2,845 research outputs found

    Conversion of the Bravo3 CAD+I preprocessor to version 3.2

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    Electromagnetic design of a new hybrid-excited flux-switching machine for fault-tolerant operations

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    Paper no. YD-011541In this paper, a new hybrid-excited flux-switching (HEFS) machine is proposed with the outer-rotor configuration, which possesses the distinct feature of fault-tolerant operation. Comparing with the conventional permanent-magnet (PM) machine, it combines merits of flux control, high mechanical integrity, and low-cost. Furthermore, its fault-tolerant feature ensures its continuous operation in the event of winding faults. Hence, a new 12/10-pole HEFS machine is designed and implemented in this paper. By using time-stepping finite element method, open circuit (OC) fault and short circuit (SC) faults on the armature winding are investigated in the proposed machine for the fault-tolerant operation. The phase-current reconfiguration and flux control are applied for the remediation of the OC fault, while the SC faults is remedied by the phase-current reconfiguration merely. Both approaches demonstrate their good performances for the fault-tolerant operation. © 2015 IEEE.postprin

    Developing a platform of environmental omics for the green-lipped mussel Perna viridis

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    Session Track: Aquatic and terrestrial ecotoxicologyOral presentationConference Theme: Science across bridges, borders and boundariesThe green-lipped mussel Perna viridis is an important marine biomonitor species in pollution monitoring and ecotoxicological studies in Asia-Pacific region, and considered as a subtropical equivalent biomonitor of the temperate Mytilus species. However, the genomic information of P. viridis is still largely unexplored when compared with Mytilus species. This study aimed to establish a transcriptomic profile of P. viridis using the next generation sequencing technology and provide a good representative set of genomic information for elucidation of toxic mechanisms upon pollution stresses and identification of a suite of suitable biomarkers for monitoring marine pollution and environmental stresses. To obtain a wide spectrum of environmental-associated transcripts, adult mussels (4-5 cm shell length) were collected from different locations in Hong Kong and from those after 24-hour exposures to various challenges of physical stresses and chemical pollutants, so as to cover a wide range of stress-associated transcription patterns for future environmental studies. Two males and females from each location and from each treatment were chosen for obtaining the three target tissues (i.e., hepatopancreas, gill and adductor muscle). For each sex and each tissue type, a total RNA sample was extracted from pooled tissues from the field and laboratory treated mussels. The RNA sample was subjected to cDNA library construction, followed by the RNA-sequencing using a Solexa GAIIx (Illumina). Including the splicing variants, a de novo assembly of a total length of 295,064,579 base-pair (bp) contig was obtained, with 233,257 contigs assembled of an average size of 1264 bp. The 192,879 non-redundant assembled transcripts were blasted against the NCBI nr database and three molluscan EST databases, and resulted in 44,713 transcripts with at least a blast hit, and having a top match with the sequences from the Pacific oyster, Crassostrea gigas (27,651 transcripts). A total of 5,131 transcripts were assigned with KEGG annotation involving in 329 pathways. Based on multivariate statistical analysis, expression patterns of genes from stress associated responses and detoxification were strongly tissue-specific but the differences between genders were little. The anticipated genomic database generated from this study will further strengthen the role of P. viridis as a universal marine biomonitor in the Asia-Pacific region.published_or_final_versio

    Fragments of the earliest land plants

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    The earliest fossil evidence for land plants comes from microscopic dispersed spores. These microfossils are abundant and widely distributed in sediments, and the earliest generally accepted reports are from rocks of mid-Ordovician age (Llanvirn, 475 million years ago). Although distribution, morphology and ultrastructure of the spores indicate that they are derived from terrestrial plants, possibly early relatives of the bryophytes, this interpretation remains controversial as there is little in the way of direct evidence for the parent plants. An additional complicating factor is that there is a significant hiatus between the appearance of the first dispersed spores and fossils of relatively complete land plants (megafossils): spores predate the earliest megafossils (Late Silurian, 425 million year ago) by some 50 million years. Here we report the description of spore-containing plant fragments from Ordovician rocks of Oman. These fossils provide direct evidence for the nature of the spore-producing plants. They confirm that the earliest spores developed in large numbers within sporangia, providing strong evidence that they are the fossilized remains of bona fide land plants. Furthermore, analysis of spore wall ultrastructure supports liverwort affinities

    De novo transcriptome analysis of Perna viridis highlights tissue-specific patterns for environmental studies

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    Time scales of epidemic spread and risk perception on adaptive networks

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    Incorporating dynamic contact networks and delayed awareness into a contagion model with memory, we study the spreading patterns of infectious diseases in connected populations. It is found that the spread of an infectious disease is not only related to the past exposures of an individual to the infected but also to the time scales of risk perception reflected in the social network adaptation. The epidemic threshold pcp_{c} is found to decrease with the rise of the time scale parameter s and the memory length T, they satisfy the equation pc=1T+ωTas(1eωT2/as)p_{c} =\frac{1}{T}+ \frac{\omega T}{a^s(1-e^{-\omega T^2/a^s})}. Both the lifetime of the epidemic and the topological property of the evolved network are considered. The standard deviation σd\sigma_{d} of the degree distribution increases with the rise of the absorbing time tct_{c}, a power-law relation σd=mtcγ\sigma_{d}=mt_{c}^\gamma is found

    Comparative transcriptome analyses of adzuki bean weevil (<i>Callosobruchus chinensis</i>) response to hypoxia and hypoxia/hypercapnia

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    Stored product insects show high adaption to hypoxia and hypercapnia, but the underlying mechanism is still unclear. Herein, a comparative transcriptome on 4(th) adzuki bean weevil (Callosobruchus chinensis) instar larvae was studied to clarify the response mechanisms to hypoxia (HA) and hypoxia/hypercapnia (HHA) using NextSeq500 RNA-Seq. Transcript profiling showed a significant difference in HA or HHA exposure both quantitatively and qualitatively. Compared with control, 631 and 253 genes were significantly changed in HHA and HA, respectively. Comparing HHA with HA, 1135 differentially expressed genes (DEGs) were identified. The addition of hypercapnia made a complex alteration on the hypoxia response of bean weevil transcriptome, carbohydrate, energy, lipid and amino acid metabolism were the most highly enriched pathways for genes significantly changed. In addition, some biological processes that were not significantly enriched but important were also discussed, such as immune system and signal transduction. Most of the DEGs related to metabolism both in HHA and HA were up-regulated, while the DEGs related to the immune system, stress response or signal transduction were significantly down-regulated or suppressed. This research reveals a comparatively full-scale result in adzuki bean weevil hypoxia and hypoxia/hypercapnia tolerance mechanism at transcription level, which might provide new insights into the genomic research of this species

    De novo transcriptome analysis for mechanistic study of organotin-mediated endocrine disruption in Reishia Clavigera

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    Poster presentation: P-63Human ImpactsMany endocrine disrupting compounds are bioaccumulative and toxic to a wide range of marine organisms, leading to reproductive impairment, development of cancer and abnormal metabolism. For instance, organotin compounds (OTs) such as tributyltin and triphenyltin can induce the development of imposex (i.e., superimposition of male sexual organs) in females of over 200 gastropod species. OTs have been widely used as biocides in antifouling paints and industrial applications. Thus they have been released into the marine environment, posing risks to non-target marine organisms and human health. Although many studies have been conducted to ...postprin

    Fluctuating diamagnetism in underdoped high temperature superconductors

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    The fluctuation induced diamagnetism of underdoped high temperature superconductors is studied in the framework of the Lawrence-Doniach model. By taking into account the fluctuations of the phase of the order parameter only, the latter reduces to a layered XY-model describing a liquid of vortices which can be either thermally excited or induced by the external magnetic field. The diamagnetic response is given by a current-current correlation function which is evaluated using the Coulomb gas analogy. Our results are then applied to recent measurements of fluctuation diamagnetism in underdoped YBCO. They allow to understand both the observed anomalous temperature dependence of the zero-field susceptibility and the two distinct regimes appearing in the magnetic field dependence of the magnetization.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures included, accepted for publication in PR

    The Tumor-Log Odds of Positive Lymph Nodes-Metastasis Staging System, a Promising New Staging System for Gastric Cancer after D2 Resection in China

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    BACKGROUND: In this study, we established a hypothetical tumor-lodds-metastasis (TLM) and tumor-ratio-metastasis (TRM) staging system. Moreover, we compared them with the 7(th) edition of American Joint Committee on Cancer tumor-nodes-metastasis (AJCC TNM) staging system in gastric cancer patients after D2 resection. METHODS: A total of 1000 gastric carcinoma patients receiving treatment in our center were selected for the analysis. Finally, 730 patients who received D2 resection were retrospectively studied. Patients were staged using the TLM, TRM and the 7(th) edition AJCC TNM system. Survival analysis was performed with a Cox regression model. We used two parameters to compare the TNM, TRM and TLM staging system, the -2log likelihood and the hazard ratio. RESULTS: The cut points of lymph node ratio (LNR) were set as 0, 0-0.3, 0.3-0.6, 0.6-1.0. And for the log odds of positive lymph nodes (LODDS), the cut points were established as≤-0.5, -0.5-0, 0-0.5, >0.5. There were significant differences in survival among patients in different LODDS classifications for each pN or LNR groups. When stratified by the LODDS classifications, the prognosis was highly homologous between those in the according pN or LNR classifications. Multivariate analysis showed that TLM staging system was better than the TRM or TNM system for the prognostic evaluation. CONCLUSIONS: The TLM system was superior to the TRM or TNM system for prognostic assessment of gastric adenocarcinoma patients after D2 resection
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