Publications by authors named "A A Sharakshane"

The conductive lipid pores occurring in planar bilayer membranes are known to manifest themselves experimentally as current fluctuations. Reliable recording of such fluctuations during phase transitions, as well as in membranes with various additives (for example, SDS), allows one to determine the characteristics of hypothetical hydrophilic pores, namely, their number, sizes, lifetimes, and duration of time intervals between pores. Because, in contrast with electroporation, the emergence of pores in a membrane does not require high voltages, this process is called soft poration.

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Most researchers associate the increase in the permeability of lipid bilayers of artificial and biological membranes observed in various experiments with the formation of hypothetical hydrophobic and hydrophilic pores. Although the existence of hydrophobic defects, as the first stage of the formation of a hydrophilic pore, was hypothesized decades ago from electroporation experiments, the difficulty of describing this stage is determined by the lack of experimental data confirming the existence or at least associated with hydrophobic pores. We explored the increase in the current variance through the lipid membrane, observed when approaching the phase transition from the side of high temperatures, and have associated it with capacitive currents arising in response to the formation of hydrophobic pores.

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Plants sharing a single light environment on a spaceship with a human being and bearing a decorative function should look as natural and attractive as possible. And consequently they can be illuminated only with white light with a high color rendering index. Can lighting optimized for a human eye be effective and appropriate for plants? Spectrum-based effects have been compared under artificial lighting of plants by high-pressure sodium lamps and general-purpose white LEDs.

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The Smoluchowski equation with an energy profile of a special type and an assumed hydrophobic ("half") pore source term is used to describe the process of hydrophilic pore formation in a lipid bilayer at the gel-liquid phase transition. The source term reflects the occurrence of molecule packing defects in a lipid bilayer at phase transition. The time sequences of the pore formation and closure events are treated as non-stationary, second-order Erlang flows whose characteristics depend on the equation solution.

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The purpose of this work was to investigate experimentally the capacity of passive acoustic thermometry (PAT) for the reconstruction of 1D, time-variable distributions of the internal temperature. Because in the PAT a noise signal is measured, a considerable integration time (about one minute) is required to attain an acceptable error level (0.5-1K).

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