7,090 research outputs found
The PAX 2 picture processing system
PAX 2 digital picture processing program written in FORTRAN - subroutine annotation
High-Temperature Corrosion Testing of Uranium Silicide Surrogates
The corrosion resistance of cerium silicide, a surrogate of uranium silicide, is investigated to gain insight into the reaction of uranium silicide with water. As-received and proton-irradiated Ce3Si2, CeSi2, and CeSi1.x monolithic pellets are subjected to corrosion tests in water at 300°C and 9 MPa for up to 48 h. Results show that an oxide layer composed of Ce4.67 (SiO4)3O forms on the surface of all samples, and it grows thicker with extended exposure times. Irradiated samples corrode to a greater extent than their unirradiated counterparts, which is mainly a result of the existing post-irradiation cerium oxide and the presence of ion-induced defects. Most of the Ce3Si2 samples crack (as-received) or fracture (ion-irradiated) during testing, which is due to the brittleness of the samples and oxide erosion/spallation that occur during testing
Optimality Theory as a Framework for Lexical Acquisition
This paper re-investigates a lexical acquisition system initially developed
for French.We show that, interestingly, the architecture of the system
reproduces and implements the main components of Optimality Theory. However, we
formulate the hypothesis that some of its limitations are mainly due to a poor
representation of the constraints used. Finally, we show how a better
representation of the constraints used would yield better results
Numerical Assessment of Infragravity Swash Response to Offshore Wave Frequency Spread Variability
We use a numerical model, already validated for this purpose, to simulate the effect of wave frequency spread on wave transformation and swash amplitudes. Simulations are performed for planar beach slope cases and for offshore wave spectra whose frequency spread changes over realistic values. Results indicate that frequency spread, under normally approaching waves, affects swash amplitudes. For moderately dissipative conditions, the significant infragravity swash increases for increasing values of the offshore frequency spread. The opposite occurs under extremely dissipative conditions. The numerical analysis suggests that this inverted pattern is driven by the effect that different distributions of incoming long?wave energy have on low?frequency wave propagation and dissipation. In fact, with large frequency spreads, wave groups force relatively short subharmonic waves that are strongly enhanced in the shoaling zone. This process leads to an infragravity swash increase for increasing frequency spread under moderately dissipative conditions in which low?frequency energy dissipation in shallow water is negligible or small. However, under extremely dissipative conditions, the significant low?frequency energy dissipation associated with large frequency spreads overturns the strong energy growth in the shoaling zone eventually yielding an infragravity swash decrease for increasing frequency spread.This work has been funded under (1) the RETOS INVESTIGACION 2014 (Grant BIA2014-59718-R) program of the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness and (2) the NEPTUNE 2 project, L. R. 7/2007 by Regione Autonoma della Sardegna
Surface van der Waals Forces in a Nutshell
Most often in chemical physics, long range van der Waals surface interactions
are approximated by the exact asymptotic result at vanishing distance, the well
known additive approximation of London dispersion forces due to Hamaker.
However, the description of retardation effects that is known since the time of
Casimir is completely neglected for lack of a tractable expression. Here we
show that it is possible to describe surface van der Waals forces at arbitrary
distances in one single simple equation. The result captures the long sought
crossover from non-retarded (London) to retarded (Casimir) interactions, the
effect of polarization in condensed media and the full suppression of retarded
interactions at large distance. This is achieved with similar accuracy and the
same material properties that are used to approximate the Hamaker constant in
conventional applications. The results show that at ambient temperature,
retardation effects significantly change the power law exponent of the
conventional Hamaker result for distances of just a few nanometers.Comment: 6 pages + 4 figures + supplementary materia
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Subclinical myocardial disease by cardiac magnetic resonance imaging and spectroscopy in healthy HIV/Hepatitis C virus-coinfected persons.
Objective The contribution of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection to the risk of heart failure in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-coinfected persons is unknown. The objective was to characterize cardiac function and morphology in HIV-treated coinfected persons. Methods In a cross-sectional study, HIV-infected patients virologically suppressed on antiretroviral therapy without known cardiovascular disease or diabetes mellitus underwent cardiac magnetic resonance imaging and spectroscopy for measures of cardiac function, myocardial fibrosis, and steatosis. Results The study included 18 male patients with a median age of 44 years. Of these, 10 had untreated HCV coinfection and eight had HIV monoinfection. Global systolic and diastolic function in the cohort were normal, and median myocardial fat content was 0.48% (interquartile range 0.35-1.54). Left ventricular (LV) mass index and LV mass/volume ratio were significantly greater in the HIV/HCV-coinfected group compared with the HIV-monoinfected group. In the HIV-monoinfected group, there was more myocardial fibrosis as measured by extracellular volume fraction. Conclusions There were differences between HIV/HCV-coinfected and HIV-monoinfected patients in cardiac structure and morphology. Larger studies are needed to examine whether HIV and HCV independently contribute to mechanisms of heart failure
Studying Flow Close to an Interface by Total Internal Reflection Fluorescence Cross Correlation Spectroscopy: Quantitative Data Analysis
Total Internal Reflection Fluorescence Cross Correlation Spectroscopy
(TIR-FCCS) has recently (S. Yordanov et al., Optics Express 17, 21149 (2009))
been established as an experimental method to probe hydrodynamic flows near
surfaces, on length scales of tens of nanometers. Its main advantage is that
fluorescence only occurs for tracer particles close to the surface, thus
resulting in high sensitivity. However, the measured correlation functions only
provide rather indirect information about the flow parameters of interest, such
as the shear rate and the slip length. In the present paper, we show how to
combine detailed and fairly realistic theoretical modeling of the phenomena by
Brownian Dynamics simulations with accurate measurements of the correlation
functions, in order to establish a quantitative method to retrieve the flow
properties from the experiments. Firstly, Brownian Dynamics is used to sample
highly accurate correlation functions for a fixed set of model parameters.
Secondly, these parameters are varied systematically by means of an
importance-sampling Monte Carlo procedure in order to fit the experiments. This
provides the optimum parameter values together with their statistical error
bars. The approach is well suited for massively parallel computers, which
allows us to do the data analysis within moderate computing times. The method
is applied to flow near a hydrophilic surface, where the slip length is
observed to be smaller than 10nm, and, within the limitations of the
experiments and the model, indistinguishable from zero.Comment: 18 pages, 12 figure
Predicting Ares I Reaction Control System Performance by Utilizing Analysis Anchored with Development Test Data
The Ares I launch vehicle is an integral part of NASA s Constellation Program, providing a foundation for a new era of space access. The Ares I is designed to lift the Orion Crew Module and will enable humans to return to the Moon as well as explore Mars.1 The Ares I is comprised of two inline stages: a Space Shuttle-derived five-segment Solid Rocket Booster (SRB) First Stage (FS) and an Upper Stage (US) powered by a Saturn V-derived J-2X engine. A dedicated Roll Control System (RoCS) located on the connecting interstage provides roll control prior to FS separation. Induced yaw and pitch moments are handled by the SRB nozzle vectoring. The FS SRB operates for approximately two minutes after which the US separates from the vehicle and the US Reaction Control System (ReCS) continues to provide reaction control for the remainder of the mission. A representation of the Ares I launch vehicle in the stacked configuration and including the Orion Crew Exploration Vehicle (CEV) is shown in Figure 1. Each Reaction Control System (RCS) design incorporates a Gaseous Helium (GHe) pressurization system combined with a monopropellant Hydrazine (N2H4) propulsion system. Both systems have two diametrically opposed thruster modules. This architecture provides one failure tolerance for function and prevention of catastrophic hazards such as inadvertent thruster firing, bulk propellant leakage, and over-pressurization. The pressurization system on the RoCS includes two ambient pressure-referenced regulators on parallel strings in order to attain the required system level single Fault Tolerant (FT) design for function while the ReCS utilizes a blow-down approach. A single burst disk and relief valve assembly is also included on the RoCS to ensure single failure tolerance for must-not-occur catastrophic hazards. The Reaction Control Systems are designed to support simultaneously firing multiple thrusters as require
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