1,925 research outputs found
Classification of journal surfaces using surface topography parameters and software methods to compensate for stylus geometry
Measurements made with a stylus surface tracer which provides a digitized representation of a surface profile are discussed. Parameters are defined to characterize the height (e.g., RMS roughness, skewness, and kurtosis) and length (e.g., autocorrelation) of the surface topography. These are applied to the characterization of crank shaft journals which were manufactured by different grinding and lopping procedures known to give significant differences in crank shaft bearing life. It was found that three parameters (RMS roughness, skewness, and kurtosis) are necessary to adequately distinguish the character of these surfaces. Every surface specimen has a set of values for these three parameters. They can be regarded as a set coordinate in a space constituted by three characteristics axes. The various journal surfaces can be classified along with the determination of a proper wavelength cutoff (0.25 mm) by using a method of separated subspace. The finite radius of the stylus used for profile tracing gives an inherent measurement error as it passes over the fine structure of the surface. A mathematical model is derived to compensate for this error
COMPTEL solar flare observations
COMPTEL as part of a solar target of opportunity campaign observed the sun during the period of high solar activity from 7-15 Jun. 1991. Major flares were observed on 9 and 11 Jun. Although both flares were large GOES events (greater than or = X10), they were not extraordinary in terms of gamma-ray emission. Only the decay phase of the 15 Jun. flare was observed by COMPTEL. We report the preliminary analysis of data from these flares, including the first spectroscopic measurement of solar flare neutrons. The deuterium formation line at 2.223 MeV was present in both events and for at least the 9 Jun. event, was comparable to the flux in the nuclear line region of 4-8 MeV, consistent with Solar-Maximum Mission (SSM) Observations. A clear neutron signal was present in the flare of 9 Jun. with the spectrum extending up to 80 MeV and consistent in time with the emission of gamma-rays, confirming the utility of COMPTEL in measuring the solar neutron flux at low energies. The neutron flux below 100 MeV appears to be lower than that of the 3 Jun. 1982 flare by more than an order of magnitude. The neutron signal of the 11 Jun. event is under study. Severe dead time effects resulting from the intense thermal x-rays require significant corrections to the measured flux which increase the magnitude of the associated systematic uncertainties
The Early Stages of Pedaliodes poesia (Hewitson, 1862) in Eastern Ecuador (Lepidoptera: Satyrinae: Pronophilina)
We describe the immature stages Pedaliodes poesia
Hewitson, 1862 from northeastern Ecuador. Chusquea scandens (Poaceae, Bambusoidea) is the larval food plant. Eggs are laid singly or in pairs on the bottom side of host plant leaves. The duration of the egg, larval, and pupal stages, combined, is 99–107 days
A new approximation scheme in quantum mechanics
An approximation method which combines the perturbation theory with the
variational calculation is constructed for quantum mechanical problems. Using
the anharmonic oscillator and the He atom as examples, we show that the present
method provides an efficient scheme in estimating both the ground and the
excited states. We also discuss the limitations of the present method.Comment: 14pages, to be published in Eur. J. Phy
Analytical approximation for the sphere-sphere Coulomb potential
A simple analytical expression, which closely approximates the Coulomb
potential between two uniformly charged spheres, is presented. This expression
can be used in the optical potential semiclassical analyses which require that
the interaction be analytic on and near the real r-axis.Comment: 4 pages including 3 figures and 1 tabl
Time-of-Day Dictates Transcriptional Inflammatory Responses to Cytotoxic Chemotherapy
Many cytotoxic chemotherapeutics elicit a proinflammatory response which is often associated with chemotherapy-induced behavioral alterations. The immune system is under circadian influence; time-of-day may alter inflammatory responses to chemotherapeutics. We tested this hypothesis by administering cyclophosphamide and doxorubicin (Cyclo/Dox), a common treatment for breast cancer, to female BALB/c mice near the beginning of the light or dark phase. Mice were injected intravenously with Cyclo/Dox or the vehicle two hours after lights on (zeitgeber time (ZT2), or two hours after lights off (ZT14). Tissue was collected 1, 3, 9, and 24 hours later. Mice injected with Cyclo/Dox at ZT2 lost more body mass than mice injected at ZT14. Cyclo/Dox injected at ZT2 increased the expression of several pro-inflammatory genes within the spleen; this was not evident among mice treated at ZT14. Transcription of enzymes within the liver responsible for converting Cyclo/Dox into their toxic metabolites increased among mice injected at ZT2; furthermore, transcription of these enzymes correlated with splenic pro-inflammatory gene expression when treatment occurred at ZT2 but not ZT14. The pattern was reversed in the brain; pro-inflammatory gene expression increased among mice injected at ZT14. These data suggest that inflammatory responses to chemotherapy depend on time-of-day and are tissue specific
Computability, G\"odel's Incompleteness Theorem, and an inherent limit on the predictability of evolution
The process of evolutionary diversification unfolds in a vast genotypic space
of potential outcomes. During the past century there have been remarkable
advances in the development of theory for this diversification, and the
theory's success rests, in part, on the scope of its applicability. A great
deal of this theory focuses on a relatively small subset of the space of
potential genotypes, chosen largely based on historical or contemporary
patterns, and then predicts the evolutionary dynamics within this pre-defined
set. To what extent can such an approach be pushed to a broader perspective
that accounts for the potential open-endedness of evolutionary diversification?
There have been a number of significant theoretical developments along these
lines but the question of how far such theory can be pushed has not been
addressed. Here a theorem is proven demonstrating that, because of the digital
nature of inheritance, there are inherent limits on the kinds of questions that
can be answered using such an approach. In particular, even in extremely simple
evolutionary systems a complete theory accounting for the potential
open-endedness of evolution is unattainable unless evolution is progressive.
The theorem is closely related to G\"odel's Incompleteness Theorem and to the
Halting Problem from computability theory.Comment: Journal of the Royal Society, Interface 201
Interference scheme to measure light-induced nonlinearities in Bose-Einstein condensates
Light-induced nonlinear terms in the Gross-Pitaevskii equation arise from the
stimulated coherent exchange of photons between two atoms. For atoms in an
optical dipole trap this effect depends on the spatial profile of the trapping
laser beam. Two different laser beams can induce the same trapping potential
but very different nonlinearities. We propose a scheme to measure light-induced
nonlinearities which is based on this observation.Comment: 2 figure
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