10,700 research outputs found
Shuttle orbiter radar cross-sectional analysis
Theoretical and model simulation studies on signal to noise levels and shuttle radar cross section are described. Pre-mission system calibrations, system configuration, and postmission system calibration of the tracking radars are described. Conversion of target range, azimuth, and elevation into radar centered east north vertical position coordinates are evaluated. The location of the impinging rf energy with respect to the target vehicles body axis triad is calculated. Cross section correlation between the two radars is presented
A superior alternative -- using the computer to determine yield on an apartment investment : a case study 1972 / BEBR No. 47
Bibliography: p.[42]-[44]
Discrete analogue computing with rotor-routers
Rotor-routing is a procedure for routing tokens through a network that can
implement certain kinds of computation. These computations are inherently
asynchronous (the order in which tokens are routed makes no difference) and
distributed (information is spread throughout the system). It is also possible
to efficiently check that a computation has been carried out correctly in less
time than the computation itself required, provided one has a certificate that
can itself be computed by the rotor-router network. Rotor-router networks can
be viewed as both discrete analogues of continuous linear systems and
deterministic analogues of stochastic processes.Comment: To appear in Chaos Special Focus Issue on Intrinsic and Designed
Computatio
The Local Group: The Ultimate Deep Field
Near-field cosmology -- using detailed observations of the Local Group and
its environs to study wide-ranging questions in galaxy formation and dark
matter physics -- has become a mature and rich field over the past decade.
There are lingering concerns, however, that the relatively small size of the
present-day Local Group ( Mpc diameter) imposes insurmountable
sample-variance uncertainties, limiting its broader utility. We consider the
region spanned by the Local Group's progenitors at earlier times and show that
it reaches co-moving Mpc in linear size (a volume of ) at . This size at early cosmic epochs is large enough
to be representative in terms of the matter density and counts of dark matter
halos with . The Local
Group's stellar fossil record traces the cosmic evolution of galaxies with
(reaching
at ) over a region that is comparable to or larger than
the Hubble Ultra-Deep Field (HUDF) for the entire history of the Universe. It
is highly complementary to the HUDF, as it probes much fainter galaxies but
does not contain the intrinsically rarer, brighter sources that are detectable
in the HUDF. Archaeological studies in the Local Group also provide the ability
to trace the evolution of individual galaxies across time as opposed to
evaluating statistical connections between temporally distinct populations. In
the JWST era, resolved stellar populations will probe regions larger than the
HUDF and any deep JWST fields, further enhancing the value of near-field
cosmology.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures; MNRAS Letters, in pres
Locating the pseudogap closing point in cuprate superconductors: absence of entrant or reentrant behavior
Current descriptions of the pseudogap in underdoped cuprates envision a
doping-dependent transition line which descends monotonically towards
zero just beyond optimal doping. There is much debate as to the location of the
terminal point where vanishes, whether or not there is a phase
transition at and exactly how behaves below within the
superconducting dome. One perspective sees cutting the dome and
continuing to descend monotonically to zero at holes/Cu
referred to here as `entrant behavior'. Another perspective derived from
photoemission studies is that intersects the dome near holes/Cu then turns back below , falling to zero again
around referred to here as `reentrant behavior'. By
examining thermodynamic data for BiSrCaCuO we show
that neither entrant nor reentrant behavior is experimentally supported.
Rather, sharply delimits the pseudogap regime and for
the pseudogap is always present, independent of temperature. Similar
results are found for YCaBaCuO. For both
materials is not a temperature but a crossover scale, , reflecting instead the underlying pseudogap energy which
vanishes as .Comment: 20 Pages, 9 Figures, in press Phys. Rev.
The spatial organisation of time-averaged streamwise velocity and its correlation with the surface topography of water-worked gravel beds
Accelerated Calvarial Healing in Mice Lacking Toll-Like Receptor 4
The bone and immune systems are closely interconnected. The immediate inflammatory response after fracture is known to trigger a healing cascade which plays an important role in bone repair. Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) is a member of a highly conserved receptor family and is a critical activator of the innate immune response after tissue injury. TLR4 signaling has been shown to regulate the systemic inflammatory response induced by exposed bone components during long-bone fracture. Here we tested the hypothesis that TLR4 activation affects the healing of calvarial defects. A 1.8 mm diameter calvarial defect was created in wild-type (WT) and TLR4 knockout (TLR4-/-) mice. Bone healing was tested using radiographic, histologic and gene expression analyses. Radiographic and histomorphometric analyses revealed that calvarial healing was accelerated in TLR4-/- mice. More bone was observed in TLR4-/- mice compared to WT mice at postoperative days 7 and 14, although comparable healing was achieved in both groups by day 21. Bone remodeling was detected in both groups on postoperative day 28. In TLR4-/- mice compared to WT mice, gene expression analysis revealed that higher expression levels of IL-1β, IL-6, TNF-α,TGF-β1, TGF-β3, PDGF and RANKL and lower expression level of RANK were detected at earlier time points (≤ postoperative 4 days); while higher expression levels of IL-1β and lower expression levels of VEGF, RANK, RANKL and OPG were detected at late time points (> postoperative 4 days). This study provides evidence of accelerated bone healing in TLR4-/- mice with earlier and higher expression of inflammatory cytokines and with increased osteoclastic activity. Further work is required to determine if this is due to inflammation driven by TLR4 activation. © 2012 Wang et al
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