39 research outputs found

    Tribological and material properties for cartilage of and throughout the bovine stifle: support for the altered joint kinematics hypothesis of osteoarthritis

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    SummaryObjectivePrior studies suggest that ligament and meniscus tears cause osteoarthritis (OA) when changes in joint kinematics bring underused and underprepared regions of cartilage into contact. This study aims to test the hypothesis that material and tribological properties vary throughout the joint according to the local mechanical environment.MethodThe local tribological and material properties of bovine stifle cartilage (N = 10 joints with 20 samples per joint) were characterized under physiologically consistent contact stress and fluid pressure conditions.ResultsOverall, cartilage from the bovine stifle had an equilibrium contact modulus of Ec0 = 0.62 ± 0.10 MPa, a tensile modulus of Et = 4.3 ± 0.7 MPa, and a permeability of k = 2.8 ± 0.9 × 10−3 mm4/Ns. During sliding, the cartilage had an effective friction coefficient of μeff = 0.024 ± 0.004, an effective contact modulus of Ec = 3.9 ± 0.7 MPa and a fluid load fraction of F′ = 0.81 ± 0.03. Tibial cartilage exhibited significantly poorer material and tribological properties than femoral cartilage. Statistically significant differences were also detected across the femoral condyle and tibial plateau. The central femoral condyle exhibited the most favorable properties while the uncovered tibial plateau exhibited the least favorable properties.ConclusionsOur findings support a previous hypothesis that altered loading patterns can cause OA by overloading underprepared regions. They also help explain why damage to the tibial plateau often precedes damage to the mating femoral condyle following joint injury in animal models. Because the variations are driven by fundamental biological processes, we anticipate similar variations in the human knee, which could explain the OA risk associated with ligament and meniscus tears

    The yields of r-process elements and chemical evolution of the Galaxy

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    The supernova yields of r-process elements are obtained as a function of the mass of their progenitor stars from the abundance patterns of extremely metal-poor stars on the left-side [Ba/Mg]-[Mg/H] boundary with a procedure proposed by Tsujimoto and Shigeyama. The ejected masses of r-process elements associated with stars of progenitor mass Mms≤18M⊙M_{ms}\leq18M_{\odot} are infertile sources and the SNe II with 20M⊙≤Mms≤40M⊙M_{\odot}\leq M_{ms}\leq 40M_{\odot}are the dominant source of r-process nucleosynthesis in the Galaxy. The ratio of these stars 20M⊙≤Mms≤40M⊙M_{\odot}\leq M_{ms}\leq40M_{\odot} with compared to the all massive stars is about ∼\sim18%. In this paper, we present a simple model that describes a star's [r/Fe] in terms of the nucleosynthesis yields of r-process elements and the number of SN II explosions. Combined the r-process yields obtained by our procedure with the scatter model of the Galactic halo, the observed abundance patterns of the metal-poor stars can be well reproducedComment: 7 pages, 6 figures, Accepted for publication in Astrophysics and Space Scienc

    The Role of Radioactivities in Astrophysics

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    I present both a history of radioactivity in astrophysics and an introduction to the major applications of radioactive abundances to astronomy

    ATLAS detector and physics performance: Technical Design Report, 1

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    S/R Ratio in Barium Stars

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