1,114 research outputs found
Experimental Test bed to De-Risk the Navy Advanced Development Model
This paper presents a reduced scale demonstration test-bed at the University of Texas’ Center for Electromechanics (UT-CEM) which is well equipped to support the development and assessment of the anticipated Navy Advanced Development Model (ADM). The subscale ADM test bed builds on collaborative power management experiments conducted as part of the Swampworks Program under the US/UK Project Arrangement as well as non-military applications. The system includes the required variety of sources, loads, and controllers as well as an Opal-RT digital simulator. The test bed architecture is described and the range of investigations that can be carried out on it is highlighted; results of preliminary system simulations and some initial tests are also provided. Subscale ADM experiments conducted on the UT-CEM microgrid can be an important step in the realization of a full-voltage, full-power ADM three-zone demonstrator, providing a test-bed for components, subsystems, controls, and the overall performance of the Medium Voltage Direct Current (MVDC) ship architecture.Center for Electromechanic
Eucalyptus virginea and E. relicta (Myrtaceae), two new rare forest trees from south-western Australia allied to E. lane-poolei, and a new phantom hybrid
Hopper, S.D. & Wardell-Johnson, G. Eucalyptus virginea and E. relicta (Myrtaceae), two new rareforest trees from south-western Australia allied to E. lane-poolei, and a new phantom hybrid. Nuytsia 15(2): 227-240 (2004). Eucalyptus virginea and E. relicta are described from Mt Lindesay National Park and from the Whicher Range south-east of Busselton respectively. Both species, together with E. lane-poolei, are in the earliest branching clade of E. ser. Curviptera, which contains many horticulturally attractive large-flowered mallees from semi-arid and desert regions such as E. macrocarpa and E. youngiana. The discovery and description of these two rare relictual forest trees so recently highlights the need for ongoing botanical survey of south-western Australia's forests. A phantom hybrid, Eucalyptus lane-poolei x relicta, is also described for the first time. It occurs close to populations of E. relicta in the Whicher Range but 150 km south of the nearest recorded E. lane-poolei
Crystal structures of four indole derivatives as possible cannabinoid allosteric antagonists
Acknowledgements We thank the EPSRC National Crystallography Service (University of Southampton) for the data collections and the EPSRC National Mass Spectrometry Service (University of Swansea) for the HRMS data. We thank John Low for carrying out the Cambridge Database survey.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Education Program using Non-Pharmacologic Support during Benzodiazepine Reduction in Patients with Anxiety Disorders
A private mental health clinic developed an initiative to aid patients with anxiety disorders to taper their use of benzodiazepines. Based on best practices, a treatment protocol was developed in which patients attended 4 sessions (1 per month) in which they combined instruction in non-pharmaceutical anti-anxiety techniques (guided imagery, mindfulness meditation, deep breathing, progressive muscle relaxation, exercise, emotional freedom) with cognitive behavioral therapy and use of selective serotonin re uptake inhibitors. Participants experienced a reduction in benzodiazepine use. This small scale initiative showed that the holistic approach to anxiety management was an effective plan to decrease the use of benzodiazepines in the treatment of anxiety disorder
Effective source approach to self-force calculations
Numerical evaluation of the self-force on a point particle is made difficult
by the use of delta functions as sources. Recent methods for self-force
calculations avoid delta functions altogether, using instead a finite and
extended "effective source" for a point particle. We provide a review of the
general principles underlying this strategy, using the specific example of a
scalar point charge moving in a black hole spacetime. We also report on two new
developments: (i) the construction and evaluation of an effective source for a
scalar charge moving along a generic orbit of an arbitrary spacetime, and (ii)
the successful implementation of hyperboloidal slicing that significantly
improves on previous treatments of boundary conditions used for
effective-source-based self-force calculations. Finally, we identify some of
the key issues related to the effective source approach that will need to be
addressed by future work.Comment: Invited review for NRDA/Capra 2010 (Theory Meets Data Analysis at
Comparable and Extreme Mass Ratios), Perimeter Institute, June 2010, CQG
special issue - 22 pages, 8 figure
The 1:1 co-crystal of 2-bromonaphthalene-1,4-dione and 1,8-dihydroxyanthracene-9,10-dione: crystal structure and Hirshfeld surface analysis
The asymmetric unit of the title co-crystal, C10H5BrO2·C14H8O4 [systematic name: 2-bromo-1,4-dihydronaphthalene-1,4-dione–1,8-dihydroxy-9,10-dihydroanthracene-9,10-dione (1/1)], features one molecule of each coformer. The 2-bromonaphthoquinone molecule is almost planar [r.m.s deviation of the 13 non-H atoms = 0.060 Å, with the maximum deviations of 0.093 (1) and 0.099 (1) Å being for the Br atom and a carbonyl-O atom, respectively]. The 1,8-dihydroxyanthraquinone molecule is planar (r.m.s. deviation for the 18 non-H atoms is 0.022 Å) and features two intramolecular hydroxy-O—H...O(carbonyl) hydrogen bonds. Dimeric aggregates of 1,8-dihydroxyanthraquinone molecules assemble through weak intermolecular hydroxy-O—H...O(carbonyl) hydrogen bonds. The molecular packing comprises stacks of molecules of 2-bromonaphthoquinone and dimeric assembles of 1,8-dihydroxyanthraquinone with the shortest π–π contact within a stack of 3.5760 (9) Å occurring between the different rings of 2-bromonaphthoquinone molecules. The analysis of the Hirshfeld surface reveals the importance of the interactions just indicated but, also the contribution of additional C—H...O contacts as well as C=O...π interactions to the molecular packing
Diffusion in Curved Spacetimes
Using simple kinematical arguments, we derive the Fokker-Planck equation for
diffusion processes in curved spacetimes. In the case of Brownian motion, it
coincides with Eckart's relativistic heat equation (albeit in a simpler form),
and therefore provides a microscopic justification for his phenomenological
heat-flux ansatz. Furthermore, we obtain the small-time asymptotic expansion of
the mean square displacement of Brownian motion in static spacetimes. Beyond
general relativity itself, this result has potential applications in analogue
gravitational systems.Comment: 14 pages, substantially revised versio
Between the point of view and the point of being: the space of the stereoscopic tours
One of the most interesting features of the travel stereoview
series is not their three-dimensional effect
but rather the intertwined outcome of realism and
“being-thereness” in the experience of early twentieth
century armchair travellers. On the set of Italy through
the Stereoscope, the viewer’s “path of the gaze” was a
novelty compared to two dimensional photographs
and stereoviews. The Underwood & Underwood publishing
company created a stereoscopic multimodal
tour to improve the impression of realism with a proprioceptive
perception of the scene. The procedure of
textual débrayage, the description of the experience as
it is happening here and now, the direction of the viewer’s
gaze with a narrative itinerary, the changing of the
visual convergence with the variation in the points of
attention: all of these elements fostered a synaesthesia
for the spectator. The result was immersion in an explorable
space between the “point of view” (2D images)
and the “point of being” (virtual reality)
Crystal structures of four indole derivatives with a phenyl substituent at the 2-position and a carbonyl group at the 3-position : the C(6) N-H⋯O chain remains the same, but the weak reinforcing inter-actions are different
Acknowledgements We thank the EPSRC National Crystallography Service (University of Southampton) for the data collections and the EPSRC National Mass Spectrometry Service (University of Swansea) for the HRMS data.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Weak interactions in the crystal structures of two indole derivatives
Acknowledgements We thank the EPSRC National Crystallography Service (University of Southampton) for the data collections and the EPSRC National Mass Spectrometry Service (University of Swansea) for the HRMS data.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
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