Please wait, while we are loading the content...
Please wait, while we are loading the content...
| Content Provider | The American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) Digital Collection |
|---|---|
| Author | Alameddine, A. |
| Copyright Year | 2011 |
| Abstract | Based on a new scientifically-engineered approach, we conjecture that adequate quantities of specific classes of nutrients (chemical agents) to accompany cholesterol intensive meals disentangles precipitation, hinders blockade, and effectively reduces buildup of plaques on inner arterial walls. Specific chemical agents lead to formation of low-frequency vibrating boundary layers at the arterial walls. The axes of these differential vibrations are positioned orthogonal to the arterial walls. Once vibrations reach resonance at the quantum level, they obstruct plaques precipitation and clinging at the cellular level by resonance bioportation magnificative channeling between the two levels. The resonance creates the physical equivalence of perturbative “slip-zone” on the inner arterial walls. Additionally, arterial resonance in specific modes, can act as a mechanical harmonic hammer that could also destabilize excessive clotting (thrombosis). In this paper, we develop and state below the theoretical bioportation fluid dynamics basis underlying our new biodynamic bioportation engineering model that is sufficient to build preventive boundary layer resonance around the inner of arterial walls to reduce and prevent plaques buildup. We start developing the mathematics, biomechanics, and biodynamic bioportation of the presented model. We build its conceptual and theoretical skeletal framework and show some challenging theoretical implications of our new hidden science, such as our fluid-bioportation dynamic formulation. We present the scientific fundamentals of our theoretical development and show how their base parks at the quantum level. It functions from concepts in the femto-world of quantum engineering. Its biomechanics & biodynamics are activated at the nano bioengineering energy levels in a bottom-up propagation hierarchy. The energy state and momentum determined by the density and flux of the oscillating source of vibrations at the quantum level is proportional to agents’ concentrations in the blood. The oscillating boundary resonance at the quantum level is magnificative thru a transient naturally resonant turbulent wave asymptotically constructed from the behavior of the transverse stress-energy-momentum tensor field T of the fluid (blood) vector field V at the macro-cellular level. The resonant boundary surface turbulence provides a “shake-off” motion to prevent plaques precipitation on arterial inner walls. A condition for the generation of such dynamic bioportation for the resonant surface boundary is presented mathematically. This natural body-generated phenomenon is classified within a new class of biodynamics we shall call “Fluidobioportation” dynamics. If at times, the class of special nutrients is unavailable to naturally trigger this phenomenon, the same could be induced by intake of specific chemical agents. At the macro-level, the bioportation process is engineeringly-sensed as an ultra-light energy-momentum turbulent wave generated by arterial boundary surface resonance rooted at the micro-level. While turbulent wave biodynamics could be shown to analytically and geometrically disallow plaques precipitation, it also has a potential to destabilize clot formation. Continuity and extension of this process may also lead to gradual systematic “shave off” of existing plaques accumulations and reduction of clotting. |
| Starting Page | 631 |
| Ending Page | 639 |
| Page Count | 9 |
| File Format | |
| ISBN | 9780791854884 |
| DOI | 10.1115/IMECE2011-62337 |
| Volume Number | Volume 2: Biomedical and Biotechnology Engineering; Nanoengineering for Medicine and Biology |
| Conference Proceedings | ASME 2011 International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition |
| Language | English |
| Publisher Date | 2011-11-11 |
| Publisher Place | Denver, Colorado, USA |
| Access Restriction | Subscribed |
| Subject Keyword | Bioengineering Turbulence Vibration Fluid dynamics Energy levels (quantum mechanics) Momentum Engineering models Mathematics Flow (dynamics) Waves Density Thrombosis Blood Stress Transients (dynamics) Biomechanics Precipitation Fluids Tensors Hammers Dynamics (mechanics) Resonance Boundary layers |
| Content Type | Text |
| Resource Type | Article |
National Digital Library of India (NDLI) is a virtual repository of learning resources which is not just a repository with search/browse facilities but provides a host of services for the learner community. It is sponsored and mentored by Ministry of Education, Government of India, through its National Mission on Education through Information and Communication Technology (NMEICT). Filtered and federated searching is employed to facilitate focused searching so that learners can find the right resource with least effort and in minimum time. NDLI provides user group-specific services such as Examination Preparatory for School and College students and job aspirants. Services for Researchers and general learners are also provided. NDLI is designed to hold content of any language and provides interface support for 10 most widely used Indian languages. It is built to provide support for all academic levels including researchers and life-long learners, all disciplines, all popular forms of access devices and differently-abled learners. It is designed to enable people to learn and prepare from best practices from all over the world and to facilitate researchers to perform inter-linked exploration from multiple sources. It is developed, operated and maintained from Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur.
Learn more about this project from here.
NDLI is a conglomeration of freely available or institutionally contributed or donated or publisher managed contents. Almost all these contents are hosted and accessed from respective sources. The responsibility for authenticity, relevance, completeness, accuracy, reliability and suitability of these contents rests with the respective organization and NDLI has no responsibility or liability for these. Every effort is made to keep the NDLI portal up and running smoothly unless there are some unavoidable technical issues.
Ministry of Education, through its National Mission on Education through Information and Communication Technology (NMEICT), has sponsored and funded the National Digital Library of India (NDLI) project.
| Sl. | Authority | Responsibilities | Communication Details |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Ministry of Education (GoI), Department of Higher Education |
Sanctioning Authority | https://www.education.gov.in/ict-initiatives |
| 2 | Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur | Host Institute of the Project: The host institute of the project is responsible for providing infrastructure support and hosting the project | https://www.iitkgp.ac.in |
| 3 | National Digital Library of India Office, Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur | The administrative and infrastructural headquarters of the project | Dr. B. Sutradhar bsutra@ndl.gov.in |
| 4 | Project PI / Joint PI | Principal Investigator and Joint Principal Investigators of the project |
Dr. B. Sutradhar bsutra@ndl.gov.in Prof. Saswat Chakrabarti will be added soon |
| 5 | Website/Portal (Helpdesk) | Queries regarding NDLI and its services | support@ndl.gov.in |
| 6 | Contents and Copyright Issues | Queries related to content curation and copyright issues | content@ndl.gov.in |
| 7 | National Digital Library of India Club (NDLI Club) | Queries related to NDLI Club formation, support, user awareness program, seminar/symposium, collaboration, social media, promotion, and outreach | clubsupport@ndl.gov.in |
| 8 | Digital Preservation Centre (DPC) | Assistance with digitizing and archiving copyright-free printed books | dpc@ndl.gov.in |
| 9 | IDR Setup or Support | Queries related to establishment and support of Institutional Digital Repository (IDR) and IDR workshops | idr@ndl.gov.in |
|
Loading...
|