725 research outputs found
Geometry of wave propagation on active deformable surfaces
Fundamental biological and biomimetic processes, from tissue morphogenesis to
soft robotics, rely on the propagation of chemical and mechanical surface waves
to signal and coordinate active force generation. The complex interplay between
surface geometry and contraction wave dynamics remains poorly understood, but
will be essential for the future design of chemically-driven soft robots and
active materials. Here, we couple prototypical chemical wave and
reaction-diffusion models to non-Euclidean shell mechanics to identify and
characterize generic features of chemo-mechanical wave propagation on active
deformable surfaces. Our theoretical framework is validated against recent data
from contractile wave measurements on ascidian and starfish oocytes, producing
good quantitative agreement in both cases. The theory is then applied to
illustrate how geometry and preexisting discrete symmetries can be utilized to
focus active elastic surface waves. We highlight the practical potential of
chemo-mechanical coupling by demonstrating spontaneous wave-induced locomotion
of elastic shells of various geometries. Altogether, our results show how
geometry, elasticity and chemical signaling can be harnessed to construct
dynamically adaptable, autonomously moving mechanical surface wave guides.Comment: text changes abstract and intro, new results on self-propelled
elastic shells added; 5 pages, 3 figures; videos available on reques
Competency development of southern African housing officers
The Report on the Ministerial Committee for the Review of the Provision of StudentHousing at South African Universities (Higher Education and Training, 2011) hasprovided a comprehensive review of residences across several housing functional areas. Inone of the residence management and administration recommendations it stated, “Theprofessionalisation of housing staff is an urgent priority” (p. 141). This coupled with thereport’s estimated “current residence bed shortage of approximately 195 815 beds … witha cost of overcoming this shortage over a period of ten years is estimated at R82.4 billion”(pp. xvii–xviii) will mean the hiring and training of hundreds of housing professional staffto meet not only the demand of the additional residence beds but the training of currenthousing staff. In 2010 The Association of College and University Housing Officers –International Southern Africa Chapter (ACUHO-I SAC) initiated a Student HousingTraining Institute (SHTI) first held in 2011 to meet the demands for professionalisinghousing staff. The SHTI was organised using a competency development model first usedto develop the Association of College and University Housing Officers – International(ACUHO-I) James C. Grimm National Housing Training Institute (NHTI) held in the US
Competency development of southern African housing officers
The Report on the Ministerial Committee for the Review of the Provision of Student Housing at South African Universities (Department of Higher Education and Training, 2011) has provided a comprehensive review of residences across several housing functional areas. In one of the residence management and administration recommendations it stated, “The professionalisation of housing staff is an urgent priority” (p. 141). This coupled with the report’s estimated “current residence bed shortage of approximately 195 815 beds […] with a cost of overcoming this shortage over a period of ten years is estimated at R82.4 billion” (pp. xvii–xviii) will mean the hiring and training of hundreds of housing professional staff to meet not only the demand of the additional residence beds but the training of current housing staff. In 2010 The Association of College and University Housing Officers – International Southern Africa Chapter (ACUHO-I SAC) initiated a Student Housing Training Institute (SHTI) first held in 2011 to meet the demands for professionalising housing staff. The SHTI was organised using a competency development model first used to develop the Association of College and University Housing Officers –International (ACUHO-I) James C. Grimm National Housing Training Institute (NHTI) held in the US.Keywords: competency, development, housing officers, higher education, professionalisatio
Critical bubbles and implications for critical black strings
We demonstrate the existence of gravitational critical phenomena in higher
dimensional electrovac bubble spacetimes. To this end, we study linear
fluctuations about families of static, homogeneous spherically symmetric bubble
spacetimes in Kaluza-Klein theories coupled to a Maxwell field. We prove that
these solutions are linearly unstable and posses a unique unstable mode with a
growth rate that is universal in the sense that it is independent of the family
considered. Furthermore, by a double analytical continuation this mode can be
seen to correspond to marginally stable stationary modes of perturbed black
strings whose periods are integer multiples of the Gregory-Laflamme critical
length. This allow us to rederive recent results about the behavior of the
critical mass for large dimensions and to generalize them to the charged black
string case.Comment: A reference to unpublished work for the case q=2, by J. Hovdebo adde
Low Reynolds number hydrodynamics of asymmetric, oscillating dumbbell pairs
Active dumbbell suspensions constitute one of the simplest model system for
collective swimming at low Reynolds number. Generalizing recent work, we derive
and analyze stroke-averaged equations of motion that capture the effective
hydrodynamic far-field interaction between two oscillating, asymmetric
dumbbells in three space dimensions. Time-averaged equations of motion, as
those presented in this paper, not only yield a considerable speed-up in
numerical simulations, they may also serve as a starting point when deriving
continuum equations for the macroscopic dynamics of multi-swimmer suspensions.
The specific model discussed here appears to be particularly useful in this
context, since it allows one to investigate how the collective macroscopic
behavior is affected by changes in the microscopic symmetry of individual
swimmers.Comment: 10 pages, to appear in EPJ Special Topic
SAR-Based Vibration Estimation Using the Discrete Fractional Fourier Transform
A vibration estimation method for synthetic aperture radar (SAR) is presented based on a novel application of the discrete fractional Fourier transform (DFRFT). Small vibrations of ground targets introduce phase modulation in the SAR returned signals. With standard preprocessing of the returned signals, followed by the application of the DFRFT, the time-varying accelerations, frequencies, and displacements associated with vibrating objects can be extracted by successively estimating the quasi-instantaneous chirp rate in the phase-modulated signal in each subaperture. The performance of the proposed method is investigated quantitatively, and the measurable vibration frequencies and displacements are determined. Simulation results show that the proposed method can successfully estimate a two-component vibration at practical signal-to-noise levels. Two airborne experiments were also conducted using the Lynx SAR system in conjunction with vibrating ground test targets. The experiments demonstrated the correct estimation of a 1-Hz vibration with an amplitude of 1.5 cm and a 5-Hz vibration with an amplitude of 1.5 mm
Intraocular Nematodiasis in a Llama (\u3cem\u3eLama glama\u3c/em\u3e)
This report describes a unique case of presumed migration of Parelaphastrongylus tenuis through the spinal cord into the eye of a llama where it survived and matured within the ocular environment. Blindness of the eye was most likely attributable to migration of the parasite through the central nervous tissue.
Résumé Infestation par les nématodes intraoculaire chez un lama (Lama glama). Ce rapport décrit un cas unique de migration présumée de Parelaphastrongylus tenuis dans la colonne vertébrale jusque dans l’œil d’un lama où il a survécu et est parvenu à maturité dans l’environnement oculaire. La cécité de l’œil a été le plus probablement attribuable à la migration du parasite dans les tissus du système nerveux central. (Traduit par Isabelle Vallières
Thermal equilibrium and statistical thermometers in special relativity
There is an intense debate in the recent literature about the correct
generalization of Maxwell's velocity distribution in special relativity. The
most frequently discussed candidate distributions include the Juettner function
as well as modifications thereof. Here, we report results from fully
relativistic one-dimensional (1D) molecular dynamics (MD) simulations that
resolve the ambiguity. The numerical evidence unequivocally favors the Juettner
distribution. Moreover, our simulations illustrate that the concept of 'thermal
equilibrium' extends naturally to special relativity only if a many-particle
system is spatially confined. They make evident that 'temperature' can be
statistically defined and measured in an observer frame independent way.Comment: version accepted for publication (5 pages), part of the introduction
modified, new figures, additional reference
Relativistic diffusion processes and random walk models
The nonrelativistic standard model for a continuous, one-parameter diffusion
process in position space is the Wiener process. As well-known, the Gaussian
transition probability density function (PDF) of this process is in conflict
with special relativity, as it permits particles to propagate faster than the
speed of light. A frequently considered alternative is provided by the
telegraph equation, whose solutions avoid superluminal propagation speeds but
suffer from singular (non-continuous) diffusion fronts on the light cone, which
are unlikely to exist for massive particles. It is therefore advisable to
explore other alternatives as well. In this paper, a generalized Wiener process
is proposed that is continuous, avoids superluminal propagation, and reduces to
the standard Wiener process in the non-relativistic limit. The corresponding
relativistic diffusion propagator is obtained directly from the nonrelativistic
Wiener propagator, by rewriting the latter in terms of an integral over
actions. The resulting relativistic process is non-Markovian, in accordance
with the known fact that nontrivial continuous, relativistic Markov processes
in position space cannot exist. Hence, the proposed process defines a
consistent relativistic diffusion model for massive particles and provides a
viable alternative to the solutions of the telegraph equation.Comment: v3: final, shortened version to appear in Phys. Rev.
Extracting the spectral function of the cuprates by a full two-dimensional analysis: Angle-resolved photoemission spectra of Bi2Sr2CuO6
Recently, angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) has revealed a
dispersion anomaly at high binding energy near 0.3-0.5eV in various families of
the high-temperature superconductors. For further studies of this anomaly we
present a new two-dimensional fitting-scheme and apply it to high-statistics
ARPES data of the strongly-overdoped Bi2Sr2CuO6 cuprate superconductor. The
procedure allows us to extract theself-energy in an extended energy and
momentum range. It is found that the spectral function of Bi2Sr2CuO6 can be
parameterized using a small set of tight-binding parameters and a
weakly-momentum-dependent self-energy up to 0.7 eV in binding energy and over
the entire first Brillouin zone. Moreover the analysis gives an estimate of the
momentum dependence of the matrix element, a quantity, which is often neglected
in ARPES analyses.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
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