53,552 research outputs found
Spheromak Experiment Using Separate Guns For Formation And Sustainment
An experiment is described that incorporates the use of separate magnetized plasma guns for formation and sustainment of a spheromak. It is shown that energy coupling efficiency approaches unity if the gun and spheromak are of comparable size. A large gun should be able to operate at lower current and therefore lower voltage. In addition, it is expected that a gun matched to the size of the spheromak will cause less perturbation to the equilibrium. It is proposed to use a smaller gun for spheromak formation and a large, efficient gun for sustainment. The theoretical basis for the experiment is developed, and the details of the experiment are described. A prediction of the equilibrium magnetic flux surfaces using the EFIT code is presented
Coherent States for Unusual Potentials
The program to construct minimum-uncertainty coherent states for general
potentials works transparently with solvable analytic potentials. However, when
an analytic potential is not completely solvable, like for a double-well or the
linear (gravitational) potential, there can be a conundrum. Motivated by
supersymmetry concepts in higher dimensions, we show how these conundrums can
be overcome.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, added info in Ref.
Influence of wear algorithm formulation on computational-experimental corroboration
Experimental wear testing is well-established as an important part of the TKR design process. Recently, in-silico models have proved their value to corroborate long-term in-vitro results on a much shorter timescale [1]. Both FE-based models & multi-body dynamics can be used to predict contact pressures, sliding distances and cross-shear (CS). The precise mechanisms of wear are not sufficiently understood to permit analytical calculations, and so empirical formulations are used to estimate wear depths & volumes.Most early simulations were based on a modified Archard/Lancaster formulation; more recently a number of alternative formulations for cross shear have been proposed; it is unclear which is the most robust or accurate for the widest range of activities. The aim of this study was to develop and corroborate a fast in-silico wear model, and use this to compare different wear formulations
Whirling skirts and rotating cones
Steady, dihedrally symmetric patterns with sharp peaks may be observed on a
spinning skirt, lagging behind the material flow of the fabric. These
qualitative features are captured with a minimal model of traveling waves on an
inextensible, flexible, generalized-conical sheet rotating about a fixed axis.
Conservation laws are used to reduce the dynamics to a quadrature describing a
particle in a three-parameter family of potentials. One parameter is associated
with the stress in the sheet, aNoether is the current associated with
rotational invariance, and the third is a Rossby number which indicates the
relative strength of Coriolis forces. Solutions are quantized by enforcing a
topology appropriate to a skirt and a particular choice of dihedral symmetry. A
perturbative analysis of nearly axisymmetric cones shows that Coriolis effects
are essential in establishing skirt-like solutions. Fully non-linear solutions
with three-fold symmetry are presented which bear a suggestive resemblance to
the observed patterns.Comment: two additional figures, changes to text throughout. journal version
will have a wordier abstrac
Many-to-One Boundary Labeling with Backbones
In this paper we study \emph{many-to-one boundary labeling with backbone
leaders}. In this new many-to-one model, a horizontal backbone reaches out of
each label into the feature-enclosing rectangle. Feature points that need to be
connected to this label are linked via vertical line segments to the backbone.
We present dynamic programming algorithms for label number and total leader
length minimization of crossing-free backbone labelings. When crossings are
allowed, we aim to obtain solutions with the minimum number of crossings. This
can be achieved efficiently in the case of fixed label order, however, in the
case of flexible label order we show that minimizing the number of leader
crossings is NP-hard.Comment: 23 pages, 10 figures, this is the full version of a paper that is
about to appear in GD'1
Corepressor diversification by alternative mRNA splicing is species specific.
BackgroundSMRT and NCoR are corepressor paralogs that help mediate transcriptional repression by a variety of transcription factors, including the nuclear hormone receptors. The functions of both corepressors are extensively diversified in mice by alternative mRNA splicing, generating a series of protein variants that differ in different tissues and that exert different, even diametrically opposite, biochemical and biological effects from one another.ResultsWe report here that the alternative splicing previously reported for SMRT appears to be a relatively recent evolutionary phenomenon, with only one of these previously identified sites utilized in a teleost fish and a limited additional number of the additional known sites utilized in a bird, reptile, and marsupial. In contrast, extensive SMRT alternative splicing at these sites was detected among the placental mammals. The alternative splicing of NCoR previously identified in mice (and shown to regulate lipid and carbohydrate metabolism) is likely to have arisen separately and after that of SMRT, and includes an example of convergent evolution.ConclusionsWe propose that the functions of both SMRT and NCoR have been diversified by alternative splicing during evolution to allow customization for different purposes in different tissues and different species
Dipoles in thin sheets
A flat elastic sheet may contain pointlike conical singularities that carry a
metrical "charge" of Gaussian curvature. Adding such elementary defects to a
sheet allows one to make many shapes, in a manner broadly analogous to the
familiar multipole construction in electrostatics. However, here the underlying
field theory is non-linear, and superposition of intrinsic defects is
non-trivial as it must respect the immersion of the resulting surface in three
dimensions. We consider a "charge-neutral" dipole composed of two conical
singularities of opposite sign. Unlike the relatively simple electrostatic
case, here there are two distinct stable minima and an infinity of unstable
equilibria. We determine the shapes of the minima and evaluate their energies
in the thin-sheet regime where bending dominates over stretching. Our
predictions are in surprisingly good agreement with experiments on paper
sheets.Comment: 20 pages, 5 figures, 2 table
Identification of putative steroid receptor antagonists in bottled water : combining bioassays and high-resolution mass spectrometry
Endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs) are man-made compounds interfering with hormone signaling and thereby adversely affecting human health. Recent reports provide evidence for the presence of EDCs in commercially available bottled water, including steroid receptor agonists and antagonists. However, since these findings are based on biological data the causative chemicals remain unidentified and, therefore, inaccessible for toxicological evaluation. Thus, the aim of this study is to assess the antiestrogenic and antiandrogenic activity of bottled water and to identify the causative steroid receptor antagonists. We evaluated the antiestrogenic and antiandrogenic activity of 18 bottled water products in reporter gene assays for human estrogen receptor alpha and androgen receptor. Using nontarget high-resolution mass spectrometry (LTQ-Orbitrap Velos), we acquired corresponding analytical data. We combined the biological and chemical information to determine the exact mass of the tentative steroid receptor antagonist. Further MS(n) experiments elucidated the molecule's structure and enabled its identification. We detected significant antiestrogenicity in 13 of 18 products. 16 samples were antiandrogenic inhibiting the androgen receptor by up to 90%. Nontarget chemical analysis revealed that out of 24520 candidates present in bottled water one was consistently correlated with the antagonistic activity. By combining experimental and in silico MS(n) data we identified this compound as di(2-ethylhexyl) fumarate (DEHF). We confirmed the identity and biological activity of DEHF and additional isomers of dioctyl fumarate and maleate using authentic standards. Since DEHF is antiestrogenic but not antiandrogenic we conclude that additional, yet unidentified EDCs must contribute to the antagonistic effect of bottled water. Applying a novel approach to combine biological and chemical analysis this is the first study to identify so far unknown EDCs in bottled water. Notably, dioctyl fumarates and maleates have been overlooked by science and regulation to date. This illustrates the need to identify novel toxicologically relevant compounds to establish a more holistic picture of the human exposome
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