Publications by authors named "B PERSSON"

During routine sampling of northern pike, a male with circular blue-metallic granular spots mainly located on the head and back was identified. Histological investigations presented multifocally thickened epidermis rich in basophilic large structures with a granulated rim and a dense, non-granulated center. Other organs showed no signs of infection.

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I study the influence of temperature and the crack-tip velocity of bond breaking at the crack tip in rubber-like materials. Bond breaking is considered as a stress-aided thermally activated process and results in an effective crack propagation energy, which increases strongly with decreasing temperature or increasing crack-tip speed. This effect is particularly important for adhesive (interfacial) crack propagation but less important for cohesive (bulk) crack propagation owing to the much larger bond-breaking energies in the latter case.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study investigates the differences in gene expression between epicardial adipose tissue (EAT) around the heart and subcutaneous adipose tissue (SAT) in patients undergoing heart surgery, revealing distinct gene clusters linked to heart failure (HF) characteristics.
  • - Researchers identified 17 gene clusters in EAT, with seven showing significant correlations to heart failure measures, indicating a unique role that EAT may play in heart dysfunction, especially related to inflammation and tissue repair.
  • - The findings emphasize the different impacts of EAT and SAT on heart health, suggesting that EAT could influence the progression of heart failure, which necessitates further studies to better understand these connections.
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We study the influence of lubricant fluids (water-glycerol mixtures) on rubber sliding friction for two different rubber tread compounds on a concrete surface. We find that for the lubricated contacts the sliding friction below a critical velocity is similar to that of the dry contact, but for > the friction drops fast with increasing sliding speed. We discuss the origin of this effect and show that it is not a "normal" mixed lubrication effect but depends on surface (or interfacial) energies.

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