1,684 research outputs found
Manoeuvring Experiments Using the MUN Explorer AUV
Autonomous Underwater Vehicles (AUVs) are
self-propelled robotic platforms that can perform a
predetermined mission completely unmanned. A series of
manoeuvring experiments were performed using the MUN
Explorer AUV during the summer of 2006 and a selection of
these experimental results are presented in this paper. The
purpose of these experiments was to collect a set of useful
data for validating a hydrodynamic model of the dynamic
performance of the vehicle. This paper aims at explaining the
methods and measures adopted in accomplishing this task.
Apart from providing a data set for validation of the
hydrodynamic model, the data record also shows the ability
of the AUV to perform extreme manoeuvres and the accuracy
with which it can follow a pre-planned mission
Manoeuvring Trials with the MUN Explorer AUV: Data Analysis and Observations
Manoeuvring trials are usually performed to
determine the manoeuvring characteristics of a marine vehicle. It
is through certain standard manoeuvres we evaluate the
robustness, performance and limitations of the vehicle control
system. A series of open-water manoeuvring trials were
performed using the MUN Explorer AUV in the summer of 2006.
The actual purpose of these experiments was to collect a set of
experimental data in order to validate a hydrodynamic model of
the dynamic performance of the vehicle. This paper presents the
results and observations from the analysis of a set of
manoeuvring trials data: in particular the results from straightline
(acceleration – deceleration) tests and turning circles. It
outlines briefly the method by which these tests were conducted
and discusses the results and observations made. Apart from
providing a data set for validation purposes, the results also
indicate the ability of the vehicle to follow a pre-planned mission
with precision
Gender differences in local and systemic reactions to inactivated influenza vaccine, established by a meta-analysis of fourteen independent studies
In order to determine whether there is a difference between genders in reported adverse reactions to inactivated influenza vaccine, a computerized database of serological studies was investigated. A standardized questionnaire was used to evaluate vaccine reactogenicity. A total of 1,800 vaccinees in 14 studies were analyzed separately for two age groups ( or = 60 years of age). Females reported significantly more local reactions than males. The pooled odds ratio for the outcome measure "any local reaction" was 0.32 (95% confidence interval, 0.26-0.40, significant) and 0.54 (95% Cl, 0.41-0.70, significant) for young and elderly adults, respectively. Similar results were obtained for the outcome measure "any systemic reaction." Previous exposure to influenza or influenza vaccine had no influence on reactogenicity. There were no gender differences in sero-responses. In conclusion, gender should be regarded as a predictor of reported reactions to influenza vaccine in both young and elderly adults and should be addressed in future study designs
New material of Laophis crotaloides, an enigmatic giant snake from Greece, with an overview of the largest fossil European vipers
Laophis crotaloides was described by Richard Owen as a new and very large fossil viperid snake species from Greece. The type material is apparently lost and the taxon was mostly neglected for more than a century. We here describe a new partial viperid vertebra, collected from the same locality and of equivalent size to the type material. This vertebra indicates that at least one of the three morphological characters that could be used to diagnose L. crotaloides is probably an artifact of the lithographer who prepared the illustration supporting the original description. A revised diagnosis of L. crotaloides is provided on the basis of the new specimen. Despite the fragmentary nature of the new vertebra, it confirms the validity of L. crotaloides, although its exact relationships within Viperidae remain unknown. The new find supports the presence of a large viperid snake in the early Pliocene of northern Greece, adding further data to the diversity of giant vipers from Europe
Antigen stripping from the nematode epicuticle using the cationic detergent cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB)
Antigen stripping from the nematode epicuticle using the cationic detergent cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB)
Submeter bathymetric mapping of volcanic and hydrothermal features on the East Pacific Rise crest at 9°50′N
Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2007. This article is posted here by permission of American Geophysical Union for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems 8 (2007): Q01006, doi:10.1029/2006GC001333.Recent advances in underwater vehicle navigation and sonar technology now permit detailed mapping of complex seafloor bathymetry found at mid-ocean ridge crests. Imagenex 881 (675 kHz) scanning sonar data collected during low-altitude (~5 m) surveys conducted with DSV Alvin were used to produce submeter resolution bathymetric maps of five hydrothermal vent areas at the East Pacific Rise (EPR) Ridge2000 Integrated Study Site (9°50′N, “bull's-eye”). Data were collected during 29 dives in 2004 and 2005 and were merged through a grid rectification technique to create high-resolution (0.5 m grid) composite maps. These are the first submeter bathymetric maps generated with a scanning sonar mounted on Alvin. The composite maps can be used to quantify the dimensions of meter-scale volcanic and hydrothermal features within the EPR axial summit trough (AST) including hydrothermal vent structures, lava pillars, collapse areas, the trough walls, and primary volcanic fissures. Existing Autonomous Benthic Explorer (ABE) bathymetry data (675 kHz scanning sonar) collected at this site provide the broader geologic context necessary to interpret the meter-scale features resolved in the composite maps. The grid rectification technique we employed can be used to optimize vehicle time by permitting the creation of high-resolution bathymetry maps from data collected during multiple, coordinated, short-duration surveys after primary dive objectives are met. This method can also be used to colocate future near-bottom sonar data sets within the high-resolution composite maps, enabling quantification of bathymetric changes associated with active volcanic, hydrothermal and tectonic processes.This work was supported by an NSF Ridge2000 fellowship
to V.L.F. and a Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
fellowship supported by the W. Alan Clark Senior Scientist
Chair (D.J.F.). Funding was also provided by the Censsis
Engineering Research Center of the National Science Foundation
under grant EEC-9986821. Support for field and laboratory studies
was provided by the National Science Foundation under grants
OCE-9819261 (D.J.F. and M.T.), OCE-0096468 (D.J.F. and
T.S.), OCE-0328117 (SMC), OCE-0525863 (D.J.F. and
S.A.S.), OCE-0112737 ATM-0427220 (L.L.W.), and OCE-
0327261 and OCE-0328117 (T.S.). Additional support was
provided by The Edwin Link Foundation (J.C.K.)
Searches for rare Bs0 and B 0 decays into four muons
Searches for rare Bs0 and B0 decays into four muons are performed using proton-proton collision data recorded by the LHCb experiment, corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 9 fb−1. Direct decays and decays via light scalar and J/ψ resonances are considered. No evidence for the six decays searched for is found and upper limits at the 95% confidence level on their branching fractions ranging between 1.8 × 10−10 and 2.6 × 10−9 are set. [Figure not available: see fulltext.
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