9,818 research outputs found
Helical states of nonlocally interacting molecules and their linear stability: geometric approach
The equations for strands of rigid charge configurations interacting
nonlocally are formulated on the special Euclidean group, SE(3), which
naturally generates helical conformations. Helical stationary shapes are found
by minimizing the energy for rigid charge configurations positioned along an
infinitely long molecule with charges that are off-axis. The classical energy
landscape for such a molecule is complex with a large number of energy minima,
even when limited to helical shapes. The question of linear stability and
selection of stationary shapes is studied using an SE(3) method that naturally
accounts for the helical geometry. We investigate the linear stability of a
general helical polymer that possesses torque-inducing non-local
self-interactions and find the exact dispersion relation for the stability of
the helical shapes with an arbitrary interaction potential. We explicitly
determine the linearization operators and compute the numerical stability for
the particular example of a linear polymer comprising a flexible rod with a
repeated configuration of two equal and opposite off-axis charges, thereby
showing that even in this simple case the non-local terms can induce
instability that leads to the rod assuming helical shapes.Comment: 34 pages, 9 figure
Variational Principles for Lagrangian Averaged Fluid Dynamics
The Lagrangian average (LA) of the ideal fluid equations preserves their
transport structure. This transport structure is responsible for the Kelvin
circulation theorem of the LA flow and, hence, for its convection of potential
vorticity and its conservation of helicity.
Lagrangian averaging also preserves the Euler-Poincar\'e (EP) variational
framework that implies the LA fluid equations. This is expressed in the
Lagrangian-averaged Euler-Poincar\'e (LAEP) theorem proven here and illustrated
for the Lagrangian average Euler (LAE) equations.Comment: 23 pages, 3 figure
Fluctuations of the vortex line density in turbulent flows of quantum fluids
We present an analytical study of fluctuations of the Vortex Line Density
(VLD) in turbulent
flows of quantum fluids. Two cases are considered. The first one is the
counterflowing (Vinen) turbulence, where the vortex lines are disordered, and
the evolution of quantity obeys the Vinen equation. The second
case is the quasi-classic turbulence, where vortex lines are believed to form
the so called vortex bundles, and their dynamics is described by the HVBK
equations. The latter case, is of a special interest, since a number of recent
experiments demonstrate the dependence for spectrum VLD,
instead of law, typical for spectrum of vorticity. In
nonstationary situation, in particular, in the fluctuating turbulent flow there
is a retardation between the instantaneous value of the normal velocity and the
quantity . This retardation tends to decrease in the accordance
with the inner dynamics, which has a relaxation character. In both cases the
relaxation dynamics of VLD is related to fluctuations of the relative velocity,
however if for the Vinen case the rate of temporal change for
is directly depends on , for the HVBK dynamics it
depends on . As a result, for the
disordered case the spectrum coincides with the spectrum . In the
case of the bundle arrangement, the spectrum of the VLD varies (at different
temperatures) from to dependencies. This
conclusion may serve as a basis for the experimental determination of what kind
of the turbulence is implemented in different types of generation.Comment: 8 pages, 29 reference
Signalment risk factors for cutaneous and renal glomerular vasculopathy (Alabama rot) in dogs in the UK
Seasonal outbreaks of cutaneous and renal glomerular vasculopathy (CRGV) have been reported annually in UK dogs since 2012, yet the aetiology of the disease remains unknown. The objectives of this study were to explore whether any breeds had an increased or decreased risk of being diagnosed with CRGV, and to report on age and sex distributions of CRGV cases occurring in the UK. Multivariable logistic regression was used to compare 101 dogs diagnosed with CRGV between November 2012 and May 2017 with a denominator population of 446,453 dogs from the VetCompass database. Two Kennel Club breed groups—hounds (odds ratio (OR) 10.68) and gun dogs (OR 9.69)—had the highest risk of being diagnosed with CRGV compared with terriers, while toy dogs were absent from among CRGV cases. Females were more likely to be diagnosed with CRGV (OR 1.51) as were neutered dogs (OR 3.36). As well as helping veterinarians develop an index of suspicion for the disease, better understanding of the signalment risk factors may assist in the development of causal models for CRGV and help identify the aetiology of the disease
Spatiotemporal patterns and agro-ecological risk factors for cutaneous and renal glomerular vasculopathy (Alabama Rot) in dogs in the UK
Seasonal outbreaks of cutaneous and renal glomerular vasculopathy (CRGV) have been reported annually in UK dogs since 2012, yet the aetiology of the disease remains unknown. The objectives of this study were to explore whether any breeds had an increased or decreased risk of being diagnosed with CRGV, and to report on age and sex distributions of CRGV cases occurring in the UK. Multivariable logistic regression was used to compare 101 dogs diagnosed with CRGV between November 2012 and May 2017 with a denominator population of 446,453 dogs from the VetCompass database. Two Kennel Club breed groups—hounds (odds ratio (OR) 10.68) and gun dogs (OR 9.69)—had the highest risk of being diagnosed with CRGV compared with terriers, while toy dogs were absent from among CRGV cases. Females were more likely to be diagnosed with CRGV (OR 1.51) as were neutered dogs (OR 3.36). As well as helping veterinarians develop an index of suspicion for the disease, better understanding of the signalment risk factors may assist in the development of causal models for CRGV and help identify the aetiology of the disease
A note on multi-dimensional Camassa-Holm type systems on the torus
We present a -component nonlinear evolutionary PDE which includes the
-dimensional versions of the Camassa-Holm and the Hunter-Saxton systems as
well as their partially averaged variations. Our goal is to apply Arnold's
[V.I. Arnold, Sur la g\'eom\'etrie diff\'erentielle des groupes de Lie de
dimension infinie et ses applications \`a l'hydrodynamique des fluides
parfaits. Ann. Inst. Fourier (Grenoble) 16 (1966) 319-361], [D.G. Ebin and J.E.
Marsden, Groups of diffeomorphisms and the motion of an incompressible fluid.
Ann. of Math. 92(2) (1970) 102-163] geometric formalism to this general
equation in order to obtain results on well-posedness, conservation laws or
stability of its solutions. Following the line of arguments of the paper [M.
Kohlmann, The two-dimensional periodic -equation on the diffeomorphism group
of the torus. J. Phys. A.: Math. Theor. 44 (2011) 465205 (17 pp.)] we present
geometric aspects of a two-dimensional periodic --equation on the
diffeomorphism group of the torus in this context.Comment: 14 page
Responding To An Income Shock Through Increasing Forest Extraction: Survey Evidence From Ethiopian Coffee Farmers
The worldwide turndown in coffee revenue to the majority of resource poor primary producers has become a serious threat to sustainable development. There is however inadequate knowledge with respect to mechanisms used by resource poor coffee farmers to stave off situations of economic hardship. Using cross-sectional household survey data from southwest Ethiopia, the present study investigates whether or not farmers use forests to even out variability associated with risky coffee income. A zero-inflated negative binomial model was used to explain farmer frequency of firewood collection trips as a response to income shock and risk in coffee farming. The empirical results indicate that a rise in household forest extraction effort for firewood is strongly associated with shortfalls in current coffee income and with income uncertainties prevailing in the coffee sector. The study draws policy implication from the perspectives of development and environment.Keywords: Income shock; coffee farming; forest extraction; Ethiopia, Afric
-Strands
A -strand is a map for a Lie
group that follows from Hamilton's principle for a certain class of
-invariant Lagrangians. The SO(3)-strand is the -strand version of the
rigid body equation and it may be regarded physically as a continuous spin
chain. Here, -strand dynamics for ellipsoidal rotations is derived as
an Euler-Poincar\'e system for a certain class of variations and recast as a
Lie-Poisson system for coadjoint flow with the same Hamiltonian structure as
for a perfect complex fluid. For a special Hamiltonian, the -strand is
mapped into a completely integrable generalization of the classical chiral
model for the SO(3)-strand. Analogous results are obtained for the
-strand. The -strand is the -strand version of the
Bloch-Iserles ordinary differential equation, whose solutions exhibit dynamical
sorting. Numerical solutions show nonlinear interactions of coherent wave-like
solutions in both cases. -strand equations on the
diffeomorphism group are also introduced and shown
to admit solutions with singular support (e.g., peakons).Comment: 35 pages, 5 figures, 3rd version. To appear in J Nonlin Sc
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Digital Creativity Support for Original Journalism
The decline in circulations and revenues resulting from the digitalization of news production and consumption has led to a crisis in journalism.Journalists have less time to research, investigate and write original stories, leading to problems for our democratic processes and holding the powerful to account. This paper reports the architecture, features and rationale for new digital creativity support designed to support journalists to discover more original angles onstories. It also summarises the evaluation of the tool’s use in 3 newsrooms
Integrated pest management systems: rationale, objectives, and design
Non-Peer ReviewedThe objective of the project was to develop integrated crop management systems for weed, insect and disease populations and evaluate the efficacy and cost/benefit of the various management practices. The strategy of integrated management of crop pests seeks to understand the factors that influence changes in pest populations and to utilize these factors to regulate population levels. Field experiments were established in the fall of 1996 on the Kernen Crop Research Farm at the University of Saskatchewan and on the Agricultural Research and Development Farm of Saskatchewan Wheat Pool at Watrous. Six systems were based on combinations of tillage and herbicide inputs. A four-year crop rotation of wheat, canola, barley and field pea was used from 1997 to 2000. Agronomic and pest population data were collected yearly. The economics and energy efficiency of the six systems were compared. Carabid beetle diversity was used as an assessment of soil health
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