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Long-tem Effects of Multiple Disturbances on Soil Properties and Regeneration in a Colorado Subalpine Forest
Compound disturbances occur when multiple disturbances happen in rapid succession, and may result in changes to ecosystem recovery processes. Activities performed by management agencies ,such as salvage-logging, following severe disturbances may act as a compound disturbance by altering the ecosystem’s recovery mechanisms. The site of the present study, located in Routt National Forest, Colorado, sustained a catastrophic blowdown event that impacted over 10,000 ha in 1997 and was partially salvage - logged between 1998 and 2001. The present study evaluates the interacting effects of these two disturbance events on soil characteristics, seedling regeneration, growth and density, and any changes to community composition. These measurements were recorded within ten heavily wind-damaged Picea-Abies stands, ten salvage - logged blowdown stands, and ten intact control stands. While soil characteristic results suggest a long-term significant difference between treatments, trends initially observed post disturbance generally diminished over time. Similarly, regeneration characteristics were significantly different between treatments but less significant so than for the short-term effects. This apparent differential recovery suggests that salvage-logging following severe blowdown results in reduced regeneration and in lasting alterations of soil properties. The present findings thus suggest that salvage-logging does act as a compound disturbance. With climate change, more frequent and severe disturbances may occur, and it is thus necessary for management agencies to quantitatively evaluate the potential compounding effects of their decisions
Multi-objective design optimisation of a 3D-rail stamping process using a robust multi-objective optimisation platform (RMOP)
The paper investigates the multi-objective design optimisation of a stamping process to control the final shape and the final quality using advanced high strength steels. The design problem of the stamping process is formulated to minimise the difference between the desired shape and the final geometry obtained by numerical simulation accounting elastic springback.
In addition, the final product quality is maximised by improving safety zones without wrinkling, thinning, or
failure.
Numerical results show that the proposed methodology improves the final product quality while reduces
its springback.Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version
Fabrication and characterization of erbium-doped toroidal microcavity lasers
Erbium-doped SiO2 toroidal microcavity lasers are fabricated on a Si substrate using a combination of optical lithography, etching, Er ion implantation, and CO2 laser reflow. Erbium is either preimplanted in the SiO2 base material or postimplanted into a fully fabricated microtoroid. Three-dimensional infrared confocal photoluminescence spectroscopy imaging is used to determine the spatial distribution of optically active Er ions in the two types of microtoroids, and distinct differences are found. Microprobe Rutherford backscattering spectrometry indicates that no macroscopic Er diffusion occurs during the laser reflow for preimplanted microtoroids. From the measured Er doping profiles and calculated optical mode distributions the overlap factor between the Er distribution and mode profile is calculated: Gamma=0.066 and Gamma=0.02 for postimplanted and preimplanted microtoroids, respectively. Single and multimode lasing around 1.5 µm is observed for both types of microtoroids, with the lowest lasing threshold (4.5 µW) observed for the preimplanted microtoroids, which possess the smallest mode volume. When excited in the proper geometry, a clear mode spectrum is observed superimposed on the Er spontaneous emission spectrum. This result indicates the coupling of Er ions to cavity modes
Enterprise Reference Library
Introduction: Johnson Space Center (JSC) offers two extensive libraries that contain journals, research literature and electronic resources. Searching capabilities are available to those individuals residing onsite or through a librarian s search. Many individuals have rich collections of references, but no mechanisms to share reference libraries across researchers, projects, or directorates exist. Likewise, information regarding which references are provided to which individuals is not available, resulting in duplicate requests, redundant labor costs and associated copying fees. In addition, this tends to limit collaboration between colleagues and promotes the establishment of individual, unshared silos of information The Integrated Medical Model (IMM) team has utilized a centralized reference management tool during the development, test, and operational phases of this project. The Enterprise Reference Library project expands the capabilities developed for IMM to address the above issues and enhance collaboration across JSC. Method: After significant market analysis for a multi-user reference management tool, no available commercial tool was found to meet this need, so a software program was built around a commercial tool, Reference Manager 12 by The Thomson Corporation. A use case approach guided the requirements development phase. The premise of the design is that individuals use their own reference management software and export to SharePoint when their library is incorporated into the Enterprise Reference Library. This results in a searchable user-specific library application. An accompanying share folder will warehouse the electronic full-text articles, which allows the global user community to access full -text articles. Discussion: An enterprise reference library solution can provide a multidisciplinary collection of full text articles. This approach improves efficiency in obtaining and storing reference material while greatly reducing labor, purchasing and duplication costs. Most importantly, increasing collaboration across research groups provides unprecedented access to information relevant to NASA s mission. Conclusion: This project is an expansion and cost-effective leveraging of the existing JSC centralized library. Adding key word and author search capabilities and an alert function for notifications about new articles, based on users profiles, represent examples of future enhancements
Numerical study of anharmonic vibrational decay in amorphous and paracrystalline silicon
The anharmonic decay rates of atomic vibrations in amorphous silicon (a-Si)
and paracrystalline silicon (p-Si), containing small crystalline grains
embedded in a disordered matrix, are calculated using realistic structural
models. The models are 1000-atom four-coordinated networks relaxed to a local
minimum of the Stillinger-Weber interatomic potential. The vibrational decay
rates are calculated numerically by perturbation theory, taking into account
cubic anharmonicity as the perturbation. The vibrational lifetimes for a-Si are
found to be on picosecond time scales, in agreement with the previous
perturbative and classical molecular dynamics calculations on a 216-atom model.
The calculated decay rates for p-Si are similar to those of a-Si. No modes in
p-Si reside entirely on the crystalline cluster, decoupled from the amorphous
matrix. The localized modes with the largest (up to 59%) weight on the cluster
decay primarily to two diffusons. The numerical results are discussed in
relation to a recent suggestion by van der Voort et al. [Phys. Rev. B {\bf 62},
8072 (2000)] that long vibrational relaxation inferred experimentally may be
due to possible crystalline nanostructures in some types of a-Si.Comment: 9 two-column pages, 13 figure
Scholar-activists in an expanding European food sovereignty movement
This article analyzes the roles, relations, and positions of scholar-activists in the European food sovereignty movement. In doing so, we document, make visible and question the political dimensions of researchers' participation in the movement. We argue that scholar-activists are part of the movement, but are distinct from the affected constituencies, put in place to ensure adequate representation of key movement actors. This is because scholar-activists lack a collective identity, have no processes to formulate collective demands, and no mechanisms for inter-researcher and researchers-movement communication. We reflect on whether and how scholar-activists could organize, and discuss possible pathways for a more cohesive and stronger researcher engagement in the movement.</p
The transcriptome of the bowhead whale Balaena mysticetus reveals adaptations of the longest-lived mammal
Mammals vary dramatically in lifespan, by at least two-orders of magnitude, but the molecular basis for this difference remains largely unknown. The bowhead whale Balaena mysticetus is the longest-lived mammal known, with an estimated maximal lifespan in excess of two hundred years. It is also one of the two largest animals and the most cold-adapted baleen whale species. Here, we report the first genome-wide gene expression analyses of the bowhead whale, based on the de novo assembly of its transcriptome. Bowhead whale or cetacean-specific changes in gene expression were identified in the liver, kidney and heart, and complemented with analyses of positively selected genes. Changes associated with altered insulin signaling and other gene expression patterns could help explain the remarkable longevity of bowhead whales as well as their adaptation to a lipid-rich diet. The data also reveal parallels in candidate longevity adaptations of the bowhead whale, naked mole rat and Brandt's bat. The bowhead whale transcriptome is a valuable resource for the study of this remarkable animal, including the evolution of longevity and its important correlates such as resistance to cancer and other diseases
A randomized, clinical trial to assess the relative efficacy and tolerability of two doses of etoricoxib versus naproxen in patients with ankylosing spondylitis
Background This study evaluated two doses of etoricoxib (60 and 90 mg) vs.
naproxen 1000 mg in subjects with ankylosing spondylitis (AS). Methods This
was a 2-part, double-blind, active comparator-controlled non-inferiority study
in subjects ≥18 years of age with AS. In Part I, subjects were randomized to
naproxen 1000 mg; etoricoxib 60 mg, and 90 mg. In Part II, naproxen and
etoricoxib 90 mg subjects continued on the same treatment; subjects on
etoricoxib 60 mg either continued on 60 mg or escalated to 90 mg. Part I (6
weeks) assessed the efficacy of A) etoricoxib 60 mg vs. naproxen and B) 90 mg
vs. naproxen according to the time-weighted average change from baseline in
Spinal Pain Intensity (SPI; 0–100 mm VAS) (primary endpoint). The non-
inferiority margin was set at 8 mm for SPI. In Part II (20 weeks) we evaluated
the potential benefit of increasing from 60 to 90 mg (predefined minimum
clinically important difference = 6 mm in SPI) for inadequate responders (<50
% improvement from baseline in SPI) onetoricoxib 60 mg in Part I. Results In
total, 1015 subjects were randomized to receive etoricoxib 60 mg (N = 702),
etoricoxib 90 mg (N = 156), and naproxen 1000 mg (N = 157); 70.9 % were male
and the mean age was 45.2 years. There were 919 subjects who completed Part I
and all continued to Part II. In Part I, SPI change was non-inferior for both
etoricoxib doses vs. naproxen. In both Part I and II, the incidence of adverse
events (AEs), drug-related AEs, and serious adverse events (SAEs) were similar
between the 3 treatment groups. Conclusion Both doses of etoricoxib were non-
inferior to naproxen. All treatments were well tolerated. Etoricoxib 60 and 90
mg effectively control pain in patients with AS, with 60 mg once daily as the
lowest effective dose for most patients. Trial registration Clinical Trials
Registry # NCT01208207. Registered on 22 September 2010
Acoustic breathers in two-dimensional lattices
The existence of breathers (time-periodic and spatially localized lattice
vibrations) is well established for i) systems without acoustic phonon branches
and ii) systems with acoustic phonons, but also with additional symmetries
preventing the occurence of strains (dc terms) in the breather solution. The
case of coexistence of strains and acoustic phonon branches is solved (for
simple models) only for one-dimensional lattices.
We calculate breather solutions for a two-dimensional lattice with one
acoustic phonon branch. We start from the easy-to-handle case of a system with
homogeneous (anharmonic) interaction potentials. We then easily continue the
zero-strain breather solution into the model sector with additional quadratic
and cubic potential terms with the help of a generalized Newton method. The
lattice size is . The breather continues to exist, but is dressed
with a strain field. In contrast to the ac breather components, which decay
exponentially in space, the strain field (which has dipole symmetry) should
decay like . On our rather small lattice we find an exponent
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