6,160 research outputs found

    Phase behaviour of binary mixtures of diamagnetic colloidal platelets in an external magnetic field

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    Using fundamental measure density functional theory we investigate paranematic-nematic and nematic-nematic phase coexistence in binary mixtures of circular platelets with vanishing thicknesses. An external magnetic field induces uniaxial alignment and acts on the platelets with a strength that is taken to scale with the platelet area. At particle diameter ratio lambda=1.5 the system displays paranematic-nematic coexistence. For lambda=2, demixing into two nematic states with different compositions also occurs, between an upper critical point and a paranematic-nematic-nematic triple point. Increasing the field strength leads to shrinking of the coexistence regions. At high enough field strength a closed loop of immiscibility is induced and phase coexistence vanishes at a double critical point above which the system is homogeneously nematic. For lambda=2.5, besides paranematic-nematic coexistence, there is nematic-nematic coexistence which persists and hence does not end in a critical point. The partial orientational order parameters along the binodals vary strongly with composition and connect smoothly for each species when closed loops of immiscibility are present in the corresponding phase diagram.Comment: 9 pages, to appear in J.Phys:Condensed Matte

    Infinite Networks of Identical Capacitors

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    The capacitance between the origin and any other lattice site in an infinite square lattice of identical capacitors is studied. The method is generalized to infinite Simple Cubic (SC) lattice. We make use of the superposition principle and the symmetry of the infinite gridComment: 16 pages, 5 figures, 2 table

    Distinct RNA profiles in subpopulations of extracellular vesicles: apoptotic bodies, microvesicles and exosomes

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    Introduction: In recent years, there has been an exponential increase in the number of studies aiming to understand the biology of exosomes, as well as other extracellular vesicles. However, classification of membrane vesicles and the appropriate protocols for their isolation are still under intense discussion and investigation. When isolating vesicles, it is crucial to use systems that are able to separate them, to avoid cross-contamination. Method: EVs released from three different kinds of cell lines: HMC-1, TF-1 and BV-2 were isolated using two centrifugation-based protocols. In protocol 1, apoptotic bodies were collected at 2,000×g, followed by filtering the supernatant through 0.8 µm pores and pelleting of microvesicles at 12,200×g. In protocol 2, apoptotic bodies and microvesicles were collected together at 16,500×g, followed by filtering of the supernatant through 0.2 µm pores and pelleting of exosomes at 120,000×g. Extracellular vesicles were analyzed by transmission electron microscopy, flow cytometry and the RNA profiles were investigated using a Bioanalyzer®. Results: RNA profiles showed that ribosomal RNA was primary detectable in apoptotic bodies and smaller RNAs without prominent ribosomal RNA peaks in exosomes. In contrast, microvesicles contained little or no RNA except for microvesicles collected from TF-1 cell cultures. The different vesicle pellets showed highly different distribution of size, shape and electron density with typical apoptotic body, microvesicle and exosome characteristics when analyzed by transmission electron microscopy. Flow cytometry revealed the presence of CD63 and CD81 in all vesicles investigated, as well as CD9 except in the TF-1-derived vesicles, as these cells do not express CD9. Conclusions: Our results demonstrate that centrifugation-based protocols are simple and fast systems to distinguish subpopulations of extracellular vesicles. Different vesicles show different RNA profiles and morphological characteristics, but they are indistinguishable using CD63-coated beads for flow cytometry analysis

    Self-organized Te redistribution during driven reconnection processes in high-temperature plasmas

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    Two-dimensional (2D) images of electron temperature fluctuations with high temporal and spatial resolution were employed to study the sawtooth oscillation in Toroidal EXperiment for Technology Oriented Research [S. S. Abdallaev et al., Nucl. Fusion 43, 299 (2003)] tokamak plasmas. The new findings are: (1) 2D images revealed that the reconnection is localized and permitted the determination of the physical dimensions of the reconnection zone in the poloidal and toroidal planes. (2) The combination of a pressure bulge due to finite pressure effects or a kink instability accompanied with a sharp pressure point leads to an "X-point" reconnection process. (3) Reconnection can take place anywhere along the q similar to 1 rational magnetic surface (both high- and low-field sides). (4) Heat flow from the core to the outside of the inversion radius during the reconnection time is through the finite opening on the poloidal and toroidal planes and the flow is highly collective. These new findings are compared with the characteristics of various theoretical models and experimental results for the study of the sawtooth oscillation in tokamak plasmas. (c) 2006 American Institute of Physics

    Severely increased albuminuria in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus is associated with increased subclinical atherosclerosis in femoral arteries with Na [<sup>18</sup>F]F activity as a proxy:The DETERMINE study

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    Background and aims: Sodium [18F]fluoride (Na [18F]F) positron emission tomography imaging allows detailed visualization of early arterial micro-calcifications. This study aims to investigate atherosclerosis manifested by micro-calcification, macro-calcification, and aortic stiffness in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) with and without albuminuria and severely decreased kidney function.Methods: A cohort was stratified in four groups (N = 10 per group), based on KDIGO categories (G1-5 A1-3). G1-2A1 non-diabetic controls (median [IQR] estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) in mL/min/1.73 m2 91 [81–104]), G1-2A1 with T2DM (eGFR 87 [84–93], and albumin-creatinin-ratio (ACR) in mg/mmol 0.35 [0.25–0.75]), G1-2A3 with T2DM (eGFR 85 [60–103], and ACR 74 [62–122], and G4A3 with T2DM (eGFR 19 [13-27] and ACR 131 [59–304]). Results: Na [18F]F femoral artery grading score differed significantly in the groups with the highest Na [18F]F activity in A3 groups with T2DM (G1-2A3 with T2DM 228 [100–446] and G4A3 with T2DM 198 [113–578]) from the lowest groups of the G1-2A1 with T2DM (33 [0–93]) and in G1-2A1 non-diabetic controls (75 [0–200], p = 0.001). Aortic Na [18F]F activity and femoral artery computed tomography (CT)-assessed macro-calcification was increased in G4A3 with T2DM compared with G1-2A1 with T2DM (47.5 [33.8–73.8] vs. 17.5 [8.8–27.5] (p = 0.006) and 291 [170–511] vs. 12.2 [1.41–44.3] mg (p = 0.032), respectively). Carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity (PWV)-assessed aortic stiffness was significantly higher in both A3 groups with T2DM compared with G1-2A1 with T2DM (11.15 and 12.35 vs. 8.86 m/s, respectively (p = 0.009)). Conclusions: This study indicates that the presence of severely increased albuminuria in patients with T2DM is cross-sectionally associated with subclinical arterial disease in terms of micro-calcification and aortic stiffness. Additional decrease in kidney function was associated with advanced macro-calcifications.</p

    Dordt College 2003-2004 Catalog

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    Academic Catalog for 2003-04https://digitalcollections.dordt.edu/academic_catalogs/1012/thumbnail.jp

    Boosting the Figure Of Merit of LSPR-based refractive index sensing by phase-sensitive measurements

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    Localized surface plasmon resonances possess very interesting properties for a wide variety of sensing applications. In many of the existing applications only the intensity of the reflected or transmitted signals is taken into account, while the phase information is ignored. At the center frequency of a (localized) surface plasmon resonance, the electron cloud makes the transition between in- and out-of-phase oscillation with respect to the incident wave. Here we show that this information can experimentally be extracted by performing phase-sensitive measurements, which result in linewidths that are almost one order of magnitude smaller than those for intensity based measurements. As this phase transition is an intrinsic property of a plasmon resonance, this opens up many possibilities for boosting the figure of merit (FOM) of refractive index sensing by taking into account the phase of the plasmon resonance. We experimentally investigated this for two model systems: randomly distributed gold nanodisks and gold nanorings on top of a continuous gold layer and a dielectric spacer and observed FOM values up to 8.3 and 16.5 for the respective nanoparticles

    On the number of limit cycles of the Lienard equation

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    In this paper, we study a Lienard system of the form dot{x}=y-F(x), dot{y}=-x, where F(x) is an odd polynomial. We introduce a method that gives a sequence of algebraic approximations to the equation of each limit cycle of the system. This sequence seems to converge to the exact equation of each limit cycle. We obtain also a sequence of polynomials R_n(x) whose roots of odd multiplicity are related to the number and location of the limit cycles of the system.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures. Submitted to Physical Review

    Using Topological Statistics to Detect Determinism in Time Series

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    Statistical differentiability of the measure along the reconstructed trajectory is a good candidate to quantify determinism in time series. The procedure is based upon a formula that explicitly shows the sensitivity of the measure to stochasticity. Numerical results for partially surrogated time series and series derived from several stochastic models, illustrate the usefulness of the method proposed here. The method is shown to work also for high--dimensional systems and experimental time seriesComment: 23 RevTeX pages, 14 eps figures. To appear in Physical Review

    Hierarchically coupled ultradian oscillators generating robust circadian rhythms

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    Ensembles of mutually coupled ultradian cellular oscillators have been proposed by a number of authors to explain the generation of circadian rhythms in mammals. Most mathematical models using many coupled oscillators predict that the output period should vary as the square root of the number of participating units, thus being inconsistent with the well-established experimental result that ablation of substantial parts of the suprachiasmatic nuclei (SCN), the main circadian pacemaker in mammals, does not eliminate the overt circadian functions, which show no changes in the phases or periods of the rhythms. From these observations, we have developed a theoretical model that exhibits the robustness of the circadian clock to changes in the number of cells in the SCN, and that is readily adaptable to include the successful features of other known models of circadian regulation, such as the phase response curves and light resetting of the phase
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