43,940 research outputs found
Aerodynamic performance of 0.5 meter-diameter, 337 meter-per-second tip speed, 1.5 pressure-ratio, single-stage fan designed for low noise aircraft engines
Overall and blade-element aerodynamic performance of a 0.271-scale model of QF-1 are presented, examined, and then compared and evaluated with that from similar low noise fan stage designs. The tests cover a wide range of speeds and weight flows along with variations in stator setting angle and stator axial spacing from the rotor. At design speed with stator at design setting angle and a fixed distance between stage measuring stations, there were no significant effects of increasing the axial spacing between rotor stator from 1.0 to 3.5 rotor chords on stage overall pressure ratio, efficiency or stall margin
Association between obesity and bacterial vaginosis as assessed by Nugent score
Background
Bacterial vaginosis is one of the most common vaginal conditions in the U.S. Recent studies have suggested obese women have an abnormal microbiota reminiscent of BV; however, few studies have investigated the prevalence of bacterial vaginosis in overweight and obese populations. Moreover, despite the increased prevalence of obesity and bacterial vaginosis in black women, it is not known whether racial disparities exist in the relationship between obesity and bacterial vaginosis.
Objective
The objective of this study was to examine the relationship between body mass index and bacterial vaginosis as determined by Nugent score and to determine the influence of race in this context.
Study Design
We performed a cross-sectional study using patient data and vaginal smears from 5,918 participants of the Contraceptive CHOICE Project. Gram stained vaginal smears were scored using the Nugent method and categorized as BV-negative (Nugent score 0-3), BV-intermediate (Nugent score 4-6), or BV-positive (Nugent score 7-10). Body mass index was determined using Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines and obese individuals were categorized as Class I, II, or III obese based on NIH and World Health Organization body mass index parameters. Linear regression was used to model mean differences in Nugent scores and Poisson regression with robust error variance was used to model prevalence of bacterial vaginosis.
Results
In our cohort, 50.7% of participants were black, 41.5% were white, and 5.1% were of Hispanic ethnicity with an average age of 25.3 years old. Overall, 28.1% of participants were bacterial vaginosis-positive. Bacterial vaginosis was prevalent in 21.3% of lean, 30.4% of overweight, and 34.5% of obese women (p<0.001). The distribution of bacterial vaginosis-intermediate individuals was similar across all body mass index categories. Compared to lean women, Nugent scores were highest among overweight and obese Class I women (adjusted mean difference; overweight 0.33 [95% CI 0.14, 0.51] and Class I obese 0.51 [95% CI 0.29, 0.72]). Consistent with this, overweight and obese women had a higher frequency of bacterial vaginosis compared to lean women, even after adjusting for variables including race. Among white women, the prevalence of BV was higher for overweight and Class I and Class II/III obese white women compared to lean white women, a phenomenon not observed among black women, suggesting an effect modification.
Conclusion
Overweight and obese women have higher Nugent scores and a greater occurrence of bacterial vaginosis compared to lean women. Black women have a greater prevalence of bacterial vaginosis independent of their body mass index compared to white women
Effect of Multiple Higgs Fields on the Phase Structure of the SU(2)-Higgs Model
The SU(2)-Higgs model, with a single Higgs field in the fundamental
representation and a quartic self-interaction, has a Higgs region and a
confinement region which are analytically connected in the parameter space of
the theory; these regions thus represent a single phase. The effect of multiple
Higgs fields on this phase structure is examined via Monte Carlo lattice
simulations. For the case of N>=2 identical Higgs fields, there is no remaining
analytic connection between the Higgs and confinement regions, at least when
Lagrangian terms that directly couple different Higgs flavours are omitted. An
explanation of this result in terms of enhancement from overlapping phase
transitions is explored for N=2 by introducing an asymmetry in the hopping
parameters of the Higgs fields. It is found that an enhancement of the phase
transitions can still occur for a moderate (10%) asymmetry in the resulting
hopping parameters.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures. References updated and minor typos correcte
The perimeter of large planar Voronoi cells: a double-stranded random walk
Let be the probability for a planar Poisson-Voronoi cell to have
exactly sides. We construct the asymptotic expansion of up to
terms that vanish as . We show that {\it two independent biased
random walks} executed by the polar angle determine the trajectory of the cell
perimeter. We find the limit distribution of (i) the angle between two
successive vertex vectors, and (ii) the one between two successive perimeter
segments. We obtain the probability law for the perimeter's long wavelength
deviations from circularity. We prove Lewis' law and show that it has
coefficient 1/4.Comment: Slightly extended version; journal reference adde
Uncovering CDM halo substructure with tidal streams
Models for the formation and growth of structure in a cold dark matter
dominated universe predict that galaxy halos should contain significant
substructure. Studies of the Milky Way, however, have yet to identify the
expected few hundred sub-halos with masses greater than about 10^6 Msun. Here
we propose a test for the presence of sub-halos in the halos of galaxies. We
show that the structure of the tidal tails of ancient globular clusters is very
sensitive to heating by repeated close encounters with the massive dark
sub-halos. We discuss the detection of such an effect in the context of the
next generation of astrometric missions, and conclude that it should be easily
detectable with the GAIA dataset. The finding of a single extended cold stellar
stream from a globular cluster would support alternative theories, such as
self-interacting dark matter, that give rise to smoother halos.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figures, submitted to MNRA
Fast moving of a population of robots through a complex scenario
Swarm robotics consists in using a large number of coordinated autonomous robots, or agents, to accomplish one or more tasks, using local and/or global rules. Individual and collective objectives can be designed for each robot of the swarm. Generally, the agents' interactions exhibit a high degree of complexity that makes it impossible to skip nonlinearities in the model. In this paper, is implemented both a collective interaction using a modified Vicsek model where each agent follows a local group velocity and the individual interaction concerning internal and external obstacle avoidance. The proposed strategies are tested for the migration of a unicycle robot swarm in an unknown environment, where the effectiveness and the migration time are analyzed. To this aim, a new optimal control method for nonlinear dynamical systems and cost functions, named Feedback Local Optimality Principle - FLOP, is applied
A new comparison between solid-state thermionics and thermoelectrics
It is shown that equations for electrical current in solid-state thermionic
and thermoelectric devices converge for devices with a width equal to the mean
free path of electrons, yielding a common expression for intensive electronic
efficiency in the two types of devices. This result is used to demonstrate that
the materials parameters for thermionic and thermoelectric devices are equal,
rather than differing by a multiplicative factor as previously thought
Letter from T.F. Lewis to Governor Washburn claiming discharge of C.B. Martin 4th Maine Volunteers, August 31, 1861
https://digitalmaine.com/adj_gen_corr_town_belfast/1008/thumbnail.jp
Microlensing of Broad Absorption Line Quasars: Polarization Variability
Roughly 10% of all quasars exhibit Broad Absorption Line (BAL) features which
appear to arise in material outflowing at high velocity from the active
galactic nucleus (AGN). The details of this outflow are, however, very poorly
constrained and the particular nature of the BAL material is essentially
unknown. Recently, new clues have become available through polarimetric studies
which have found that BAL troughs are more polarized than the quasar continuum
radiation. To explain these observations, models where the BAL material
outflows equatorially across the surface of the dusty torus have been
developed. In these models, however, several sources of the BAL polarization
are possible. Here, we demonstrate how polarimetric monitoring of
gravitationally lensed quasars, such as H 1413+117, during microlensing events
can not only distinguish between two currently popular models, but can also
provide further insight into the structure at the cores of BAL quasars.Comment: 17 pages, 3 figures, accepted to PAS
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