Variable Number of Particles

Author(s):  
Nils Dalarsson ◽  
Mariana Dalarsson ◽  
Leonardo Golubović
1964 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 139-141 ◽  
Author(s):  
A.A. Logunov ◽  
Nguyen Van Hieu ◽  
L.T. Todorov

Author(s):  
M.T. Thomaz

We approach the question of the movement of a particle with variable mass observed from an inertial frame. We consider two different situations: (i) a particle whose intrinsic mass value varies over time; (ii) the center of mass (CM) of a set of particles with constant mass but with a variable number of particles belonging to it. We show that Newton’s Second Law distinguishes the case in which the intrinsic mass of the particle varies over time from systems composed of particles, with constant mass, whose total mass varies over time. In the first case, we study the consequences of the equation of motion of a particle with variable mass is not covariant in inertial references under Galilean transformations. We also show that the equation that drives the dynamics of the CM of a system with variable number of particles preserves the equivalence of all inertial frames under the Galilean transformations. We verify the non-conservation of the linear momentum vector of the CM of a set of free particles during the time that one particle leaves or comes into the system.


2019 ◽  
Vol 28 ◽  
pp. 01051
Author(s):  
Jacek Michalski ◽  
Piotr Kozierski ◽  
Joanna Zietkiewicz

In this paper authors present a new approaches to the hybrid Kalman filtering and modified hybrid Kalman filtering, with the changed order of methods inside (Unscented Kalman Filter and Extended Kalman Filter). For these algorithms, the modification based on double use of Hybrid Kalman Filters (Excented and Unscented) has been proposed. This new modification has been checked for Hybrid Kalman Particle Filters too, for the variable number of particles. Based on the obtained results, one can see that duplication of hybrid filters can improve the estimation quality.


Author(s):  
L. Andrew Staehelin

Freeze-etched membranes usually appear as relatively smooth surfaces covered with numerous small particles and a few small holes (Fig. 1). In 1966 Branton (1“) suggested that these surfaces represent split inner mem¬brane faces and not true external membrane surfaces. His theory has now gained wide acceptance partly due to new information obtained from double replicas of freeze-cleaved specimens (2,3) and from freeze-etch experi¬ments with surface labeled membranes (4). While theses studies have fur¬ther substantiated the basic idea of membrane splitting and have shown clearly which membrane faces are complementary to each other, they have left the question open, why the replicated membrane faces usually exhibit con¬siderably fewer holes than particles. According to Branton's theory the number of holes should on the average equal the number of particles. The absence of these holes can be explained in either of two ways: a) it is possible that no holes are formed during the cleaving process e.g. due to plastic deformation (5); b) holes may arise during the cleaving process but remain undetected because of inadequate replication and microscope techniques.


Author(s):  
Minakhi Pujari ◽  
Joachim Frank

In single-particle analysis of macromolecule images with the electron microscope, variations of projections are often observed that can be attributed to the changes of the particle’s orientation on the specimen grid (“rocking”). In the multivariate statistical analysis (MSA) of such projections, a single factor is often found that expresses a large portion of these variations. Successful angle calibration of this “rocking factor” would mean that correct angles can be assigned to a large number of particles, thus facilitating three-dimensional reconstruction.In a study to explore angle calibration in factor space, we used 40S ribosomal subunits, which are known to rock around an axis approximately coincident with their long axis. We analyzed micrographs of a field of these particles, taken with 20° tilt and without tilt, using the standard methods of alignment and MSA. The specimen was prepared with the double carbon-layer method, using uranyl acetate for negative staining. In the MSA analysis, the untilted-particle projections were used as active, the tilted-particle projections as inactive objects. Upon tilting, those particles whose rocking axes are parallel to the tilt axis will change their appearance in the same way as under the influence of rocking. Therefore, each vector, in factor space, joining a tilted and untilted projection of the same particle can be regarded as a local 20-degree calibration bar.


Author(s):  
M. F. Miller ◽  
A. R. Rubenstein

Studies of rotavirus particles in humans, monkeys and various non-primates with acute gastroenteritis have involved detection of virus in fecal material by electron microscopy. The EM techniques most commonly employed have been the conventional negative staining (Fig. 1) and immune aggregation (Fig. 2) procedures. Both methods are somewhat insensitive and can most reliably be applied to samples containing large quantities of virus either naturaLly or as a result of concentration by ultracentrifugation. The formation of immune complexes by specific antibody in the immune aggregation procedures confirms the rotavirus diagnosis, but the number of particles per given microscope field is effectively reduced by the aggregation process. In the present communication, we describe use of an on-grid immunoelectron microscopic technique in which rotavirus particles are mounted onto microscope grids that were pre-coated with specific antibody. The technique is a modification of a method originalLy introduced by Derrick (1) for studies of plant viruses.


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