scholarly journals Rigorous treatment of the averaging process for co-orbital motions in the planetary problem

2015 ◽  
Vol 35 (3) ◽  
pp. 675-699 ◽  
Author(s):  
Philippe Robutel ◽  
Laurent Niederman ◽  
Alexandre Pousse

The theory of the vibrations of the pianoforte string put forward by Kaufmann in a well-known paper has figured prominently in recent discussions on the acoustics of this instrument. It proceeds on lines radically different from those adopted by Helmholtz in his classical treatment of the subject. While recognising that the elasticity of the pianoforte hammer is not a negligible factor, Kaufmann set out to simplify the mathematical analysis by ignoring its effect altogether, and treating the hammer as a particle possessing only inertia without spring. The motion of the string following the impact of the hammer is found from the initial conditions and from the functional solutions of the equation of wave-propagation on the string. On this basis he gave a rigorous treatment of two cases: (1) a particle impinging on a stretched string of infinite length, and (2) a particle impinging on the centre of a finite string, neither of which cases is of much interest from an acoustical point of view. The case of practical importance treated by him is that in which a particle impinges on the string near one end. For this case, he gave only an approximate theory from which the duration of contact, the motion of the point struck, and the form of the vibration-curves for various points of the string could be found. There can be no doubt of the importance of Kaufmann’s work, and it naturally becomes necessary to extend and revise his theory in various directions. In several respects, the theory awaits fuller development, especially as regards the harmonic analysis of the modes of vibration set up by impact, and the detailed discussion of the influence of the elasticity of the hammer and of varying velocities of impact. Apart from these points, the question arises whether the approximate method used by Kaufmann is sufficiently accurate for practical purposes, and whether it may be regarded as applicable when, as in the pianoforte, the point struck is distant one-eighth or one-ninth of the length of the string from one end. Kaufmann’s treatment is practically based on the assumption that the part of the string between the end and the point struck remains straight as long as the hammer and string remain in contact. Primâ facie , it is clear that this assumption would introduce error when the part of the string under reference is an appreciable fraction of the whole. For the effect of the impact would obviously be to excite the vibrations of this portion of the string, which continue so long as the hammer is in contact, and would also influence the mode of vibration of the string as a whole when the hammer loses contact. A mathematical theory which is not subject to this error, and which is applicable for any position of the striking point, thus seems called for.


1985 ◽  
Vol 22 (02) ◽  
pp. 443-446 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aidan Sudbury

For a model of a rumour, first given a non-rigorous treatment by Maki and Thompson, it is shown that the proportion of the population never hearing the rumour converges in probability to 0.203 as the population size tends to∞.


1988 ◽  
Vol 120 (2) ◽  
pp. 195-231 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. de Smedt ◽  
D. Dürr ◽  
J. L. Lebowitz ◽  
C. Liverani

Author(s):  
Burak Erman ◽  
James E. Mark

In the constrained-junction model presented in chapter 3, intermolecular correlations were assumed to suppress the fluctuations of junctions. According to this model, the elastic free energy of a network varies between the free energies of the phantom and the affine networks. In a second group of models, to be introduced here, there is a constraining action of entanglements along the chains that may further contribute to the elastic free energy, as if they were additional (albeit temporary) junctions. Consequently, the upper bound of the elastic free energy of such networks may exceed that of an affine network. Since the entanglements along the chain contour are explicitly taken into account in the models, they are referred to as the constrained-chain models. The idea of constrained-chain theories originates from the trapped-entanglement concept of Langley, and Graessley, stating that some fraction of the entanglements which are present in the bulk polymer before cross-linking become permanently trapped by the cross-linking and act as additional cross-links. These trapped entanglements, unlike the chemical cross-links, have some freedom, and the two chains forming the entanglement may slide relative to one other. The two chains may therefore be regarded as being attached to each other by means of a fictitious “slip-link,” as is illustrated schematically in figure 4.1. The entangled system of chains representing the real situation is shown in part (a), and the representation of two entangled chains in this system joined together by a sliplink is shown in part (b). The slip-link may move along the chains by a distance a, which is inversely proportional to the severity of the entanglements. A model based on this picture of slip-links was first proposed by Graessley, and a more rigorous treatment of the slip-link model was given by Ball et al. and subsequently simplified by Edwards and Vilgis; section 4.1 describes this latter treatment in detail. In section 4.2, we present the extension of the Flory constrained junction model to the constrained-chain model by including the effects of constraints along chains, following Erman and Monnerie. One of the newest approaches, the diffused-constraints model, is then described briefly in section 4.3.


2020 ◽  
Vol 48 (4) ◽  
pp. 593-602 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sue Chang ◽  
George A. Parker ◽  
Sarah E. Kleinschmidt ◽  
Geary W. Olsen ◽  
Carol A. Ley ◽  
...  

Among many short-term, subchronic, and chronic toxicology studies with ammonium perfluorooctanoate (PFOA), the gastrointestinal tract has not been identified as a target organ for PFOA-related toxicity in laboratory animals where the corresponding serum PFOA concentrations typically approach several orders of magnitude higher than the general human population. These lack of gastrointestinal tract-related findings were in direct contrast to an epidemiological observation where a positive trend was observed for ulcerative colitis, an idiopathic chronic inflammatory condition of the gut, in a Mid-Ohio River community whose drinking water contained higher levels of PFOA. This study was conducted to perform a histological reevaluation of large intestine sections in laboratory animals from 2 long-term toxicological studies: one was with Sprague Dawley rats that received ammonium PFOA in their diet for 2 years and the other one was with cynomolgus macaques that received daily capsules of ammonium PFOA for 6 months. In both studies, there was a lack of histological evidence of treatment-related inflammatory lesions that was suggestive of the occurrence of ulcerative colitis in these laboratory animals even under the most rigorous treatment schedules. These findings do not offer support for the biological plausibility of the epidemiological associations reported.


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