8,393 research outputs found
In silico transitions to multicellularity
The emergence of multicellularity and developmental programs are among the
major problems of evolutionary biology. Traditionally, research in this area
has been based on the combination of data analysis and experimental work on one
hand and theoretical approximations on the other. A third possibility is
provided by computer simulation models, which allow to both simulate reality
and explore alternative possibilities. These in silico models offer a powerful
window to the possible and the actual by means of modeling how virtual cells
and groups of cells can evolve complex interactions beyond a set of isolated
entities. Here we present several examples of such models, each one
illustrating the potential for artificial modeling of the transition to
multicellularity.Comment: 21 pages, 10 figures. Book chapter of Evolutionary transitions to
multicellular life (Springer
Velocity Distribution in a Viscous Granular Gas
We investigate the velocity relaxation of a viscous one-dimensional granular
gas, that is, one in which neither energy nor momentum is conserved in a
collision. Of interest is the distribution of velocities in the gas as it
cools, and the time dependence of the relaxation behavior. A Boltzmann equation
of instantaneous binary collisions leads to a two-peaked distribution with each
peak relaxing to zero velocity as 1/t while each peak also narrows as 1/t.
Numerical simulations of grains on a line also lead to a double-peaked
distribution that narrows as 1/t. A Maxwell approximation leads to a
single-peaked distribution about zero velocity with power-law wings. This
distribution narrows exponentially. In either case, the relaxing distribution
is not of Maxwell-Boltzmann form
Parabolic dunes in north-eastern Brazil
In this work we present measurements of vegetation cover over parabolic dunes
with different degree of activation along the north-eastern Brazilian coast. We
are able to extend the local values of the vegetation cover density to the
whole dune by correlating measurements with the gray-scale levels of a high
resolution satellite image of the dune field. The empirical vegetation
distribution is finally used to validate the results of a recent continuous
model of dune motion coupling sand erosion and vegetation growth.Comment: 18 pages, 14 figures, aubmitted to Geomorpholog
Droplet and cluster formation in freely falling granular streams
Particle beams are important tools for probing atomic and molecular
interactions. Here we demonstrate that particle beams also offer a unique
opportunity to investigate interactions in macroscopic systems, such as
granular media. Motivated by recent experiments on streams of grains that
exhibit liquid-like breakup into droplets, we use molecular dynamics
simulations to investigate the evolution of a dense stream of macroscopic
spheres accelerating out of an opening at the bottom of a reservoir. We show
how nanoscale details associated with energy dissipation during collisions
modify the stream's macroscopic behavior. We find that inelastic collisions
collimate the stream, while the presence of short-range attractive interactions
drives structure formation. Parameterizing the collision dynamics by the
coefficient of restitution (i.e., the ratio of relative velocities before and
after impact) and the strength of the cohesive interaction, we map out a
spectrum of behaviors that ranges from gas-like jets in which all grains drift
apart to liquid-like streams that break into large droplets containing hundreds
of grains. We also find a new, intermediate regime in which small aggregates
form by capture from the gas phase, similar to what can be observed in
molecular beams. Our results show that nearly all aspects of stream behavior
are closely related to the velocity gradient associated with vertical free
fall. Led by this observation, we propose a simple energy balance model to
explain the droplet formation process. The qualitative as well as many
quantitative features of the simulations and the model compare well with
available experimental data and provide a first quantitative measure of the
role of attractions in freely cooling granular streams
Cooling and aggregation in wet granulates
Wet granular materials are characterized by a defined bond energy in their
particle interaction such that breaking a bond implies an irreversible loss of
a fixed amount of energy. Associated with the bond energy is a nonequilibrium
transition, setting in as the granular temperature falls below the bond energy.
The subsequent aggregation of particles into clusters is shown to be a
self-similar growth process with a cluster size distribution that obeys
scaling. In the early phase of aggregation the clusters are fractals with
D_f=2, for later times we observe gelation. We use simple scaling arguments to
derive the temperature decay in the early and late stages of cooling and verify
our results with event-driven simulations.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figures, suggestions of the referees implemented, EPAPS
supplementary material added:
http://netserver.aip.org/cgi-bin/epaps?ID=E-PRLTAO-102-00391
Dilute Wet Granulates: Nonequilibrium Dynamics and Structure Formation
We investigate a gas of wet granular particles, covered by a thin liquid
film. The dynamic evolution is governed by two-particle interactions, which are
mainly due to interfacial forces in contrast to dry granular gases. When two
wet grains collide, a capillary bridge is formed and stays intact up to a
certain distance of withdrawal when the bridge ruptures, dissipating a fixed
amount of energy. A freely cooling system is shown to undergo a nonequillibrium
dynamic phase transition from a state with mainly single particles and fast
cooling to a state with growing aggregates, such that bridge rupture becomes a
rare event and cooling is slow. In the early stage of cluster growth,
aggregation is a self-similar process with a fractal dimension of the
aggregates approximately equal to D_f ~ 2. At later times, a percolating
cluster is observed which ultimately absorbs all the particles. The final
cluster is compact on large length scales, but fractal with D_f ~ 2 on small
length scales.Comment: 14 pages, 20 figure
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