3,916 research outputs found

    Capabilities and applications of the Program to Optimize Simulated Trajectories (POST). Program summary document

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    The capabilities and applications of the three-degree-of-freedom (3DOF) version and the six-degree-of-freedom (6DOF) version of the Program to Optimize Simulated Trajectories (POST) are summarized. The document supplements the detailed program manuals by providing additional information that motivates and clarifies basic capabilities, input procedures, applications and computer requirements of these programs. The information will enable prospective users to evaluate the programs, and to determine if they are applicable to their problems. Enough information is given to enable managerial personnel to evaluate the capabilities of the programs and describes the POST structure, formulation, input and output procedures, sample cases, and computer requirements. The report also provides answers to basic questions concerning planet and vehicle modeling, simulation accuracy, optimization capabilities, and general input rules. Several sample cases are presented

    Six-degree-of-freedom program to optimize simulated trajectories (6D POST). Volume 1: Formulation manual

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    The basic equations and models used in a computer program (6D POST) to optimize simulated trajectories with six degrees of freedom were documented. The 6D POST program was conceived as a direct extension of the program POST, which dealt with point masses, and considers the general motion of a rigid body with six degrees of freedom. It may be used to solve a wide variety of atmospheric flight mechanics and orbital transfer problems for powered or unpowered vehicles operating near a rotating oblate planet. Its principal features are: an easy to use NAMELIST type input procedure, an integrated set of Flight Control System (FCS) modules, and a general-purpose discrete parameter targeting and optimization capability. It was written in FORTRAN 4 for the CDC 6000 series computers

    Expression of urease by Haemophilus influenzae during human respiratory tract infection and role in survival in an acid environment

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Nontypeable <it>Haemophilus influenzae </it>is a common cause of otitis media in children and lower respiratory tract infection in adults with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Prior studies have shown that <it>H. influenzae </it>expresses abundant urease during growth in the middle ear of the chinchilla and in pooled human sputum, suggesting that expression of urease is important for colonization and infection in the hostile environments of the middle ear and in the airways in adults. Virtually nothing else is known about the urease of <it>H. influenzae</it>, which was characterized in the present study.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Analysis by reverse transcriptase PCR revealed that the <it>ure </it>gene cluster is expressed as a single transcript. Knockout mutants of a urease structural gene (<it>ureC</it>) and of the entire <it>ure </it>operon demonstrated no detectable urease activity indicating that this operon is the only one encoding an active urease. The <it>ure </it>operon is present in all strains tested, including clinical isolates from otitis media and COPD. Urease activity decreased as nitrogen availability increased. To test the hypothesis that urease is expressed during human infection, purified recombinant urease C was used in ELISA with pre acquisition and post infection serum from adults with COPD who experienced infections caused by <it>H. influenzae</it>. A total of 28% of patients developed new antibodies following infection indicating that <it>H. influenzae </it>expresses urease during airway infection. Bacterial viability assays performed at varying pH indicate that urease mediates survival of <it>H. influenzae </it>in an acid environment.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>The <it>H. influenzae </it>genome contains a single urease operon that mediates urease expression and that is present in all clinical isolates tested. Nitrogen availability is a determinant of urease expression. <it>H. influenzae </it>expresses urease during human respiratory tract infection and urease is a target of the human antibody response. Expression of urease enhances viability in an acid environment. Taken together, these observations suggest that urease is important for survival and replication of <it>H. influenzae </it>in the human respiratory tract.</p

    Program to Optimize Simulated Trajectories (POST). Volume 1: Formulation manual

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    A general purpose FORTRAN program for simulating and optimizing point mass trajectories (POST) of aerospace vehicles is described. The equations and the numerical techniques used in the program are documented. Topics discussed include: coordinate systems, planet model, trajectory simulation, auxiliary calculations, and targeting and optimization

    Modeling the U.S. firearms market: the effects of civilian stocks, crime, legislation, and armed conflicte

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    This study represents an attempt to understand the U.S. firearms market – the largest in the world – in economic terms. A model of the underlying interplay of legal firearms supply and demand is a prerequisite for reliably evaluating the effectiveness of pertinent existing state and federal firearms policies, and to amend them as necessary. The stakes are high: compared to other nation-states, per capita firearms-related harm in the United States (including suicides and homicides) is exceptionally high and, within constitutional strictures, state and federal firearms policymakers increasingly view it as a major and pressing society-wide problem

    Exact properties of Frobenius numbers and fraction of the symmetric semigroups in the weak limit for n=3

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    We generalize and prove a hypothesis by V. Arnold on the parity of Frobenius number. For the case of symmetric semigroups with three generators of Frobenius numbers we found an exact formula, which in a sense is the sum of two Sylvester's formulaes. We prove that the fraction of the symmetric semigroups is vanishing in the weak limit
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