289 research outputs found
Mapping Community Mindscapes: Visualizing Social Autobiography as Political Transformation and Mobilization
Historically, autobiography has been used to perpetuate neo-liberal ideologies. Yet, when autobiography becomes social and is used to engage political communities of color, political transformation is possible. This project, through the collaborative visualization of Asian American social biography using pedagogical and relational methods as a means for engagement, seeks to destabilize dominant notions of time and space, and provide a mechanism for the retention of and documentation of institutional, and social histories using the Asian American Student Union at Scripps College as the site for political praxis
An assessment of eddy viscosity models on predicting performance parameters of valves
The major objective of the present study is to evaluate the performance of a range of turbulent eddy viscosity models in the prediction of macro-parameters (flow coefficient (CQ) and force coefficient (CF)), for certain types of valve, including the conic valve, the disk valves, and the compensated valve. This has been achieved by comparison of numerical predictions with experimental measurements available in the literature. The examined turbulence models include most of the available turbulent eddy viscosity models in STAR-CCM+ 12.04. They are the standard k-Δ model, realizable k-Δ model, k-Ï-sst model, V2F model, EB k-Δ model and the Lag EB k-Δ models. The low-Re turbulence models (k-Ï-sst, V2F, EB k-Δ and Lag EB k-Δ) perform worse than the high-Re models (standard k-Δ and realizable k-Δ). For the conic valve, the performance of different turbulent models varies little; the standard k-Δ model shows a marginal advantage over the others. The performance of the turbulence models changed greatly, however, for prediction of CQ and CF of the disk and compensated valves. In general, the realizable k-Δ model is demonstrated to be a robust choice for both valve types. Although the EB k-Δ may marginally outperform it in the prediction of CF at large disk valve opening. The effects of the unknown entry flow and initialization conditions are also studied. The predictions are more sensitive to the entry flow condition when the valve opening is large. Additionally, the uncertainties caused by unknown entry conditions are comparable to overall modelling errors in some cases. For flow systems with multiple stable flow-states coexisting in the flow domain, the output of the numerical models can also be affected by the initialization conditions. When the streamline curvature and secondary flow is modest like conical valve flow, the nonlinear modification of the standard k-Δ model and k-Ï-sst model, as well as the curvature correction in the realizable k-Δ model, will not have visible effects on the numerical prediction. Once the strong streamline curvature and secondary flow exit in the domain, such as the disk valve flow, the non-linear modification of the standard k-Δ model will greatly improve the numerical outputs, however, the non-linear modifications of k-Ï-sst model only have minor effects. Moreover, the curvature correction in the realizable k-Δ model will jeopardise the accuracy of outputs in the same case
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Implications of the variation in biological 18 O natural abundance in body water to inform use of Bayesian methods for modelling total energy expenditure when using doubly labelled water.
RATIONALE: Variation in 18 O natural abundance can lead to errors in the calculation of total energy expenditure (TEE) when using the doubly labelled water (DLW) method. The use of Bayesian statistics allows a distribution to be assigned to 18 O natural abundance, thus allowing a best-fit value to be used in the calculation. The aim of this study was to calculate within-subject variation in 18 O natural abundance and apply this to our original working model for TEE calculation. METHODS: Urine samples from a cohort of 99 women, dosed with 50âg of 20% 2 H2 O, undertaking a 14-day breast milk intake protocol, were analysed for 18 O. The within-subject variance was calculated and applied to a Bayesian model for the calculation of TEE in a separate cohort of 36 women. This cohort of 36 women had taken part in a DLW study and had been dosed with 80âmg/kg body weight 2 H2 O and 150âmg/kg body weight H2 18 O. RESULTS: The average change in the ÎŽ18 O value from the 99 women was 1.14â° (0.77) [0.99, 1.29], with the average within-subject 18 O natural abundance variance being 0.13â°2 (0.25) [0.08, 0.18]. There were no significant differences in TEE (9745 (1414), 9804 (1460) and 9789 (1455) kJ/day, non-Bayesian, Bluck Bayesian and modified Bayesian models, respectively) between methods. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings demonstrate that using a reduced natural variation in 18 O as calculated from a population does not impact significantly on the calculation of TEE in our model. It may therefore be more conservative to allow a larger variance to account for individual extremes
Religion as practices of attachment and materiality: the making of Buddhism in contemporary London
This article aims to explore Buddhismâs often-overlooked presence on Londonâs urban landscape, showing how its quietness and subtlety of approach has allowed the faith to grow largely beneath the radar. It argues that Buddhism makes claims to urban space in much the same way as it produces its faith, being as much about the practices performed and the spaces where they are enacted as it is about faith or beliefs. The research across a number of Buddhist sites in London reveals that number of people declaring themselves as Buddhists has indeed risen in recent years, following the rise of other non-traditional religions in the UK; however, this research suggests that Buddhism differs from these in several ways. Drawing on Baumannâs (2002) distinction between traditionalist and modernist approaches to Buddhism, our research reveals a growth in each of these. Nevertheless, Buddhism remains largely invisible in the urban and suburban landscape of London, adapting buildings that are already in place, with little material impact on the built environment, and has thus been less subject to contestation than other religious movements and traditions. This research contributes to a growing literature which foregrounds the importance of religion in making contemporary urban and social worlds
Coffee consumption has no acute effects on glucose metabolism in healthy men : a randomized crossover clinical trial
We investigate the effect of coffee (caffeinated and decaffeinated) on glucose effectiveness and insulin sensitivity using the stable isotope minimal model protocol with oral glucose administration in healthy men
Safety Considerations and Proposed Workflow for Laboratory-Scale Chemical Synthesis by Ball Milling
Chemical reactions that take place in a ball mill and in the absence of a bulk reaction solvent present different safety profiles to stirred solution reactions. Herein, we present and describe steps that a researcher may take to better ensure that they have considered some of the hazards and measures that emerge and minimize the risk to themselves and their colleagues
The Tumultuous Formation of the Hubble Sequence at z > 1 Examined with HST/WFC3 Observations of the Hubble Ultra Deep Field
We examine in this paper a stellar mass selected sample of galaxies at 1 < z
< 3 within the Hubble Ultra Deep Field, utilising WFC3 imaging to study the
rest-frame optical morphological distribution of galaxies at this epoch. We
measure how apparent morphologies (disk, elliptical, peculiar) correlate with
physical properties, such as quantitative structure and spectral-types. One
primary result is that apparent morphology does not correlate strongly with
stellar populations, nor with galaxy structure at this epoch, suggesting a
chaotic formation history for Hubble types at z > 1. By using a locally defined
definition of disk and elliptical galaxies based on structure and
spectral-type, we find no true ellipticals at z > 2, and a fraction of
3.2+/-2.3% at 1.5 < z < 2. Local counterparts of disk galaxies are at a similar
level of 7-10%, much lower than the 75% fraction at lower redshifts. We further
compare WFC3 images with the rest-frame UV view of galaxies from ACS imaging,
showing that galaxies imaged with ACS that appear peculiar often contain an
`elliptical' like morphology in WFC3. We show through several simulations that
this larger fraction of elliptical-like galaxies is partially due to the
courser PSF of WFC3, and that the `elliptical' class very likely includes
early-type disks. We also measure the merger history for our sample using CAS
parameters, finding a redshift evolution increasing with redshift, and a peak
merger fraction of ~30% at z~2 for the most massive galaxies with M_*> 10^{10}
M_sol, consistent with previous results from ACS and NICMOS. We compare our
results to semi-analytical model results and find a relatively good agreement
between our morphological break-down and the predictions. Finally, we argue
that the peculiars, ellipticals and peculiar ellipticals have similar
properties, suggesting similar formation modes, likely driven by major mergers.Comment: 21 pages, submitted to MNRA
Caledonian foreland basin sedimentation : A new depositional model for the Upper Silurian-Lower Devonian Lower Old Red Sandstone of the Midland Valley Basin, Scotland
Open Access via Wiley publishing agreement. We thank Stuart Archer, Brian Hampton and the anonymous reviewer for their thoughtful and constructive reviews of this manuscript, which has benefited greatly from their attention. We also thank the Associate Editors at Basin Research for their time, advice and suggestions during the submission process. DATA AVAILABILITY STATEMENT The data that support the findings of this study are available from the corresponding author upon reasonable request.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
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