Remarkably, based on a combination of specific structural and electronic features, the polycationic self‐assembled AgI coordination cage undergoes a supramolecular transformation upon oxidation into a three‐dimensional coordination polymer, that is characterized by X‐ray crystallography. This redox‐controlled change of the molecular organization results from the drastic conformational modifications accompanying oxidation of the exTTF moiety
Influence of the Striker Material on the Results of High-Speed Impact at a Barrier
In this work the influence of the characteristics ofthematerial ofthe striker
(cumulative jet or projectile), moving at speeds of 2-10 km/s, on the volume
of the resulting crater in a metal target, has been studied. The dependence
ofthe crater volume in an aluminum alloy target ofCu-Al, W-Cu-Pb-Al composites,
and steel St45 for a PTFE-Cu composite, were investigated. The outer diameter
and height of the shaped charges were 26 and 28, and 31 and 33 mm, respectively.
The mass of the explosive (phlegmatized hexogen) in these charges was 10
and 18 g. A comparison was made between the ratios of the kinetic energy of the
striker to the volume of the crater formed for the composites PTFE-Al, PTFE-Cu,
Cu-Al, Ni-Al, W-Cu-Pb, and porous materials Cu and Al. It was demonstrated
that the chemical interaction of the components of the porous Cu-Al and Ni-Al
composites during penetration into the barrier is possible at an impact velocity
of at least 2-3 km/s and a porosity of at least 30%
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