12 results on '"Najem, Sara"'
Search Results
2. Curvature tensor in discrete gravity.
- Author
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Chamseddine, Ali H., Malaeb, Ola, and Najem, Sara
- Abstract
We study numerically the curvature tensor in a three-dimensional discrete space. Starting from the continuous metric of a three-sphere, we transformed it into a discrete space using three integers n 1 , n 2 , and n 3 . The numerical results are compared with the expected values in the continuous limit. We show that as the number of cells in the lattice increases, the continuous limit is recovered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Thermodynamic properties of amyloid fibrils in equilibrium.
- Author
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Urbic, Tomaz, Najem, Sara, and Dias, Cristiano L.
- Subjects
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AMYLOID beta-protein , *HEAT capacity , *ENTROPY , *FREE energy (Thermodynamics) , *PEPTIDES - Abstract
In this manuscript we use a two-dimensional coarse-grained model to study how amyloid fibrils grow towards an equilibrium state where they coexist with proteins dissolved in a solution. Free-energies to dissociate proteins from fibrils are estimated from the residual concentration of dissolved proteins. Consistent with experiments, the concentration of proteins in solution affects the growth rate of fibrils but not their equilibrium state. Also, studies of the temperature dependence of the equilibrium state can be used to estimate thermodynamic quantities, e.g., heat capacity and entropy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Phase-field approach to chemotactic driving of neutrophil morphodynamics.
- Author
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Najem, Sara and Grant, Martin
- Subjects
- *
NEUTROPHILS , *FREE energy (Thermodynamics) , *DYNAMICAL systems , *POLYMERIZATION , *GEOMETRICAL constructions , *SIMULATION methods & models - Abstract
To simulate the motion of neutrophils and their morphodynamics in response to chemical cues, we construct a model based on the phase-field method utilizing a description with a free-energy functional and associated dynamics which captures the basic features of the phenomenon. We additionally incorporate spatial sensing by introducing an auxiliary field which depicts the polymerization of the region of the cell facing the highest concentration of the chemical attractant. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. The potential of urban distributed solar energy in transition economies: The case of Beirut city.
- Author
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Eslami, Hossein, Najem, Sara, Ghanem, Dana Abi, and Ahmad, Ali
- Subjects
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TRANSITION economies , *PHOTOVOLTAIC power generation , *SOLAR energy , *DISTRIBUTED power generation , *RENEWABLE energy transition (Government policy) , *CLEAN energy , *RENEWABLE energy sources - Abstract
In this paper, using Lebanon's capital, Beirut, as a case study, a methodology is proposed to assess the potential for solar photovoltaics (PV) in urban areas incorporating both economic and non-economic factors. Utilizing a rich spatial dataset of solar irradiation augmented with electricity bills at the building level, the cost and benefit of installing rooftop PV systems for each building is estimated. Additionally, incentives and barriers for adopting those systems are investigated using a probabilistic choice model. The results show that Beirut city has a potential for distributed rooftop solar PV to be between 195 and 295 MWp. However, adoption rates are low at 0.49% and 1.23% for residential and commercial buildings, respectively, reflecting the limitation of financial incentives alone to promote the deployment of distributed renewable energy systems in transition economies. The impact of different incentive policy instruments and the role of solar PV in today's economic crisis in Lebanon is analyzed. The biggest impact was achieved through removing (or lowering) electricity tariff subsidy, although this option remains highly constrained by political calculus. We argue that the Lebanese government should fast-track and implement the required legal framework to facilitate and incentivize distributed power generation from renewable sources to promote both green energy and its financial resilience. The proposed modeling framework together with the results obtained in this study will have important implications for energy policy makers in Lebanon and other transition economies. • The potential for distributed rooftop solar energy in Beirut is estimated at the building level. • The effects of economic and non-economic factors on solar PV adoption are analyzed using a probabilistic choice model. • The impacts of various incentive policies and societal factors on promoting PV are investigated with policy implications. • Electricity subsidy removal increases solar PV adoption rates, partly compensating for weak non-financial incentives. • The government should fast-track implementing the legal framework for distributed power generation including PV systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Scalar curvature in discrete gravity.
- Author
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Chamseddine, Ali H., Malaeb, Ola, and Najem, Sara
- Subjects
- *
CURVATURE , *GRAVITY , *INTEGERS - Abstract
We focus on studying, numerically, the scalar curvature tensor in a two-dimensional discrete space. The continuous metric of a two-sphere is transformed into that of a lattice using two possible slicings. In the first, we use two integers, while in the second we consider the case where one of the coordinates is ignorable. The numerical results of both cases are then compared with the expected values in the continuous limit as the number of cells of the lattice becomes very large. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Kinetic roughening of the urban skyline.
- Author
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Najem, Sara, Krayem, Alaa, Ala-Nissila, Tapio, and Grant, Martin
- Subjects
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URBAN morphology , *ISOKINETIC exercise , *ALTITUDES - Abstract
We analyze the morphology of the modern urban skyline in terms of its roughness properties. This is facilitated by a database of 10 7 building heights in cities throughout the Netherlands which allows us to compute the asymptotic height difference correlation function in each city. We find that in cities for which the height correlations display power-law scaling as a function of distance between the buildings, the corresponding roughness exponents are commensurate to the Edwards-Wilkinson and Kardar-Parisi-Zhang equations for kinetic roughening. Based on analogy to discrete deposition models, we argue that these two limiting classes emerge because of possible height restriction rules for buildings in some cities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Unexpected stray attractors in confined leader-follower dynamics driven by cone-of-vision interactions.
- Author
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Al-Sayegh, Amara A., Najem, Sara A., Klushin, Leonid, and Touma, Jihad R.
- Abstract
Experiments with groups of fish inside a circular tank have provided valuable insights into the nature of leadership in social groups. Sophisticated mathematical models were constructed with a view to recovering observed schooling and leadership behavior in such experiments. Here, and with the help of variations on a promising class of such models, we explore a dual set of social concerns, namely the likelihood of permanent evasion from a cohesive group by a controlled individual in confinement. Our minimal model reduces to a leader-follower configuration, with cone-of-vision driven interactions inside a circular domain. We show that the resulting dynamical system sustains a rich supply of non-aligned, straying "follower" states, the dynamics on which displays (chaotic) intermittency between boundary following behavior and infrequent long flights. We map these states in configuration space and explore transitions between them. We demonstrate robustness of observed behavior by considering model variations, as well as alternate leader control trajectory. While it is too early to draw the implications of leader-follower dynamics to collective behavior, we do confirm that a model stray fish relates to a self-organized school bouncing back and forth along the diameter very much like a follower responds to a point leader in our model. We further draw the implications of our results to the study of dynamical systems with discontinuities, robotics, and the study of human behavior in the face of normative control and confinement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Solar potential scaling and the urban road network topology.
- Author
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Najem, Sara
- Subjects
- *
ROAD construction , *CRITICAL exponents , *SOLAR energy - Abstract
We explore the scaling of cities' solar potentials with their number of buildings and reveal a latent dependence between the solar potential and the length of the corresponding city's road network. This scaling is shown to be valid at the grid and block levels and is attributed to a common street length distribution. Additionally, we compute the buildings' solar potential correlation function and length in order to determine the set of critical exponents typifying the urban solar potential universality class. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Phase-field model for collective cell migration.
- Author
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Najem, Sara and Grant, Martin
- Subjects
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CELL migration , *LANDAU theory , *FREE energy (Thermodynamics) , *SURFACE tension measurement , *CELL morphology - Abstract
We construct a phase-field model for collective cell migration based on a Ginzburg-Landau free-energy formulation. We model adhesion, surface tension, repulsion, coattraction, and polarization, enabling us to follow the cells' morphologies and the effect of their membranes fluctuations on collective motion. We were able to measure the tissue surface tension as a function of the individual cell cortical tension and adhesion and identify a density threshold for cell-sheet formation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Machine learning for buildings' characterization and power-law recovery of urban metrics.
- Author
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Krayem, Alaa, Yeretzian, Aram, Faour, Ghaleb, and Najem, Sara
- Subjects
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MACHINE learning , *RANDOM forest algorithms , *ELECTRIC power consumption , *AIRBORNE lasers , *WORKFLOW - Abstract
In this paper we focus on a critical component of the city: its building stock, which holds much of its socio-economic activities. In our case, the lack of a comprehensive database about their features and its limitation to a surveyed subset lead us to adopt data-driven techniques to extend our knowledge to the near-city-scale. Neural networks and random forests are applied to identify the buildings' number of floors and construction periods' dependencies on a set of shape features: area, perimeter, and height along with the annual electricity consumption, relying a surveyed data in the city of Beirut. The predicted results are then compared with established scaling laws of urban forms, which constitutes a further consistency check and validation of our workflow. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Urban energy modeling and calibration of a coastal Mediterranean city: The case of Beirut.
- Author
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Krayem, Alaa, Al Bitar, Ahmad, Ahmad, Ali, Faour, Ghaleb, Gastellu-Etchegorry, Jean-Philippe, Lakkis, Issam, Gerard, Jocelyne, Zaraket, Haitham, Yeretzian, Aram, and Najem, Sara
- Subjects
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APARTMENT buildings , *ELECTRIC power consumption , *ELECTRIC power distribution , *ELECTRIC transients , *ENERGY consumption , *TOPOGRAPHIC maps - Abstract
Urban expansion, driven by population and economic growth, has been a major contributor to increased levels of energy consumption across the globe. Beirut, Lebanon's capital, is no exception in facing a surge in its demand for electricity as it expands. However, with frequent power outages, underpinning a largely problematic power sector, Beirut's demand for electricity is becoming a real hurdle that impedes the city's economic growth and development. This paper introduces a near-city-scale building energy model, BEirut Energy Model BEEM, which estimates the building stock's electricity consumption in two different districts in Beirut. The methodology uses rule-based expert data for an archetypal classification of the buildings based on their functions and periods of construction with their corresponding attributes including the number of floors, number of apartments, and bimonthly electricity consumption to generate a 3D model for 3630 buildings coupled to the hourly weather conditions and topographic map, which is then simulated in EnergyPlus. The predicted consumption of 2311 buildings is then calibrated with actual available metered data, to adapt the model to Beirut's occupancy and users' behaviors. Calibrated results are mapped to reveal the spatiotemporal distribution of energy peak demands which provide insights for future interventions. An analysis of the spatial distribution of electricity use demonstrates a spatial clustering that underlies urban energy demand which can be used for smart grid zoning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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