1,021 research outputs found
Flood of September 20-23, 1969 in the Gadsden County area, Florida
The center of low pressure of a tropical disturbance which
moved northward in the Gulf of Mexico, reached land between
Panama City and Port St. Joe, Florida, on September 20, 1969. This
system was nearly stationary for 48 hours producing heavy rainfall
in the Quincy-Havana area, 70-80 miles northeast of the center.
Rainfall associated with the tropical disturbance exceeded 20
inches over a part of Gadsden County, Florida, during September 20
through 23, 1969, and the maximum rainfall of record occurred at
Quincy with 10.87 inches during a 6-hour period on September 21.
The 48-hour maximum of 17.71 inches exceeded the 1 in 100-year
probability of 16 inches for a 7-day period.
The previous maximum rainfall of record at Quincy (more than
12 inches) was on September 14-15, 1924. The characteristics of this
historical storm were similar in path and effect to the September
1969 tropical disturbance.
Peak runoff from a 1.4-square mile area near Midway, Florida,
was 1,540 cfs (cubic feet per second) per square mile. A peak discharge
of 45,600 cfs on September 22 at the gaging station on the
Little River near Quincy exceeded the previous peak of 25,400 cfs
which occurred on December 4, 1964. The peak discharge of 89,400
cfs at Ochlockonee River near Bloxham exceeded the April 1948
peak of 50,200 cfs, which was the previous maximum of record, by
1.8 times. Many flood-measurement sites had peak discharges in
excess of that of a 50-year flood.
Nearly 520,000 in contractual work was required to replace four
bridges that were destroyed. Agricultural losses were estimated at
$1,000,000. (44 page document
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Introduction to detonation phenomena
The paper serves as an introduction to detonation phenomena for scientists who work in other fields. (TFD
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Equation of state for detonation products
To be useful, an equation of state for detonation products must allow rapid computation. The constraints applied by this requirement have surprising thermodynamic effects. Some of these are discussed here. A simple, complete equation of state is proposed, and its properties are discussed. With the form assumed here, all the useful integrals (except for the Riemann integral) can be written simply and explicitly, so the behavior of the important variables can be easily seen. The complete equation of state is calibrated for PBX9404 and PBX9501
Range Grasses of Hawaii
This bulletin discusses the more important grasses growing on local ranges, their growth in other parts of the world, nature of growth, palatability, persistence, climatic requirements, and present importance and possibilities for Hawaii
Estimation of bovine leukemia virus (BLV) proviral load harbored by lymphocyte subpopulations in BLV-infected cattle at the subclinical stage of enzootic bovine leucosis using BLV-CoCoMo-qPCR
Background: Bovine leukemia virus (BLV) is associated with enzootic bovine leukosis (EBL), which is the most common neoplastic disease of cattle. BLV infection may remain clinically silent at the aleukemic (AL) stage, cause persistent lymphocytosis (PL), or, more rarely, B cell lymphoma. BLV has been identified in B cells, CD2+ T cells, CD3+ T cells, CD4+ T cells, CD8+ T cells, Îł/ÎŽ T cells, monocytes, and granulocytes in infected cattle that do not have tumors, although the most consistently infected cell is the CD5+ B cell. The mechanism by which BLV causes uncontrolled CD5+ B cell proliferation is unknown. Recently, we developed a new quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) method, BLV-CoCoMo-qPCR, which enabled us to demonstrate that the proviral load correlates not only with BLV infection, as assessed by syncytium formation, but also with BLV disease progression. The present study reports the distribution of BLV provirus in peripheral blood mononuclear cell subpopulations isolated from BLV-infected cows at the subclinical stage of EBL as examined by cell sorting and BLV-CoCoMo-qPCR.Results: Phenotypic characterization of five BLV-infected but clinically normal cattle with a proviral load of > 100 copies per 1 Ă 105 cells identified a high percentage of CD5+ IgM+ cells (but not CD5- IgM+ B cells, CD4+ T cells, or CD8+T cells). These lymphocyte subpopulations were purified from three out of five cattle by cell sorting or using magnetic beads, and the BLV proviral load was estimated using BLV-CoCoMo-qPCR. The CD5+ IgM+ B cell population in all animals harbored a higher BLV proviral load than the other cell populations. The copy number of proviruses infecting CD5- IgM+ B cells, CD4+ cells, and CD8+ T cells (per 1 ml of blood) was 1/34 to 1/4, 1/22 to 1/3, and 1/31 to 1/3, respectively, compared with that in CD5+ IgM+ B cells. Moreover, the BLV provirus remained integrated into the genomic DNA of CD5+ IgM+ B cells, CD5- IgM+ B cells, CD4+ T cells, and CD8+ T cells, even in BLV-infected cattle with a proviral load of <100 copies per 105 cells.Conclusions: The results of the recent study showed that, although CD5+ IgM+ B cells were the main cell type targeted in BLV-infected but clinically normal cattle, CD5- IgM+ B cells, CD4+ cells, and CD8+ T cells were infected to a greater extent than previously thought.Facultad de Ciencias Veterinaria
T2D: Generating Dialogues Between Virtual Agents Automatically from Text
The Text2Dialogue (T2D) system that we are developing allows digital content creators to generate attractive multi-modal dialogues presented by two virtual agentsâby simply providing textual information as input. We use Rhetorical Structure Theory (RST) to decompose text into segments and to identify rhetorical discourse relations between them. These are then 'acted out' by two 3D agents using synthetic speech and appropriate conversational gestures. In this paper, we present version 1.0 of the T2D system and focus on the novel technique that it uses for mapping rhetorical relations to questionâanswer pairs, thus transforming (monological) text into a form that supports dialogues between virtual agents
On the role of the magnetic dipolar interaction in cold and ultracold collisions: Numerical and analytical results for NH() + NH()
We present a detailed analysis of the role of the magnetic dipole-dipole
interaction in cold and ultracold collisions. We focus on collisions between
magnetically trapped NH molecules, but the theory is general for any two
paramagnetic species for which the electronic spin and its space-fixed
projection are (approximately) good quantum numbers. It is shown that dipolar
spin relaxation is directly associated with magnetic-dipole induced avoided
crossings that occur between different adiabatic potential curves. For a given
collision energy and magnetic field strength, the cross-section contributions
from different scattering channels depend strongly on whether or not the
corresponding avoided crossings are energetically accessible. We find that the
crossings become lower in energy as the magnetic field decreases, so that
higher partial-wave scattering becomes increasingly important \textit{below} a
certain magnetic field strength. In addition, we derive analytical
cross-section expressions for dipolar spin relaxation based on the Born
approximation and distorted-wave Born approximation. The validity regions of
these analytical expressions are determined by comparison with the NH + NH
cross sections obtained from full coupled-channel calculations. We find that
the Born approximation is accurate over a wide range of energies and field
strengths, but breaks down at high energies and high magnetic fields. The
analytical distorted-wave Born approximation gives more accurate results in the
case of s-wave scattering, but shows some significant discrepancies for the
higher partial-wave channels. We thus conclude that the Born approximation
gives generally more meaningful results than the distorted-wave Born
approximation at the collision energies and fields considered in this work.Comment: Accepted by Eur. Phys. J. D for publication in Special Issue on Cold
Quantum Matter - Achievements and Prospects (2011
Limited evolution of West Nile virus has occurred during its southwesterly spread in the United States
AbstractAnalysis of partial nucleotide sequences of nine West Nile virus strains isolated in southeast Texas during JuneâAugust 2002 revealed a maximum of 0.35% nucleotide variation from a New York 1999 strain. Two sequence subtypes were identified that differed from each other by approximately 0.5%, suggesting multiple introductions of virus to this area. Analysis of sequences from cloned PCR products for one strain revealed up to 0.6% divergence from the consensus sequence at the subpopulation level. The presence of unique patterns of small numbers of mutations in North American West Nile strains studied to date may suggest the absence of a strong selective pressure to drive the emergence of dominant variants
The half-lives for 24Na, 72Ga and 140La
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/22610/1/0000160.pd
Stability of the trapped nonconservative Gross-Pitaevskii equation with attractive two-body interaction
The dynamics of a nonconservative Gross-Pitaevskii equation for trapped
atomic systems with attractive two-body interaction is numerically
investigated, considering wide variations of the nonconservative parameters,
related to atomic feeding and dissipation. We study the possible limitations of
the mean field description for an atomic condensate with attractive two-body
interaction, by defining the parameter regions where stable or unstable
formation can be found. The present study is useful and timely considering the
possibility of large variations of attractive two-body scattering lengths,
which may be feasible in recent experiments.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Physical Review
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