1,598 research outputs found
Alien Registration- Purdy, Anna B. (Baldwin, Cumberland County)
https://digitalmaine.com/alien_docs/32983/thumbnail.jp
Spheres tangent to all the faces of a simplex
AbstractThere are at most 2n spheres tangent to all n + 1 faces of an n-simplex. It has been shown that the minimum number of such spheres is 2n − c(n, 12(n + 1)) if n is odd and 2n − c(n, 12(n + 1)) if n is even. The object of this note is to show that this result is a consequence of a theorem in graph theory
ThermoPhyl : a software tool for selecting phylogenetically optimized conventional and quantitative-PCR taxon-targeted assays for use with complex samples
The ability to specifically and sensitively target genotypes of interest is critical
for the success of many PCR-based analyses of environmental or clinical samples that
contain multiple templates.Next-generation sequence data clearly show that such
samples can harbour hundreds to thousands of operational taxonomic units; a richness
which precludes the manual evaluation of candidate assay specificity and sensitivity
using multiple sequence alignments. To solve this problem we have developed and
validated a free software tool which automates the identification of PCR assays
targeting specific genotypes in complex samples. ThermoPhyl uses user-defined
target and non-target sequence databases to assess the phylogenetic sensitivity and
specificity of thermodynamically optimised candidate assays derived from primer
design software packages. ThermoPhyl takes its name from its central premise of
testing Thermodynamically optimal assays for Phylogenetic specificity and
sensitivity and can be used for two primer (traditional PCR) or two primers with an
internal probe (e.g. TaqMan® qPCR) applications and potentially for oligonucleotide
probes.Here we describe the use of ThermoPhyl for traditional PCR and qPCR assays.
PCR assays selected using ThermoPhyl were validated using 454 pyrosequencing of a
traditional specific PCR assay and with a set of four genotype-specific qPCR assays
applied to estuarine sediment samples
Amplification of Reynolds number dependent processes by wave distortion
A system using a hot-wire transducer as an analog of a liquid droplet of propellant was employed to investigate the ingredients of the acoustic instability of liquid-propellant rocket engines. It was assumed that the combustion process was vaporization-limited and that the combustion chamber was acoustically similar to a closed-closed right-circular cylinder. Before studying the hot-wire closed-loop system (the analog system), a microphone closed-loop system, which used the response of a microphone as the source of a linear feedback exciting signal, was investigated to establish the characteristics of self-sustenance of acoustic fields. Self-sustained acoustic fields were found to occur only at resonant frequencies of the chamber. In the hot-wire closed-loop system, the response of hot-wire anemometer was used as the source of the feedback exciting signal. The self-sustained acoustic fields which developed in the system were always found to be harmonically distorted and to have as their fundamental frquency a resonant frequency for which there also existed a second resonant frequency which was approximately twice the fundamental frequency
Are logics enough? Framing as an alternative tool for understanding institutional meaning making
Understanding institutions requires attending both to their social fact qualities and to the bidirectional nature of institutional processes as they influence and are influenced by actors. We advocate for frames and framing as tools to elucidate meaning making activities, and to explain whether and how meanings subsequently spread, scale up, and perhaps become widely institutionalized. Frames as cognitive structures provide resources for actors and shape what they see as possible, while framing as an interaction process is a source of agency that is imbedded in the everyday activities of individuals, groups, and organizations. In making the case for the framing approach, we consider how the extensive use of the logics approach in organization theory research has created confusion about what logics are and how they accommodate both structure and agency. We conclude with a discussion of the phenomenological and ontological potential of frames and framing
A Bichromatic Incidence Bound and an Application
We prove a new, tight upper bound on the number of incidences between points
and hyperplanes in Euclidean d-space. Given n points, of which k are colored
red, there are O_d(m^{2/3}k^{2/3}n^{(d-2)/3} + kn^{d-2} + m) incidences between
the k red points and m hyperplanes spanned by all n points provided that m =
\Omega(n^{d-2}). For the monochromatic case k = n, this was proved by Agarwal
and Aronov.
We use this incidence bound to prove that a set of n points, no more than n-k
of which lie on any plane or two lines, spans \Omega(nk^2) planes. We also
provide an infinite family of counterexamples to a conjecture of Purdy's on the
number of hyperplanes spanned by a set of points in dimensions higher than 3,
and present new conjectures not subject to the counterexample.Comment: 12 page
A physically-motivated quantisation of the electromagnetic field on curved spacetimes
Recently, Bennett et al. [Eur. J. Phys. 37:014001, 2016] presented a physically-motivated and explicitly gauge-independent scheme for the quantisation of the electromagnetic field in flat Minkowski space. In this paper we generalise this field quantisation scheme to curved spacetimes.Working within the standard assumptions of quantum field theory and only postulating the physicality of the photon, we derive the Hamiltonian, H, and the electric and magnetic field observables, E and B, without having to invoke a specific gauge. As an example, we quantise the electromagnetic field in the spacetime of an accelerated Minkowski observer, Rindler space, and demonstrate consistency with other field quantisation schemes by reproducing the Unruh effect
Vein of Galen arteriovenous malformation with PAPVR and use of serial B-type natriuretic peptide levels in the management: a case report and review of the literature
Abstract Background Arteriovenous malformation of the vein of Galen with partial anomalous pulmonary venous return can lead to a critically challenging condition associated with a high morbidity and mortality. Case report We report a case of a full term infant born with a vein of Gallen arteriovenous malformation complicated by partial anomalous pulmonary venous return and congestive heart failure where B-type natriuretic peptide was used as a vital tool in clinical assessment and treatment management. Conclusions Rapid diagnosis and treatment in infants with complex conditions such as this are imperative to expedite appropriate treatments, preventing long term negative outcome
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