3,715 research outputs found
The 2D/3D dynamics of wall-bounded low-Rm magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) turbulence
With this experimental study, we give evidence that the dynamics of low-Rm MHD turbulence depends on the diffusion length l_z, which corresponds to the distance over which the Lorentz force is able to diffuse momentum before it is balanced by inertia
Triangular Constellations in Flows
Particles advected on the surface of a fluid can exhibit fractal clustering. The local structure of a fractal set is described by its dimension , which is the exponent of a power-law relating the mass in a ball to its radius : . It is desirable to characterise the {\em shapes} of constellations of points sampling a fractal measure, as well as their masses. The simplest example is the distribution of shapes of triangles formed by triplets of points, which we investigate for fractals generated by chaotic dynamical systems. The most significant parameter describing the triangle shape is the ratio of its area to the radius of gyration squared. We show that the probability density of has a phase transition: is independent of and approximately uniform below a critical flow compressibility , which we estimate. For the distribution appears to be described by two power laws: when , and when
Exact two-dimensionalization of low-magnetic-Reynolds-number flows subject to a strong magnetic field
We investigate the behavior of flows, including turbulent flows, driven by a horizontal body-force and subject to a vertical magnetic field, with the following question in mind: for very strong applied magnetic field, is the flow mostly two-dimensional, with remaining weak three-dimensional fluctuations, or does it become exactly 2D, with no dependence along the vertical? We restrict attention to low-magnetic-Reynolds number (Rm) flow. Because liquid metals have low magnetic Prandtl number, such low- flows can have a kinetic Reynolds number as large as one million and therefore be strongly turbulent. We first focus on the quasi-static approximation, i.e. the asymptotic limit of vanishing magnetic Reynolds number Rm << 1: we prove that the flow becomes exactly 2D asymptotically in time, regardless of the initial condition and provided the interaction parameter N is larger than a threshold value. We call this property absolute two-dimensionalization: the attractor of the system is necessarily a (possibly turbulent) 2D flow. We then consider the full-magnetohydrodynamic equations and we prove that, for low enough Rm and large enough N, the flow becomes exactly two-dimensional in the long-time limit provided the initial vertically-dependent perturbations are infinitesimal. We call this phenomenon linear two-dimensionalization: the (possibly turbulent) 2D flow is an attractor of the dynamics, but it is not necessarily the only attractor of the system. Some 3D attractors may also exist and be attained for strong enough initial 3D perturbations. These results shed some light on the existence of a dissipative anomaly for magnetohydrodynamic flows subject to a strong external magnetic field
The Decay of Wall Bounded MHD Turbulence at Low RM
We have developed a new spectral method to simulate flows with very fine boundary layers present. We apply it to calculate the evolution of freely decaying MHD turbulence between isolating walls. By comparison them with results obtained in fully periodic domain we quantify the influence of the channel walls on the character of freely decaying MHD turbulence
Structural and functional imaging by MRI.
Magnetic resonance imaging is one of the most exciting techniques for noninvasive molecular imaging of the cardiovascular system. The article will describe challenges, solutions and results of magnetic resonance plaque imaging ex-vivo, in the experimental animal and in patients
Coronary magnetic resonance imaging: visualization of the vessel lumen and the vessel wall and molecular imaging of arteriothrombosis.
Coronary magnetic resonance (MR) imaging has dramatically emerged over the last decade. Technical improvements have enabled reliable visualization of the proximal and midportion of the coronary artery tree for exclusion of significant coronary artery disease. However, current technical developments focus also on direct visualization of the diseased coronary vessel wall and imaging of coronary plaque because plaques without stenoses are typically more vulnerable with higher risk of plaque rupture. Plaque rupture with subsequent thrombosis and vessel occlusion is the main cause of myocardial infarction. Very recently, the first success of molecular imaging in the coronary arteries has been demonstrated using a fibrin-specific contrast agent for selective visualization of coronary thrombosis. This demonstrates in general the high potential of molecular MR imaging in the field of coronary artery disease. In this review, we will address recent technical advances in coronary MR imaging, including visualization of the lumen and the vessel wall and molecular imaging of coronary arteriothrombosis. First results of these new approaches will be discussed
A basis of a certain module for the hyperalgebra and some applications
In the hyperalgebra of the -th Frobenius kernel of the algebraic group , we construct a basis of the
-module generated by a certain element which was given by the
author before. As its applications, we also prove some results on the
-modules and the algebra .Comment: 30 page
Borromini tuscolano
La pubblicazione propone, in versione ampliata e aggiornata, la chiave di lettura già avanzata dall’autore alcuni anni or sono in relazione all’intervento seicentesco voluto dalla famiglia Falconieri sulla più antica delle Ville Tuscolane, la Rufina, ritenendone valida la consolidata attribuzione al Borromini.
Nel volume viene data un’ampia dimostrazione dell’efficacia dell’interazione “documenti storici-rilievo architettonico”, nella ricostruzione delle fasi evolutive di una fabbrica e di come questo momento d’analisi, ove insufficientemente approfondito, possa indurre a considerazioni erronee.
Infatti, l’ipotesi diffusa in vari contributi sull’argomento riguardo alla forma dell’originario Casino della Rufina – e in particolare alla posizione della loggia verso Roma – è suffragata soltanto da incisioni d’epoca e non è mai stata scientificamente comprovata dal riscontro di un rilievo, né dal confronto attento con la pianta del nucleo originario della fabbrica conservata nelle Carte Strozzi presso l’Archivio di Stato di Firenze, ignorata o considerata – con una certa superficialità – come inattendibile.
L’ipotesi qui sostenuta valuta la “logica” dell’addizione alla Villa Rufina basandosi su considerazioni relative sia ai vari documenti iconografici sia all’attendibilità di ciascuno; il tutto è inoltre riferito al completo rilevamento dell’opera nel suo stato attuale.
Discutendo ipotesi diverse (anche attributive) emerse nel frattempo e sviluppando le considerazioni precedentemente avanzate grazie anche a un nuovo apparato iconografico che vede sfruttate le potenzialità della modellazione 3D applicate ai criteri del rilievo filologico, il lavoro tende a ribadire l’efficacia di tale metodo d’indagine, basato sul rilievo delle attuali condizioni dell’opera in associazione all’imprescindibile analisi storico-documentale.
Attraverso il medesimo impianto scientifico procedurale è inoltre sviluppata la ricostruzione filologica del fronte settentrionale, basata anche su documentazione fotografica d’epoca parzialmente inedita. Si intende così offrire un iniziale – seppur parziale – contributo alla rilettura dell’ultima fase (quella novecentesca) che ha contrassegnato la fabbrica, vedendola già alterata ai primi del XX secolo, quindi compromessa dagli eventi bellici e infine trasformata dalle operazioni di restauro/ripristino del complesso, che hanno riproposto solo parzialmente e in modo generico la precedente morfologia del manufatto.This publication proposes, in an expanded and updated version, the key that the Author had already advanced in an earlier essay which was published ten years ago, concerning the 17th century intervention on the Villa Rufina: the first one of the Ville Tuscolane (summer residences for the papal circle that rose, in the late Renaissance, on the hills at the south of Rome). The Authors assumes also to be valid the well-established attribution of this work to Francesco Borromini.
In this volume a wide demonstration is offered of the efficacy, for the aim of a reliable reconstruction of the evolutionary phases of a certain building, of the interaction between the historical documents and the architectural survey, showing also how this time of analysis can lead to incorrect or misleading considerations, when it is not carried out enough deeply.
In the second phase (the expansion of the 17th century) which characterized all the Ville Tuscolane, the Rufina, at the time owned by the Falconieri (family), was the subject of an extensive renewal. With this intervention the first bulding that had initiated the “modern rediscovery” of building activity in these places (being, in fact, the originator of the Complex) was considerably transformed with regard to its material structure, appearance and relationship with the environment. For the devising of the general plan, it is commonly ascribed to Francesco Borromini, on the basis more of archive documents than of its style.
If the decoration of the Villa has been extensively and reliably studied, the same cannot be said about the transformations that the old building underwent, especially with regard to the lost loggia towards Rome. The hypothesis that has gradually taken root, about the location of this lodge, in the various papers published on the subject, is in fact supported only by some engravings of the time (in which the Villa is depicted in a pseudo-perspectival view and only as an element amongst the many others of the Complex). It has never been scientifically proved by the check of a survey, or by a careful comparison with the plan of the original nucleus of the original factory map stored in the “Carte Strozzi” at the State Archives of Florence, that has been ignored or considered – with some superficiality – as unreliable.
The hypothesis the Author suggested since the previous essay, evaluates the “logic” of the addition Borromini made to the Villa Rufina detaching itself from these assumptions and basing itself on some specific considerations concerning the iconographic documents that have been published over the years in various contributions, evaluating the reliability of each of them. These considerations were also related to a comprehensive survey of the work in its current state, as the so far published surveys are partial or were carried out on the structure as extensively damaged by the war.
In the volume are also discussed several different hypotheses that emerged in the meantime, also on the allocation of the project, as the attribution to Borromini – which in the past had seen ups and downs, from the header of the engraving by Alessandro Specchi to the evidences provided by Paolo Portoghesi and by Angela Negro, taken from the Falconieri-Carpegna archive – has recently been the subject of a new attempt of denial.
Developing the considerations already advanced before, and using a new display of subsidiary iconography that sees the exploitation of the potential of 3d modeling when applied to the criteria of the philological surveying, this study aims at a confirmation of the effectiveness of this method of investigation, which is based on a survey of the work in its positive state in conjunction with an unavoidable historical-documentary analysis.
On the basis of this same scientific procedural system, taking as well in account many historical photographic documents, so far unpublished, is also developed a philological reconstruction of the northern front, that is proposed in the last chapter. The aim is to provide a first – although partial – contribution to the re-reading of the last phase (the 20th century), which marked the building, that had already been altered in the early years of the 20th century, then compromised by the war and finally transformed by the restoration and rehabilitation of the complex, which reconstructed the pre-existing morphology only in a partial and general way
Late Gadolinium Enhancement Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Imaging:From Basic Concepts to Emerging Methods
BACKGROUND: Late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) is a widely used cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) technique to diagnose a broad range of ischemic and non-ischemic cardiomyopathies. Since its development and validation against histology already more than two decades ago, the clinical utility of LGE and its span of applications have increased considerably.METHODS: In this review we will present the basic concepts of LGE imaging and its diagnostic and prognostic value, elaborate on recent developments and emerging methods, and finally discuss future prospects.RESULTS: Continuous developments in 3 D imaging methods, motion correction techniques, water/fat-separated imaging, dark-blood methods, and scar quantification improved the performance and further expanded the clinical utility of LGE imaging.CONCLUSION: LGE imaging is the current noninvasive reference standard for the assessment of myocardial viability. Improvements in spatial resolution, scar-to-blood contrast, and water/fat-separated imaging further strengthened its position.KEY POINTS: · LGE MRI is the reference standard for the noninvasive assessment of myocardial viability. · LGE MRI is used to diagnose a broad range of non-ischemic cardiomyopathies in everyday clinical practice.. · Improvements in spatial resolution and scar-to-blood contrast further strengthened its position. · Continuous developments improve its performance and further expand its clinical utility.CITATION FORMAT: · Holtackers RJ, Emrich T, Botnar RM et al. Late Gadolinium Enhancement Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Imaging: From Basic Concepts to Emerging Methods. Fortschr Röntgenstr 2022; DOI: 10.1055/a-1718-4355.</p
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