288 research outputs found
On the stability of travelling waves with vorticity obtained by minimisation
We modify the approach of Burton and Toland [Comm. Pure Appl. Math. (2011)]
to show the existence of periodic surface water waves with vorticity in order
that it becomes suited to a stability analysis. This is achieved by enlarging
the function space to a class of stream functions that do not correspond
necessarily to travelling profiles. In particular, for smooth profiles and
smooth stream functions, the normal component of the velocity field at the free
boundary is not required a priori to vanish in some Galilean coordinate system.
Travelling periodic waves are obtained by a direct minimisation of a functional
that corresponds to the total energy and that is therefore preserved by the
time-dependent evolutionary problem (this minimisation appears in Burton and
Toland after a first maximisation). In addition, we not only use the
circulation along the upper boundary as a constraint, but also the total
horizontal impulse (the velocity becoming a Lagrange multiplier). This allows
us to preclude parallel flows by choosing appropriately the values of these two
constraints and the sign of the vorticity. By stability, we mean conditional
energetic stability of the set of minimizers as a whole, the perturbations
being spatially periodic of given period.Comment: NoDEA Nonlinear Differential Equations and Applications, to appea
An estimate for the Morse index of a Stokes wave
Stokes waves are steady periodic water waves on the free surface of an
infinitely deep irrotational two dimensional flow under gravity without surface
tension. They can be described in terms of solutions of the Euler-Lagrange
equation of a certain functional. This allows one to define the Morse index of
a Stokes wave. It is well known that if the Morse indices of the elements of a
set of non-singular Stokes waves are bounded, then none of them is close to a
singular one. The paper presents a quantitative variant of this result.Comment: This version contains an additional reference and some minor change
A non-linear observer for unsteady three-dimensional flows
A method is proposed to estimate the velocity field of an unsteady flow using
a limited number of flow measurements. The method is based on a non-linear
low-dimensional model of the flow and on expanding the velocity field in terms
of empirical basis functions. The main idea is to impose that the coefficients
of the modal expansion of the velocity field give the best approximation to the
available measurements and that at the same time they satisfy as close as
possible the non-linear low-order model. The practical use may range from
feedback flow control to monitoring of the flow in non-accessible regions. The
proposed technique is applied to the flow around a confined square cylinder,
both in two- and three-dimensional laminar flow regimes. Comparisons are
provided. with existing linear and non-linear estimation techniques
Epidemiology of Bell’s palsy in an Italian Health District: incidence and case-control study
The incidence of Bell’s palsy has been estimated in a health district of a major Italian city, taking also into consideration the potential
risk factors that might influence the occurrence of Bell’s palsy. A matched case-control was therefore designed, by collecting data from
the Emergency Departments of four Hospitals belonging to the same Health District in Rome (Italy), coordinated by a tertiary referral
centre University Hospital. All patients affected by Bell’s palsy within the health district and four controls for each case were included.
Controls were selected from other ENT patients, and were matched for hospital admission, week of disease onset, and climate conditions.
Information regarding possible risk factors was collected using standardized telephone interviews. The resulting dataset was
analyzed using multiple conditional logistic regression. The study group comprised 381 patients with acute, unilateral, peripheral facial
palsy, clinically diagnosed as Bell’s palsy observed between 1st January 2006 and 31st December 2008. The cumulative incidence of
Bell’s palsy was found to be 53.3/100.000/year. Among the risk factors, age was found to influence onset of Bell’s palsy, with an odds
ratio of 2% for each one-year increase in age, with a linear trend (95% CI = 1-3%; p = 0.005). Bell’s palsy was found to occur with an
annual incidence close to previous reports. Among the possible known risk factors (diabetes, pregnancy, etc.), only aging was found to
play a significant role
Energy fluctuation relations and repeated quantum measurements
In this paper, we discuss the statistical description in non-equilibrium regimes of energy fluctuations originated by the interaction between a quantum system and a measurement apparatus applying a sequence of repeated quantum measurements. To properly quantify the information about energy fluctuations, both the exchanged heat probability density function and the corresponding characteristic function are derived and interpreted. Then, we discuss the conditions allowing for the validity of the fluctuation theorem in Jarzynski form 〈e−βQ〉=1, thus showing that the fluctuation relation is robust against the presence of randomness in the time intervals between measurements. Moreover, also the late-time, asymptotic properties of the heat characteristic function are analyzed, in the thermodynamic limit of many intermediate quantum measurements. In such a limit, the quantum system tends to the maximally mixed state (thus corresponding to a thermal state with infinite temperature) unless the system's Hamiltonian and the intermediate measurement observable share a common invariant subspace. Then, in this context, we also discuss how energy fluctuation relations change when the system operates in the quantum Zeno regime. Finally, the theoretical results are illustrated for the special cases of two- and three-levels quantum systems, now ubiquitous for quantum applications and technologies
Gastric Cancer: The Times they are a-changin’
Gastric cancer is the third leading cause of cancer death worldwide. Even though during these last decades gastric cancer incidence decreased in Western countries, it remains endemic and with a high incidence in Eastern countries. The survival in advanced and metastatic stage of gastric cancer is still very poor. Recently the Cancer Genoma Atlas Research Network identified four subtypes with different molecular profiles to classify gastric cancer in order to offer the optimal targeted therapies for pre-selected patients. Indeed, the key point is still the selection of patients for the right treatment, on basis of molecular tumor characterization. Since chemotherapy reached a plateau of efficacy for gastric cancer, the combination between cytotoxic therapy and biological agents gets a better prognosis and decreases chemotherapeutic toxicity. Currently, Trastuzumab in combination with platinum and fluorouracil is the only approved targeted therapy in the first line for c-erbB2 positive patients, whereas Ramucirumab is the only approved targeted agent for patients with metastatic gastric cancer. New perspectives for an effective treatment derived from the immunotherapeutic strategies. Here, we report an overview on gastric cancer treatments, with particular attention to recent advances in targeted therapies and in immunotherapeutic approach
Shilnikov Lemma for a nondegenerate critical manifold of a Hamiltonian system
We prove an analog of Shilnikov Lemma for a normally hyperbolic symplectic
critical manifold of a Hamiltonian system. Using this
result, trajectories with small energy shadowing chains of homoclinic
orbits to are represented as extremals of a discrete variational problem,
and their existence is proved. This paper is motivated by applications to the
Poincar\'e second species solutions of the 3 body problem with 2 masses small
of order . As , double collisions of small bodies correspond to
a symplectic critical manifold of the regularized Hamiltonian system
Distribution of Foxp3+ T cells in the liver and hepatic lymph nodes of goats and sheep experimentally infected with Fasciola hepatica
Foxp3 regulatory T cells (Tregs) are now considered to play a key role in modulation of immune responses during parasitic helminth infections. Immunomodulation is a key factor in Fasciola hepatica infection; however, the distribution and role of Foxp3+ Tregs cells have not been investigated in F. hepatica infected ruminants. The aim of this study was to evaluate the presence of Foxp3+ Tregs in the liver and hepatic lymph nodes from experimentally infected sheep and goats during acute and chronic stages of infection. Three groups of goats (n=6) and three groups of sheep (n=6) were used in this study. Goats in groups 1-2 and sheep in groups 4-5 were orally infected with metacercarie of ovine origin. Groups 1 and 4 were killed during the acute stage of the infection, at nine days post infection (dpi); groups 2 and 5 were killed during the chronic stage, at 15 and19 weeks post infection respectively (wpi). Groups 3 (goats) and 6 (sheep) were left as uninfected controls. Fluke burdens and liver damage were assessed and the avidin-biotin-complex method was used for the immunohistochemical study. At nine dpi in acute hepatic lesions, the number of both Foxp3+ and CD3+ T lymphocytes increased significantly in goats and sheep. In the chronic stages of infection (15-19wpi), the number of Foxp3+ and CD3+ T lymphocytes were also significantly increased with respect to control livers, particularly in portal spaces with severely enlarged bile ducts (response to adult flukes) while the increase was lower in granulomas, chronic tracts and smaller portal spaces (response to tissue damage). Foxp3+ Tregs were increased in the cortex of hepatic lymph nodes of sheep (chronic infection) and goats (acute and chronic infection). The estimated proportion of T cells which were Foxp3+ was significantly increased in the large bile ducts and hepatic lymph node cortex of chronically infected goats but not sheep. This first report of the expansion of Foxp3+ Tregs in acute and chronic hepatic lesions in ruminants suggests that these cells may be involved in both parasite survival and modulation of hepatic damage. Future studies should be focused on the investigation of parasite molecules and cytokines involved in this process.This work was supported by EU grants (H2020-635408-PARAGONE) and the Spanish Ministry of Science grant AGL2015-67023-C2-1-R. TM receives funding from the Scottish Government.Accepted manuscriptVeterinari
La chimica delle deposizioni atmosferiche e gli inquinanti atmosferici nelle aree del programma CONECOFOR nell\u27anno 2012
Atmospheric deposition was sampled in 13 forest sites in Italy, in the open field, under tree canopy and on stemflow, and analyzed for major ions, dissolved organic carbon and total nitrogen. Ozone concentration was also measured during spring and summer. The results were compared with time series dating back to 1997
Comparative dynamics of peritoneal cell immunophenotypes in sheep during the early and late stages of the infection with Fasciola hepatica by flow cytometric analysis
Background: The peritoneal cell populations (PCP) are thought to play a crucial role during the early immune response
in Fasciola hepatica infection while newly excysted juveniles (NEJ) are migrating in the peritoneal cavity (PC) towards the
liver. In this study, we aimed to determine the immunophenotypes of the PCP and to analyse the dynamics of the
recruitment of the PCP during the early and late stage of the infection in sheep infected with F. hepatica.
Methods: Thirty-seven sheep were divided into three groups: Group 1 (n = 20) and 2 (n = 10) were challenged with
F. hepatica, Group 3 (n = 7) was not infected and remained as uninfected control (UC). After the slaughtering, peritoneal
lavages were carried out to isolate peritoneal cell populations at 1, 3, 9 and 18 days post-infection (dpi) for Group 1 and
at 14 weeks post-infection (wpi) for Group 2 and 3. Flow cytometry was conducted to assess the dynamics of peritoneal
cavity cell populations.
Results: TCD4 cells showed a significant decrease at 1 and 18 dpi when compared to UC; no statistical differences were
detected for TCD8 and WC1+
γδ during the early stage of the infection with respect to the UC. CD14 cells exhibited a
decreasing trend, with a significant decrease at 9 and 18 dpi when compared to the UC. The dynamics of MHCII and
CD83 cells showed a similar increasing pattern from 3 to 18 dpi. During the chronic stage, both TCD4 and TCD8 cells
showed no significant differences when compared to the UC, although a slight but statistically significant higher level of
WC1+
γδ cells was observed. A lower percentage of antigen-presenting cells (APCs) was detected with respect to the UC.
Conclusions: The recruitment of the lymphocytes subsets did not show a significant increase during the course of the
infection and only WC1+
γδ cells displayed a significant increase at the chronic stage. For the CD14, a decreasing trend
was observed during the early stage, which was statistically significant at the chronic stage of the infection. Peritoneal
CD83 and MHCII cells developed an increasing trend during the early stage of infection, and showed a significant
decrease at the late stage of the infection.This study was funded by the European Union Grant H2020-635408- PARAGONE and by National Grant AGL2015-67023-C2-1-R. RPC was supported by an FPU grant of the Spanish Ministry of Education, Culture and Sport. Funding bodies were neither involved in the design of the study nor in analysis and interpretation of the dataVeterinari
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