5,896 research outputs found
An incubatable direct current stimulation system for in vitro studies of Mammalian cells.
The purpose of this study was to provide a simplified alternative technology and format for direct current stimulation of mammalian cells. An incubatable reusable stimulator was developed that effectively delivers a regulated current and does not require constant monitoring
Organizational stress and individual strain: A social-psychological study of risk factors in coronary heart disease among administrators, engineers, and scientists
It is hypothesized that organizational stresses, such as high quantitative work load, responsibility for persons, poor relations with role senders, and contact with alien organizational territories, may be associated with high levels of psychological and physiological strain which are risk factors in coronary heart disease. It is further hypothesized that persons with coronary-prone Type A personality characteristics are most likely to exhibit strain under conditions of organizational stress. Measures of these stresses, personality traits, and strains were obtained from 205 male NASA administrators, engineers, and scientists. Type A personality measures included sense of time urgency, persistence, involved striving, leadership, and preference for competitive and environmentally overburdening situations
Iron oxidation at low temperature (260–500 C) in air and the effect of water vapor
The oxidation of iron has been studied at low temperatures (between 260 and 500 C) in dry air or air with 2 vol% H2O, in the framework of research on dry corrosion of nuclear waste containers during long-term interim storage. Pure iron is regarded as a model material for low-alloyed steel. Oxidation tests were performed in a thermobalance (up to 250 h) or in a laboratory furnace (up to 1000 h). The oxide scales formed were characterized using SEM-EDX, TEM, XRD, SIMS and EBSD techniques. The parabolic rate constants deduced from microbalance experiments were found to be in good agreement with the few existing values of the literature. The presence of water vapor in air was found to strongly influence the transitory stages of the kinetics. The entire structure of the oxide scale was composed of an internal duplex magnetite scale made of columnar grains and an external hematite scale made of equiaxed grains. 18O tracer experiments performed at 400 C allowed to propose a growth mechanism of the scale
Triggered massive-star formation on the borders of Galactic HII regions. II. Evidence for the collect and collapse process around RCW 79
We present SEST-SIMBA 1.2-mm continuum maps and ESO-NTT SOFI JHK images of
the Galactic HII region RCW 79. The millimetre continuum data reveal the
presence of massive fragments located in a dust emission ring surrounding the
ionized gas. The two most massive fragments are diametrically opposite each
other in the ring. The near-IR data, centred on the compact HII region located
at the south-eastern border of RCW 79, show the presence of an IR-bright
cluster containing massive stars along with young stellar objects with near-IR
excesses. A bright near- and mid-IR source is detected towards maser emissions,
1.2 pc north-east of the compact HII region centre. Additional information,
extracted from the Spitzer GLIMPSE survey, are used to discuss the nature of
the bright IR sources observed towards RCW 79. Twelve luminous Class I sources
are identified towards the most massive millimetre fragments. All these facts
strongly indicate that the massive-star formation observed at the border of the
HII region RCW 79 has been triggered by its expansion, most probably by the
collect and collapse process.Comment: 14 pages, 15 figures. Accepted for publication in A&A. The images
have been highly compressed for astro-ph. A version of this paper with
higher-resolution figures is available at
http://www.oamp.fr/matiere/rcw79.pd
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