Search Results
Results 451 - 500 of 627
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Higgins Michael J - - 2006
In this study, we apply a dynamic atomic force microscopy (AFM) technique, frequency modulation (FM) detection, to the mechanical unfolding of single titin I27 domains and make comparisons with measurements made using the AFM contact or static mode method. Static mode measurements revealed the well-known force transition occurring at 100-120 ...
Bippes Christian A - - 2006
Measuring the visco-elastic properties of biological macromolecules constitutes an important step towards the understanding of dynamic biological processes, such as cell adhesion, muscle function, or plant cell wall stability. Force spectroscopy techniques based on the atomic force microscope (AFM) are increasingly used to study the complex visco-elastic response of (bio-)molecules ...
Wada Hirofumi - - 2005
Nonlinear elastic responses of short and stiff polyelectrolytes are investigated by dynamic simulations on a single-molecule level. When a polyelectrolyte condensate undergoes a mechanical unfolding, two types of force-extension curves--i.e., a force plateau and a stick-release pattern--are observed depending on the strength of the electrostatic interaction. We provide a physical ...
Garcia-Manyes Sergi - - 2005
The use of stiff cantilevers with diamond tips allows us to perform nanoindentations on hard covalent materials such as silicon with atomic force microscopy. Thanks to the high sensitivity in the force measurements together with the high resolution upon imaging the surface, we can study nanomechanical properties. At this scale, ...
Irbäck Anders - - 2005
The unfolding behavior of ubiquitin under the influence of a stretching force recently was investigated experimentally by single-molecule constant-force methods. Many observed unfolding traces had a simple two-state character, whereas others showed clear evidence of intermediate states. Here, we use Monte Carlo simulations to investigate the force-induced unfolding of ubiquitin ...
Hollins Mark - - 2005
Two experiments involving indirect touch were carried out to explore the relationships among perceptual dimensions of haptically examined surfaces. Subjects in both experiments used a stylus to evaluate the properties of virtual surfaces created by a force-feedback device; four surface properties (resistance to normal force, coefficient of friction, texture scale, ...
Huerta D A - - 2005
We fluidize a granular bed in a rectangular container by injecting energy through the lateral walls with high-frequency sinusoidal horizontal vibrations. In this way, the bed is brought to a steady state with no convection. We measured buoyancy forces on light spheres immersed in the bed and found that they ...
Price W J - - 2005
Nanostructures of self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) are designed and produced using coadsorption and nanografting techniques. Because the structures of these artificially engineered domains are predesigned and well-characterized, a systematic investigation is possible to study the mechanical responses to force modulation under atomic force microscope tips. Force modulation imaging reveals characteristic contrast ...
Naka Marco Hiroshi - - 2005
BACKGROUND: Superficial conditions and integrity of collagen network play an important role on the lubrication performance of articular cartilage. In this work, a technique based on the evanescent waves is used for the evaluation of contact condition during friction tests. METHODS: The frictional and superficial characteristics of the normal and ...
Naka Marco Hiroshi - - 2006
Articular cartilage plays an important role in the lubrication of synovial joints because of its peculiar characteristics. In this work, the frictional and superficial characteristics of articular cartilage were evaluated simultaneously during intermittent sliding and loading. The apparatus used for the analysis of the articular surface was based on the ...
Wright M J - - 2005
We report on ultracold atomic collision experiments utilizing frequency-chirped laser light. A rapid chirp below the atomic resonance results in adiabatic excitation to an attractive molecular potential over a wide range of internuclear separation. This leads to a transient inelastic collision rate which is large compared to that obtained with ...
Caronna Chiara - - 2005
In this work we investigate the dynamic properties of hemoglobin in glycerolD(8)/D(2)O solution using incoherent elastic (ENS) and quasi-elastic (QENS) neutron scattering. Taking advantage of complementary energy resolutions of backscattering spectrometers at ILL (Grenoble), we explore motions in a large space-time window, up to 1 ns and 14 A; moreover, ...
Zhang Qing - - 2005
We present a quantitative study of the nanoscale frictional properties of one-component (pure) and two-component (mixed) alkylsilane self-assembled monolayers (SAMs). The load and velocity dependence of the friction force was measured in air and ethanol using lateral force microscopy (LFM). It was observed that for SAMs with well-ordered structure (pure ...
Blomgren Fredrik - - 2005
According to time-resolved spectroscopic measurements, the initial step of the photoreaction of rhodopsin occurs with a time constant of approximately 200 fs. The whole or a part of the retinal molecule cannot move any significant distance in such a short time. In this paper, we propose instead a minimal motion ...
Unger Tamás - - 2005
Granular packings of hard disks are investigated by means of contact dynamics which is an appropriate technique to explore the allowed force realizations in the space of contact forces. Configurations are generated for given friction coefficients, and then an ensemble of equilibrium forces is found for fixed contacts. We study ...
Sliwinska-Kowalska Mariola - - 2005
: Numerous organic solvents applied in industry, like toluene, styrene, xylene and n-hexane have been demonstrated to impair hearing in animals. However, the effects of exposure to a given organic solvent and the interaction of noise and solvents on hearing in humans are still not fully recognized. : The study ...
Farrell Todd R - - 2005
In general, externally powered prostheses do not provide proprioceptive feedback and thus require the user to rely on cognitively expensive visual feedback to effectively control the prosthesis. Applying the concept of extended physiological proprioception (EPP) to externally powered prostheses provides direct feedback to the user's proprioceptive system regarding the position, ...
Iregren Anders - - 2005
Styrene exposure and color vision for 108 workers (21-65 years) was studied at Swedish reinforced plastic plants. Acute exposure was measured at work. Data on past exposures and personal background data were collected by questionnaire. Current exposure varied between 0.3 and 96mg/m(3). Cumulative past exposures varied from 18 to 4455mg ...
Kuhn M - - 2005
Recently, direct measurements of forces stabilizing single proteins or individual receptor-ligand bonds became possible with ultra-sensitive force probe methods like the atomic force microscope (AFM). In force spectroscopy experiments using AFM, a single molecule or receptor-ligand pair is tethered between the tip of a micromachined cantilever and a supporting surface. ...
Atman A P F - - 2005
We relate the pressure "dip" observed at the bottom of a sand pile prepared by successive avalanches to the stress profile obtained on sheared granular layers in response to a localized vertical overload. We show that, within a simple anisotropic elastic analysis, the skewness and the tilt of the response ...
Watano Satoru - - 2005
Scale-up of wet granulation in a vertical high shear mixer was conducted. Pharmaceutical excipient powders composed of lactose, cornstarch and micro-crystallinecellulose, and hydroxypropylcellulose as a binder were mixed together and then granulated with purified water under various operating conditions and vessel scales. A novel internal stress measurement system was developed ...
Huber Gerrit - - 2005
Animals that cling to walls and walk on ceilings owe this ability to micrometre and nanoscale attachment elements. The highest adhesion forces are encountered in geckoes, which have developed intricate hierarchical structures consisting of toes (millimetre dimensions), lamella (400-600microm size), setae (micrometre dimensions) and spatulae ( approximately 200nm size). Adhesion ...
Bozec Laurent - - 2005
Although the mechanical behavior of tendon and bone has been studied for decades, there is still relatively little understanding of the molecular basis for their specific properties. Thus, despite consisting structurally of the same type I collagen, bones and tendons have evolved to fulfill quite different functions in living organisms. ...
Kado Shinpei - - 2005
We have measured the single intermolecular force of a typical photoionizable molecule, spirobenzopyran, by means of atomic force microscopy, which has proven to be useful in measuring directly single molecular forces. The spirobenzopyran moiety was immobilized covalently on both Au-coated probe tips and substrates by use of a self-assembled monolayer ...
Wang Tong - - 2005
The force measurement mode of an atomic force microscope (AFM) has enabled us to measure the mechanical properties of biological materials at the single molecular level. In a conventional quasi-static force measurement on a single circularly permuted green fluorescent protein (cpGFP), we could unfold it by unraveling several sub-domains in ...
Helmke Brian P - - 2005
The endothelium at the interface between blood and tissue acts as a primary transducer of local hemodynamic forces into signals that maintain physiological function or initiate pathological processes in vessel walls. Rapid intracellular spatial gradients of structural dynamics and signaling molecule activity suggest that mechanical cues at the molecular level ...
Rio E - - 2005
To probe the microscopic balance of forces close to a moving contact line, the boundary conditions around viscous drops sliding down an inclined plane are investigated. At first, the variation of the contact angle as a function of the scale of analysis is discussed. The dynamic contact angle is measured ...
Dovat L - - 2005
This paper describes a mechanical interface to use in conjunction with fMRI, in order to infer the brain mechanisms of human motor learning. Innovative mechanical concepts based on gravity and elastic forces were used to generate typical stable and unstable dynamic interactions at the hand during multijoint arm movements. Two ...
Park Ji-Hoon - - 2004
Frictional resistance tends to rapidly increase as the angle between a bracket and an archwire increases beyond a critical angle. The purpose of this study was to determine a new measuring method with a pin on disk friction tester for the measurement of the frictional force between lingual brackets and ...
Maleki M - - 2004
We present an experimental study of the coiling instability of a liquid "rope" falling on a solid surface. Coiling can occur in three different regimes--viscous, gravitational, or inertial--depending on the fluid viscosity and density, the fall height, and the flow rate. The competition among the different forces causes the coiling ...
Fiurásek Jaromír - - 2004
A scheme for the optimal Gaussian cloning of coherent light states at the interface between light and atoms is proposed. The distinct feature of this proposal is that the clones are stored in an atomic quantum memory, which is important for applications in quantum communication. The atomic quantum cloning machine ...
Kawakami Masaru - - 2004
We report on single molecule measurements of the viscoelastic properties of the polysaccharide dextran using a new approach which involves acquiring the power spectral density of the thermal noise of an atomic force microscope cantilever while holding the single molecule of interest under force-clamp conditions. The attractiveness of this approach ...
Ohta Satoko - - 2004
The forced unfolding process of bovine carbonic anhydrase II (BCA II) was examined at the atomic level by the molecular dynamics (MD) simulation. By force spectroscopy, experimentally obtained force-extension curves (F-E curves) showed a prominent force peak after 50 nm extension. F-E curves obtained from our simulation had three force ...
Rubinstein Shmuel M - - 2004
The dynamics of friction have been studied for hundreds of years, yet many aspects of these everyday processes are not understood. One such aspect is the onset of frictional motion (slip). First described more than 200 years ago as the transition from static to dynamic friction, the onset of slip ...
Linke Wolfgang A - - 2004
The forces developed during stretch of nonactivated muscle consist of velocity-sensitive (viscous/viscoelastic) and velocity-insensitive (elastic) components. At the myofibrillar level, the elastic-force component has been described in terms of the entropic-spring properties of the giant protein titin, but entropic elasticity cannot account for viscoelastic properties, such as stress relaxation. Here ...
Pelling Andrew E - - 2004
We demonstrate that the cell wall of living Saccharomyces cerevisiae (baker's yeast) exhibits local temperature-dependent nanomechanical motion at characteristic frequencies. The periodic motions in the range of 0.8 to 1.6 kHz with amplitudes of approximately 3 nm were measured using the cantilever of an atomic force microscope (AFM). Exposure of ...
Gorb Stanislav N - - 2004
Each tarsus of Coreus marginatus L. (Coreidae) bears a pair of smooth flexible pulvilli adapted for attachment to relatively smooth surfaces, such as their host plant Rumex crispus L. (Polygonaceae). This account quantifies insect attachment abilities on smooth surfaces at various stages of ontogenesis. Friction (shear) force (FF) of adults ...
Urbakh Michael - - 2004
Tribology is the study of adhesion, friction, lubrication and wear of surfaces in relative motion. It remains as important today as it was in ancient times, arising in the fields of physics, chemistry, geology, biology and engineering. The more we learn about tribology the more complex it appears. Nevertheless, recent ...
Janovjak Harald - - 2005
Atomic force microscopy (AFM) allows the critical forces that unfold single proteins and rupture individual receptor-ligand bonds to be measured. To derive the shape of the energy landscape, the dynamic strength of the system is probed at different force loading rates. This is usually achieved by varying the pulling speed ...
Strekalov Dmitry - - 2004
We report on the experimental demonstration of the light dragging effect due to atomic motion in a rubidium vapor cell. We find that the minimum group velocity is achieved for light redshifted from the center of the atomic resonance and that the value of this shift increases with decreasing group ...
Breakspear S - - 2004
We report the use of longitudinal (aspect ratio > 1 : 1) scanning atomic force microscopy as an aid in returning to the same area of hair fibres after bleaching, treatment with a commercial shampoo or the application of a 'leave-on' conditioner product. The bleaching treatment used in this study ...
Shenoy V B - - 2004
We show that the decay of sinusoidal ripples on crystal surfaces, where mass transport is limited by the attachment and detachment of atoms at the step edges, is remarkably different from the decay behavior that has been reported until now. Unlike the decreasing or at most constant rate of amplitude ...
Zimmer F - - 2004
The advantages of light and matter-wave Sagnac interferometers--large area on one hand and high rotational sensitivity per unit area on the other--can be combined utilizing ultraslow light in cold atomic gases. While a group-velocity reduction alone does not affect the Sagnac phase shift, the associated momentum transfer from light to ...
Stolz Martin - - 2004
Cartilage stiffness was measured ex vivo at the micrometer and nanometer scales to explore structure-mechanical property relationships at smaller scales than has been done previously. A method was developed to measure the dynamic elastic modulus, |E(*)|, in compression by indentation-type atomic force microscopy (IT AFM). Spherical indenter tips (radius = ...
Schlierf Michael - - 2004
We use single-molecule force spectroscopy to study the kinetics of unfolding of the small protein ubiquitin. Upon a step increase in the stretching force, a ubiquitin polyprotein extends in discrete steps of 20.3 +/- 0.9 nm marking each unfolding event. An average of the time course of these unfolding events ...
Chen Zhigang - - 2004
We report what we believe to be the first evidence of localized nanoscale photonic jets generated at the shadow-side surfaces of micronscale, circular dielectric cylinders illuminated by a plane wave. These photonic nanojets have waists smaller than the diffraction limit and propagate over several optical wavelengths without significant diffraction. We ...
Chtcheglova Lilia A - - 2004
A new method of direct and continuous measurement of the spring constant of single molecule or molecular complex is elaborated. To that end the standard force spectroscopy technique with functionalized tips and samples is combined with a small dithering of the tip. The change of the dithering amplitude as a ...
Luo Zong-Ping - - 2004
Type II collagen and hyaluronan are the two major components of extracellular molecules in cartilage and play an important role in mechanical functions of extracellular matrix. Currently, their mechanical properties have been investigated only at the gross-level. In this study, the mechanical properties of single type II collagen and hyaluronan ...
Hollins Mark - - 2004
We examined, in two experiments, the perceptual scaling of the properties of haptically examined virtual surfaces, and the way in which these properties subjectively combine. Participants used a consistent movement pattern to explore, with a stylus, virtual surfaces generated by a force-feedback device. In experiment 1, four surface properties (bump ...
Labeyrie G - - 2003
We study the diffusive propagation of multiply scattered light in an optically thick cloud of cold rubidium atoms illuminated by a quasiresonant laser beam. In the vicinity of a sharp atomic resonance, the energy transport velocity of the scattered light is almost 5 orders of magnitude smaller than the vacuum ...
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