2,484 research outputs found
Comparison of copper and tungsten carbide calibration spheres
Author Posting. © Acoustical Society of America, 1984. This article is posted here by permission of Acoustical Society of America for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 75 (1984): 612-616, doi:10.1121/1.390489.The properties of calibration spheres made from electricalâgrade copper, denoted Cu, and tungsten carbide with 6% cobalt binder, denoted WC, are examined theoretically. Effects of variations in material, medium, and equipment parameters are determined for spheres intended to calibrate 38âkHz echo sounders when a target strength of order â41.5 dB is required. The derived 30.4âmmâdiam Cu sphere and selected 38.1âmmâdiam WC ball bearing show different dependences on the varied parameters. Changes in the material and equipment parameters within wide ranges will not upset a precision calibration with expected ±0.1âdB accuracy. Adjustment of the calibration value of âbackscattering cross section with changing temperature is generally necessary for elastic spheres. This is the case for the present WC sphere, but not for the Cu sphere by virtue of its optimization with respect to temperature. Greater hardness is found to be insufficient for choosing between the two; the particular application must be considered. Pragmatic criteria for sphere selection are discussed
Depth-dependent target strengths of gadoids by the boundary-element method
Author Posting. © Acoustical Society of America, 2003. This article is posted here by permission of Acoustical Society of America for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 114 (2003): 3136-3146, doi:10.1121/1.1619982.The depth dependence of fish target strength has mostly eluded experimental investigation because of the need to distinguish it from depth-dependent behavioral effects, which may change the orientation distribution. The boundary-element method (BEM) offers an avenue of approach. Based on detailed morphometric data on 15 gadoid swimbladders, the BEM has been exercised to determine how the orientation dependence of target strength changes with pressure under the assumption that the fish swimbladder remains constant in shape and volume. The backscattering cross section has been computed at a nominal frequency of 38 kHz as a function of orientation for each of three pressures: 1, 11, and 51 atm. Increased variability in target strength and more abundant and stronger resonances are both observed with increasing depth. The respective backscattering cross sections have been averaged with respect to each of four normal distributions of tilt angle, and the corresponding target strengths have been regressed on the logarithm of fish length. The tilt-angle-averaged backscattering cross sections at the highest pressure have also been averaged with respect to frequency over a 2-kHz band for representative conditions of insonification. For all averaging methods, the mean target strength changes only slightly with depth.This work began with sponsorship by the European Commission through its RTD-program, Contract No. MAS3-CT95-0031 (BASS), and was completed with support by the Office of Naval Research, Contract No. N000140310368
Determination of Extractable and Bound Condensed Tannins in Forage Species
The levels of condensed tannins (CT) in 12 herbaceous species growing at 2 sites were determined using a recently modified butanolÂHCL procedure. The method measured CT extractable in 70:30 acetone: water, and CT bound to protein and fibre, using ground, freeze-dried material. Total plant CT levels ranged from trace to 8% OM, with high concentrations (5-8% DM) being detected in 3 Dorycnium spp. and Lotus pedunculatus. Coronilla varia, Hedysarum coronarium and Lotus corniculatus had CT levels of 2-4% DM which may be appropriate for optimum nutritional value. CT content in ·n. rect11m, D. pe11taphyl/11m and L. pedunculatus was higher at a relatively moist, cool site (mean = 7.1% DM) compared with at a drier, warmer site (mean = 5.8% DM), At the former site, species with total plant CT greater than 2% ·DM often had CT levels in lamina 2-5 times higher than those in stem. In most species with low total plant CT (\u3c0.5% DM), lamina and stem had similar CT concentration,. The proportion of total CT bound to protein ranged from 19% (D. rectum) to 70% (L. teumis). It was recommended that future assays should estimate protein-bound CT in addition to that extractable. FibreÂbound CT was 1-20% of total CT in most species and need not be measured in freeze-dried and ground material
Recombinant deamidated mutants of Erwinia chrysanthemi L-asparaginase have similar or increased activity compared to wild- type enzyme
The enzyme Erwinia chrysanthemi L-asparaginase (ErA) is an important biopharmaceutical product used in the treatment of Acute Lymphoblastic Leukaemia. Like all proteins, certain asparagine (Asn) residues of ErA are susceptible to deamidation to aspartic acid (Asp), which may be a concern with respect to enzyme activity and potentially to pharmaceutical efficacy. Recombinant ErA mutants containing Asn to Asp changes were expressed, purified and characterised. Two mutants with single deamidation sites (N41D and N281D) were found to have approximately the same specific activity
(1062 and 924U/mg respectively) as the wild type (908U/mg). However, a double mutant (N41D N281D) had an increased specific activity (1261U/mg). The N41D mutation conferred a slight increase in the catalytic constant (kcat 657 s-1) when compared to the WT (kcat 565 s-1), which was further increased in the double mutant, with a kcat of 798 s-1. Structural analyses showed that the slight changes caused by point mutation of Asn41 to Asp may have reduced the number of hydrogen bonds in this α-helical part of the protein structure, resulting in subtle changes in enzyme turnover, both structurally and catalytically. The increased α-helical content observed with the N41D mutation by circular dichroism spectroscopy correlates with the difference in kcat, but not Km. The N281D mutation resulted in a lower glutaminase activity compared with WT and the N41D mutant, however the N281D mutation also imparted less stability to the enzyme at elevated temperatures. Taken as a whole, these data suggest that ErA deamidation at the Asn41 and Asn281 sites does not affect enzyme activity and should not be a concern during processing, storage, or clinical use. The production of recombinant deamidated variants has proven an effective and powerful means of studying the effect of these changes and may be a useful strategy for other biopharmaceutical products
The Transit Light Curve Project. IX. Evidence for a Smaller Radius of the Exoplanet XO-3b
We present photometry of 13 transits of XO-3b, a massive transiting planet on
an eccentric orbit. Previous data led to two inconsistent estimates of the
planetary radius. Our data strongly favor the smaller radius, with increased
precision: R_p = 1.217 +/- 0.073 R_Jup. A conflict remains between the mean
stellar density determined from the light curve, and the stellar surface
gravity determined from the shapes of spectral lines. We argue the light curve
should take precedence, and revise the system parameters accordingly. The
planetary radius is about 1 sigma larger than the theoretical radius for a
hydrogen-helium planet of the given mass and insolation. To help in planning
future observations, we provide refined transit and occultation ephemerides.Comment: To appear in ApJ [22 pages
Biological Inventory of Anchialine Pool Invertebrates at Puâuhonua o HĆnaunau National Historical Park and PuâukoholÄ Heiau National Historic Site, Hawaiâi Island
Reports were scanned in black and white at a resolution of 600 dots per inch and were converted to text using Adobe Paper Capture Plug-in.Inventories for major groups of invertebrates were completed at anchialine pool complexes in Puâuhonua o HĆnaunau National Historical Park (PUHO) and PuâukoholÄ Heiau National Historic Site (PUHE) on the island of Hawaiâi. Nine pools within two pool complexes were surveyed at PUHO, along with one extensive pool at the terminus of MakeÄhua Gulch at PUHE. At both parks, inventories documented previously unreported diversity, with pool complexes at PUHO exhibiting greater species richness for most taxa than the pool at PUHE. Inventories at PUHO recorded five species of molluscs, four species of crustaceans (including the candidate endangered shrimp Metabetaeus lohena), two species of Orthoptera, four species of Odonata (including the candidate endangered damselfly Megalagrion xanthomelas), fourteen species of Diptera, nine taxa of plankton, and thirteen species of ants; inventories at the PUHE pool produced only one species of mollusc, two species of crustacean, at least one species of Orthoptera, four species of Odonata, thirty species of Diptera, five taxa of plankton, and four species of ants. Further survey work may be necessary to document the full diversity of pool fauna, especially in species-rich groups like the Diptera. Inventory data will be used to generate a network wide database of species presence and distribution, and will aid in developing management plans for anchialine pool resources.This inventory was made possible thanks to support from the National Park Service
Inventory and Monitoring Program and the U.S. Geological Survey Pacific Island
Ecosystems Research Center
Transport through an impurity tunnel coupled to a Si/SiGe quantum dot
Achieving controllable coupling of dopants in silicon is crucial for
operating donor-based qubit devices, but it is difficult because of the small
size of donor-bound electron wavefunctions. Here we report the characterization
of a quantum dot coupled to a localized electronic state, and we present
evidence of controllable coupling between the quantum dot and the localized
state. A set of measurements of transport through this device enable the
determination of the most likely location of the localized state, consistent
with an electronically active impurity in the quantum well near the edge of the
quantum dot. The experiments we report are consistent with a gate-voltage
controllable tunnel coupling, which is an important building block for hybrid
donor and gate-defined quantum dot devices.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
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