1,469 research outputs found
Spectral infrared hemispherical reflectance measurements for LDEF tray clamps
Infrared hemispherical reflectance measurements that were made on 58 chromic acid anodized tray clamps from LDEF are described. The measurements were made using a hemiellipsoidal mirror reflectometer with interferometer for wavelengths between 2-15 microns. The tray clamps investigated were from locations about the entire spacecraft and provided the opportunity for comparing the effects of atomic oxygen at each location. Results indicate there was essentially no dependence on atomic oxygen fluence for the surfaces studied, but there did appear to be a slight dependence on solar radiation exposure. The reflectances of the front sides of the tray clamps consistently were slightly higher than for the protected rear tray clamp surfaces
Surface drift charts for the Eastern Tropical Pacific Ocean
ENGLISH: For the region of the Eastern Tropical Pacific Ocean between 0° and 300 N, and between 1200 W and the coastline of the Americas, charts of surface drift have been prepared for each month of the year. These should be of interest to both mariners and oceanographers. SPANISH: Cartas de la deriva de superficie para la región del Océano Pacífico Oriental Tropical, comprendida entre 0° y 30° N., Y 120° O. y la línea de la costa de las Américas fueron preparadas por cada mes del año. Estas pueden interesar tanto a los marinos como a los oceanógrafos.
(PDF contains 23 pages.
Comparison of Ocular Outcomes in Two 14-Day Bed Rest Studies
Reports of astronauts' visual changes have raised concern about ocular health during long-duration spaceflight. Some of these findings include globe flattening with hyperopic shifts, choroidal folds, optic disc edema, retinal nerve fiber layer (RNFL) thickening, and cotton wool spots. While the etiology remains unknown, it is hypothesized that, in predisposed individuals, hypertension in the brain may follow cephalad fluid shifts during spaceflight. This possible mechanism of ocular changes may also apply to analogous cases of idiopathic intracranial hypertension (IIH) or pseudotumor cerebri on Earth patients. Head-down t ilt (HDT) bed rest is a spaceflight analog that induces cephalad fluid shifts. Previous studies of the HDT position demonstrated body fluid shifts associated with changes in intraocular pressure (IOP) but the conditions of bed rest varied among experiments, making it difficult to compare data and draw conclusions. For these reasons, vision evaluation of bed rest subjects was implemented for NASA bed rest studies since 2010, in an attempt to monitor vision health in subjects subjected to bed rest. Vision monitoring is thus currently performed in all NASA-conducted bed rest campaign
Long Duration Head-Down Tilt Bed Rest Studies: Safety Considerations Regarding Vision Health
Visual symptoms reported in astronauts returning from long duration missions in low Earth orbit, including hyperopic shift, choroidal folds, globe flattening and papilledema, are thought to be related to fluid shifts within the body due to microgravity exposure. Because of this possible relation to fluid shifts, safety considerations have been raised regarding the ocular health of head-down tilt (HDT) bed rest subjects. HDT is a widely used ground ]based analog that simulates physiological changes of spaceflight, including fluid shifts. Thus, vision monitoring has been performed in bed rest subjects in order to evaluate the safety of HDT with respect to vision health. Here we report ocular outcomes in 9 healthy subjects (age range: 27-48 years; Male/Female ratio: 8/1) completing bed rest Campaign 11, an integrated, multidisciplinary 70-day 6 degrees HDT bed rest study. Vision examinations were performed on a weekly basis, and consisted of office-based (2 pre- and 2 post-bed rest) and in-bed testing. The experimental design was a repeated measures design, with measurements for both eyes taken for each subject at each planned time point. Findings for the following tests were all reported as normal in each testing session for every subject: modified Amsler grid, red dot test, confrontational visual fields, color vision and fundus photography. Overall, no statistically significant differences were observed for any of the measures, except for both near and far visual acuity, which increased during the course of the study. This difference is not considered clinically relevant as may result from the effect of learning. Intraocular pressure results suggest a small increase at the beginning of the bed rest phase (p=0.059) and lesser increase at post-bed rest with respect to baseline (p=0.046). These preliminary results provide the basis for further analyses that will include correlations between intraocular pressure change pre- and post-bed rest, and optical coherence tomography measurements of the retina
Elastic energy of polyhedral bilayer vesicles
In recent experiments [M. Dubois, B. Dem\'e, T. Gulik-Krzywicki, J.-C.
Dedieu, C. Vautrin, S. D\'esert, E. Perez, and T. Zemb, Nature (London) Vol.
411, 672 (2001)] the spontaneous formation of hollow bilayer vesicles with
polyhedral symmetry has been observed. On the basis of the experimental
phenomenology it was suggested [M. Dubois, V. Lizunov, A. Meister, T.
Gulik-Krzywicki, J. M. Verbavatz, E. Perez, J. Zimmerberg, and T. Zemb, Proc.
Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. Vol. 101, 15082 (2004)] that the mechanism for the
formation of bilayer polyhedra is minimization of elastic bending energy.
Motivated by these experiments, we study the elastic bending energy of
polyhedral bilayer vesicles. In agreement with experiments, and provided that
excess amphiphiles exhibiting spontaneous curvature are present in sufficient
quantity, we find that polyhedral bilayer vesicles can indeed be energetically
favorable compared to spherical bilayer vesicles. Consistent with experimental
observations we also find that the bending energy associated with the vertices
of bilayer polyhedra can be locally reduced through the formation of pores.
However, the stabilization of polyhedral bilayer vesicles over spherical
bilayer vesicles relies crucially on molecular segregation of excess
amphiphiles along the ridges rather than the vertices of bilayer polyhedra.
Furthermore, our analysis implies that, contrary to what has been suggested on
the basis of experiments, the icosahedron does not minimize elastic bending
energy among arbitrary polyhedral shapes and sizes. Instead, we find that, for
large polyhedron sizes, the snub dodecahedron and the snub cube both have lower
total bending energies than the icosahedron
Six-Degree Head-Down Tilt Bed Rest: Forty Years of Development as a Physiological Analog for Weightlessness
Early on, bed rest was recognized as a method for inducing many of the physiological changes experienced by spaceflight. Head-down tilt (HDT) bed rest was first introduced as an analog for spaceflight by a Soviet team led by Genin and Kakurin. Their study was performed in 1970 (at -4 degrees) and lasted for 30 days; results were reported in the Russian Journal of Space Biology (Kosmicheskaya Biol. 1972; 6(4): 26-28 & 45-109). The goal was to test physiological countermeasures for cosmonauts who would soon begin month-long missions to the Salyut space station. HDT was chosen to produce a similar sensation of blood flow to the head reported by Soyuz cosmonauts. Over the next decade, other tilt angles were studied and comparisons with spaceflight were made, showing that HDT greater than 4 degrees was superior to horizontal bed rest for modeling acute physiological changes observed in space; but, at higher angles, subjects experienced greater discomfort without clearly improving the physiological comparison to spaceflight. A joint study performed by US and Soviet investigators, in 1979, set the goal of standardization of baseline conditions and chose 6-degrees HDT. This effectively established 6-degree HDT bed rest as the internationally-preferred analog for weightlessness and, since 1990, nearly all further studies have been conducted at 6-degrees HDT. A thorough literature review (1970-2010) revealed 534 primary scientific journal articles which reported results from using HDT as a physiological analog for spaceflight. These studies have ranged from as little as 10 minutes to the longest duration of 370 days. Long-term studies lasting four weeks or more have resulted in over 170 primary research articles. Today, the 6-degree HDT model provides a consistent, thoroughly-tested, ground-based analog for spaceflight and allows the proper scientific controls for rigorous testing of physiological countermeasures; however, all models have their strengths and limits. The 6-degrees HDT model must continue to be scrutinized, re-examined, validated and compared to other analog environments whenever possible. Only by understanding the strengths and limits of this model, will it continue to serve as a critical physiological analog to spaceflight for many more years to come
Comparison of Structural and Functional Ocular Outcomes Between 14- and 70-Day Bed Rest
To compare structural and functional ocular outcomes between14-and 70-day HDTBR in healthy human subjects
Ocular Outcomes Comparison Between 14- and 70-day Head-down Tilt Bed Rest
No abstract availabl
Locked and Unlocked Chains of Planar Shapes
We extend linkage unfolding results from the well-studied case of polygonal
linkages to the more general case of linkages of polygons. More precisely, we
consider chains of nonoverlapping rigid planar shapes (Jordan regions) that are
hinged together sequentially at rotatable joints. Our goal is to characterize
the families of planar shapes that admit locked chains, where some
configurations cannot be reached by continuous reconfiguration without
self-intersection, and which families of planar shapes guarantee universal
foldability, where every chain is guaranteed to have a connected configuration
space. Previously, only obtuse triangles were known to admit locked shapes, and
only line segments were known to guarantee universal foldability. We show that
a surprisingly general family of planar shapes, called slender adornments,
guarantees universal foldability: roughly, the distance from each edge along
the path along the boundary of the slender adornment to each hinge should be
monotone. In contrast, we show that isosceles triangles with any desired apex
angle less than 90 degrees admit locked chains, which is precisely the
threshold beyond which the inward-normal property no longer holds.Comment: 23 pages, 25 figures, Latex; full journal version with all proof
details. (Fixed crash-induced bugs in the abstract.
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