2,114 research outputs found
Finite Boolean Algebras for Solid Geometry using Julia's Sparse Arrays
The goal of this paper is to introduce a new method in computer-aided
geometry of solid modeling. We put forth a novel algebraic technique to
evaluate any variadic expression between polyhedral d-solids (d = 2, 3) with
regularized operators of union, intersection, and difference, i.e., any CSG
tree. The result is obtained in three steps: first, by computing an independent
set of generators for the d-space partition induced by the input; then, by
reducing the solid expression to an equivalent logical formula between Boolean
terms made by zeros and ones; and, finally, by evaluating this expression using
bitwise operators. This method is implemented in Julia using sparse arrays. The
computational evaluation of every possible solid expression, usually denoted as
CSG (Constructive Solid Geometry), is reduced to an equivalent logical
expression of a finite set algebra over the cells of a space partition, and
solved by native bitwise operators.Comment: revised version submitted to Computer-Aided Geometric Desig
New sources of cultural history of education: Italian trademark pictures as vehicles of colonial prejudices during the Fascist era
This paper uses an effective contextualisation of the images used in registered trademarks, to demonstrate how heuristic developments can go beyond the already-studied link be- tween material history and trademarks history (Hamilton 2009). It analyzes the meaning of a series of Italian trademark pictures with regards to the cultural environment which produced them and on which they impacted. It argued that those images played a role as indirect education factor as far as they strengthened stereotypes already promoted by in- stitutional racism.This contributes to a better understanding of the Italian colonial prejudices in the 20th century (Gabrielli 2013; Labanca 2000; Triulzi 1999; Castelli 1998)
Deep Drone Racing: From Simulation to Reality with Domain Randomization
Dynamically changing environments, unreliable state estimation, and operation
under severe resource constraints are fundamental challenges that limit the
deployment of small autonomous drones. We address these challenges in the
context of autonomous, vision-based drone racing in dynamic environments. A
racing drone must traverse a track with possibly moving gates at high speed. We
enable this functionality by combining the performance of a state-of-the-art
planning and control system with the perceptual awareness of a convolutional
neural network (CNN). The resulting modular system is both platform- and
domain-independent: it is trained in simulation and deployed on a physical
quadrotor without any fine-tuning. The abundance of simulated data, generated
via domain randomization, makes our system robust to changes of illumination
and gate appearance. To the best of our knowledge, our approach is the first to
demonstrate zero-shot sim-to-real transfer on the task of agile drone flight.
We extensively test the precision and robustness of our system, both in
simulation and on a physical platform, and show significant improvements over
the state of the art.Comment: Accepted as a Regular Paper to the IEEE Transactions on Robotics
Journal. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1806.0854
Reconfigurable photoinduced metamaterials in the microwave regime
We investigate optically reconfigurable dielectric metamaterials at gigahertz
frequencies. More precisely, we study the microwave response of a subwavelength
grating optically imprinted into a semiconductor slab. In the homogenized
regime, we analytically evaluate the ordinary and extraordinary component of
the effective permittivity tensor by taking into account the photo-carrier
dynamics described by the ambipolar diffusion equation. We analyze the impact
of semiconductor parameters on the gigahertz metamaterial response which turns
out to be highly reconfigurable by varying the photogenerated grating and which
can show a marked anisotropic behavior.Comment: 6 figures, 7 page
Activation of the Heat Shock Factor 1 by Serine Protease Inhibitors AN EFFECT ASSOCIATED WITH NUCLEAR FACTOR-κB INHIBITION
Heat shock proteins (HSPs) have a cytoprotective role in several human diseases, including ischemia and viral infection. Nuclear factor-kappaB (NF-kappaB) is a critical regulator of inflammation and virus replication. Here we report that a class of serine protease inhibitors with NF-kappaB-inhibitory activity are potent HSP inducers via activation of heat shock transcription factor 1 (HSF1) in human cells. 3,4-Dichloroisocoumarin, the most effective compound, rapidly induces HSF1 DNA binding activity and phosphorylation, leading to transcription and translation of heat shock genes for a period of several hours. HSF1 activation is independent of de novo protein synthesis and is correlated in a concentration- and time-dependent manner with NF-kappaB inhibition. Cysteine protease inhibitors E64 and calpain inhibitor II, which do not block NF-kappaB activation, do not induce HSF DNA binding activity. HSP induction by 3,4-dichloroisocoumarin is associated with antiviral activity during rhabdovirus infection. These results identify a new class of HSP inducers and indicate a link between the regulatory pathways of HSF and NF-kappaB, suggesting novel strategies to simultaneously switch on cytoprotective genes and down-regulate inflammatory and viral genes
In Situ Determination of the Effects of Lead and Copper on Cyanobacterial Populations in Microcosms
BACKGROUND: Biomass has been studied as biomarker to evaluate the effect of heavy metals on microbial communities. Nevertheless, the most important methodological problem when working with natural and artificial microbial mats is the difficulty to evaluate changes produced on microorganism populations that are found in thicknesses of just a few mm depth. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Here, we applied for first time a recently published new method based on confocal laser scanning microscopy and image-program analysis to determine in situ the effect of Pb and Cu stress in cyanobacterial populations. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: The results showed that both in the microcosm polluted by Cu and by Pb, a drastic reduction in total biomass for cyanobacterial and Microcoleus sp. (the dominant filamentous cyanobacterium in microbial mats) was detected within a week. According to the data presented in this report, this biomass inspection has a main advantage: besides total biomass, diversity, individual biomass of each population and their position can be analysed at microscale level. CLSM-IA could be a good method for analyzing changes in microbial biomass as a response to the addition of heavy metals and also to other kind of pollutants
Influence of biochar, mycorrhizal inoculation and fertilizer rate on growth and flowering of pelargonium (Pelargonium zonale L.) plants
Peat is the most common substrate used in nurseries despite being a very expensive and a non-renewable material. Peat replacement with biochar could be a sound environmental practice, as it is produced from waste biomass, but evaluation of biochar as a potting substrate is needed. Ratios of peat:biochar of 100:0, 70:30, 30:70 (BC0, BC30, and BC70, respectively), two fertilizer rates (FERT1, FERT2), and arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) inoculation were tested on potted Pelargonium plants. Plant growth, flowering, bio-physiological and nutritional responses, and root mycorrhization were evaluated. The BC30 mixture did not affect plant growth compared with pure peat. However, BC30 in combination with FERT2 treatment was more effective in enhancing nitrogen (N) and chlorophyll (CHL) leaf concentrations, and leaf and flower numbers. The BC70 mixture depressed plant growth, flowering traits, and root mycorrhization. Leaf N concentration was below the sufficiency range reported for Pelargonium growth. Leaf concentration of phosphorous (P) was adequate in pure peat and in BC30 but it dropped close to sub-optimal values in BC70. The pH value of the mixtures lowered P availability, though in BC30 the mycorrhizal activity could have allowed adequate P plant uptake. In BC70 plants, the deficiency of both N and P might be a reason for the observed growth reduction. The inoculation of the substrate with selected AMF improved plant growth (higher dry biomass, greater floral clusters, larger and more abundant leaves) and quality resulting in unstressed (lower electrolyte leakage and higher relative water content values) and greener leaves (low L∗ and C∗, high CHL content) and in more intensely colored flowers. We conclude that biochar can be applied in nursery/potted plant production provided that the proportion in the peat mixture does not exceed 30%. Furthermore, AMF inoculation contributed to achieving the best plant performance in 30% biochar amended medium
Ionogel hybrid polymer electrolytes encompassing room-temperature ionic liquids for 4V-class Li-metal batteries operating at ambient temperature
In this study, we prepare ionogels composed of bisphenol A ethoxylate dimethacrylate, poly(ethylene glycol) methyl ether methacrylate, lithium bis(trifluoromethanesulfonyl)imide, and 1-butyl-1-methylpyrrolidinium bis(fluorosulfonyl)imide or 1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium bis(fluorosulfonyl)imide ionic liquids via rapid, scalable, solvent-free UV-induced polymerization.The various hybrid polymer electrolyte formulations are thoroughly characterized using acomprehensive set of physico-chemical and electrochemical methods, including gel content,FTIR, rheology, DTMA, TGA, SEM, cycling voltammetry, impedance spectroscopy, andgalvanostatic cycling in laboratory-scale Li-metal cells. We particularly focus on the influence ofusing two different ionic liquids as reaction medium on the properties of the resulting materialsand their electrochemical behaviors. Our results indicate that viscosity affects thepolymerization kinetics of the ionogels, which in turn might affect their thermal stability andgalvanostatic cycling behavior. In the purpose of promoting overall performance of solid-statebatteries, we also present the results of composite electrolytes obtained by introducingLi7La3Zr2O12(LLZO) into ionogels and followingin-situUV-polymerisation. The addition of LLZOceramic results in more porous solid networks, leading to enhanced charge/discharge stabilityat ambient temperature and higher C-rates featuring 4V-class NMC cathodes, enlightening thepromising prospects of the developed materials to be successfully implemented as stable,durable, and efficient electrolytes in next-generation Li-metal cells
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