44,028 research outputs found

    Release mechanism for releasing and reattaching experiments on the Space Shuttle

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    The release mechanism (REM) unlatches an experiment so that it can be moved about inside and outside the shuttle bay by the remote manipulator system (RMS), and then reattaches it to the REM base. Operated from the crew compartment after the RMS has been attached to the experiment, the REM releases the experiment by an electric motor driving a gear train and linkage which extracts four pins from holes in four plates. Electrical connectors on the REM are disengaged by the mechanical action of the structural pins retracting from the plates. When the REM releases the experiment, an unlatched indicator is actuated in the crew compartment, and then the experiment can be moved by using the RMS. To reattach the experiment to the REM, the RMS places the experiment with REM attachment angles against the flat, smooth surface of the REM; then the RMS moves the experiment into position for latchup. Actuation of an electric motor drives the four pins into the four holes in the plates. When fully latched, a switch actuated by the motion of the linkage, shuts the electric motor off and gives an indication to the crew compartment that the REM is latched

    Ephedrine requirements are reduced during spinal anaesthesia for caesarean section in preeclampsia

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    Part of the Portfolio Thesis by Geoffrey H. Sharwood-Smith: The inferior vena caval compression theory of hypotension in obstetric spinal anaesthesia: studies in normal and preeclamptic pregnancy, a literature review and revision of fundamental concepts, available at http://hdl.handle.net/10023/1815Background: Despite controversy over the haemodynamically safest blockade for caesarean section in women with severe preeclampsia, an increasing number of anaesthetists now opt for spinal anaesthesia. In a previous study we found that spinal compared to epidural anaesthesia offered an equally safe but more effective option for these patients. The current study was designed to compare the hypotension induced by spinal anaesthesia, as measured by ephedrine requirement, between 20 normotensive and 20 severely preeclamptic but haemodynamically stabilised women. Method: Standardised spinal anaesthesia was instituted and ephedrine was given in boluses of 6 mg if the systolic pressure fell >20% from the baseline, or if the patient exhibited symptoms of hypotension. Results: The mean ephedrine requirement of the normotensive group (27.9 ± 11.6 mg) was significantly greater (P < 0.01) than that of the preeclamptic group (16.4 ± 15.0 mg). Conclusion: This suggests that the hypotension induced by spinal anaesthesia in women with severe but haemodynamically stabilised preeclampsia, is less than that of normotensive patients.Publisher PD

    Thermodynamic properties of Fermi systems with flat single-particle spectra

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    The behavior of strongly correlated Fermi systems is investigated beyond the onset of a phase transition where the single-particle spectrum ξ(p)\xi({\bf p}) becomes flat. The Landau-Migdal quasiparticle picture is shown to remain applicable on the ordered side of this transition. Nevertheless, low-temperature properties evaluated within this picture show profound changes relative to results of Landau theory, as a direct consequence of the flattening of ξ(p)\xi({\bf p}). Stability conditions for this class of systems are examined, and the nature of antiferromagnetic quantum phase transitions is elucidated.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
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