106 research outputs found

    Selection of dune shapes and velocities. Part 1: Dynamics of sand, wind and barchans

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    Almost fifty years of investigations of barchan dunes morphology and dynamics is reviewed, with emphasis on the physical understanding of these objects. The characteristics measured on the field (shape, size, velocity) and the physical problems they rise are presented. Then, we review the dynamical mechanisms explaining the formation and the propagation of dunes. In particular a complete and original approach of the sand transport over a flat sand bed is proposed and discussed. We conclude on open problems by outlining future research directions.Comment: submitted to Eur. Phys. J. B, 20 pages, 20 figure

    Properties of Random Complex Chemical Reaction Networks and Their Relevance to Biological Toy Models

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    We investigate the properties of large random conservative chemical reaction networks composed of elementary reactions endowed with either mass-action or saturating kinetics, assigning kinetic parameters in a thermodynamically-consistent manner. We find that such complex networks exhibit qualitatively similar behavior when fed with external nutrient flux. The nutrient is preferentially transformed into one specific chemical that is an intrinsic property of the network. We propose a self-consistent proto-cell toy model in which the preferentially synthesized chemical is a precursor for the cell membrane, and show that such proto-cells can exhibit sustainable homeostatic growth when fed with any nutrient diffusing through the membrane, provided that nutrient is metabolized at a sufficient rate

    On the structure of the (3n+1)/2d(n) iteration problem Part I : Prediction of forward iterations

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    48 pages, 18 figuresTo investigate the iteration of the Collatz function, we define an operation between periodic integer series that produce arithmetically subsets of them. This operation allows to decompose any periodic integer series along their generalized evenness (the number of times an integer can be divided by 2). For any periodic integer series the same regular (periodic) fractal structure is obtained. Writing how the parameters of this structure are changed through the iteration of the Collatz function, which can be simply drawn, explains the origin of the stochastic appearance of the iterations. It also allows to describe fully these iterations, and to find a general expression for them, even if still in an iterated form for the parameters. This extends the theorem of Lagarias (1985) on the periodicity of numbers of similar history. If we define the history of an integer by the successive evenness through the Collatz function iteration, and compute the number corresponding to a given history, we find that only few histories do not lead to an infinite number

    Convergence in a Disk Stacking Model on the Cylinder

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    We study an iterative process modeling growth of phyllotactic patterns, wherein disks are added one by one on the surface of a cylinder, on top of an existing set of disks, as low as possible and without overlap. Numerical simulations show that the steady states of the system are spatially periodic, lattices-like structures called rhombic tilings. We present a rigorous analysis of the dynamics of all configurations starting with closed chains of 3 tangent, non-overlapping disks encircling the cylinder. We show that all these configurations indeed converge to rhombic tilings. Surprisingly, we show that convergence can occur in either finitely or infinitely many iterations. The infinite-time convergence is explained by a conserved quantity

    Necessary and sufficient conditions for protocell growth

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    International audienceWe consider a generic protocell model consisting of any conservative chemical reaction network embedded within a membrane. The membrane results from the self-assembly of a membrane precursor and is semi-permeable to some nutrients. Nutrients are metabolized into all other species including the membrane precursor, and the membrane grows in area and the protocell in volume. Faithful replication through cell growth and division requires a doubling of both cell volume and surface area every division time (thus leading to a periodic surface area-to-volume ratio) and also requires periodic concentrations of the cell constituents. Building upon these basic considerations, we prove necessary and sufficient conditions pertaining to the chemical reaction network for such a regime to be met. A simple necessary condition is that every moiety must be fed. A stronger necessary condition implies that every siphon must be either fed, or connected to species outside the siphon through a pass reaction capable of transferring net positive mass into the siphon. And in the case of nutrient uptake through passive diffusion and of constant surface area-to-volume ratio, a sufficient condition for the existence of a fixed point is that every siphon be fed. These necessary and sufficient conditions hold for any chemical reaction kinetics, membrane parameters or nutrient flux diffusion constants
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