41,497 research outputs found
A Toll for lupus
Toll-like receptor (TLR)-9 recognizes CpG motifs in microbial DNA. TLR9 signalling stimulates innate antimicrobial immunity and modulates adaptive immune responses including autoimmunity against chromatin, e.g., in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). This review summarizes the available data for a role of TLR9 signalling in lupus and discusses the following questions that arise from these observations: 1) Is CpG-DNA/TLR9 interaction involved in infection-induced disease activity of lupus? 2) What are the risks of CpG motifs in vaccine adjuvants for lupus patients? 3) Is TLR9 signalling involved in the pathogenesis of lupus by recognizing self DNA
Thermal energies of classical and quantum damped oscillators coupled to reservoirs
We consider the global thermal state of classical and quantum harmonic
oscillators that interact with a reservoir. Ohmic damping of the oscillator can
be exactly treated with a 1D scalar field reservoir, whereas general non-Ohmic
damping is conveniently treated with a continuum reservoir of harmonic
oscillators. Using the diagonalized Hamiltonian of the total system, we
calculate a number of thermodynamic quantities for the damped oscillator: the
mean force internal energy, mean force free energy, and another internal energy
based on the free-oscillator Hamiltonian. The classical mean force energy is
equal to that of a free oscillator, for both Ohmic and non-Ohmic damping and no
matter how strong the coupling to the reservoir. In contrast, the quantum mean
force energy depends on the details of the damping and diverges for strictly
Ohmic damping. These results give additional insight into the steady-state
thermodynamics of open systems with arbitrarily strong coupling to a reservoir,
complementing results for energies derived within dynamical approaches (e.g.
master equations) in the weak-coupling regime.Comment: 13 page
Airfoil large eddy breakup devices for turbulent drag reduction
It was determined from the present LaRC experiments that tandem, airfoil-shaped large eddy breakup (LEBU) devices can reduce local skin friction as much as 30 percent with a recovery region extending more than 100 boundary layer thicknesses downstream. These airfoils experience near laminar skin friction device drag and produce net drag reductions of up to 7 percent. In contrast to the thin plates used in previous experiments, these airfoils are more than 1000 time stiffer and hence have the potential to withstand the real flight environment (dynamic pressure 36 times larger than in low-speed wing tunnels). In addition, the higher Reynolds numbers of the present tests indicate drag reduction performance is at least as good (or better) as at lower Reynolds numbers
Time-reversal symmetric work distributions for closed quantum dynamics in the histories framework
A central topic in the emerging field of quantum thermodynamics is the
definition of thermodynamic work in the quantum regime. One widely used
solution is to define work for a closed system undergoing non-equilibrium
dynamics according to the two-point energy measurement scheme. However, due to
the invasive nature of measurement the two-point quantum work probability
distribution leads to inconsistencies with two pillars of thermodynamics: it
breaks the first law and the time-reversal symmetry expected for closed
dynamics. We here introduce the quantum histories framework as a method to
characterise the thermodynamic properties of the unmeasured, closed dynamics.
Extending the classical phase space trajectories to continuous power operator
trajectories allows us to derive an alternative quantum work distribution for
closed quantum dynamics that fulfils the first law and is time-reversal
symmetric. We find that the work distribution of the unmeasured dynamics leads
to deviations from the classical Jarzynski equality and can have negative
values highlighting distinctly non-classical features of quantum work.Comment: 18 pages, 2 figures, comments welcom
Entropy production and time-asymmetry in the presence of strong interactions
It is known that the equilibrium properties of open classical systems that
are strongly coupled to a heat bath are described by a set of thermodynamic
potentials related to the system's Hamiltonian of mean force. By adapting this
framework to a more general class of non-equilibrium states, we show that the
equilibrium properties of the bath can be well-defined, even when the system is
arbitrarily far from equilibrium and correlated with the bath. These states,
which retain a notion of temperature, take the form of conditional equilibrium
distributions. For out-of-equilibrium processes we show that the average
entropy production quantifies the extent to which the system-bath state is
driven away from the conditional equilibrium distribution. In addition, we show
that the stochastic entropy production satisfies a generalised Crooks relation
and can be used to quantify time-asymmetry of correlated non-equilibrium
processes. These results naturally extend the familiar properties of entropy
production in weakly-coupled systems to the strong coupling regime.
Experimental measurements of the entropy production at strong coupling could be
pursued using optomechanics or trapped ion systems, which allow strong coupling
to be engineered.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figure, comments welcom
Effects of vibrational nonequilibrium on the inviscid design of an axisymmetric nozzle for hypersonic flow
An axisymmetric, hypersonic nozzle for arc-heated air is described. The method of characteristics is used to compute an inviscid nozzle contour in which vibrational nonequilibrium is approximated by the sudden-freeze technique. Chemical reactions are shown to freeze early in the nozzle expansion, and the result of vibrational and chemical freezing on the nozzle contour is demonstrated. The approximate nozzle design is analyzed by an exact calculation based on the method of characteristics for flow with vibrational nonequilibrium. Exit profiles are computed, and the usefulness of the approximate design is discussed. An analysis of the nozzle performance at off-design conditions is presented
Circularizing Planet Nine through dynamical friction with an extended, cold planetesimal belt
Unexpected clustering in the orbital elements of minor bodies beyond the
Kuiper belt has led to speculations that our solar system actually hosts nine
planets, the eight established plus a hypothetical "Planet Nine". Several
recent studies have shown that a planet with a mass of about 10 Earth masses on
a distant eccentric orbit with perihelion far beyond the Kuiper belt could
create and maintain this clustering. The evolutionary path resulting in an
orbit such as the one suggested for Planet Nine is nevertheless not easily
explained. Here we investigate whether a planet scattered away from the
giant-planet region could be lifted to an orbit similar to the one suggested
for Planet Nine through dynamical friction with a cold, distant planetesimal
belt. Recent simulations of planetesimal formation via the streaming
instability suggest that planetesimals can readily form beyond 100au. We
explore this circularisation by dynamical friction with a set of numerical
simulations. We find that a planet that is scattered from the region close to
Neptune onto an eccentric orbit has a 20-30% chance of obtaining an orbit
similar to that of Planet Nine after 4.6Gyr. Our simulations also result in
strong or partial clustering of the planetesimals; however, whether or not this
clustering is observable depends on the location of the inner edge of the
planetesimal belt. If the inner edge is located at 200au the degree of
clustering amongst observable objects is significant.Comment: Accepted to MNRA
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