13,742 research outputs found

    Experimental and analytical study of cracks under biaxial fatigue

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    Most mechanical components experience multi-axial cyclic loading conditions during service. Experimental analysis of fatigue cracks under such conditions is not easy and most works tend to focus more on the simpler but less realistic case of uni-axial loading. Consequently, there are many uncertainties related to the load sequence effect that are now well known and are not normally incorporated into the growth models. The current work presents a new methodology for evaluating overload effect in biaxial fatigue cracks. The methodology includes evaluation of mixed-mode (KI and KII) stress intensity factor and the Crack Opening Displacement for samples with and without overload cycle under biaxial loading. The methodology is tested under a range of crack lengths. All crack-tip information is obtained with a hybrid methodology that combines experimental full-field digital image correlation data and Williams' elastic model describing the crack-tip field.Universidad de Málaga. Campus de Excelencia Internacional Andalucía Tech

    String solutions in Chern-Simons-Higgs model coupled to an axion

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    We study a d=2+1 dimensional Chern-Simons gauge theory coupled to a Higgs scalar and an axion field, finding the form of the potential that allows the existence of selfdual equations and the corresponding Bogomolny bound for the energy of static configurations. We show that the same conditions allow for the N=2 supersymmetric extension of the model, reobtaining the BPS equations from the supersymmetry requirement. Explicit electrically charged vortex-like solutions to these equations are presented.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figure

    Attention-Based Models for Text-Dependent Speaker Verification

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    Attention-based models have recently shown great performance on a range of tasks, such as speech recognition, machine translation, and image captioning due to their ability to summarize relevant information that expands through the entire length of an input sequence. In this paper, we analyze the usage of attention mechanisms to the problem of sequence summarization in our end-to-end text-dependent speaker recognition system. We explore different topologies and their variants of the attention layer, and compare different pooling methods on the attention weights. Ultimately, we show that attention-based models can improves the Equal Error Rate (EER) of our speaker verification system by relatively 14% compared to our non-attention LSTM baseline model.Comment: Submitted to ICASSP 201

    Sobrecargas en crecimiento de grietas por fatiga biaxial

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    El presente trabajo se centra en el estudio de grietas de fatiga bajo cargas biaxiales. Se presenta una nueva metodología para evaluar el efecto de las sobrecargas basada en la evaluación experimental del factor de intensidad de tensiones efectivo y de la apertura de la grieta (Crack Opening Displacement, COD). El estudio se ha realizado en probetas cilíndricas de acero de bajo contenido en carbono sometidas a cargas de tracción y torsión. Los datos experimentales se han obtenido mediante la técnica de correlación de imágenes digitales. Se ha comparado la evolución de la grieta con y sin sobrecarga. Además, se ha utilizado un procedimiento de detección de carga de apertura. Dicho procedimiento se había desarrollado previamente en fatiga uniaxial para el caso biaxial. Dicho procedimiento permite poner de manifiesto el cambio originado por un ciclo de sobrecarga.Universidad de Málaga. Campus de Excelencia Internacional Andalucía Tech

    Genomic analysis of eight native plasmids of the phytopathogen Pseudomonas syringae

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    Comunicación a conferenciaThe pPT23A family of plasmids (PFPs) appears to be indigenous to the plant pathogen Pseudomonas syringae and these plasmids are widely distributed and widely transferred among pathovars of P. syringae and related species. PFPs are sources of accessory genes for their hosts that can include genes important for virulence and epiphytic colonization of plant leaf surfaces. Further understanding of the evolution of the pPT23A plasmid family and the role of these plasmids in P. syringae biology and pathogenesis, requires the determination and analysis of additional complete, closed plasmid genome sequences. Therefore, our main objective was to obtain complete genome sequences from PFPs from three different P. syringae pathovars and perform a comparative genomic analysis. In this work plasmid DNA isolation, purification by CsCl-EtBr gradients, and sequencing using 454 platform, were used to obtain the complete sequence of P. syringae plasmids. Different bioinformatic tools were used to analyze the plasmid synteny, to identify virulence genes (i.e. type 3 effectors) and to unravel the evolutionary history of PFPs. Our sequence analysis revealed that PFPs from P. syringae encode suites of accessory genes that are selected at different levels (universal, interpathovar and intrapathovar). The conservation of type IVSS encoding conjugation functions also contributes to the distribution of these plasmids within P. syringae populations. Thus, this study contributes to unravel the genetic basis of the role of PFPs in different P. syringae lifestyles.Universidad de Málaga. Campus de Excelencia Internacional Andalucía Tech

    Isolation, characterization and selection of bacterial isolates from a suppressive soil with beneficial traits to plants

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    Backgrounds This study focused on the characterization and selection of bacterial strains obtained from a suppressive soil displaying antifungal activity against the soilborne phytopathogenic fungi Rosellinia necatrix. Bacterial profile from this suppressive soil were first obtained by 16S rRNA gene sequencing, revealing a significant increase in the bacterial class Gammaproteobacteria, especially in some antagonistic representatives of Pseudomonas spp. Objectives To obtain and characterize a collection of 246 bacterial isolates obtained from this suppressive soil, in order to identify new strains with antifungal activity against fungal phytopathogens. Methods To obtain the bacterial collection, we performed an isolation on a selective medium for Pseudomonas-like microorganisms. Further characterization tests were used in order to analyse the bacterial collection, including identification of the general metabolic profile of glucose, the profiling of antifungals produced, including both the putative production of antifungal compounds and lytic exoenzymes, and the evaluation of traits related with beneficial effects on plants. Conclusions A final selection of representative strains resulted in antifungal isolates belonging to the genus Pseudomonas, but also some representatives of the genera Serratia and Stenotrophomonas. These selected strains were tested for plant protection by an in vivo experiment using avocado and wheat plants challenged by the pathogen R. necatrix, showing all of them an antifungal ability and plant disease protection. Pseudomonas-like strains isolated from suppressive soils constitute an excellent source for novel microbial biocontrol agents against soilborne fungal pathogens. This work was supported by grant AGL2014-52518-C2-1-R. Carmen Vida and Sandra Tienda are supported by a PhD fellowship from the FPI program of the Spanish Government.This work was supported by grant AGL2014-52518-C2-1-R. Carmen Vida and Sandra Tienda are supported by a PhD fellowship from the FPI program of the Spanish Government; Universidad de Málaga. Campus de Excelencia Internacional Andalucía Tech

    Comparative genomic analysis of native pseudomonas syringae plasmids belonging to the ppt23 a family reveals their role in p. Syringae epiphytic and pathogenic lifestyles

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    Backgrounds The pPT23A family of plasmids (PFPs) appears to be indigenous to the plant pathogen Pseudomonas syringae and these plasmids are widely distributed and widely transferred among pathovars of P. syringae and related species. PFPs are sources of accessory genes for their hosts that can include genes important for virulence and epiphytic colonization of plant leaf surfaces. Objectives Further understanding of the evolution of the pPT23A plasmid family and the role of these plasmids in P. syringae biology and pathogenesis, requires the determination and analysis of additional complete, closed plasmid genome sequences. Therefore, our main objective was to obtain complete genome sequences of PFPs from three different P. syringae pathovars and perform a comprehensive comparative genomic analysis. Methods In this work plasmid DNA isolation, purification by CsCl-EtBr gradients, and sequencing using 454 platform, were carried out to obtain the complete sequence of P. syringae plasmids. Different bioinformatic tools were used to analyze the plasmid synteny, to identify virulence genes (i.e. type 3 effectors) and to unravel the evolutionary history of PFPs. Conclusions Our sequence analysis revealed that PFPs from P. syringae encode suites of accessory genes that are selected at different levels (universal, interpathovar and intrapathovar). The conservation of type IVSS encoding conjugation functions also contributes to the distribution of these plasmids within P. syringae populations. Thus, this study contributes to unravel the genetic bases of the role of PFPs in different P. syringae lifestyles. This work was supported by grants Proyecto de Excelencia, Junta de Andalucía (P07-AGR-02471; P12-AGR-1473) and by Michigan State University AgBioResearch.This work was supported by grants Proyecto de Excelencia, Junta de Andalucía (P07-AGR-02471; P12-AGR-1473) and by Michigan State University AgBioResearch; Universidad de Málaga. Campus de Excelencia Internacional Andalucía Tech
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