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Measurements of anisotropic flow coefficients (v_{n}) and their cross-correlations using two- and multiparticle cumulant methods are reported in collisions of pp at sqrt[s]=13 TeV, p-Pb at a center-of-mass energy per nucleon pair sqrt[s_{NN}]=5.02 TeV, Xe-Xe at sqrt[s_{NN}]=5.44 TeV, and Pb-Pb at sqrt[s_{NN}]=5.02 TeV recorded with the ALICE detector. The multiplicity dependence of v_{n} is studied in a very wide range from 20 to 3000 particles produced in the midrapidity region |η|<0.8 for the transverse momentum range 0.2
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.123.142301 | DOI Listing |
Int J Numer Method Biomed Eng
September 2025
School of Mathematics and Statistics, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK.
Blood perfusion in cardiac tissues involves intricate interactions among vascular networks and tissue mechanics. Perfusion deficit is one of the leading causes of cardiac diseases, and modeling certain cardiac conditions that are clinically infeasible, invasive, or costly can provide valuable supplementary insights to aid clinicians. However, existing homogeneous perfusion models lack the complexity required for patient-specific simulations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiosystems
September 2025
Department of Physics, Lancaster University, Lancaster LA1 4YB, UK. Electronic address:
Swirling motion is an essential phenomenon that significantly influences numerous biological processes, such as the mixing of molecular components within living cells, nutrient transport, the structural changes of the cytoskeletons of contractile cells and the rearrangement of multicellular systems caused by collective cell migration. The dynamical relationship between subcellular and supracellular rearrangements enhances cell migration and contributes to tissue homeostasis. However, the basic mechanisms that drive swirling motion in biological contexts remain a matter of ongoing inquiry.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Biomater
September 2025
Arts et Métiers Institute of Technology, EPF Engineering School, Université Sorbonne Paris Nord, IBHGC-Institut de Biomécanique Humaine Georges Charpak, Paris, France.
The passive material properties of skeletal muscle are key to proper force transmission, and changes to muscle microstructure can have deleterious effects on whole tissue function. However, to the best of the authors' knowledge, it is not currently possible to predict the passive material properties of skeletal muscle with microstructural measurements such as titin isoform type and/or extracellular matrix collagen content, type, or organization. The goals of this work were to 1) develop an experimental dataset at the tissue length scale of passive skeletal muscle under multiaxial loading conditions, 2) develop a biphasic microstructural model of skeletal muscle, and 3) calibrate, validate, and implement such a model.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
August 2025
State Key Laboratory of Urban-rural Water Resource and Environment, School of Environment, Harbin Institute of Technology, Harbin, China.
Reactive transport in porous media is the key to heterogeneous catalysis, which is the central process in both natural and engineered systems. Elucidating nexus between porous architecture and reactive transport is of importance, but remains a challenge. Conventional text-based approach relies on quantitative structural features (QSFs; porosity, tortuosity, and connectivity), which fails to identify key reaction regions and predict local reaction rate for anisotropic architecture due to isotropic assumption.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
August 2025
School of Engineering Science, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, 100049, China.
This study investigates Marangoni convection in a liquid metal-filled cubic cavity, relevant to fusion reactor plasma-facing components, using three-dimensional direct numerical simulations with a self-developed magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) code. The effects of magnetic field strength (Hartmann number, Ha = 0-200) and orientation (x, y, z directions) are analyzed at a fixed Reynolds number (Re = 100,000). Strong magnetic fields suppress convection, with the x and y directions exhibiting greater suppression than the z direction.
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