836 resultados para TORSION THEORIES
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Using ultracold alkaline-earth atoms in optical lattices, we construct a quantum simulator for U(N) and SU(N) lattice gauge theories with fermionic matter based on quantum link models. These systems share qualitative features with QCD, including chiral symmetry breaking and restoration at nonzero temperature or baryon density. Unlike classical simulations, a quantum simulator does not suffer from sign problems and can address the corresponding chiral dynamics in real time.
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Einleitung: Bandscheiben wirken als Schockabsorbierer in der Wirbelsäule und auf diese wirken meistens komplexe Kräfte, zusammengesetzt aus Kompression, Torsion und Flexion. Die biomechanishe Umgebung einer Bandscheibe ist denn auch geprägt von komplexen Belastungen. Die Forschung über die in vitro Bandscheibenbiologie hat sich bisher um die axiale Kompression konzentriert, wobei die Bedeutung von Torsion und insbesondere dem Zusammenspiel von Kompression und Torsion (="Twisting") praktisch noch nie untersucht wurde an lebenden Organkultur-Explantaten. Wir präsentieren neue mechanobiologische Daten über die Überlebenswahrscheinlichkeit von Bandscheibenzellen kultiviert in einem neuartigen, kompakten Design eines bi-axialen Bioreaktors, um die Bedeutung von Kompression und Torsion zu verstehen. Material/Methode: Bovine Schwanzbandscheiben mit den Endplatten wurden isoliert wie bereits beschrieben [2] und mechanische Belastung wurde angewendet mit einem 2 DoF Bioreaktor für 14 Tage [3]. Die Bandscheiben wurden in verschiedene Belastungsgruppen eingeteilt: 1) Keine Belastung (NL), 2) zyklische Kompression (CC) [8h: axiale Kompression mit 0.6 ± 0.2 MPa, 0.2 Hz], 3) zyklische Torsion (CT) [8h: ± 2° torsion, 0.2 Hz, 0.2 MPa compression], 4) zyklische Kompression und Torsion (CCT) [8h: 0.6 ± 0.2 MPa, 0.2 Hz & ± 2° torsion, 0.2 Hz]. Das Bandscheibengewebe wurde mit LIVE/DEAD gefärbt und miteinem konfokalen Mikroskop visualisiert um die Überlebensrate zu bestimmen. Zell Apoptosis wurde quantifiziert mit einem Caspase 3/7 Kit normalisiert zum totalen Proteingehalt (Bradford). Relative Gen-Expression von wichtigen Genen für die Bandscheibe wurde bestimmt von anabolischen, katabolischen und inflammatorischen Genen mittels real-time RT-PCR. Die Morphologie der Bandscheibenzellen wurde mittels Histologie bestimmt. Ergebnisse: Die Resultate zeigten einen starken Abfall der Zellüberlebenswahrscheinlichkeit im Zentrum der Bandscheiben, dem Nulceus Pulposus (NP), i.e. 10%, in der Gruppe mit CCT. Hingegen die Überlebenswahrscheinlichkeit im Annulus fibrosus (AF) war stabilisiert bei über 60% im NP und im AF in allen anderen Gruppen (Fig 1). Apoptotische Aktivität war statistisch signifikant erhöht in der CC-Gruppe, aber nicht in der CCT-Gruppe, was die Vermutung nahe legt, dass der erhöhte Zellverlust im NP nicht mit Apoptose sondern mit Nekrose erklärt werden kann. Die Gen Expression der anabolischen Gene COL1, COL2 und Biglycan war signifikant erhöht im AF in der CCT Gruppe, ebenfalls waren Remodeling-Gene angeschaltet wie ADAMTS4 und MMP-13 in der CCT Gruppe (Fig. 2). Der Glykosaminoglykan (GAG) Gehalt war generell im AF erhöht in den Gruppen unter mechanischer Belastung, jedoch nicht statistisch signifikant. Schlussfolgerung: Zyklische Torsion kombiniert mit zyklischer Kompression waren in dieser Studie erfolgreich und nach unserem besten Wissen zum ersten Mal an Bandscheibenexplantaten in einer 14- tägigen Organkultur angewendet worden in einem dafür speziell konzipierten Bioreaktor. Die Resultezeigten überraschend einen negativen Effekt bei physiologischen Parametern, was die Belastung (0.6MPa ± 0.2MPa) und die Torsion (± 2°) angeht. Dieser negative Effekt des "Twistings" auf die Überlebenswahrscheinlichkeit der Zellen war jedoch nur regional im NP von Bedeutung, wohingegen im AF keine Effekte zu detektieren waren.
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The spine is routinely subjected to repetitive complex loading consisting of axial compression, torsion, flexion and extension. Mechanical loading is one of the important causes of spinal diseases, including disc herniation and disc degeneration. It is known that static and dynamic compression can lead to progressive disc degeneration, but little is known about the mechanobiology of the disc subjected to combined dynamic compression and torsion. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to compare the mechanobiology of the intervertebral disc when subjected to combined dynamic compression and axial torsion or pure dynamic compression or axial torsion using organ culture. We applied four different loading modalities 1. control: no loading (NL), 2. cyclic compression (CC), 3. cyclic torsion (CT), and 4. combined cyclic compression and torsion (CCT) on bovine caudal disc explants using our custom made dynamic loading bioreactor for disc organ culture. Loads were applied for 8 h/day and continued for 14 days, all at a physiological magnitude and frequency. Our results provided strong evidence that complex loading induced a stronger degree of disc degeneration compared to one degree of freedom loading. In the CCT group, less than 10\% nucleus pulposus (NP) cells survived the 14 days of loading, while cell viabilities were maintained above 70\% in the NP of all the other three groups and in the annulus fibrosus (AF) of all the groups. Gene expression analysis revealed a strong up-regulation in matrix genes and matrix remodeling genes in the AF of the CCT group. Cell apoptotic activity and glycosaminoglycan content were also quantified but there were no statistically significant differences found. Cell morphology in the NP of the CCT was changed, as shown by histological evaluation. Our results stress the importance of complex loading on the initiation and progression of disc degeneration.
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We present a novel approach to the inference of spectral functions from Euclidean time correlator data that makes close contact with modern Bayesian concepts. Our method differs significantly from the maximum entropy method (MEM). A new set of axioms is postulated for the prior probability, leading to an improved expression, which is devoid of the asymptotically flat directions present in the Shanon-Jaynes entropy. Hyperparameters are integrated out explicitly, liberating us from the Gaussian approximations underlying the evidence approach of the maximum entropy method. We present a realistic test of our method in the context of the nonperturbative extraction of the heavy quark potential. Based on hard-thermal-loop correlator mock data, we establish firm requirements in the number of data points and their accuracy for a successful extraction of the potential from lattice QCD. Finally we reinvestigate quenched lattice QCD correlators from a previous study and provide an improved potential estimation at T2.33TC.
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This article analyzes the interaction between theories of radicalization and state responses to militancy in India. Focusing on the interpretation of the increased frequency of terrorist attacks in Indian metropolises in the last decade, the article examines the narratives surrounding those classified as terrorists in the context of rising Muslim militancy in the country. Different state agencies operate with different theories about the links between processes of radicalization and terrorist violence. The scenarios of radicalization underlying legislative efforts to prevent terrorism, the construction of motives by the police, and the interpretation of violence by the judiciary all rely on assumptions about radicalization and violence. Such narratives are used to explain terrorism both to security agencies and to the public; they inform the categories and scenarios of prevention. Prevention relies on detection of future deeds, planning, intentions, and even potential intentions. "Detection" of potential intentions relies on assumptions about specific dispositions. Identification of such dispositions in turn relies on the context-specific theories of the causes of militancy. These determine what "characteristics" of individuals or groups indicate potential threats and form the basis for their categorization as "potentially dangerous." The article explores the cultural contexts of theories of radicalization, focusing on how they are framed by societal understandings of the causes of deviance and the relation between the individual and society emerging in contemporary India. It examines the shift in the perception of threat and the categories of "dangerous others" from a focus on role to a focus on ascriptive identity.
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Abelian and non-Abelian gauge theories are of central importance in many areas of physics. In condensed matter physics, AbelianU(1) lattice gauge theories arise in the description of certain quantum spin liquids. In quantum information theory, Kitaev’s toric code is a Z(2) lattice gauge theory. In particle physics, Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD), the non-Abelian SU(3) gauge theory of the strong interactions between quarks and gluons, is nonperturbatively regularized on a lattice. Quantum link models extend the concept of lattice gauge theories beyond the Wilson formulation, and are well suited for both digital and analog quantum simulation using ultracold atomic gases in optical lattices. Since quantum simulators do not suffer from the notorious sign problem, they open the door to studies of the real-time evolution of strongly coupled quantum systems, which are impossible with classical simulation methods. A plethora of interesting lattice gauge theories suggests itself for quantum simulation, which should allow us to address very challenging problems, ranging from confinement and deconfinement, or chiral symmetry breaking and its restoration at finite baryon density, to color superconductivity and the real-time evolution of heavy-ion collisions, first in simpler model gauge theories and ultimately in QCD.
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BACKGROUND Ventricular torsion is an important component of cardiac function. The effect of septic shock on left ventricular torsion is not known. Because torsion is influenced by changes in preload, we compared the effect of fluid loading on left ventricular torsion in septic shock with the response in matched healthy control subjects. METHODS We assessed left ventricular torsion parameters using transthoracic echocardiography in 11 patients during early septic shock and in 11 age- and sex-matched healthy volunteers before and after rapid volume loading with 250 mL of a Ringer's lactate solution. RESULTS Peak torsion and peak apical rotation were reduced in septic shock (10.2 ± 5.2° and 5.6 ± 5.4°) compared with healthy volunteers (16.3 ± 4.5° and 9.6 ± 1.5°; P = 0.009 and P = 0.006 respectively). Basal rotation was delayed and diastolic untwisting velocity reached its maximum later during diastole in septic shock patients than in healthy volunteers (104 ± 16% vs 111 ± 14% and 13 ± 5% vs 21 ± 10%; P = 0.03 and P = 0.034, respectively). Fluid challenge increased peak torsion in both groups (septic shock, 10.2 ± 5.3° vs 12.6 ± 3.9°; healthy volunteers, 16.3 ± 4.5° vs 18.1 ± 6°; P = 0.01). Fluid challenge increased left ventricular stroke volume in septic shock patients (P = 0.003). CONCLUSIONS Compared with healthy volunteers, left ventricular torsion is impaired in septic shock patients. Fluid loading attenuates torsion abnormalities in parallel with increasing stroke volume. Reduced torsional motion might constitute a relevant component of septic cardiomyopathy, a notion that merits further testing in larger populations.
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A quantum simulator of U(1) lattice gauge theories can be implemented with superconducting circuits. This allows the investigation of confined and deconfined phases in quantum link models, and of valence bond solid and spin liquid phases in quantum dimer models. Fractionalized confining strings and the real-time dynamics of quantum phase transitions are accessible as well. Here we show how state-of-the-art superconducting technology allows us to simulate these phenomena in relatively small circuit lattices. By exploiting the strong non-linear couplings between quantized excitations emerging when superconducting qubits are coupled, we show how to engineer gauge invariant Hamiltonians, including ring-exchange and four-body Ising interactions. We demonstrate that, despite decoherence and disorder effects, minimal circuit instances allow us to investigate properties such as the dynamics of electric flux strings, signaling confinement in gauge invariant field theories. The experimental realization of these models in larger superconducting circuits could address open questions beyond current computational capability.
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We consider an effective field theory for a gauge singlet Dirac dark matter particle interacting with the standard model fields via effective operators suppressed by the scale Λ≳1 TeV. We perform a systematic analysis of the leading loop contributions to spin-independent Dirac dark matter–nucleon scattering using renormalization group evolution between Λ and the low-energy scale probed by direct detection experiments. We find that electroweak interactions induce operator mixings such that operators that are naively velocity suppressed and spin dependent can actually contribute to spin-independent scattering. This allows us to put novel constraints on Wilson coefficients that were so far poorly bounded by direct detection. Constraints from current searches are already significantly stronger than LHC bounds, and will improve in the near future. Interestingly, the loop contribution we find is isospin violating even if the underlying theory is isospin conserving.