1,063 research outputs found
USS FITZGERALD COLLISION: MIDSHIPMEN CASE STUDY
Naval Academy Midshipmen spend four years in a comprehensive program of moral, mental, and physical development meant to mold them into Navy and Marine Corps officers ready to lead in combat. This program includes critical summer training periods where Midshipmen embark with Navy ships and Fleet Marine Force units around the globe to gain hands-on experience with operational units. But what happens when Midshipmen are put in a dangerous situation in the Fleet before they commission? Are they prepared or expected to act, and how does this influence their development? Based on six semi-structured interviews, this thesis details a case study from the point of view of the half of the 12 Midshipmen onboard USS Fitzgerald during the 2017 collision off the coast of Japan that killed seven Sailors. Many case studies and investigations have been written about the USS Fitzgerald collision from the point of view of the crew involved, but the Midshipmen who were on board at the time have yet to be considered. The lessons learned from this traumatic experience can be utilized to improve preparations and training for all current and future Midshipmen as they take leadership classes and execute summer training with operational forces.Distribution Statement A. Approved for public release: Distribution is unlimited.Lieutenant, United States NavyLieutenant, United States NavyLieutenant, United States Nav
Speeding Up the Heart? Traditional and New Perspectives on HCN4 Function
The sinoatrial node (SAN) is the primary pacemaker of the heart and is responsible for generating the intrinsic heartbeat. Within the SAN, spontaneously active pacemaker cells initiate the electrical activity that causes the contraction of all cardiomyocytes. The firing rate of pacemaker cells depends on the slow diastolic depolarization (SDD) and determines the intrinsic heart rate (HR). To adapt cardiac output to varying physical demands, HR is regulated by the autonomic nervous system (ANS). The sympathetic and parasympathetic branches of the ANS innervate the SAN and regulate the firing rate of pacemaker cells by accelerating or decelerating SDDâa process well-known as the chronotropic effect. Although this process is of fundamental physiological relevance, it is still incompletely understood how it is mediated at the subcellular level. Over the past 20 years, most of the work to resolve the underlying cellular mechanisms has made use of genetically engineered mouse models. In this review, we focus on the findings from these mouse studies regarding the cellular mechanisms involved in the generation and regulation of the heartbeat, with particular focus on the highly debated role of the hyperpolarization-activated cyclic nucleotide-gated cation channel HCN4 in mediating the chronotropic effect. By focusing on experimental data obtained in mice and humans, but not in other species, we outline how findings obtained in mice relate to human physiology and pathophysiology and provide specific information on how dysfunction or loss of HCN4 channels leads to human SAN disease
A CrossâShaped Monomer as Building Block for Molecular Textiles
The exploration of new materials is timeless. Especially 2D-materials have gotten much interest in the last decades. This work proposes a new route towards a fascinating class of 2D materials: molecular textiles. The suggested bottom-up approach focuses on the 2D self-assembly of a cross-shaped monomer at the water/air interface. A 3D cross-shaped motive was designed, synthesized, and characterized, which exhibits the required structural features, i.âe., static and dynamic control. Analysis of the cross-shaped motive by H-NMR spectroscopy, X-ray structure, and chiral stationary phase HPLC proved the rigidity and stability of the system, and thus also its potential for the here suggested new strategy towards molecular textiles. Three variants of a Schiff-base precursor pair functionalized monomer were synthesized and characterized by H-NMR spectroscopy, C-NMR spectroscopy, and mass spectrometry. Finally, the network formation of the monomer is shown to be triggered by deprotonation of its ammonium salt, corroborated with FT-IR analysis
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