Queue Automata of Constant Length

Author(s):  
Sebastian Jakobi ◽  
Katja Meckel ◽  
Carlo Mereghetti ◽  
Beatrice Palano
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
H. Mohri

In 1959, Afzelius observed the presence of two rows of arms projecting from each outer doublet microtubule of the so-called 9 + 2 pattern of cilia and flagella, and suggested a possibility that the outer doublet microtubules slide with respect to each other with the aid of these arms during ciliary and flagellar movement. The identification of the arms as an ATPase, dynein, by Gibbons (1963)strengthened this hypothesis, since the ATPase-bearing heads of myosin molecules projecting from the thick filaments pull the thin filaments by cross-bridge formation during muscle contraction. The first experimental evidence for the sliding mechanism in cilia and flagella was obtained by examining the tip patterns of molluscan gill cilia by Satir (1965) who observed constant length of the microtubules during ciliary bending. Further evidence for the sliding-tubule mechanism was given by Summers and Gibbons (1971), using trypsin-treated axonemal fragments of sea urchin spermatozoa. Upon the addition of ATP, the outer doublets telescoped out from these fragments and the total length reached up to seven or more times that of the original fragment. Thus, the arms on a certain doublet microtubule can walk along the adjacent doublet when the doublet microtubules are disconnected by digestion of the interdoublet links which connect them with each other, or the radial spokes which connect them with the central pair-central sheath complex as illustrated in Fig. 1. On the basis of these pioneer works, the sliding-tubule mechanism has been established as one of the basic mechanisms for ciliary and flagellar movement.


1947 ◽  
Vol 17 (5) ◽  
pp. 245-255 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edward G. Burleigh ◽  
Helmut Wakeham

1954 ◽  
Vol 27 (1) ◽  
pp. 36-54 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. Kuhn ◽  
O. Künzle ◽  
A. Preissmann

Abstract By rapid deformation of a medium in which linear molecules are present, various changes are produced simultaneously in the latter. These changes are more or less independent of one another, and can release independently and totally or partially by rearrangement of valence distances and valence angles in the chain molecules. By virtue of such relaxation processes, a portion of the stress originating in the rapid deformation disappears, with a changing time requirement for the various portions. A relaxation time spectrum is thus formed. The relaxation time spectrum consists of a finite number of restoring force mechanisms with proper relaxation times or of a continuous spectrum. Both the creep curves (the dependence of the length of a body on time at constant load), and stress relaxation (decay of the stress observed in test sample kept at constant length after rapid deformation), as well as the total visco-elastic behavior, especially the behavior at constant periodic deformation of the test sample, are determined by the relaxation time spectrum. The appropriate Quantitative relationships were derived.


2008 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Shokouhmand ◽  
M. Moghaddami ◽  
H. Jafari

Fins are widely utilized in many industrial applications for example, fins are used in air cooled finned tube heat exchangers like car radiators, heat rejection devices, refrigeration systems and in condensing central heat exchangers. In this paper, heat transfer inside the fin system composed of a primary rectangular fin with a number of rectangular fins (secondary fins), which are attached on its surface, is modeled and analyzed numerically. The length of the secondary fins decreases linearly from the base of the primary fin to its tip. This modified triangular fin is a kind of improved tree fin networks. The effectiveness of the modified triangular fin is compared with the effectiveness of triangular fin which is calculated analytically. The results show that adding secondary fins increases the effectiveness of triangular fin significantly. Also, it is found that increasing the number of secondary fins in a constant length of primary fin will increase the effectiveness. In addition, by comparing the results it can be concluded that by shortening the length of the primary fin in modified triangular fin, the effectiveness will increase significantly to the contrary of the triangular fin, so smaller heat exchangers can be built by using the modified triangular fin. It is found that in a constant length of primary fin, there is an optimum thickness of secondary fins which maximize the effectiveness of the fin.


2019 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 69-72
Author(s):  
Anne Bertrand-Mathis

AbstractWe show that for an arbitrary sequence of intervals In with constant length c, there exist real numbers β such that for all n βn belongs to In modulo one.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 1-17
Author(s):  
Faith Ellen ◽  
Barun Gorain ◽  
Avery Miller ◽  
Andrzej Pelc

Broadcast is one of the fundamental network communication primitives. One node of a network, called the s ource, has a message that has to be learned by all other nodes. We consider broadcast in radio networks, modeled as simple undirected connected graphs with a distinguished source. Nodes communicate in synchronous rounds. In each round, a node can either transmit a message to all its neighbours, or stay silent and listen. At the receiving end, a node v hears a message from a neighbour w in a given round if v listens in this round and if w is its only neighbour that transmits in this round. If more than one neighbour of a node v transmits in a given round, we say that a c ollision occurs at v . We do not assume collision detection: in case of a collision, node v does not hear anything (except the background noise that it also hears when no neighbour transmits). We are interested in the feasibility of deterministic broadcast in radio networks. If nodes of the network do not have any labels, deterministic broadcast is impossible even in the four-cycle. On the other hand, if all nodes have distinct labels, then broadcast can be carried out, e.g., in a round-robin fashion, and hence O (log n )-bit labels are sufficient for this task in n -node networks. In fact, O (log Δ)-bit labels, where Δ is the maximum degree, are enough to broadcast successfully. Hence, it is natural to ask if very short labels are sufficient for broadcast. Our main result is a positive answer to this question. We show that every radio network can be labeled using 2 bits in such a way that broadcast can be accomplished by some universal deterministic algorithm that does not know the network topology nor any bound on its size. Moreover, at the expense of an extra bit in the labels, we can get the following additional strong property of our algorithm: there exists a common round in which all nodes know that broadcast has been completed. Finally, we show that 3-bit labels are also sufficient to solve both versions of broadcast in the case where it is not known a priori which node is the source.


1974 ◽  
Vol 81 (1) ◽  
pp. 36 ◽  
Author(s):  
John Gerriets ◽  
George Poole
Keyword(s):  

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