499 research outputs found

    Airborne HCl - CO sensing system

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    A system for measuring air pollutants in-situ using an aircraft was designed, fabricated, and tested. The system is based upon a technique called Gas Filter Correlation (GFC) which provides for high sensitivity and specificity in the presence of interfering species. This particular system was designed for measuring hydrochloric acid and carbon monoxide gases emitted from rocket exhaust effluents

    Chemistry of butter and butter making IV. The relationships among the cream acidity, the churning loss and the churning time

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    1. The influence of acidity, developed in cream that had been pasteurized while sweet and subsequently ripened, was studied over a pH range (in the buttermilk) from 4.5 to 7.0. 2. Three series of creams, viz., 20, 30 and 37.5 percent fat, were investigated. 3. The losses (calculated as percentage of the total fat) for all three series varied little in the pH range 7.0 to 5.5. In this region the least variation was encountered with 30 percent cream; such tendency in loss changes as was exhibited by 30 percent cream was toward a decreasing loss with decreasing pH, while the 37.5 percent cream losses tended to pass through a. minimum at pH 6.3 to 6.4. From pH 5.5 to pH 4.8 or 4.9 the losses rose to maxima (at 4.8 to 4.9) with 20 and 37.5 percent cream; a slight rise with no definite maximum at pH 4.8 to 4.9 occurred with 30 percent cream. With all three creams a marked change of function in the curves (loss vs. pH of buttermilk) occurred at pH 4.8 to 4.9; the loss dropped sharply and in practically linear fashion from that point to pH 4.5. 4. The above facts (especially the maximum at pH 4.8 to 4.9) were interpreted as indicating that casein plays an important role in the protection of the fat globules in cream, if the churning loss is taken as a measure of protective action. 5. The churning loss data correlated very well with electro-kinetic potentials of the fat globules, determined by Sommer and North and re-presented here. 6. Churning times show closer correlation with pH of buttermilk the lower the fat test of the cream. Other factors such as change in protein to fat ratio, increased viscosity, greater ease of whipping, lower specific gravity, etc., may be involved in affecting the churning times of the richer creams. 7. Churning time data in this and the third bulletin of this series indicate that, if the fat and serum in cream are in proper physical state and chemical equilibrium, no hard and fast rule can be drawn that long or short churning times must be associated with high losses. 8. Data show that the fat test of the buttermilk in low fat (18 to 20 percent), highly ripened creams (pH 4.5 to 4.6) is considerably lower than those for high fat (30 to 37.5 percent), sweet cream (pH 6.5). Calculated as the percentage of the total fat churned, however, the low fat, highly ripened cream losses are approximately equivalent to those for 30 percent sweet cream and are slightly higher than those for 37.5 percent sweet cream. This shows that the American, Australian and New Zealand churning losses compare very favorably with those obtained in Denmark, Germany and Holland. 9. Based on the data presented and others from the literature it was hypothecated that the protective action at the fat globule interface was caused by two types of protective materials- one labile and one non-labile. The latter is closely associated with the fat, presumably on the fat side of the interface, and consists of a protein-phospholipin complex. The former is oriented from the water side of the interface and is composed of all the surface tension lowering constituents of the serum. Of the serum constituents casein probably plays the most important protective role as indicated by certain dairy phenomena. 10. If the validity of the hypothesis presented is assumed, the following explanation of the churning process seems logical: Utilization of the labile protective materials, to stabilize foam interfaces, decreases their concentration at the fat-serum interface. When the labile to non-labile protective material ratio is sufficiently small that the fat globules are in an unstable state, they merge and lose their identity. This merger weakens the forces at the force centers of the fat globules to such an extent that the non-labile materials are released from the fat globule surfaces and are incorporated in the buttermilk, while the fat unites to form butter

    Earth Science Data Fusion with Event Building Approach

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    Objectives of the NASA Information And Data System (NAIADS) project are to develop a prototype of a conceptually new middleware framework to modernize and significantly improve efficiency of the Earth Science data fusion, big data processing and analytics. The key components of the NAIADS include: Service Oriented Architecture (SOA) multi-lingual framework, multi-sensor coincident data Predictor, fast into-memory data Staging, multi-sensor data-Event Builder, complete data-Event streaming (a work flow with minimized IO), on-line data processing control and analytics services. The NAIADS project is leveraging CLARA framework, developed in Jefferson Lab, and integrated with the ZeroMQ messaging library. The science services are prototyped and incorporated into the system. Merging the SCIAMACHY Level-1 observations and MODIS/Terra Level-2 (Clouds and Aerosols) data products, and ECMWF re- analysis will be used for NAIADS demonstration and performance tests in compute Cloud and Cluster environments

    A monument to the player: Preserving a landscape of socio-cultural capital in the transitional MMORPG

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    This is the pre-print version of the Article. The official published version can be accessed from the links below - Copyright @ 2012 Taylor & Francis LtdMassively multiplayer online role-playing games (MMORPGs) produce dynamic socio-ludic worlds that nurture both culture and gameplay to shape experiences. Despite the persistent nature of these games, however, the virtual spaces that anchor these worlds may not always be able to exist in perpetuity. Encouraging a community to migrate from one space to another is a challenge now facing some game developers. This paper examines the case of Guild Wars® and its “Hall of Monuments”, a feature that bridges the accomplishments of players from the current game to the forthcoming sequel. Two factor analyses describe the perspectives of 105 and 187 self-selected participants. The results reveal four factors affecting attitudes towards the feature, but they do not strongly correlate with existing motivational frameworks, and significant differences were found between different cultures within the game. This informs a discussion about the implications and facilitation of such transitions, investigating themes of capital, value perception and assumptive worlds. It is concluded that the way subcultures produce meaning needs to be considered when attempting to preserve the socio-cultural landscape

    An EMA analysis of the effect of increasing word length on consonant production in apraxia of speech: A case study

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    The effect of increasing word length on the articulatory dynamics (i.e. duration, distance, maximum acceleration, maximum deceleration, and maximum velocity) of consonant production in acquired apraxia of speech was investigated using electromagnetic articulography (EMA). Tongue-tip and tongue-back movement of one apraxic patient was recorded using the AG-200 EMA system during word-initial consonant productions in one, two, and three syllable words. Significantly deviant articulatory parameters were recorded for each of the target consonants during one, two, and three syllables words. Word length effects were most evident during the release phase of target consonant productions. The results are discussed with respect to theories of speech motor control as they relate to AOS

    Determination of Omega_b From Big Bang Nucleosynthesis in the Presence of Regions of Antimatter

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    Production of regions of antimatter in the early universe is predicted in many baryogenesis models. Small scale antimatter regions would annihilate during or soon after nucleosynthesis, affecting the abundances of the light elements. In this paper we study how the acceptable range in Omega_b changes in the presence of antimatter regions, as compared to the standard big bang nucleosynthesis. It turns out that it is possible to produce at the same time both a low 4He value (Y_p < 0.240) and a low D/H value (D/H < 4e-5), but overproduction of 7Li is unavoidable at large Omega_b.Comment: 9 pages, PRD version, ref. 6 correcte

    Toward a conceptual framework of emotional relationship marketing: an examination of two UK political parties

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    The purpose of this paper is to review the notion of branding and evaluate its applicability to political parties. As ideological politics is in decline, branding may provide a consistent narrative where voters feel a sense of warmth and belonging. The paper aims to build an understanding of the complexity of building a political brand where a combination of image, logo, leadership, and values can all contribute to a compelling brand narrative. It investigates how competing positive and negative messages attempt to build and distort the brand identity. A critical review of bran ding, relationship marketing, and political science literature articulates the conceptual development of branding and its applicability to political parties. The success or failure of negative campaigning is due to the authenticity of a political party’s brand values — creating a coherent brand story — if there is no distance between the brand values articulated by the political party and the values their community perceives then this creates an "authentic" brand. However, if there is a gap this paper illustrates how negative campaigning can be used to build a "doppelganger brand," which undermines the credibility of the authentic political brand. The paper argues that political parties need to understand how brand stories are developed but also how they can be used to protect against negative advertising. This has implications for political marketing strategists and political parties. This paper draws together branding theory and relationship marketing and incorporates them into a framework that makes a contribution to the political marketing literature

    Non-polynomial Worst-Case Analysis of Recursive Programs

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    We study the problem of developing efficient approaches for proving worst-case bounds of non-deterministic recursive programs. Ranking functions are sound and complete for proving termination and worst-case bounds of nonrecursive programs. First, we apply ranking functions to recursion, resulting in measure functions. We show that measure functions provide a sound and complete approach to prove worst-case bounds of non-deterministic recursive programs. Our second contribution is the synthesis of measure functions in nonpolynomial forms. We show that non-polynomial measure functions with logarithm and exponentiation can be synthesized through abstraction of logarithmic or exponentiation terms, Farkas' Lemma, and Handelman's Theorem using linear programming. While previous methods obtain worst-case polynomial bounds, our approach can synthesize bounds of the form O(nlogn)\mathcal{O}(n\log n) as well as O(nr)\mathcal{O}(n^r) where rr is not an integer. We present experimental results to demonstrate that our approach can obtain efficiently worst-case bounds of classical recursive algorithms such as (i) Merge-Sort, the divide-and-conquer algorithm for the Closest-Pair problem, where we obtain O(nlogn)\mathcal{O}(n \log n) worst-case bound, and (ii) Karatsuba's algorithm for polynomial multiplication and Strassen's algorithm for matrix multiplication, where we obtain O(nr)\mathcal{O}(n^r) bound such that rr is not an integer and close to the best-known bounds for the respective algorithms.Comment: 54 Pages, Full Version to CAV 201

    Enteral lactoferrin supplementation for very preterm infants: a randomised placebo-controlled trial

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    Background Infections acquired in hospital are an important cause of morbidity and mortality in very preterm infants. Several small trials have suggested that supplementing the enteral diet of very preterm infants with lactoferrin, an antimicrobial protein processed from cow's milk, prevents infections and associated complications. The aim of this large randomised controlled trial was to collect data to enhance the validity and applicability of the evidence from previous trials to inform practice. Methods In this randomised placebo-controlled trial, we recruited very preterm infants born before 32 weeks' gestation in 37 UK hospitals and younger than 72 h at randomisation. Exclusion criteria were presence of a severe congenital anomaly, anticipated enteral fasting for longer than 14 days, or no realistic prospect of survival. Eligible infants were randomly assigned (1:1) to receive either enteral bovine lactoferrin (150 mg/kg per day; maximum 300 mg/day; lactoferrin group) or sucrose (same dose; control group) once daily until 34 weeks' postmenstrual age. Web-based randomisation minimised for recruitment site, gestation (completed weeks), sex, and single versus multifetal pregnancy. Parents, caregivers, and outcome assessors were unaware of group assignment. The primary outcome was microbiologically confirmed or clinically suspected late-onset infection (occurring >72 h after birth), which was assessed in all participants for whom primary outcome data was available by calculating the relative risk ratio with 95% CI between the two groups. The trial is registered with the International Standard Randomised Controlled Trial Number 88261002. Findings We recruited 2203 participants between May 7, 2014, and Sept 28, 2017, of whom 1099 were assigned to the lactoferrin group and 1104 to the control group. Four infants had consent withdrawn or unconfirmed, leaving 1098 infants in the lactoferrin group and 1101 in the sucrose group. Primary outcome data for 2182 infants (1093 [99·5%] of 1098 in the lactoferrin group and 1089 [99·0] of 1101 in the control group) were available for inclusion in the modified intention-to-treat analyses. 316 (29%) of 1093 infants in the intervention group acquired a late-onset infection versus 334 (31%) of 1089 in the control group. The risk ratio adjusted for minimisation factors was 0·95 (95% CI 0·86–1·04; p=0·233). During the trial there were 16 serious adverse events for infants in the lactoferrin group and 10 for infants in the control group. Two events in the lactoferrin group (one case of blood in stool and one death after intestinal perforation) were assessed as being possibly related to the trial intervention. Interpretation Enteral supplementation with bovine lactoferrin does not reduce the risk of late-onset infection in very preterm infants. These data do not support its routine use to prevent late-onset infection and associated morbidity or mortality in very preterm infants. Funding UK National Institute for Health Research Health Technology Assessment programme (10/57/49)
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