1,145 research outputs found
Experiment K-6-09. Morphological and biochemical investigation of microgravity-induced nerve and muscle breakdown. Part 1: Investigation of nerve and muscle breakdown during spaceflight; Part 2: Biochemical analysis of EDL and PLT muscles
The present findings on rat hindlimb muscles suggest that skeletal muscle weakness induced by prolonged spaceflight can result from a combination of muscle fiber atrophy, muscle fiber segmental necrosis, degeneration of motor nerve terminals and destruction of microcirculatory vessels. Damage was confined to the red adductor longus (AL) and soleus muscles. The midbelly region of the AL muscle had more segmental necrosis and edema than the ends. Macrophages and neutrophils were the major mononucleated cells infiltrating and phagocytosing the cellular debris. Toluidine blue-positive mast cells were significantly decreased in Flight AL muscles compared to controls; this indicated that degranulation of mast cells contributed to tissue edema. Increased ubiquitination of disrupted myofibrils may have promoted myofilament degradation. Overall, mitochondria content and SDH activity were normal, except for a decrease in the subsarcolemmal region. The myofibrillar ATPase activity shifted toward the fast type in the Flight AL muscles. Some of the pathological changes may have occurred or been exacerbated during the 2 day postflight period of readaptation to terrestrial gravity. While simple atrophy should be reversible by exercise, restoration of pathological changes depends upon complex processes of regeneration by stem cells. Initial signs of muscle and nerve fiber regeneration were detected. Even though regeneration proceeds on Earth, the space environment may inhibit repair and cause progressive irreversible deterioration during long term missions. Muscles obtained from Flight rats sacrificed immediately (within a few hours) after landing are needed to distinguish inflight changes from postflight readaptation
A dynamics-driven approach to precision machines design for micro-manufacturing and its implementation perspectives
Precision machines are essential elements in fabricating high quality micro products or micro features and directly affect the machining accuracy, repeatability and efficiency. There are a number of literatures on the design of industrial machine elements and a couple of precision machines commercially available. However, few researchers have systematically addressed the design of precision machines from the dynamics point of view. In this paper, the design issues of precision machines are presented with particular emphasis on the dynamics aspects as the major factors affecting the performance of the precision machines and machining processes. This paper begins with a brief review of the design principles of precision machines with emphasis on machining dynamics. Then design processes of precision machines are discussed, and followed by a practical modelling and simulation approaches. Two case studies are provided including the design and analysis of a fast tool servo system and a 5-axis bench-top micro-milling machine respectively. The design and analysis used in the two case studies are formulated based on the design methodology and guidelines
Elemental Analysis of OAK and Hickory Charcoal Using Neutron Activation Analysis
One-cm cubes of heartwood of white oak and shagbark hickory wood and charcoat were analyzed for selected inorganic elements using neutron activation analysis. A multi-element survey procedure with short (30-sec) and long (24-h) irradiation exposures was developed for use with the University of Missouri Research Reactor Facility. Output of this facility is 10 Megawatts, generating a flux of 1 x 1014 neutrons/cm2/sec. Matched wood samples were converted into charcoat utilizing (1) commercial process in a Missouri-type kiln, and (2) laboratory charring using specified time/temperature schedules.Inorganic concentrations of Al, Ba, Br, Ca, Ce, Co, Cr, Eu, Fe, K, Mg, Mn, Na, Rb, and Zn were found to increase with charring temperature as a result of the reduced charcoal yield. The elements measured accounted for some 60% of the ash content, which was also shown to increase in inverse proportion to the charcoal yield
Funneling Light Through a Subwavelength Aperture with Epsilon-Near-Zero Materials
Integration of the next generation of photonic structures with electronic and
optical on-chip components requires the development of effective methods for
confining and controlling light in subwavelength volumes. Several techniques
enabling light coupling to sub-wavelength objects have recently been proposed,
including grating-, and composite-based solutions. However, experi-mental
realization of these couplers involves complex fabrication with \sim 10nm
resolution in three dimensions. One promising alternative to complex coupling
structures involves materials with vanishingly small dielectric permittivity,
also known as epsilon-near-zero (ENZ) materials. In contrast to the previously
referenced approaches, a single at layer of ENZ-material is expected to provide
effcient coupling between free-space radiation and sub-wavelength guiding
structures. Here we report the first direct observation of bulk-ENZ-enhanced
transmission through a subwavelength slit, accompanied by a theoretical study
of this phenomenon. Our study opens the door to multiple practical applications
of ENZ materials and ENZ-based photonic systems
LesionAir: An Automated, Low-Cost Vision-Based Skin Cancer Diagnostic Tool
Current techniques for diagnosing skin cancer lack specificity and sensitivity, resulting in unnecessary biopsies and missed diagnoses. Automating tissue palpation and morphology quantification will result in a repeatable, objective process. LesionAir is a low-cost skin cancer diagnostic tool that measures the full-field compliance of tissue by applying a vacuum force and measuring the precise deflection using structured light three-dimensional (3D) reconstruction. The technology was tested in a benchtop setting on phantom skin and in a small clinical study. LesionAir has been shown to measure deflection with a 0.085mm root-mean-square (RMS) error and measured the stiffness of phantom tissue to within 20% of finite element analysis (FEA) predictions. After biopsy and analysis, a dermatopathologist confirmed the diagnosis of skin cancer in tissue that LesionAir identified as noticeably stiffer and the regions of this stiffer tissue aligned with the bounds of the lesion. A longitudinal, full-scale study is required to determine the clinical efficacy of the device. This technology shows initial promise as a low-cost tool that could rapidly identify and diagnose skin cancer.National Science Foundation (U.S.) (Grant 1122374
Nd:LNA Laser Optical Pumping Of ⁴He: Application To Space Magnetometers
We have observed Hanle signals and n=0, p=1 parametric resonances of 23S1 metastable helium atoms in a discharge cell by optically pumping the helium atoms with a tunable Nd:LNA laser. These resonances were used to construct a sensitive magnetometer for the measurement of very small magnetic fields. Since magnetometer sensitivity is proportional to the slope of the parametric resonance signal (signal amplitude divided by linewidth), the slopes for single-line laser pumping were compared with similar quantities obtained from conventional helium lamp pumping. Laser pumping yielded 45 times greater slopes with comparable power requirements, thus establishing the potential for developing ultrasensitive resonance magnetometers using single-line laser pumping
Interpretable by Design: Learning Predictors by Composing Interpretable Queries
There is a growing concern about typically opaque decision-making with
high-performance machine learning algorithms. Providing an explanation of the
reasoning process in domain-specific terms can be crucial for adoption in
risk-sensitive domains such as healthcare. We argue that machine learning
algorithms should be interpretable by design and that the language in which
these interpretations are expressed should be domain- and task-dependent.
Consequently, we base our model's prediction on a family of user-defined and
task-specific binary functions of the data, each having a clear interpretation
to the end-user. We then minimize the expected number of queries needed for
accurate prediction on any given input. As the solution is generally
intractable, following prior work, we choose the queries sequentially based on
information gain. However, in contrast to previous work, we need not assume the
queries are conditionally independent. Instead, we leverage a stochastic
generative model (VAE) and an MCMC algorithm (Unadjusted Langevin) to select
the most informative query about the input based on previous query-answers.
This enables the online determination of a query chain of whatever depth is
required to resolve prediction ambiguities. Finally, experiments on vision and
NLP tasks demonstrate the efficacy of our approach and its superiority over
post-hoc explanations.Comment: 29 pages, 14 figures. Accepted as a Regular Paper in Transactions on
Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligenc
Light response of pure CsI calorimeter crystals painted with wavelength-shifting lacquer
We have measured scintillation properties of pure CsI crystals used in the
shower calorimeter built for a precise determination of the pi+ -> pi0 e+ nu
decay rate at the Paul Scherrer Institute (PSI). All 240 individual crystals
painted with a special wavelength-shifting solution were examined in a
custom-build detection apparatus (RASTA=radioactive source tomography
apparatus) that uses a 137Cs radioactive gamma source, cosmic muons and a light
emitting diode as complementary probes of the scintillator light response. We
have extracted the total light output, axial light collection nonuniformities
and timing responses of the individual CsI crystals. These results predict
improved performance of the 3 pi sr PIBETA calorimeter due to the painted
lateral surfaces of 240 CsI crystals. The wavelength-shifting paint treatment
did not affect appreciably the total light output and timing resolution of our
crystal sample. The predicted energy resolution for positrons and photons in
the energy range of 10-100 MeV was nevertheless improved due to the more
favorable axial light collection probability variation. We have compared
simulated calorimeter ADC spectra due to 70 MeV positrons and photons with a
Monte Carlo calculation of an ideal detector light response.Comment: Elsevier LaTeX, 35 pages in e-print format, 15 Postscript Figures and
4 Tables, also available at
http://pibeta.phys.virginia.edu/~pibeta/subprojects/csipro/tomo/rasta.p
- …