5,696 research outputs found
Direct Numerical Simulation of decaying two-dimensional turbulence in a no-slip square box using Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics
This paper explores the application of SPH to a Direct Numerical Simulation
(DNS) of decaying turbulence in a two-dimensional no-slip wall-bounded domain.
In this bounded domain, the inverse energy cascade, and a net torque exerted by
the boundary, result in a spontaneous spin up of the fluid, leading to a
typical end state of a large monopole vortex that fills the domain. The SPH
simulations were compared against published results using a high accuracy
pseudo-spectral code. Ensemble averages of the kinetic energy, enstrophy and
average vortex wavenumber compared well against the pseudo-spectral results, as
did the evolution of the total angular momentum of the fluid. However, while
the pseudo-spectral results emphasised the importance of the no-slip boundaries
as generators of long lived coherent vortices in the flow, no such generation
was seen in the SPH results. Vorticity filaments produced at the boundary were
always dissipated by the flow shortly after separating from the boundary layer.
The kinetic energy spectrum of the SPH results was calculated using a SPH
Fourier transform that operates directly on the disordered particles. The
ensemble kinetic energy spectrum showed the expected k-3 scaling over most of
the inertial range. However, the spectrum flattened at smaller length scales
(initially less than 7.5 particle spacings and growing in size over time),
indicating an excess of small-scale kinetic energy
Long-term Recovery from Acute Cold Shock in Caenorhabditis Elegans
Background
Animals are exposed to a wide range of environmental stresses that can cause potentially fatal cellular damage. The ability to survive the period of stress as well as to repair any damage incurred is essential for fitness. Exposure to 2 °C for 24 h or longer is rapidly fatal to the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, but the process of recovery from a shorter, initially non-lethal, cold shock is poorly understood.
Results We report that cold shock of less than 12-hour duration does not initially kill C. elegans, but these worms experience a progression of devastating phenotypes over the next 96 h that correlate with their eventual fate: successful recovery from the cold shock and survival, or failure to recover and death. Cold-shocked worms experience a marked loss of pigmentation, decrease in the size of their intestine and gonads, and disruption to the vulva. Those worms who will successfully recover from the cold shock regain their pigmentation and much of the integrity of their intestine and gonads. Those who will die do so with a distinct phenotype from worms dying during or immediately following cold shock, suggesting independent mechanisms. Worms lacking the G-protein coupled receptor FSHR-1 are resistant to acute death from longer cold shocks, and are more successful in their recovery from shorter sub-lethal cold shocks.
Conclusions We have defined two distinct phases of death associated with cold shock and described a progression of phenotypes that accompanies the course of recovery from that cold shock. The G-protein coupled receptor FSHR-1 antagonizes these novel processes of damage and recovery
Notes on plague, its epidemicity and prophylaxis
#1. The wide dissemination of Plague in India is
attributable to the great facilities for and
popularity of Railway travel.
#2. A local outbreak is almost invariably traceable t.
an imported case, and it is always preceded by an
epizootic (among rats and chipmunks).
#3. The interval between the discovery of the epigootic
(i.e. the finding of dead rats) is regularly from
10 to 14 days. c.f. The Etiology and Epidemiology
of Plague, 1908, p.21 1.
#4. There is a general recognition by the mass of the
people, even villagers, of the close connection
between rat mortality and human plague. There is
increasing willingness to evacuate houses earlier.
#5. The effective management of plague epidemics, owi
to the lethargy and prejudices of t.he people, is
possible only in small communities.
#6. The mode of building and the close proximity to
each other of Indian houses favour the maintenance:
of a large rat population, which is usually well
fed owing to the very careless storage and handling
of food stuffs, and the accumulation of rubbish
in the houses.
#7. Plague rarely attacks the young and old, while it
incidence among the strong and healthy adult, male
and female, is proverbial.
#8. The infection is usually and markedly most virulent
at the beginning of an outbreak, and there is a
low case mortality at the end.
#9. The infection of plague is frequently spread when
people flee from an infected locality taking the
bedding with them.
#10. It is most conspicuous how seldom those in attendance
on cases of plague (out of the surroundings
in which the disease was contracted) themselves
contract the disease.
#11. The epidemicity of plague seems to be favoured by
prevalence of conditions of scarcity or famine.
#12. The breeding of rats is specially related to the
hot season, when scarcity usually prevails, and
there is always a relatively greater number of
young and highly susceptible rats after a famine
or scarcity.
#13. A marked tendency of plague to recur in the same
localities in successive outbreaks has been noticed.
#14. Anti- plague inoculation with Haffkine's prophylacsic
confers a very high degree of protection and immunity
upon inoculated persons. The writer has net
known of the occurrence in the same epidemic season
of a single case of plague among over 1,000 'cases
personally inoculated. The statistics of the
outbreak in the 99th Native Infantry at Sehore
show how high a degree of safety of life, i.e. hot
great a reduction of mortality there is among
those contracting plague even six months after
being inoculated. Probably six months should
be considered the outside period of the protectio
resulting from inoculation.
#15. Only cases of Bubonic Plague have been met with i
the epidemics occurring under the writer's observation
in the Districts, in Central India, and th
Central Provinces, referred to. The occurrence
of carbuncles has never been observed in these
areas.
#16. The symptoms of the earlier cases have been marked
and classical, but cases near the cessation of the
outbreak may be so mild as to go undetected - hen e
possible inaccuracy of mortality statistics.
#17. With the exception of the incision of bubos that
have progressed to suppuration, and the application
of Ac. Carbolic Pur. and Sp. Vin. Rect. tc
them when evacuated, the treatment has been
symptomatic, and chiefly directed to the avoidanc
of heart failure.
#18. Immediate evacuation of dwellings'', and, after
sterilisation of bedding, etc., the resort to
camps can be relied upon to reduce an outbreak to
trivial proportions. This, however, is seldom
attainable, and there is commonly a severe exacerbation
through People returning too soon to their
homes.
On the outbreak of an epizootic and the finding
dead rats, etc.
#19. Anti- plague inoculation is not only a great
individual safeguard, but it can be relied upon
greatly to minimise the ravages of an incipient
epidemic, if a sufficiently large proportion of
the population, say not less than 500 and better
60 or upwards, is inoculated.
#20. The destruction of rats on such a scale as to
modify the epidemicity of plague,is not attainable
in India because of the indifference of the people
at non-epidemic seasons, when alone it is of value,
and because of the Hindus religious objection to
the taking of animal life.
#21. Small and comparatively isolated communities can
be guarded against outbreaks of plague by prompt
and thorough measures in dealing with imported
cases - i.e. by the effective inspection and taking
the temperature for ten days of visitors and
returning inhabitants from infected places, and
the rigorous isolation in a segregation camp for
ten days of suspects and contacts, and the treatment
in a plague camp or Hospital of all cases.
#22. Too great stress cannot be laid upon the value of
popularising anti-plague inoculation, a practice
attended with no ascertained injury to health,and
the one effective personal or individual and
communal safeguard.
The methods assailable and effective for propaganda are: -
(a) Civil surgeons and Medical Missionaries coming into
personal contact with the common people and
explaining the objects and results of inoculation
(b) The granting of certificates of inoculation which
lighten the restrictions upon residence and tray
of people belonging to infected localities.
(c) Legitimate pressure upon Government servants and
employees to induce them to submit to inoculation
- preferably in public.
(d) Monetary rewards to those who are inoculated.
(e) Widespread circulation of explanatory literature
(e.g. specimens sent) giving details of the
method and results, both in English and the
vernaculars, to induce the educated classes to
adopt and recommend thát safeguard, and to remove
the prejudice of the masses.
(f) The writer thinks that a properly trained staff
of Subordinate European Inonulators, who would
travel among the villages in the cool season,
might do much to recommend and increase the
adoption of the safeguard by the common people
Agricultural Aerosols: The Impact of Farming Activity on Ice Nucleating Particles
Farming activities cause particles such as soil dust and plant material to be emitted into the air. Some of these aerosols can become ice nucleating particles (INPs), serving as seeds for ice and mixed-phase clouds. While there have been ground-based studies of these particles in the western Great Plains and a single air-based study in Indiana, there is a distinct lack of ground-based studies in the Midwest. In Indiana, over two-thirds of the state is farmland, with over 75% of land in Tippecanoe County used for agriculture. Despite farming being such an essential part of life in Indiana, the connection between agricultural activities and INP concentrations in the area has not been explored. Using field observations taken at the Purdue Agronomy Center for Research and Education (ACRE), we hope to study the impact of harvesting on INP concentrations in the midwestern United States. The field experiment took place from May to December 2021 at the ACRE site, but this study focuses on three days during the harvesting period. Data was collected via two instruments: the SPectrometer for Ice Nuclei (SPIN) and the Cloud Condensation Nuclei Counter (CCNC). It appears there is an increase in INP concentrations on days when harvesting occurs, most likely due to an increase in organic and biological particles. It is hoped that the data from this project will provide further insight into the composition and number concentrations of INPs from harvesting through ground-based field observations, as well as insight into INP concentration in the rural Midwest and its climatic impacts
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