48,029 research outputs found
Dynamic clustering in active colloidal suspensions with chemical signaling
In this paper, we explore experimentally the phase behavior of a dense active
suspension of self- propelled colloids. In addition to a solid-like and a
gas-like phase observed for high and low densities, a novel cluster phase is
reported at intermediate densities. This takes the form of a stationary
assembly of dense aggregates, with an average size which grows with activity as
a linear function of the self-propelling velocity. While different possible
scenarii can be considered to account for these observations - such as a
generic velocity weakening instability recently put forward -, we show that the
experimental results are reproduced by a chemotactic aggregation mechanism,
originally introduced to account for bacterial aggregation, and accounting here
for diffusiophoretic chemical interaction between colloidal swimmers.Comment: supplementary video :http://
www-lpmcn.univ-lyon1.fr/~lbocquet/Movie-Theurkauff-SI.av
Matrix partitioning and EOF/principal component analysis of Antarctic Sea ice brightness temperatures
A field of measured anomalies of some physical variable relative to their time averages, is partitioned in either the space domain or the time domain. Eigenvectors and corresponding principal components of the smaller dimensioned covariance matrices associated with the partitioned data sets are calculated independently, then joined to approximate the eigenstructure of the larger covariance matrix associated with the unpartitioned data set. The accuracy of the approximation (fraction of the total variance in the field) and the magnitudes of the largest eigenvalues from the partitioned covariance matrices together determine the number of local EOF's and principal components to be joined by any particular level. The space-time distribution of Nimbus-5 ESMR sea ice measurement is analyzed
Enzyme kinetics for a two-step enzymic reaction with comparable initial enzyme-substrate ratios
We extend the validity of the quasi-steady state assumption for a model double intermediate enzyme-substrate reaction to include the case where the ratio of initial enzyme to substrate concentration is not necessarily small. Simple analytical solutions are obtained when the reaction rates and the initial substrate concentration satisfy a certain condition. These analytical solutions compare favourably with numerical solutions of the full system of differential equations describing the reaction. Experimental methods are suggested which might permit the application of the quasi-steady state assumption to reactions where it may not have been obviously applicable before
Intensity mapping cross-correlations II: HI halo models including shot noise
HI intensity mapping data traces the large-scale structure matter
distribution using the integrated emission of neutral hydrogen gas (HI). The
cross-correlation of the intensity maps with optical galaxy surveys can
mitigate foreground and systematic effects, but has been shown to significantly
depend on galaxy evolution parameters of the HI and the optical sample.
Previously, we have shown that the shot noise of the cross-correlation scales
with the HI content of the optical samples, such that the shot noise estimation
infers the average HI masses of these samples. In this article, we present an
adaptive framework for the cross-correlation of HI intensity maps with galaxy
samples using our implementation of the halo model formalism (Murray et al
2018, in prep) which utilises the halo occupation distribution of galaxies to
predict their power spectra. We compare two HI population models, tracing the
spatial halo and the galaxy distribution respectively, and present their auto-
and cross-power spectra with an associated galaxy sample. We find that the
choice of the HI model and the distribution of the HI within the galaxy sample
have minor significance for the shape of the auto- and cross-correlations, but
highly impact the measured shot noise amplitude of the estimators, a finding we
confirm with simulations. We demonstrate parameter estimation of the HI halo
occupation models and advocate this framework for the interpretation of future
experimental data, with the prospect of determining the HI masses of optical
galaxy samples via the cross-correlation shot noise.Comment: 15 pages, 8 figures, 3 tables. Comments welcom
Relativistic Resonant Relations between Massive Black Hole Binary and Extreme Mass Ratio Inspiral
One component of a massive black hole binary (MBHB) might capture a small
third body, and then a hierarchical, inclined triple system would be formed.
With the post-Newtonian approximation including radiation reaction, we analyzed
the evolution of the triple initially with small eccentricities. We found that
an essentially new resonant relation could arise in the triple system. Here
relativistic effects are crucial. Relativistic resonances, including the new
one, stably work even for an outer MBHB of comparable masses, and significantly
change the orbit of the inner small body.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, to appear in PR
Network formation of tissue cells via preferential attraction to elongated structures
Vascular and non-vascular cells often form an interconnected network in
vitro, similar to the early vascular bed of warm blooded embryos. Our
time-lapse recordings show that the network forms by extending sprouts, i.e.,
multicellular linear segments. To explain the emergence of such structures, we
propose a simple model of preferential attraction to stretched cells. Numerical
simulations reveal that the model evolves into a quasi-stationary pattern
containing linear segments, which interconnect above the critical volume
fraction of 0.2. In the quasi-stationary state the generation of new branches
offset the coarsening driven by surface tension. In agreement with empirical
data, the characteristic size of the resulting polygonal pattern is
density-independent within a wide range of volume fractions
Brain GABA and Glutamate Concentrations Following Chronic Gabapentin Administration: A Convenience Sample Studied During Early Abstinence From Alcohol.
Gabapentin (GBP), a GABA analog that may also affect glutamate (Glu) production, can normalize GABA and Glu tone during early abstinence from alcohol, effectively treating withdrawal symptoms and facilitating recovery. Using in vivo magnetic resonance spectroscopy, we tested the degree to which daily GBP alters regional brain GABA and Glu levels in short-term abstinent alcohol-dependent individuals. Regional metabolite levels were compared between 13 recently abstinent alcohol-dependent individuals who had received daily GBP for at least 1 week (GBP+) and 25 matched alcohol-dependent individuals who had not received GBP (GBP-). Magnetic resonance spectra from up to five different brain regions were analyzed to yield absolute GABA and Glu concentrations. GABA and Glu concentrations in the parieto-occipital cortex were not different between GBP- and GBP+. Glu levels in anterior cingulate cortex, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, and basal ganglia did not differ between GBP- and GBP+. However, in a subgroup of individuals matched on age, sex, and abstinence duration, GBP+ had markedly lower Glu in the frontal white matter (WM) than GBP-, comparable to concentrations found in light/non-drinking controls. Furthermore, lower frontal WM Glu in GBP+ correlated with a higher daily GBP dose. Daily GBP treatment at an average of 1,600 mg/day for at least 1 week was not associated with altered cortical GABA and Glu concentrations during short-term abstinence from alcohol, but with lower Glu in frontal WM. GBP for the treatment of alcohol dependence may work through reducing Glu in WM rather than increasing cortical GABA
Transient resonances in the inspirals of point particles into black holes
We show that transient resonances occur in the two body problem in general
relativity, in the highly relativistic, extreme mass-ratio regime for spinning
black holes. These resonances occur when the ratio of polar and radial orbital
frequencies, which is slowly evolving under the influence of gravitational
radiation reaction, passes through a low order rational number. At such points,
the adiabatic approximation to the orbital evolution breaks down, and there is
a brief but order unity correction to the inspiral rate. Corrections to the
gravitational wave signal's phase due to resonance effects scale as the square
root of the inverse of mass of the small body, and thus become large in the
extreme-mass-ratio limit, dominating over all other post-adiabatic effects. The
resonances make orbits more sensitive to changes in initial data (though not
quite chaotic), and are genuine non-perturbative effects that are not seen at
any order in a standard post-Newtonian expansion. Our results apply to an
important potential source of gravitational waves, the gradual inspiral of
white dwarfs, neutron stars, or black holes into much more massive black holes.
It is hoped to exploit observations of these sources to map the spacetime
geometry of black holes. However, such mapping will require accurate models of
binary dynamics, which is a computational challenge whose difficulty is
significantly increased by resonance effects. We estimate that the resonance
phase shifts will be of order a few tens of cycles for mass ratios , by numerically evolving fully relativistic orbital dynamics
supplemented with an approximate, post-Newtonian self-force.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, minor correction
Chemotactic Collapse and Mesenchymal Morphogenesis
We study the effect of chemotactic signaling among mesenchymal cells. We show
that the particular physiology of the mesenchymal cells allows one-dimensional
collapse in contrast to the case of bacteria, and that the mesenchymal
morphogenesis represents thus a more complex type of pattern formation than
those found in bacterial colonies. We finally compare our theoretical
predictions with recent in vitro experiments
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Icelandic debris flow and their relationship to martian gullies
Abstract not available
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