2,381 research outputs found
Inlet protein aggregation: a new mechanism for lubricating film formation with model synovial fluids.
This paper reports a fundamental study of lubricant film formation with model synovial fluid components (proteins) and bovine serum (BS). The objective was to investigate the role of proteins in the lubrication process. Film thickness was measured by optical interferometry in a ball-on-disc device (mean speed range of 2-60 mm/s). A commercial cobalt-chromium (CoCrMo) metal femoral head was used as the stationary component. The results for BS showed complex time-dependent behaviour, which was not representative of a simple fluid. After a few minutes sliding BS formed a thin adherent film of 10-20 nm, which was attributed to protein absorbance at the surface. This layer was augmented by a hydrodynamic film, which often increased at slow speeds. At the end of the test deposited surface layers of 20-50 nm were measured. Imaging of the contact showed that at slow speeds an apparent 'phase boundary' formed in the inlet just in front of the Hertzian zone. This was associated with the formation of a reservoir of high-viscosity material that periodically moved through the contact forming a much thicker film. The study shows that proteins play an important role in the film-forming process and current lubrication models do not capture these mechanisms
Electronic aperture control devised for solid state imaging system
Electronic means of performing the equivalent of automatic aperture control has been devised for the new class of television cameras that incorporates a solid state imaging device in the form of phototransistor mosaic sensors
Colloidal suspension simulates linear dynamic pressure profile
Missile nose fairings immersed in colloidal suspension prepared with various specific gravities simulate pressure profiles very similar to those encountered during reentry. Stress and deflection conditions similar to those expected during atmospheric reentry are thus attained in the laboratory
Hall current accelerator Final report, 10 Jun. 1964 - 10 Sep. 1965
Axisymmetric Hall current accelerator as electric spacecraft propulsion syste
Fractionation of human immune γ-globulin
Equine and bovine serum proteins have recently been fractionated by means of a physical method utilizing an electrophoretic adaptation of the principles of the Clusius column (l-4), first described and tested by Kirkwood (5) and Nielsen (6). The method of electrophoresis-convection has now been applied to the fractionation of human γ-globulin. The γ-globulin was prepared by ethanol fractionation (7) from the plasma of individuals hyperimmunized to Hemophilus pertussis organisms. The resulting fractions of γ-globulin have been characterized electrophoretically, and the protective antibody activity and agglutinin titer have been measured
Non-linear enhancement of laser generated ultrasonic Rayleigh waves by cracks
Laser generated ultrasound has been widely used for detecting cracks, surface and sub-surface defects in
many different materials. It provides a non-contact wideband excitation source which can be focused into
different geometries. Previous workers have reported enhancement of the laser generated Rayleigh wave
when a crack is illuminated by pulsed laser beam irradiation. We demonstrate that the enhancement
observed is due to a combination of source truncation, the free boundary condition at the edge of the crack
and interference effects. Generating a Rayleigh wave over a crack can lead to enhancement of the
amplitude of the Rayleigh wave signal, a shift in the dominant frequency of the wideband Rayleigh wave
and strong enhancement of the high frequency components of the Rayleigh wave
The Triple P-Positive Parenting Programme: A universal population-level approach to the prevention of child abuse
The Triple P-Positive Parenting Programme is described as an example of an evidence-based universal parenting initiative that provides a tiered continuum of interventions of increasing strength but narrowing reach in an effort to make parenting programmes more accessible to parents. Interventions within the system range from the use of the media and brief messages to intensive family interventions for parents where parenting problems are complicated by multiple additional sources of family adversity. Several issues concerning the role of training and organizational factors that influence the successful uptake and implementation of the programme are discussed
Mitochondrial Dna Replacement Versus Nuclear Dna Persistence
In this paper we consider two populations whose generations are not
overlapping and whose size is large. The number of males and females in both
populations is constant. Any generation is replaced by a new one and any
individual has two parents for what concerns nuclear DNA and a single one (the
mother) for what concerns mtDNA. Moreover, at any generation some individuals
migrate from the first population to the second.
In a finite random time , the mtDNA of the second population is completely
replaced by the mtDNA of the first. In the same time, the nuclear DNA is not
completely replaced and a fraction of the ancient nuclear DNA persists. We
compute both and . Since this study shows that complete replacement of
mtDNA in a population is compatible with the persistence of a large fraction of
nuclear DNA, it may have some relevance for the Out of Africa/Multiregional
debate in Paleoanthropology
Analysis of the Risley prism duction procedure for sources of error
Analysis of the Risley prism duction procedure for sources of erro
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