1,425 research outputs found
Wave generation and particle transport in the plasma sheet and boundary layer
The one and two ion beam instability was considered as a possible explanation for the observations of broadband electrostatic noise in the plasma sheet region of the geomagnetic tail. When only hot streaming plasma sheet boundary layer ions were present, no broadband waves were excited. Cold, streaming ionospheric ions can generate electrostatic broadband waves propagating in the slow beam-acoustic mode, but the growth rates of the waves were significantly enhanced when warm boundary layer ions were presented. (Both the slow and fast beam-acoustic modes can be excited, depending on the relative ion drift.) This mode predicted that the wave intensity of the broadband noise should peak in the plasma sheet boundary layer (PSBL). Observations of less intense electrostatic waves in the lobes and plasma sheet were likely a result of the absence of warm ion beams or large ion temperatures, respectively, which resulted in smaller growth rates. The model dependence of the ion beam instability has also been studied. For cold and warm ions streaming in the same direction, researchers found wave growth peaked for wave normal angles theta = 0 deg. and wave frequencies approx. 0.1 x the electron plasma frequency. However, for anti-parallel streaming cold and warm ions, wave growth peaks near theta = 90 deg. and wave frequencies were an order of magnitude smaller
A proposed neutral line signature
An identifying signature is proposed for the existence and location of the neutral line in the magnetotail. The signature, abrupt density, and temperature changes in the Earthtail direction, was first discovered in test particle simulations. Such temperature variations have been observed in ISEE data (Huang et. al. 1992), but their connection to the possible existence of a neutral line in the tail has not yet been established. The proposed signature develops earlier than the ion velocity space ridge of Martin and Speiser (1988), but can only be seen by spacecraft in the vicinity of the neutral line, while the latter can locate a neutral line remotely
Anomalous thermodynamics at the micro-scale
Particle motion at the micro-scale is an incessant tug-of-war between thermal
fluctuations and applied forces on one side, and the strong resistance exerted
by fluid viscosity on the other. Friction is so strong that completely
neglecting inertia - the overdamped approximation - gives an excellent
effective description of the actual particle mechanics. In sharp contrast with
this result, here we show that the overdamped approximation dramatically fails
when thermodynamic quantities such as the entropy production in the environment
is considered, in presence of temperature gradients. In the limit of
vanishingly small, yet finite inertia, we find that the entropy production is
dominated by a contribution that is anomalous, i.e. has no counterpart in the
overdamped approximation. This phenomenon, that we call entropic anomaly, is
due to a symmetry-breaking that occurs when moving to the small, finite inertia
limit. Strong production of anomalous entropy is traced back to intense sweeps
down the temperature gradient.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, supplementary information uploaded as a separate
pdf file (see other formats link
Fractional Chemotaxis Diffusion Equations
We introduce mesoscopic and macroscopic model equations of chemotaxis with
anomalous subdiffusion for modelling chemically directed transport of
biological organisms in changing chemical environments with diffusion hindered
by traps or macro-molecular crowding. The mesoscopic models are formulated
using Continuous Time Random Walk master equations and the macroscopic models
are formulated with fractional order differential equations. Different models
are proposed depending on the timing of the chemotactic forcing.
Generalizations of the models to include linear reaction dynamics are also
derived. Finally a Monte Carlo method for simulating anomalous subdiffusion
with chemotaxis is introduced and simulation results are compared with
numerical solutions of the model equations. The model equations developed here
could be used to replace Keller-Segel type equations in biological systems with
transport hindered by traps, macro-molecular crowding or other obstacles.Comment: 25page
Human cancers over express genes that are specific to a variety of normal human tissues
We have analyzed gene expression data from 3 different kinds of samples:
normal human tissues, human cancer cell lines and leukemic cells from lymphoid
and myeloid leukemia pediatric patients. We have searched for genes that are
over expressed in human cancer and also show specific patterns of
tissue-dependent expression in normal tissues. Using the expression data of the
normal tissues we identified 4346 genes with a high variability of expression,
and clustered these genes according to their relative expression level. Of 91
stable clusters obtained, 24 clusters included genes preferentially expressed
either only in hematopoietic tissues or in hematopoietic and 1-2 other tissues;
28 clusters included genes preferentially expressed in various
non-hematopoietic tissues such as neuronal, testis, liver, kidney, muscle,
lung, pancreas and placenta. Analysis of the expression levels of these 2
groups of genes in the human cancer cell lines and leukemias, identified genes
that were highly expressed in cancer cells but not in their normal
counterparts, and were thus over expressed in the cancers. The different cancer
cell lines and leukemias varied in the number and identity of these over
expressed genes. The results indicate that many genes that are over expressed
in human cancer cells are specific to a variety of normal tissues, including
normal tissues other than those from which the cancer originated. It is
suggested that this general property of cancer cells plays a major role in
determining the behavior of the cancers, including their metastatic potential.Comment: To appear in PNA
Hydrodynamic object recognition using pressure sensing
Hydrodynamic sensing is instrumental to fish and some amphibians. It also represents, for underwater vehicles, an alternative way of sensing the fluid environment when visual and acoustic sensing are limited. To assess the effectiveness of hydrodynamic sensing and gain insight into its capabilities and limitations, we investigated the forward and inverse problem of detection and identification, using the hydrodynamic pressure in the neighbourhood, of a stationary obstacle described using a general shape representation. Based on conformal mapping and a general normalization procedure, our obstacle representation accounts for all specific features of progressive perceptual hydrodynamic imaging reported experimentally. Size, location and shape are encoded separately. The shape representation rests upon an asymptotic series which embodies the progressive character of hydrodynamic imaging through pressure sensing. A dynamic filtering method is used to invert noisy nonlinear pressure signals for the shape parameters. The results highlight the dependence of the sensitivity of hydrodynamic sensing not only on the relative distance to the disturbance but also its bearing
Asexual and sexual replication in sporulating organisms
This paper develops models describing asexual and sexual replication in
sporulating organisms. Replication via sporulation is the replication strategy
for all multicellular life, and may even be observed in unicellular life (such
as with budding yeast). We consider diploid populations replicating via one of
two possible sporulation mechanisms: (1) Asexual sporulation, whereby adult
organisms produce single-celled diploid spores that grow into adults
themselves. (2) Sexual sporulation, whereby adult organisms produce
single-celled diploid spores that divide into haploid gametes. The haploid
gametes enter a haploid "pool", where they may recombine with other haploids to
form a diploid spore that then grows into an adult. We consider a haploid
fusion rate given by second-order reaction kinetics. We work with a simplified
model where the diploid genome consists of only two chromosomes, each of which
may be rendered defective with a single point mutation of the wild-type. We
find that the asexual strategy is favored when the rate of spore production is
high compared to the characteristic growth rate from a spore to a reproducing
adult. Conversely, the sexual strategy is favored when the rate of spore
production is low compared to the characteristic growth rate from a spore to a
reproducing adult. As the characteristic growth time increases, or as the
population density increases, the critical ratio of spore production rate to
organism growth rate at which the asexual strategy overtakes the sexual one is
pushed to higher values. Therefore, the results of this model suggest that, for
complex multicellular organisms, sexual replication is favored at high
population densities, and low growth and sporulation rates.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, to be submitted to Journal of Theoretical
Biology, figures not included in this submissio
Identifying Vessel Branching from Fluid Stresses on Microscopic Robots
Objects moving in fluids experience patterns of stress on their surfaces
determined by the geometry of nearby boundaries. Flows at low Reynolds number,
as occur in microscopic vessels such as capillaries in biological tissues, have
relatively simple relations between stresses and nearby vessel geometry. Using
these relations, this paper shows how a microscopic robot moving with such
flows can use changes in stress on its surface to identify when it encounters
vessel branches.Comment: Version 2 has minor clarification
Nemo: a computational tool for analyzing nematode locomotion
The nematode Caenorhabditis elegans responds to an impressive range of
chemical, mechanical and thermal stimuli and is extensively used to investigate
the molecular mechanisms that mediate chemosensation, mechanotransduction and
thermosensation. The main behavioral output of these responses is manifested as
alterations in animal locomotion. Monitoring and examination of such
alterations requires tools to capture and quantify features of nematode
movement. In this paper, we introduce Nemo (nematode movement), a
computationally efficient and robust two-dimensional object tracking algorithm
for automated detection and analysis of C. elegans locomotion. This algorithm
enables precise measurement and feature extraction of nematode movement
components. In addition, we develop a Graphical User Interface designed to
facilitate processing and interpretation of movement data. While, in this
study, we focus on the simple sinusoidal locomotion of C. elegans, our approach
can be readily adapted to handle complicated locomotory behaviour patterns by
including additional movement characteristics and parameters subject to
quantification. Our software tool offers the capacity to extract, analyze and
measure nematode locomotion features by processing simple video files. By
allowing precise and quantitative assessment of behavioral traits, this tool
will assist the genetic dissection and elucidation of the molecular mechanisms
underlying specific behavioral responses.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures. accepted by BMC Neuroscience 2007, 8:8
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