383 research outputs found
Characterization of laser propagation through turbulent media by quantifiers based on the wavelet transform: dynamic study
We analyze, within the wavelet theory framework, the wandering over a screen
of the centroid of a laser beam after it has propagated through a time-changing
laboratory-generated turbulence. Following a previous work (Fractals 12 (2004)
223) two quantifiers are used, the Hurst parameter, , and the Normalized
Total Wavelet Entropy, . The temporal evolution of both
quantifiers, obtained from the laser spot data stream is studied and compared.
This allows us to extract information of the stochastic process associated to
the turbulence dynamics.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, accepted to be published in Physica
Thermopower in the strongly overdoped region of single-layer Bi2Sr2CuO6+d superconductor
The evolution of the thermoelectric power S(T) with doping, p, of
single-layer Bi2Sr2CuO6+d ceramics in the strongly overdoped region is studied
in detail. Analysis in term of drag and diffusion contributions indicates a
departure of the diffusion from the T-linear metallic behavior. This effect is
increased in the strongly overdoped range (p~0.2-0.28) and should reflect the
proximity of some topological change.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Retarding Sub- and Accelerating Super-Diffusion Governed by Distributed Order Fractional Diffusion Equations
We propose diffusion-like equations with time and space fractional
derivatives of the distributed order for the kinetic description of anomalous
diffusion and relaxation phenomena, whose diffusion exponent varies with time
and which, correspondingly, can not be viewed as self-affine random processes
possessing a unique Hurst exponent. We prove the positivity of the solutions of
the proposed equations and establish the relation to the Continuous Time Random
Walk theory. We show that the distributed order time fractional diffusion
equation describes the sub-diffusion random process which is subordinated to
the Wiener process and whose diffusion exponent diminishes in time (retarding
sub-diffusion) leading to superslow diffusion, for which the square
displacement grows logarithmically in time. We also demonstrate that the
distributed order space fractional diffusion equation describes super-diffusion
phenomena when the diffusion exponent grows in time (accelerating
super-diffusion).Comment: 11 pages, LaTe
Fractional oscillator process with two indices
We introduce a new fractional oscillator process which can be obtained as
solution of a stochastic differential equation with two fractional orders.
Basic properties such as fractal dimension and short range dependence of the
process are studied by considering the asymptotic properties of its covariance
function. The fluctuation--dissipation relation of the process is investigated.
The fractional oscillator process can be regarded as one-dimensional fractional
Euclidean Klein-Gordon field, which can be obtained by applying the Parisi-Wu
stochastic quantization method to a nonlocal Euclidean action. The Casimir
energy associated with the fractional field at positive temperature is
calculated by using the zeta function regularization technique.Comment: 32 page
Magnetic properties and phase diagrams of a bilayer spin-3/2 Ising model
The magnetic properties and phase diagrams of a bilayer spin-3/2 Ising model is studied, under the effect of crystal field, using the mean field (MF) theory and the Monte Carlo (MC) simulations. The ground state phase diagrams in the (Js1 / J, ∆s1 / J) and (Js2 / J, ∆s1 / J) planes are determined analytically. On the other hand, the magnetization and critical temperature is studied. The results found by the two methods are in good agreement with the ground state phase diagram. It was found that the critical temperature calculated by Monte Carlo simulations is less than that one obtained by the mean field method, for both positive and negative crystal field acting on each layer of the film.The magnetic properties and phase diagrams of a bilayer spin-3/2 Ising model is studied, under the effect of crystal field, using the mean field (MF) theory and the Monte Carlo (MC) simulations. The ground state phase diagrams in the (Js1 / J, ∆s1 / J) and (Js2 / J, ∆s1 / J) planes are determined analytically. On the other hand, the magnetization and critical temperature is studied. The results found by the two methods are in good agreement with the ground state phase diagram. It was found that the critical temperature calculated by Monte Carlo simulations is less than that one obtained by the mean field method, for both positive and negative crystal field acting on each layer of the film
Optical properties of an effective one-band Hubbard model for the cuprates
We study the Cu and O spectral density of states and the optical conductivity
of CuO_2 planes using an effective generalized one-band Hubbard model derived
from the extended three-band Hubbard model. We solve exactly a square cluster
of 10 unit cells and average the results over all possible boundary conditions,
what leads to smooth functions of frequency. Upon doping, the Fermi energy
jumps to Zhang-Rice states which are connected to the rest of the valence band
(in contrast to an isolated new band in the middle of the gap). The transfer of
spectral weight depends on the parameters of the original three-band model not
only through the one-band effective parameters but also through the relevant
matrix elements. We discuss the evolution of the gap upon doping. The optical
conductivity of the doped system shows a mid-infrared peak due to intraband
transitions, a pseudogap and a high frequency part related to interband
transitions. Its shape and integrated weight up to a given frequency (including
the Drude weight) agree qualitatively with experiments in the cuprates for low
to moderate doping levels, but significant deviations exist for doping .Comment: 11 pages (tex), 14 figures (ps
Continuous fungal treatment of non-sterile veterinary hospital effluent: pharmaceuticals removal and microbial community assessment
Source point treatment of effluents with a high load of pharmaceutical active compounds (PhACs), such as hospital wastewater, is a matter of discussion among the scientific community. Fungal treatments have been reported to be successful in degrading this type of pollutants and, therefore, the white-rot fungus Trametes versicolor was applied for the removal of PhACs from veterinary hospital wastewater. Sixty-six percent removal was achieved in a non-sterile batch bioreactor inoculated with T. versicolor pellets. On the other hand, the study of microbial communities by means of DGGE and phylogenetic analyses led us to identify some microbial interactions and helped us moving to a continuous process. PhAC removal efficiency achieved in the fungal treatment operated in non-sterile continuous mode was 44 % after adjusting the C/N ratio with respect to the previously calculated one for sterile treatments. Fungal and bacterial communities in the continuous bioreactors were monitored as well.Authors want to acknowledge the UAB veterinary hospital staff for their kind permission and help for the samplings. This work has been funded by the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness and FEDER (projects CTM2013-48545-C2 and AIB2010PT-00169) and supported by the Generalitat de Catalunya (Consolidated Research Groups 2014-SGR-476 and 2014-SGR-291). The Department of Chemical Engineering of the Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona (UAB) is a member of the Xarxa de Referencia en Biotecnologia de la Generalitat de Catalunya. M. Badia-Fabregat and D. Lucas acknowledge the predoctoral grants from UAB and from the Spanish Ministry of Education, Culture and Sports (AP-2010-4926), respectively. The authors also thank the Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT) Strategic Project PEst-OE/EQB/LA0023/2013, Project FCOMP-01-0124-FEDER-027462 co-funded by Operational Competitiveness Programme, FEDER, and Project "BioEnv-Biotechnology and Bioengineering for a sustainable world," REF. NORTE-07-0124-FEDER-000048, co-funded by Programa Operacional Regional do Norte (ON.2 - O Novo Norte), QREN, FEDER
Oral Delivery of Bioencapsulated Proteins Across Blood–Brain and Blood–Retinal Barriers
Delivering neurotherapeutics to target brain-associated diseases is a major challenge. Therefore, we investigated oral delivery of green fluorescence protein (GFP) or myelin basic protein (MBP) fused with the transmucosal carrier cholera toxin B subunit (CTB), expressed in chloroplasts (bioencapsulated within plant cells) to the brain and retinae of triple transgenic Alzheimer\u27s disease (3×TgAD) mice, across the blood–brain barriers (BBB) and blood–retinal barriers (BRB). Human neuroblastoma cells internalized GFP when incubated with CTB-GFP but not with GFP alone. Oral delivery of CTB-MBP in healthy and 3×TgAD mice shows increased MBP levels in different regions of the brain, crossing intact BBB. Thioflavin S–stained amyloid plaque intensity was reduced up to 60% by CTB-MBP incubation with human AD and 3×TgAD mice brain sections ex vivo. Amyloid loads were reduced in vivo by 70% in hippocampus and cortex brain regions of 3×TgAD mice fed with bioencapsulated CTB-MBP, along with reduction in the ratio of insoluble amyloid β 42 (Aβ42) to soluble fractions. CTB-MBP oral delivery reduced Aβ42 accumulation in retinae and prevented loss of retinal ganglion cells in 3×TgAD mice. Lyophilization of leaves increased CTB-MBP concentration by 17-fold and stabilized it during long-term storage in capsules, facilitating low-cost oral delivery of therapeutic proteins across the BBB and BRB
Cross-correlation of long-range correlated series
A method for estimating the cross-correlation of long-range
correlated series and , at varying lags and scales , is
proposed. For fractional Brownian motions with Hurst exponents and ,
the asymptotic expression of depends only on the lag
(wide-sense stationarity) and scales as a power of with exponent
for . The method is illustrated on (i) financial series,
to show the leverage effect; (ii) genomic sequences, to estimate the
correlations between structural parameters along the chromosomes.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figure
Atmospheric characterisation and tighter constraints on the orbital misalignment of WASP-94 A b with HARPS
We present high spectral resolution observations of the hot Jupiter WASP-94 A
b using the HARPS instrument on ESO's 3.6m telescope in La Silla, Chile. We
probed for Na absorption in its atmosphere as well as constrained the
previously reported misaligned retrograde orbit using the Rossiter-McLaughlin
effect. Additionally, we undertook a combined atmospheric retrieval analysis
with previously published low-resolution data. We confirm the retrograde orbit
as well as constrain the orbital misalignment with our measurement of a
projected spin-orbit obliquity of . We find a
tentative detection of Na absorption in the atmosphere of WASP-94 A b,
independent of the treatment of the Rossiter-McLaughlin effect in our analysis
(3.6 and 4.4). We combine our HARPS high resolution data with
low resolution data from the literature and find that while the posterior
distribution of the Na abundance results in a tighter constraint than using a
single data set, the detection significance does not improve (3.2),
which we attribute to degeneracies between the low and high resolution data.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
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