1,763 research outputs found

    Design, Fabrication, and Testing of a Graphite-Epoxy Composite Gravity-Gradient Boom for a Small Satellite

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    Passive stabilization methods for satellites have undergone extensive research and development. Recently the number of small satellites (satellites less than 100 kg.) has increased dramatically. This has lead to increased use of passive stabilization methods, such as gravity-gradient. The core of a gravity-gradient stabilization system is a deployable boom with a damping mechanism. Traditionally, this boom is constructed from metal alloys. Uneven heating and cooling occurs when these alloys are exposed to varying solar radiation conditions. This can induce thermal vibrations which can lead to undesired satellite attitude inversions. Graphite-epoxy composites can be fabricated to minimize thermal expansion. This will be beneficial when applied to gravity-gradient booms. The goal of this project is to demonstrate the use of graphite-epoxy composites in gravity-gradient booms. This project encompasses: the use of a satellite attitude simulation program for boom sizing and determination of gravity-gradient boom loading, development of joint-locking mechanisms for boom deployment, and selection and testing of appropriate fabrication methods

    K022: Effect of combination therapy (ANG II antagonist, valsartan and a calcium channel blocker) in a hypertensive model of diabetic nephropathy

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    Recently, it has been suggested that in the context of diabetes and hypertension, more aggressive blood pressure targets should be considered. To achieve these levels of blood pressure control, it is likely that combination therapy will need to be used. The present study has explored the role of the addition of either a dihydropyridine or a non-dihydropyridine calcium channel blocker (CCB) to Ang II antagonist based treatment in an experimental model of hypertension and diabetes. The doses chosen for the combination therapy groups were lower than those used with monotherapy in order to achieve similar antihypertensive efficacy. Diabetic (streptozotocin induced) SHR were randomised to no treatment, valsartan (30 mg/kg/day), the non-dihydropyridine CCB verapamil (20 mg/kg/day), the dihydropyridine CCB amlodipine (6 mg/kg/day), a combination of valsartan and amlodipine (20 mg + 4 mg/kg/day respectively) or valsartan and verapamil (20 mg + 15 mg/kg/day respectively). Serial measurements of systolic blood pressure (BP) and albumin excretion rate (AER) were performed monthly (data are shown at week 16 for AER and mean of wk 20-28 for BP). This model was associated with hypertension (control, 217 ± 8, diabetic, 200 ± 5 mmHg) which was reduced by most treatments to a similar degree (valsartan 165 ± 3, amlodipine 164 ± 2, verapamil 182 ± 4, valsartan + amlodipine 151 ± 3 and valsartan + verapamil 169 ± 5 mmHg). Diabetes was associated with a progressive increase in AER (control 1.5 vs diabetic 17 mg/24 hr). Valsartan retarded the increase in AER (11 mg/24 hr). Similar efficacy was observed in the valsartan + amlodipine combination (9 mg/24 hr) but not with amlodipine alone (16 mg/24 hr) despite similar effects on blood pressure. No advantage of verapamil versus amlodipine either as monotherapy or in combination with valsartan was observed. The present study indicates that the combination of an Ang II antagonist and a dihydropyridine CCB is an effective regimen at reducing blood pressure and albuminuria in the context of diabetes and hypertensio

    What’s hot and what’s not: making sense of biodiversity ‘hotspots’

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    Conserving biogeographic regions with especially high biodiversity, known as biodiversity ‘hotspots’, is intuitive because finite resources can be focussed towards manageable units. Yet, biodiversity, environmental conditions and their relationship are more complex with multidimensional properties. Assessments which ignore this risk failing to detect change, identify its direction or gauge the scale of appropriate intervention. Conflicting concepts which assume assemblages as either sharply delineated communities or loosely collected species have also hampered progress in the way we assess and conserve biodiversity. We focus on the marine benthos where delineating manageable areas for conservation is an attractive prospect because it holds most marine species and constitutes the largest single ecosystem on earth by area. Using two large UK marine benthic faunal datasets, we present a spatially gridded data sampling design to account for survey effects which would otherwise be the principal drivers of diversity estimates. We then assess γ‐diversity (regional richness) with diversity partitioned between α (local richness) and β (dissimilarity), and their change in relation to covariates to test whether defining and conserving biodiversity hotspots is an effective conservation strategy in light of the prevailing forces structuring those assemblages. α‐, β‐ and γ‐diversity hotspots were largely inconsistent with each metric relating uniquely to the covariates, and loosely collected species generally prevailed with relatively few distinct assemblages. Hotspots could therefore be an unreliable means to direct conservation efforts if based on only a component part of diversity. When assessed alongside environmental gradients, α‐, β‐ and γ‐diversity provide a multidimensional but still intuitive perspective of biodiversity change that can direct conservation towards key drivers and the appropriate scale for intervention. Our study also highlights possible temporal declines in species richness over 30 years and thus the need for future integrated monitoring to reveal the causal drivers of biodiversity change

    Measuring the efficiency of Serbian insurance companies

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    The transition period, and the still ongoing economic crisis, amplify the volatility in the domestic insurance market and forces the management of insurance companies to continuously monitor changes in the market, i.e. to identify risks and opportunities, and therefore to undertake certain activities. The focus of the business of insurance companies is based on satisfying the needs of existing and potential clients. Respecting the current situation in the insurance market in anticipation of future events, the management of insurance companies must create and implement the optimal strategy in line with the company’s capabilities. For this purpose it is necessary to measure the efficiency of the business, which is the subject of this paper where the Data Envelopment Analysis (DEA) method is applied to the case of insurance companies operating in Serbia

    Equivalence between free quantum particles and those in harmonic potentials and its application to instantaneous changes

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    This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly citedIn quantum physics the free particle and the harmonically trapped particle are arguably the most important systems a physicist needs to know about. It is little known that, mathematically, they are one and the same. This knowledge helps us to understand either from the viewpoint of the other. Here we show that all general time-dependent solutions of the free-particle Schrodinger equation can be mapped to solutions of the Schrodinger equation for harmonic potentials, both the trapping oscillator and the inverted `oscillator'. This map is fully invertible and therefore induces an isomorphism between both types of system, they are equivalent. A composition of the map and its inverse allows us to map from one harmonic oscillator to another with a different spring constant and different center position. The map is independent of the state of the system, consisting only of a coordinate transformation and multiplication by a form factor, and can be chosen such that the state is identical in both systems at one point in time. This transition point in time can be chosen freely, the wave function of the particle evolving in time in one system before the transition point can therefore be linked up smoothly with the wave function for the other system and its future evolution after the transition point. Such a cut-and-paste procedure allows us to describe the instantaneous changes of the environment a particle finds itself in. Transitions from free to trapped systems, between harmonic traps of different spring constants or center positions, or, from harmonic binding to repulsive harmonic potentials are straightforwardly modelled. This includes some time dependent harmonic potentials. The mappings introduced here are computationally more efficient than either state-projection or harmonic oscillator propagator techniques conventionally employed when describing instantaneous (non-adiabatic) changes of a quantum particle's environmentPeer reviewe

    Breakup Reactions of 11Li within a Three-Body Model

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    We use a three-body model to investigate breakup reactions of 11Li (n+n+9Li) on a light target. The interaction parameters are constrained by known properties of the two-body subsystems, the 11Li binding energy and fragmentation data. The remaining degrees of freedom are discussed. The projectile-target interactions are described by phenomenological optical potentials. The model predicts dependence on beam energy and target, differences between longitudinal and transverse momentum distributions and provides absolute values for all computed differential cross sections. We give an almost complete series of observables and compare with corresponding measurements. Remarkably good agreement is obtained. The relative neutron-9Li p-wave content is about 40%. A p-resonance, consistent with measurements at about 0.5 MeV of width about 0.4 MeV, seems to be necessary. The widths of the momentum distributions are insensitive to target and beam energy with a tendency to increase towards lower energies. The transverse momentum distributions are broader than the longitudinal due to the diffraction process. The absolute values of the cross sections follow the neutron-target cross sections and increase strongly for beam energies decreasing below 100 MeV/u.Comment: 19 pages, 14 figures, RevTeX, psfig.st

    Mixed-symmetry octupole and hexadecapole excitations in N=52 isotones

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    In addition to the well-established quadrupole mixed-symmetry states, octupole and hexadecapole excitations with mixed-symmetry character have been recently proposed for the N = 52 isotones 92Zr and 94Mo. We performed two inelastic proton-scattering experiments to study this kind of excitations in the heaviest stable N = 52 isotone 96Ru. From the combined experimental data of both experiments absolute transition strengths were extracted

    The T1-weighted/T2-weighted ratio as a biomarker of anti-NMDA receptor encephalitis

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    BACKGROUND: Anti-N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor (NMDAR) encephalitis rarely causes visible lesions in conventional MRI, yet advanced imaging detects extensive white matter damage. To improve prognostic capabilities, we evaluate the T1-weighted/T2-weighted (T1w/T2w) ratio, a measure of white matter integrity computable from clinical MRI sequences, in NMDAR encephalitis and examine its associations with cognitive impairment. METHODS: T1-weighted and T2-weighted MRI were acquired cross-sectionally at 3 Tesla in 53 patients with NMDAR encephalitis (81% women, mean age 29 years) and 53 matched healthy controls. Quantitative and voxel-wise group differences in T1w/T2w ratios and associations with clinical and neuropsychological outcomes were assessed. P-values were false discovery rate (FDR) adjusted where multiple tests were conducted. RESULTS: Patients with NMDAR encephalitis had significantly lower T1w/T2w ratios across normal appearing white matter (p=0.009, Hedges' g=-0.51), which was associated with worse verbal episodic memory performance (r=0.39, p=0.005, p(FDR)=0.026). White matter integrity loss was observed in the corticospinal tract, superior longitudinal fascicle, optic radiation and callosal body with medium to large effects (Cohen's d=[0.42-1.17]). In addition, patients showed decreased T1w/T2w ratios in the hippocampus (p=0.002, p(FDR)=0.005, Hedges' g=-0.62), amygdala (p=0.002, p(FDR)=0.005, Hedges' g=-0.63) and thalamus (p=0.010, p(FDR)=0.019, Hedges' g=-0.51). CONCLUSIONS: The T1w/T2w ratio detects microstructural changes in grey and white matter of patients with NMDAR encephalitis that correlate with cognitive performance. Computable from conventional clinical MRI sequences, this measure shows promise in bridging the clinico-radiological dissociation in NMDAR encephalitis and could serve as an imaging outcome measure in clinical trials

    Sedentary time and markers of inflammation in people with newly diagnosed type 2 diabetes

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    AbstractBackground and aimsWe investigated whether objectively measured sedentary time was associated with markers of inflammation in adults with newly diagnosed type 2 diabetes.Methods and resultsWe studied 285 adults (184 men, 101 women, mean age 59.0 ± 9.7) who had been recruited to the Early ACTivity in Diabetes (Early ACTID) randomised controlled trial. C-reactive protein (CRP), adiponectin, soluble intracellular adhesion molecule-1 (sICAM-1), interleukin-6 (IL-6), and accelerometer-determined sedentary time and moderate-vigorous physical activity (MVPA) were measured at baseline and after six-months. Linear regression analysis was used to investigate the independent cross-sectional and longitudinal associations of sedentary time with markers of inflammation.At baseline, associations between sedentary time and IL-6 were observed in men and women, an association that was attenuated following adjustment for waist circumference. After 6 months of follow-up, sedentary time was reduced by 0.4 ± 1.2 h per day in women, with the change in sedentary time predicting CRP at follow-up. Every hour decrease in sedentary time between baseline and six-months was associated with 24% (1, 48) lower CRP. No changes in sedentary time between baseline and 6 months were seen in men.ConclusionsHigher sedentary time is associated with IL-6 in men and women with type 2 diabetes, and reducing sedentary time is associated with improved levels of CRP in women. Interventions to reduce sedentary time may help to reduce inflammation in women with type 2 diabetes
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