162 research outputs found
Structure of Plasma Heating in Gyrokinetic Alfvénic Turbulence
We analyze plasma heating in weakly collisional kinetic Alfv\'en wave (KAW)
turbulence using high resolution gyrokinetic simulations spanning the range of
scales between the ion and the electron gyroradii. Real space structures that
have a higher than average heating rate are shown not to be confined to current
sheets. This novel result is at odds with previous studies, which use the
electromagnetic work in the local electron fluid frame, i.e. , as a proxy for
turbulent dissipation to argue that heating follows the intermittent spatial
structure of the electric current. Furthermore, we show that electrons are
dominated by parallel heating while the ions prefer the perpendicular heating
route. We comment on the implications of the results presented here.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Fluid Ontologies in the Search for MH370
This paper gives an account of the disappearance of Malaysian Airways Flight MH370 into the southern Indian Ocean in March 2014 and analyses the rare glimpses into remote ocean space this incident opened up. It follows the tenuous clues as to where the aeroplane might have come to rest after it disappeared from radar screens – seven satellite pings, hundreds of pieces of floating debris and six underwater sonic recordings – as ways of entering into and thinking about ocean space. The paper pays attention to and analyses this space on three registers – first, as a fluid, more-than-human materiality with particular properties and agencies; second, as a synthetic situation, a composite of informational bits and pieces scopically articulated and augmented; and third, as geopolitics, delineated by the protocols of international search and rescue. On all three registers – as matter, as data and as law – the ocean is shown to be ontologically fluid, a world defined by movement, flow and flux, posing intractable difficulties for human interactions with it
Core transport and pedestal characteristics of nitrogen seeded H-mode discharges in ASDEX Upgrade
A New Technique for the Calculation and 3D Visualisation of Magnetic Complexities on Solar Satellite Images
YesIn this paper, we introduce two novel models for processing real-life satellite images to quantify and then
visualise their magnetic structures in 3D. We believe this multidisciplinary work is a real convergence between
image processing, 3D visualization and solar physics. The first model aims to calculate the value of the magnetic
complexity in active regions and the solar disk. A series of experiments are carried out using this model and a
relationship has been indentified between the calculated magnetic complexity values and solar flare events. The
second model aims to visualise the calculated magnetic complexities in 3D colour maps in order to identify the
locations of eruptive regions on the Sun. Both models demonstrate promising results and they can be potentially
used in the fields of solar imaging, space weather and solar flare prediction and forecasting
Gyrokinetic GENE simulations of DIII-D near-edge L-mode plasmas
We present gyrokinetic simulations with the GENE code addressing the
near-edge region of an L-mode plasma in the DIII-D tokamak. At radial position
, simulations with the ion temperature gradient increased by
above the nominal value give electron and ion heat fluxes that are in
simultaneous agreement with the experiment. This gradient increase is
consistent with the combined statistical and systematic uncertainty of
the Charge Exchange Recombination Spectroscopy (CER) measurements at the level. Multi-scale simulations are carried out with realistic mass
ratio and geometry for the first time in the near-edge. These multi-scale
simulations suggest that the highly unstable ion temperature gradient (ITG)
modes of the flux-matched ion-scale simulations suppress electron-scale
transport, such that ion-scale simulations are sufficient at this location. At
radial position , nonlinear simulations show a hybrid state of ITG
and trapped electron modes~(TEMs), which was not expected from linear
simulations. The nonlinear simulations reproduce the total experimental heat
flux with the inclusion of shear effects and an
increase in the electron temperature gradient by . This gradient
increase is compatible with the combined statistical and systematic uncertainty
of the Thomson scattering data at the level. These results are
consistent with previous findings that gyrokinetic simulations are able to
reproduce the experimental heat fluxes by varying input parameters close to
their experimental uncertainties, pushing the validation frontier closer to the
edge region.Comment: 14 pages, 17 figures, published in Physics of Plasma
History of clinical transplantation
The emergence of transplantation has seen the development of increasingly potent immunosuppressive agents, progressively better methods of tissue and organ preservation, refinements in histocompatibility matching, and numerous innovations is surgical techniques. Such efforts in combination ultimately made it possible to successfully engraft all of the organs and bone marrow cells in humans. At a more fundamental level, however, the transplantation enterprise hinged on two seminal turning points. The first was the recognition by Billingham, Brent, and Medawar in 1953 that it was possible to induce chimerism-associated neonatal tolerance deliberately. This discovery escalated over the next 15 years to the first successful bone marrow transplantations in humans in 1968. The second turning point was the demonstration during the early 1960s that canine and human organ allografts could self-induce tolerance with the aid of immunosuppression. By the end of 1962, however, it had been incorrectly concluded that turning points one and two involved different immune mechanisms. The error was not corrected until well into the 1990s. In this historical account, the vast literature that sprang up during the intervening 30 years has been summarized. Although admirably documenting empiric progress in clinical transplantation, its failure to explain organ allograft acceptance predestined organ recipients to lifetime immunosuppression and precluded fundamental changes in the treatment policies. After it was discovered in 1992 that long-surviving organ transplant recipient had persistent microchimerism, it was possible to see the mechanistic commonality of organ and bone marrow transplantation. A clarifying central principle of immunology could then be synthesized with which to guide efforts to induce tolerance systematically to human tissues and perhaps ultimately to xenografts
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