2,035 research outputs found

    Stratified spatiotemporal chaos in anisotropic reaction-diffusion systems

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    Numerical simulations of two dimensional pattern formation in an anisotropic bistable reaction-diffusion medium reveal a new dynamical state, stratified spatiotemporal chaos, characterized by strong correlations along one of the principal axes. Equations that describe the dependence of front motion on the angle illustrate the mechanism leading to stratified chaos

    Differential amplification of rDNA repeats in barley translocation and duplication lines: role of a specific segment

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    Variation in restriction pattern, relative amounts of the two ribosomal DNA (rDNA) repeats, and the overall content of rDNA were compared among twelve segmental duplications and eleven parental translocations involving NOR6 and NOR7 of cultivated barley. Southern blot hybridization revealed two rDNA repeats of 9.9 kb and 9.0 kb. While all duplications snowed dimers for these rDNA repeats, the duplication lines D29 and D47 displayed trimers in addition to a higher proportion of rDNA repeats as dimers. The rDNA of Dl, D29 and D47 showed resistance to Bam HI and Taq I digestion, indicating possible melhylation of cytosine and adenine. Densitometric scans of autoradiographs revealed variations in the relative amounts of the 9.0 kb and 9.9 kb rDNA repeats among different karyotypes. Dot blot hybridizations indicated variation in the overall rDNA content. Comparison of the 9.0/9.9 kb ratios and the percentage of genomic DNA hybridizing to an rDNA clone of barley illustrates differential amplification for the two rDNA repeats. When the segmental composition of these deviating lines were compared, it was evident that the relative position of the segment 12-16 of chromosome 6 determines differential amplification while duplication of the same segment controls the overall rDNA content

    Dynamic Front Transitions and Spiral-Vortex Nucleation

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    This is a study of front dynamics in reaction diffusion systems near Nonequilibrium Ising-Bloch bifurcations. We find that the relation between front velocity and perturbative factors, such as external fields and curvature, is typically multivalued. This unusual form allows small perturbations to induce dynamic transitions between counter-propagating fronts and nucleate spiral vortices. We use these findings to propose explanations for a few numerical and experimental observations including spiral breakup driven by advective fields, and spot splitting

    A Method for Reducing the Severity of Epidemics by Allocating Vaccines According to Centrality

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    One long-standing question in epidemiological research is how best to allocate limited amounts of vaccine or similar preventative measures in order to minimize the severity of an epidemic. Much of the literature on the problem of vaccine allocation has focused on influenza epidemics and used mathematical models of epidemic spread to determine the effectiveness of proposed methods. Our work applies computational models of epidemics to the problem of geographically allocating a limited number of vaccines within several Texas counties. We developed a graph-based, stochastic model for epidemics that is based on the SEIR model, and tested vaccine allocation methods based on multiple centrality measures. This approach provides an alternative method for addressing the vaccine allocation problem, which can be combined with more conventional approaches to yield more effective epidemic suppression strategies. We found that allocation methods based on in-degree and inverse betweenness centralities tended to be the most effective at containing epidemics.Comment: 10 pages, accepted to ACM BCB 201

    Propagation Failure in Excitable Media

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    We study a mechanism of pulse propagation failure in excitable media where stable traveling pulse solutions appear via a subcritical pitchfork bifurcation. The bifurcation plays a key role in that mechanism. Small perturbations, externally applied or from internal instabilities, may cause pulse propagation failure (wave breakup) provided the system is close enough to the bifurcation point. We derive relations showing how the pitchfork bifurcation is unfolded by weak curvature or advective field perturbations and use them to demonstrate wave breakup. We suggest that the recent observations of wave breakup in the Belousov-Zhabotinsky reaction induced either by an electric field or a transverse instability are manifestations of this mechanism.Comment: 8 pages. Aric Hagberg: http://cnls.lanl.gov/~aric; Ehud Meron:http://www.bgu.ac.il/BIDR/research/staff/meron.htm

    Order Parameter Equations for Front Transitions: Planar and Circular Fronts

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    Near a parity breaking front bifurcation, small perturbations may reverse the propagation direction of fronts. Often this results in nonsteady asymptotic motion such as breathing and domain breakup. Exploiting the time scale differences of an activator-inhibitor model and the proximity to the front bifurcation, we derive equations of motion for planar and circular fronts. The equations involve a translational degree of freedom and an order parameter describing transitions between left and right propagating fronts. Perturbations, such as a space dependent advective field or uniform curvature (axisymmetric spots), couple these two degrees of freedom. In both cases this leads to a transition from stationary to oscillating fronts as the parity breaking bifurcation is approached. For axisymmetric spots, two additional dynamic behaviors are found: rebound and collapse.Comment: 9 pages. Aric Hagberg: http://t7.lanl.gov/People/Aric/; Ehud Meron: http://www.bgu.ac.il/BIDR/research/staff/meron.htm

    Controlling domain patterns far from equilibrium

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    A high degree of control over the structure and dynamics of domain patterns in nonequilibrium systems can be achieved by applying nonuniform external fields near parity breaking front bifurcations. An external field with a linear spatial profile stabilizes a propagating front at a fixed position or induces oscillations with frequency that scales like the square root of the field gradient. Nonmonotonic profiles produce a variety of patterns with controllable wavelengths, domain sizes, and frequencies and phases of oscillations.Comment: Published version, 4 pages, RevTeX. More at http://t7.lanl.gov/People/Aric

    Four-phase patterns in forced oscillatory systems

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    We investigate pattern formation in self-oscillating systems forced by an external periodic perturbation. Experimental observations and numerical studies of reaction-diffusion systems and an analysis of an amplitude equation are presented. The oscillations in each of these systems entrain to rational multiples of the perturbation frequency for certain values of the forcing frequency and amplitude. We focus on the subharmonic resonant case where the system locks at one fourth the driving frequency, and four-phase rotating spiral patterns are observed at low forcing amplitudes. The spiral patterns are studied using an amplitude equation for periodically forced oscillating systems. The analysis predicts a bifurcation (with increasing forcing) from rotating four-phase spirals to standing two-phase patterns. This bifurcation is also found in periodically forced reaction-diffusion equations, the FitzHugh-Nagumo and Brusselator models, even far from the onset of oscillations where the amplitude equation analysis is not strictly valid. In a Belousov-Zhabotinsky chemical system periodically forced with light we also observe four-phase rotating spiral wave patterns. However, we have not observed the transition to standing two-phase patterns, possibly because with increasing light intensity the reaction kinetics become excitable rather than oscillatory.Comment: 11 page
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