2,516 research outputs found
Electroexcitation of nucleon resonances at Q^2=0.65 GeV/c^2 from a combined analysis of single- and double-pion electroproduction data
Data on single- and double-charged pion electroproduction off protons are
successfully described in the second and third nucleon resonance regions with
common N* photocouplings. The analysis was carried out using separate isobar
models for both reactions. From the combined analysis of two exclusive
channels, the gamma* p --> N*+ helicity amplitudes are obtained for the
resonances P11(1440), D13(1520), S31(1620), S11(1650), F15(1680), D33(1700),
D13(1700), and P13(1720) at Q2=0.65 GeV/c^2.Comment: 12 pages, 12 figures (eps), Published in PHYSICAL REVIEW C 72, 045201
(2005
Homozygous mutation in the prokineticin-receptor2 gene (Val274Asp) presenting as reversible Kallmann syndrome and persistent oligozoospermia: case report.
Prokineticin 2 (Prok2) or prokineticin-receptor2 (Prok-R2) gene mutations are associated with Kallmann syndrome
(KS). We describe a new homozygous mutation of Prok-R2 gene in a man displaying KS with an apparent reversal of
hypogonadism. The proband, offspring of consanguineous parents, presented at age 19 years with absent puberty, no
sense of smell, low testosterone and gonadotrophin levels. Magnetic resonance imaging showed olfactory bulb absence.
The patient achieved virilization and spermatogenesis with gonadotrophin administration. Two years after discontinuing
hormonal therapy, he maintained moderate oligozoospermia and normal testosterone levels. Prok2 and Prok-
R2 gene sequence analyses were performed. The proband had a homozygous mutation in Prok-R2 exon 2 that harbours
the c.T820>A base substitution, causing the introduction of an aspartic acid in place of valine at position 274
(Val274Asp). His mother had the same mutation in heterozygous state. This report describes a novel homozygous
mutation of Prok-R2 gene in a man with variant KS, underlying the role of Prok-R2 gene in the olfactory and reproductive
system development in humans. Present findings indicate that markedly delayed activation of gonadotrophin
secretion may occur in some KS cases with definite gene defects, and that oligozoospermia might result from a variant
form of reversible hypogonadotrophic hypogonadism
Multi-scale techniques for mansonry structures
The aim of this work is, hence, to adopt the computational homogenization techniques to obtain the
global response of masonry structures.
Since the experimental global response curves, obtained in typical shear tests on masonry panels, show
stiffness and resistance degradation, damage is the fundamental ingredients which must be taken into
account in such problems.
Moreover, as it is well known, due to the aforementioned softening behavior, regularization techniques
are required in order to avoid spurious mesh dependencies when a numerical solution is sought in the
framework of finite element method.
The first step of this work is the adoption of the standard first order computational homogenization,
where Cauchy continuum is used both at the macro and micro-level. This approach is well known in
literature and several authors applied it to different engineering problems. An example of the adoption of regularization techniques in the context of multi-scale approaches is found in Massart (2003).
Hence a regularization based on the imposition of the macroscopical length scale at the micro-level, in
the framework of the fracture energy regularization, is proposed.
However, as previously stated, many authors have pointed out the inner limits of first order computational homogenization. Such a formulation, in fact, may be adopted only if
1)the microstructure is very small with respect to the characteristic size at the macro-scale;
2)the absolute size of the constituents does not affect the mechanical properties of the homogenized
medium and in presence of low macroscopic gradients of stresses and strains.
As a consequence no localization phenomena typically exhibited by masonry can be analyzed.
For masonry structures, instead, microstructural typical sizes are comparable with the macro-structural
sizes; shape, size and arrangement of the constituents strongly affect the mechanical global response and
high deformation gradients typically appear.
An enriched formulation is then proposed in order to overcome these problems, based on the adoption
of a Cosserat medium at the macro-level and a Cauchy medium at the micro-level. The theoretical and
computational schemes remain the same as before but for the fact that the two media present different
variables. In particular in the Cosserat medium additional strain and stress variables appear, with respect
to the Cauchy continuum, as a consequence of the independent rotational degree of freedom assigned to
every material point. Thus, a more sophisticated kinematic map, containing higher order polynomial
expansions, is needed to state proper bridging conditions between the two levels.
The innovative contribution of this work concerns the adoption of an enhanced multi-scale computational homogenization technique for studying the masonry response, together with the employment of
damage models for the constituents description.
Thus, by exploiting the inner regularization properties of the Cosserat continuum at the macro-level and
by adopting a classical fracture energy regularization at the micro-level, localization phenomena, typically exhibited by masonry structures, are analyzed. Since this material shows a typical strain softening
behavior, an ad hoc regularization technique has been developed at both levels in order to obtain objective numerical responses. To the knowledge of the author, no previous examples of Cosserat-Cauchy
computational homogenization techniques, taking into account localization effects, have been presented.
A possible objection to the use of a fully-coupled multi-scale technique could be related to the high computational efforts required, but here the use of parallel computing brings them down. In this context,
these procedures strike a good balance between the achievement of detailed information at the scale of
the constituents and the requirement of holding the computational costs down
Efficient Thermal Electric Skipping Strategy Applied to the Control of Series/Parallel Hybrid Powertrain
The optimal control of hybrid powertrains represents one of the most challenging tasks for the compliance with the legislation concerning CO2 and pollutant emission of vehicles. Most common off-line optimization strategies (Pontryagin minimum principle-PMP-or dynamic programming) allow to identify the optimal control along a predefined driving mission at the expense of a quite relevant computational effort. On-line strategies, suitable for on-vehicle implementation, involve a certain performance degradation depending on their degree of simplification and computational effort. In this work, a simplified control strategy is presented, where the conventional power-split logics, typical of the above-mentioned strategies, is here replaced with an alternative utilization of the thermal and electric units for the vehicle driving (Efficient Thermal Electric Skipping Strategy-ETESS). The choice between the units is realized at each time and is based on the comparison between the effective fuel rate of the thermal engine and an equivalent fuel rate related to the electrical power consumption. The equivalent fuel rate in a pure electric driving is associated to a combination of brake specific fuel consumption of the thermal engine, and electro-mechanical efficiencies along the driveline. The ETESS is applied for the simulation of segment C hybrid vehicle, equipped with a thermal engine and two electric units (motor and generator). The methodology is tested along regulatory driving cycles (WLTP, Artemis) and RDE, with different powertrain variants. Numerical results underline that the proposed approach performs very close to most common control strategies (consumed fuel per kilometer higher than PMP of about 1% on average). The main advantage is a reduced computational effort (decrease of 99% on average). The ETESS is straightforwardly adapted for an on-line implementation, through the introduction of an adaptative factor, preserving the computational effort and the fuel economy
Identifying factors associated with the success and failure of terrestrial insect translocations
Translocation is increasingly used as a management strategy to mitigate the effects of human activity on biodiversity. Based on the current literature, we summarised trends in terrestrial insect translocations and identified factors associated with success and failure. As the authors’ definitions of success and failure varied according to the individual sets of goals and objectives in each project, we adopted a standardised species-specific definition of success. We applied generalised linear models and information-theoretic model selection to identify the most important factors associated with translocation success. We found literature documenting the translocation of 74 terrestrial insect species to 134 release sites. Of the translocations motivated by conservation, 52% were considered successful, 31% were considered to have failed and 17% were undetermined. Our results indicate that the number of individuals released at a translocation site was the most important factor associated with translocation success, despite this being a relatively infrequent perceived cause of failure as reported by authors. Factors relating to weather and climate and habitat quality were the most commonly perceived causes of translocation failure by authors. Consideration of these factors by managers during the planning process may increase the chance of success in future translocation attempts of terrestrial insects
Employment of an auto-regressive model for knock detection supported by 1D and 3D analyses
In this work, experimental data, carried out on a twin-cylinder turbocharged engine at full load operations and referred to a spark advance of borderline knock, are used to characterize the effects of cyclic dispersion on knock phenomena. 200 consecutive incylinder pressure signals are processed through a refined Auto-Regressive Moving Average (ARMA) mathematical technique, adopted to define the percentage of knocking cycles, through a prefixed threshold level. The heuristic method used for the threshold selection is then verified by 1D and 3D analyses. In particular, a 1D model, properly accounting for cycle-by-cycle variations, and coupled to a reduced kinetic sub-model, is used to reproduce the measured cycles, in terms of statistical distribution of a theoretical knock index. In addition, few individual cycles, representative of the whole dataset, are selected in a single operating condition in order to perform a more detailed knock analysis by means of a 3D CFD approach, coupled to a tabulated chemistry technique for auto-ignition modeling. Outcomes of 1D and 3D models are compared to the ARMA results and a substantial coherence of the numerical and experimental results is demonstrated. The integrated 1D and 3D analyses can hence help in supporting the choice of the experimental threshold level for knock identification, following a more standardized theoretical approach
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