scholarly journals An Exploratory View on Relationship between Space Dimensionality and Interaction Force among Objects

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-5
Author(s):  
Zhou u Xinli ◽  

To thoroughly explore and analyze the space dimensionality as well as the dynamic relationship between itself and the motion of objects, the author of this paper applies the approach of mathematical sets so as to discover the essential discipline of motion and motionlessness in the astrospace, and the author also tries to find perfect answers to the not-yet-satisfactorily-explained questions or phenomena in modern physical theories, providing a new theoretical foundation for the research on uniform force field

Reproduction ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jinxiu Dong ◽  
Siqi Liu ◽  
Ziming Wang ◽  
Kai Zheng ◽  
Mengli Yang ◽  
...  

The specificity of sperm-egg recognition is crucial to species independence, and two proteins (Izumo1 and JUNO) are essential for gamete adhesion/fusion in mammals. However, hybridization, which is very common in turtles, also requires specific recognition of sperm-egg binding proteins. In this study, we discovered that natural selection plays an important role in the codon usage bias of Tu-Izumo1 and Tu-JUNO. Positively selected sites and co-evolutionary analyses between Tu-Izumo1 and Tu-JUNO has been previously reported, and we confirm these results in a larger analysis containing 25 turtle species. We also showed that Tu-JUNO is expressed on the oocyte surface and that Tu-Izumo1 and Tu-JUNO interact with each other directly in different species hybridization combinations. Co-immunization assays revealed that this interaction is evolutionarily conserved in turtles. The results of avidity-based extracellular interaction screening between Tu-Izumo1 and Tu-JUNO for sperm-oocyte binding pairs (both within and across species) likely suggest that the interaction force between Izumo1 and JUNO has a certain correlation in whether the turtles can hybridize. Our results lay a theoretical foundation for the subsequent development of techniques to detect whether different turtle species can interbreed, which would provide the molecular basis for breeding management and species protection of turtles.


Author(s):  
Alberto Zasso ◽  
Marco Belloli ◽  
Stefano Giappino ◽  
Sara Muggiasca

The vortex induced vibration of a rigid cylinder has been studied in the subcritical Reynolds range in terms of motion parameters and also in terms of instantaneous pressure distribution on the cylinder surface. The resulting force field has been analyzed as a function of the fundamental parameters z* (non-dimensional amplitude) and Un (critical velocity ratio) showing a possible systematic modelization of the force component synchronous with the oscillation frequency, responsible for the power input in the lock-in region. The magnitude and the phase of the synchronous force component have been studied analyzing build-up events as well as steady state constant amplitude oscillation events. A very close correspondence has been highlighted among the two different analyzed cases, confirming that a quasi-steady model of the force field is a robust and reliable representation of the flow-cylinder interaction force field. This interaction is responsible for the typical transient build-up oscillations of technical interest. The pressure distribution monitored at different locations along the oscillating cylinder axial coordinate allowed finally to show a direct link between the incoming flow velocity distribution and the correlation characteristics of the vortex shedding force distribution along the cylinder axis.


RSC Advances ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 5 (40) ◽  
pp. 31594-31605 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nazanin Davari ◽  
Shokouh Haghdani ◽  
Per-Olof Åstrand ◽  
George C. Schatz

A model for the local electric field as a linear response to a frequency-dependent external electric field is presented based on a combined charge-transfer and point–dipole interaction force-field model.


1988 ◽  
Vol 43 (8-9) ◽  
pp. 774-792 ◽  
Author(s):  
Masato Kakihana ◽  
Minoru Akiyama ◽  
Tadashi Nagumo ◽  
Makoto Okamoto

AbstractThe infrared spectra (4000-100 cm-1) of the α-form crystal ofglycine (NH3+ - CH2 - COO-) and of thirteen isotopic modifications comprising D, 13C, 15N, and 18O were measured at 80 and 290 K. Excellent resolution was reached at the low temperature. In the low temperature spectra the fine structure of the nearly degenerate NH3 and ND3 antisymmetric deformational modes and the CO2-torsional bands in the vicinity of 200 cm-1 for each of the isotopic molecules, which in the low-frequency region are strongly overlapped by a number of lattice modes, clearly showed up. Based upon the frequency data of the 14 isotopic analogs and the precisely known structure of the molecule, a normal coordinate analysis was carried out. 307 observed frequencies were utilized to derive a new empirical valence force field reduced to a set of 50 force constants by a number of restrictive assumptions. The resulting force field reproduced the 307 frequencies with a root-mean- square deviation of 3.32 cm -1. This force field emphasizes the importance of interaction force constants of the in-plane CO2-rocking and CO2-deformational coordinates with the CH2-twisting coordinate, which can come form a significant deviation of this molecule from an ideal Cs-symmetry. The composition of normal vibrations from generally accepted local-symmetry coordinates is given in terms of the potential energy distribution (PED). The PED results indicate that almost all the normal modes below 1600 cm-1 are extensively intermixed group modes, thus precluding a simple normal vibrational decription. Interestingly the PED description for several vibrations associated with the NH3 - CH2 - C fragment exhibits strong mixing between quasi-A′ symmetric and -A″ antisymmetric coordinates with respect to a pseudo molecular symmetry (CCN) plane in this molecule.


1997 ◽  
Vol 90 (3) ◽  
pp. 495-497
Author(s):  
CLAUDIO ESPOSTI ◽  
FILIPPO TAMASSIA ◽  
CRISTINA PUZZARINI ◽  
RICCARDO TARRONI ◽  
ZDENEK ZELINGER

1976 ◽  
Vol 73 ◽  
pp. 1051-1057
Author(s):  
Sadao Isotani ◽  
Alain J.-P. Alix

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