Probabilistic settling in the Local Exchange Model of turbulent particle transport.

J Theor Biol

Patrick Center for Environmental Research, Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, 1900 Benjamin Franklin Parkway, Philadelphia, PA 19103, USA.

Published: July 2006

The Local Exchange Model (LEM) is a stochastic diffusion model of particle transport in turbulent flowing water. It was developed mainly for application to particles of near-neutral buoyancy that are strongly influenced by turbulent eddies. Turbulence can rapidly transfer such particles to the bed, where settlement can then occur by, for example, sticking to biofilms (e.g., fine particulate organic matter, or FPOM) or attaching to the substrate behaviorally (e.g., benthic invertebrates). Previous papers on the LEM have addressed the problems of how long (time) and far (distance) a suspended particle will be transported before hitting the bed for the first time. These are the hitting-time and hitting-distance problems, respectively. Hitting distances predicted by the LEM for FPOM in natural streams tend to be much shorter than the distances at which most particles actually settle, suggesting that particles usually do not settle the first time they hit the bed. The present paper extends the LEM so it can address probabilistic settling, where a particle encountering the bed can either remain there for a positive length of time (i.e., settle) or immediately reflect back into the water column, each with positive probability. Previous results for the LEM are generalized by deducing a single set of equations governing the probability distribution and moments of a broad class of quantities that accumulate during particle trajectories terminated by hitting or settling on the bed (e.g., transport time, transport distance, cumulative energy expenditure during transport). Key properties of the settling-time and settling-distance distributions are studied numerically and compared with the observed FPOM settling-distance distribution for a natural stream. Some remaining limitations of the LEM and possible means of overcoming them are discussed.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jtbi.2005.12.006DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

probabilistic settling
8
local exchange
8
exchange model
8
particle transport
8
particles settle
8
lem
6
particle
5
transport
5
bed
5
time
5

Similar Publications

A new holistic perspective to assess the ecological risk of microplastics: A case study in Baiyangdian Basin, China.

J Hazard Mater

December 2024

Tianjin Engineering Center of Urban River Eco-purification Technology School of Environmental Science and Engineering, Tianjin University, Jinnan District, Tianjin 300350, China. Electronic address:

By integrating probabilistic ecological risk assessment with the overall risk index method, which considers the multidimensional characteristics of the microplastome, the ecological risks of microplastic pollution were assessed more comprehensively. This study took the Baiyangdian Basin as an example to address the limitations of current risk assessment methods that rely on concentration data or the individual risk of microplastics. Using an exponential regression model, the acute and chronic ecological risk thresholds for the overall risk index method were determined to be 0.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Late Ediacaran strata from Newfoundland, Canada (~574-560 Ma) document near-census palaeocommunities of some of the earliest metazoans. Such preservation enables reproductive strategies to be inferred from the spatial distribution of populations of fossilized benthic organisms, previously revealing the existence of both propagule and stoloniferous reproductive modes among Ediacaran frondose taxa. Here, we describe 'conga lines': linear arrangements of more than three closely spaced fossil specimens.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Clear aligners (CA) are used 22 h daily, creating a bite-block effect. This work aims to (i) analyze occlusal changes before the beginning of treatment, after the first set of CA and after the use of additional aligners; (ii) compare planned occlusal contacts with the ones obtained after the first set of CA; (iii) analyze the occlusal changes occurred after reaching the orthodontic goals after 3 months of using CA only at night; (iv) evaluate and characterize which tooth movements did not allow the treatment to be completed at the end of the first set of aligners, and finally (v) verify the possible relation between the changes in occlusal contact and areas and parameters such as case complexity and facial biotype.

Materials And Methods: A quantitative, comparative, and observational longitudinal cohort study design was implemented to evaluate the clinical data and the complexity levels of cases receiving CA.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

TruthSift: A Platform for Collective Rationality.

Neural Comput

February 2023

TruthSift, Princeton, NJ 08540, U.S.A.

TruthSift is a cloud-based platform that logically combines members' contributions into a collective intelligence. Members add statements and directed connectors to diagrams. TruthSift monitors which statements have been logically established by demonstrations for which every challenge raised has been refuted by an established refutation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The migration of Homo erectus in Southeast Asia during Early Pleistocene is cardinal to our comprehension of the evolution of the genus Homo. However, the limited consideration of the rapidly changing physical environment, together with controversial datings of hominin bearing sites, make it challenging to secure the robust timeline needed to unveil the behavior of early humans. Here, we reappraise the first appearance datum of Javanese H.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!