570 research outputs found
Metabolic and addiction indices in patients on opioid agonist medication-assisted treatment: A comparison of buprenorphine and methadone
"Marginal pinching" in soap films
We discuss the behaviour of a thin soap film facing a frame element: the
pressure in the Plateau border around the frame is lower than the film
pressure, and the film thins out over a certain distance lambda(t), due to the
formation of a well-localized pinched region of thickness h(t) and extension
w(t). We construct a hydrodynamic theory for this thinning process, assuming a
constant surface tension: Marangoni effects are probably important only at late
stages, where instabilitites set in. We find lambda(t) ~ t^{1/4}, and for the
pinch dimensions h(t) ~ t^{-1/2}$ and w(t) ~ t^{-1/4}. These results may play a
useful role for the discussion of later instabilitites leading to a global film
thinning and drainage, as first discussed by K. Mysels under the name
``marginal regeneration''.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figure
Dynamics of soap bubble bursting and its implications to volcano acoustics
In order to assess the physical mechanisms at stake when giant gas bubbles
burst at the top of a magma conduit, laboratory experiments have been
performed. An overpressurized gas cavity is initially closed by a thin liquid
film, which suddenly bursts. The acoustic signal produced by the bursting is
investigated. The key result is that the amplitude and energy of the acoustic
signal strongly depend on the film rupture time. As the rupture time is
uncontrolled in the experiments and in the field, the measurement of the
acoustic excess pressure in the atmosphere, alone, cannot provide any
information on the overpressure inside the bubble before explosion. This could
explain the low energy partitioning between infrasound, seismic and explosive
dynamics often observed on volcanoes
Long Range Hydration Effects in Electrolytic Free Suspended Black Films
The force law within free suspended black films made of negatively charged
Aerosol-OT (AOT) with added LiCl or CsCl is studied accurately using X-ray
reflectivity (ca. 1{\AA}). We find an electrolyte concentration threshold above
which a substantial additional repulsion is detected in the LiCl films, up to
distances of 100 {\AA}. We interpret this phenomenon as an augmentation of the
Debye screening length, due to the local screening of the condensed hydrophilic
counterions by the primary hydration shell.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, to be published Phys. Rev. Let
The field theoretic derivation of the contact value theorem in planar geometries and its modification by the Casimir effect
The contact value theorem for Coulomb gases in planar or film-like geometries
is derived using a Hamiltonian field theoretic representation of the system.
The case where the film is enclosed by a material of different dielectric
constant to that of the film is shown to contain an additional Casimir-like
term which is generated by fluctuations of the electric potential about its
mean-field value.Comment: Link between Sine-Gordon and Coulomb gas pressures via subtraction of
self interaction terms included. Discussion of results within Debye-Huckel
approximation included. Added reference
At Least You Could Say Hello / music by Sammy Mysels; words by Dick Robertson and Charles J. McCarthy
https://egrove.olemiss.edu/sharris_e/1050/thumbnail.jp
The Singing Hills
Photograph of Blue Barron; Illustration of hills and stars in backgroundhttps://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/cht-sheet-music/11200/thumbnail.jp
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Sweet taste pleasantness is modulated by morphine and naltrexone
Rodent models highlight the key role of µ-opioid receptor (MOR) signaling in palatable food consumption. In humans however, the effects of MOR stimulation on eating and food liking remain unclear. In a bidirectional psychopharmacological cross-over study, 49 healthy men underwent a sweet taste paradigm following double-blind administration of the MOR agonist morphine, placebo, and the opioid antagonist nalt rexone. We hypothesized that behaviors regulated by the endogenous MOR system would be enhanced by MOR agonism, and decreased by antagonism. The strongest drug effects were expected for the sweetest (high-calorie) sucrose solution, as reported in rodents. However, very sweet sucrose-water solutions are considered sickly and aversive by many people (called sweet dislikers). Since both sweet likers and dislikers were tested, we were able to assess whether MOR manipulations affect pleasantness ratings differently depending on both subjective and objective value. As hypothesized, MOR stimulation with morphine increased pleasantness of the sweetest of five sucrose solutions, without enhancing pleasantness of the lower-sucrose solutions. For opioid antagonism, an opposite pattern was observed for the sweetest drink only. This bidirectional effect of agonist and antagonist treatment is consistent with rodent findings that MOR manipulations most strongly affect the highest-calorie foods. Importantly, the observed drug effects on pleasantness of the sweetest drink did not differ between sweet likers and dislikers. We speculate that the MOR system promotes survival in part by increasing concordance between the objective (caloric) and subjective (hedonic) value of food stimuli, so that feeding behaviour becomes more focused on the richest food available
Low-surface energy surfactants with branched hydrocarbon architectures
International audienceSurface tensiometry and small-angle neutron scattering have been used to characterize a new class of low-surface energy surfactants (LSESs), "hedgehog" surfactants. These surfactants are based on highly branched hydrocarbon (HC) chains as replacements for environmentally hazardous fluorocarbon surfactants and polymers. Tensiometric analyses indicate that a subtle structural modification in the tails and headgroup results in significant effects on limiting surface tensions γcmc at the critical micelle concentration: a higher level of branching and an increased counterion size promote an effective reduction of surface tension to low values for HC surfactants (γcmc 24 mN m-1). These LSESs present a new class of potentially very important materials, which form lamellar aggregates in aqueous solutions independent of dilution
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