3,927 research outputs found
A review of the mosquito species (Diptera: Culicidae) of Bangladesh
© The Author(s). 2016 Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated. The attached file is the published version of the article
Particle swarm optimisation algorithms and their application to controller design for flexible structure systems
Particle swarm optimisation (PSO) is one of the relatively new optimisation techniques, which has become increasingly popular in tuning and designing controllers for different applications. A major problem is that simple PSO have a tendency to converge to local optima, mainly, due to lack of diversity in the particles as the algorithm proceeds and improper selection of other parameters. Maintaining diversity within a population is challenging for PSO, especially for dynamic problems. In order to increase diversity in the search space and to improve convergence, a new variant of PSO is proposed. The increased interest from industry and real-world applications has led to several modifications in the conventional algorithms so as to deal with multiple conflicting objectives and constraints. A modified multi-objective PSO (MOPSO) proposal is made which will allow the algorithm to deal with multi-objective optimisation problems. The main challenge, in designing a MOPSO algorithm, is to select local and global best for each particle so as to obtain a wide range of solutions that trade-off among the conflicting objectives. In the proposed algorithm, a new technique is introduced that combines external archive and non-dominated fronts of the current population in order to select the global best for each particle. The effectiveness of the proposed algorithm is assessed with two examples in controller design for vibration control of flexible structure systems and satisfactory results have been obtained
Is famine exposure during developmental life in rural Bangladesh associated with a metabolic and epigenetic signature in young adulthood? A historical cohort study
Objectives Famine exposure in utero can ‘programme’ an individual towards type 2 diabetes and obesity in later life. We sought to identify, (1) whether Bangladeshis exposed to famine during developmental life are programmed towards diabetes and obesity, (2) whether this programming was specific to gestational or postnatal exposure windows and (3) whether epigenetic differences were associated with famine exposure.
Design A historical cohort study was performed as part of a wider cross-sectional survey. Exposure to famine was defined through birth date and historical records and participants were selected according to: (A) exposure to famine in postnatal life, (B) exposure to famine during gestation and (C) unexposed.
Setting Matlab, a rural area in the Chittagong division of Bangladesh.
Participants Young adult men and women (n=190) recruited to a historical cohort study with a randomised subsample included in an epigenetic study (n=143).
Outcome measures Primary outcome measures of weight, body mass index and oral glucose tolerance tests (0 and 120 min glucose). Secondary outcome measures included DNA methylation using genome-wide and targeted analysis of metastable epialleles sensitive to maternal nutrition.
Results More young adults exposed to famine in gestation were underweight than those postnatally exposed or unexposed. In contrast, more young adults exposed to famine postnatally were overweight compared to those gestationally exposed or unexposed. Underweight adults exposed to famine in gestation in utero were hyperglycaemic following a glucose tolerance test, and those exposed postnatally had elevated fasting glucose, compared to those unexposed. Significant differences in DNA methylation at seven metastable epialleles (VTRNA2-1, PAX8, PRDM-9, near ZFP57, near BOLA, EXD3) known to vary with gestational famine exposure were identified.
Conclusions Famine exposure in developmental life programmed Bangladeshi offspring towards diabetes and obesity in adulthood but gestational and postnatal windows of exposure had variable effects on phenotype. DNA methylation differences were replicated at previously identified metastable epialleles sensitive to periconceptual famine exposure
System identification of a twin rotor multi-input multi-output system using adaptive filters with pseudo random binary input
This paper presents an investigation into the development of a parametric model of pitch movement of a twin rotor multi-input multi-output system (TRMS) using adaptive finite impulse response (FIR) models. The TRMS is a laboratory platform designed for control experiments. In certain aspects, its behaviour resembles that of a helicopter. It typifies a high-order nonlinear system with significant cross coupling between its two channels. The system is initially excited with PRBS signals of different bandwidths to ensure that all resonance modes are captured. The PRBS magnitude is selected so that it does not drive the system out of its linear operating range. Then, an adaptive FIR filter structure with LMS, NLMS, and genetic algorithm (GA) with LMS algorithms is investigated to identify the system and extract its parametric model. Effects of filter taps, step-size and system convergence are also studied. Performances of the employed techniques are assessed and presented in time and frequency domains
Stability Testing of Beclomethasone Dipropionate Nanoemulsion
Purpose: To perform stability studies on a nanoemulsion formulation containing beclomethasone dipropionate (BD) and prepared by spontaneous emulsification method.Method: A nanoemulsion (o/w) containing BD was prepared using eucalyptus oil, Tween-40, ethanol and distilled water. The nanoemulsions were characterized by droplet size, pH, viscosity, conductivity and refractive index. Stability studies were performed according to International Council on Harmonization (ICH) guidelines over a period of 3 months. Droplet size, pH, viscosity, conductivity and refractive index were determined monthly for 3 months. The shelf-life of the nanoemulsion formulation was determined by accelerated stability testing.Results: The droplet size, conductivity, viscosity, pH and refractive index of the optimized formulations did not change significantly (p ≥ 0.05) after 3 months of storage at room temperature (25 ºC). The shelf life was 1.83 years at room temperature.Conclusion: The study demonstrates that the physical and chemical stability of BD is enhanced when it is formulated as a nanoemulsion.Keywords: Nanoemulsion, Beclomethasone dipropionate, Shelf-life, Accelerated stability, Viscosity, Conductivity, Refractive inde
Accretions of Various Types of Dark Energies onto Morris-Thorne Wormhole
In this work, we have studied accretion of the dark energies onto
Morris-Thorne wormhole. For quintessence like dark energy, the mass of the
wormhole decreases and phantom like dark energy, the mass of wormhole
increases. We have assumed two types of dark energy like variable modified
Chaplygin gas (VMCG) and generalized cosmic Chaplygin gas (GCCG). We have found
the expression of wormhole mass in both cases. We have found the mass of the
wormhole at late universe and this is finite. For our choices the parameters
and the function , these models generate only quintessence dark energy
(not phantom) and so wormhole mass decreases during evolution of the universe.
Next we have assumed 5 kinds of parametrizations of well known dark energy
models. These models generate both quintessence and phantom scenarios. So if
these dark energies accrete onto the wormhole, then for quintessence stage,
wormhole mass decreases upto a certain value (finite value) and then again
increases to infinite value for phantom stage during whole evolution of the
universe. We also shown these results graphically.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures. arXiv admin note: text overlap with
arXiv:1112.615
CP violation Beyond the MSSM: Baryogenesis and Electric Dipole Moments
We study electroweak baryogenesis and electric dipole moments in the presence
of the two leading-order, non-renormalizable operators in the Higgs sector of
the MSSM. Significant qualitative and quantitative differences from MSSM
baryogenesis arise due to the presence of new CP-violating phases and to the
relaxation of constraints on the supersymmetric spectrum (in particular, both
stops can be light). We find: (1) spontaneous baryogenesis, driven by a change
in the phase of the Higgs vevs across the bubble wall, becomes possible; (2)
the top and stop CP-violating sources can become effective; (3) baryogenesis is
viable in larger parts of parameter space, alleviating the well-known
fine-tuning associated with MSSM baryogenesis. Nevertheless, electric dipole
moments should be measured if experimental sensitivities are improved by about
one order of magnitude.Comment: 33 pages, 6 figure
Holographic zero sound at finite temperature in the Sakai-Sugimoto model
In this paper, we study the fate of the holographic zero sound mode at finite
temperature and non-zero baryon density in the deconfined phase of the
Sakai-Sugimoto model of holographic QCD. We establish the existence of such a
mode for a wide range of temperatures and investigate the dispersion relation,
quasi-normal modes, and spectral functions of the collective excitations in
four different regimes, namely, the collisionless quantum, collisionless
thermal, and two distinct hydrodynamic regimes. For sufficiently high
temperatures, the zero sound completely disappears, and the low energy physics
is dominated by an emergent diffusive mode. We compare our findings to
Landau-Fermi liquid theory and to other holographic models.Comment: 1+24 pages, 19 figures, PDFTeX, v2: some comments and references
added, v3: some clarifications relating to the different regimes added,
matches version accepted for publication in JHEP, v4: corrected typo in eq.
(3.18
Back-reaction of Non-supersymmetric Probes: Phase Transition and Stability
We consider back-reaction by non-supersymmetric D7/anti-D7 probe branes in
the Kuperstein-Sonnenschein model at finite temperature. Using the smearing
technique, we obtain an analytical solution for the back-reacted background to
leading order in N_f/N_c. This back-reaction explicitly breaks the conformal
invariance and introduces a dimension 6 operator in the dual field theory which
is an irrelevant deformation of the original conformal field theory. We further
probe this back-reacted background by introducing an additional set of probe
brane/anti-brane. This additional probe sector undergoes a chiral phase
transition at finite temperature, which is absent when the back-reaction
vanishes. We investigate the corresponding phase diagram and the thermodynamics
associated with this phase transition. We also argue that additional probes do
not suffer from any instability caused by the back-reaction, which suggests
that this system is stable beyond the probe limit.Comment: 56 pages, 8 figures. References updated, improved discussion on
dimension eight operato
The use of medicinal plants in health care practices by Rohingya refugees in a degraded forest and conservation area of Bangladesh
People in developing countries traditionally rely on plants for their primary healthcare. This dependence is relatively higher in forests in remote areas due to the lack of access to modern health facilities and easy availability of the plant products.We carried out an ethno-medicinal survey in Teknaf Game Reserve (TGR), a heavily degraded forest and conservation area in southern Bangladesh, to explore the diversity of plants used by Rohingya refugees for treating various ailments. The study also documented the traditional utilization, collection and perceptions of medicinal plants by the Rohingyas residing on the edges of this conservation area. We collected primary information through direct observation and by interviewing older respondents using a semi-structured questionnaire. A total of 34 plant species in 28 families were frequently used by the Rohingyas to treat 45 ailments, ranging from simple headaches to highly complex eye and heart diseases. For medicinal preparations and treating various ailments, aboveground plant parts were used more than belowground parts. The collection of medicinal plants was mostly from the TGR. © 2009 Taylor & Francis
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