8,814 research outputs found
Small scale wind tunnel model investigation of hybrid high lift systems combining upper surface blowing with the internally blown flap
A small-scale wind tunnel test of a two engine hybrid model with upper surface blowing on a simulated expandable duct internally blown flap was accomplished in a two phase program. The low wing Phase I model utilized 0.126c radius Jacobs/Hurkamp flaps and 0.337c radius Coanda flaps. The high wing Phase II model was utilized for continued studies on the Jacobs/Hurkamp flap. Principal study areas included: basic data both engines operative and with an engine out, control flap utilization, horizontal tail effectiveness, spoiler effectiveness, USB nacelle deflector study and USB/IBF pressure ratio effects
The detection of extragalactic N: Consequences for nitrogen nucleosynthesis and chemical evolution
Detections of extragalactic N are reported from observations of the
rare hydrogen cyanide isotope HCN toward the Large Magellanic Cloud
(LMC) and the core of the (post-) starburst galaxy NGC 4945. Accounting for
optical depth effects, the LMC data from the massive star-forming region N113
infer a N ratio of 111 17, about twice the C
value. For the LMC star-forming region N159HW and for the central region of NGC
4945, N ratios are also 100. The N ratios
are smaller than all interstellar nitrogen isotope ratios measured in the disk
and center of the Milky Way, strongly supporting the idea that N is
predominantly of `primary' nature, with massive stars being its dominant
source. Although this appears to be in contradiction with standard stellar
evolution and nucleosynthesis calculations, it supports recent findings of
abundant N production due to rotationally induced mixing of protons into
the helium-burning shells of massive stars.Comment: 15 pages including one postscript figure, accepted for publication by
ApJ Letter, further comments: please contact Yi-nan Chi
Coupled valence and spin state transition in (Pr0.7Sm0.3)0.7Ca0.3CoO3
The coupled valence and spin state transition (VSST) taking place in
(Pr0.7Sm0.3)0.7Ca0.3CoO3 was investigated by soft x-ray absorption spectroscopy
(XAS) experiments carried out at the Pr-M4,5, Co-L2,3, and O-1s edges. This
VSST is found to be composed of a sharp Pr/Co valence and Co spin state
transition centered at T*=89.3 K, followed by a smoother Co spin-state
evolution at higher temperatures. At T < T*, we found that the praseodymium
displays a mixed valence Pr3+/Pr4+ with about 0.13 Pr4+/f.u., while all the
Co3+ is in the low-spin (LS) state. At T around T*, the sharp valence
transition converts all the Pr4+ to Pr3+ with a corresponding Co3+ to Co4+
compensation. This is accompanied by an equally sharp spin state transition of
the Co3+ from the low to an incoherent mixture of low and high spin (HS)
states. An involvement of the intermediate spin (IS) state can be discarded for
the Co3+. While above T* and at high temperatures the system shares rather
similar properties as Sr-doped LaCoO3, at low temperatures it behaves much more
like EuCoO3 with its highly stable LS configuration for the Co3+. Apparently,
the mechanism responsible for the formation of Pr4+ at low temperatures also
helps to stabilize the Co3+ in the LS configuration despite the presence of
Co4+ ions. We also found out that that the Co4+ is in an IS state over the
entire temperature range investigated in this study (10-290 K). The presence of
Co3+ HS and Co4+ IS at elevated temperatures facilitates the conductivity of
the material.Comment: 19 pages, 7 figures, Accepted in PR
Anharmonicity Induced Resonances for Ultracold Atoms and their Detection
When two atoms interact in the presence of an anharmonic potential, such as
an optical lattice, the center of mass motion cannot be separated from the
relative motion. In addition to generating a confinement-induced resonance (or
shifting the position of an existing Feshbach resonance), the external
potential changes the resonance picture qualitatively by introducing new
resonances where molecular excited center of mass states cross the scattering
threshold. We demonstrate the existence of these resonances, give their
quantitative characterization in an optical superlattice, and propose an
experimental scheme to detect them through controlled sweeping of the magnetic
field.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures; expanded presentatio
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Nutrient Estimation from 24-Hour Food Recalls Using Machine Learning and Database Mapping: A Case Study with Lactose.
The Automated Self-Administered 24-Hour Dietary Assessment Tool (ASA24) is a free dietary recall system that outputs fewer nutrients than the Nutrition Data System for Research (NDSR). NDSR uses the Nutrition Coordinating Center (NCC) Food and Nutrient Database, both of which require a license. Manual lookup of ASA24 foods into NDSR is time-consuming but currently the only way to acquire NCC-exclusive nutrients. Using lactose as an example, we evaluated machine learning and database matching methods to estimate this NCC-exclusive nutrient from ASA24 reports. ASA24-reported foods were manually looked up into NDSR to obtain lactose estimates and split into training (n = 378) and test (n = 189) datasets. Nine machine learning models were developed to predict lactose from the nutrients common between ASA24 and the NCC database. Database matching algorithms were developed to match NCC foods to an ASA24 food using only nutrients ("Nutrient-Only") or the nutrient and food descriptions ("Nutrient + Text"). For both methods, the lactose values were compared to the manual curation. Among machine learning models, the XGB-Regressor model performed best on held-out test data (R2 = 0.33). For the database matching method, Nutrient + Text matching yielded the best lactose estimates (R2 = 0.76), a vast improvement over the status quo of no estimate. These results suggest that computational methods can successfully estimate an NCC-exclusive nutrient for foods reported in ASA24
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