10,614 research outputs found
Aerodynamic data on a large semispan tilting wing with 0.5-diameter chord, double-slotted flap, and both left-hand and right-hand rotation of a single propeller
Longitudinal aerodynamic data on large-scale semispan V/STOL tilt-wing configuration having single propeller with left and right hand rotatio
Biochemistry and functional aspects of human glandular kallikreins
Human urinary kallikrein was purified by gel filtration on Sephacryl S-200 and affinity chromatography on aprotinin-Sepharose, followed by ion exchange chromatography on DEAE-Sepharose. In dodecylsulfate gel electrophoresis two protein bands with molecular weights of 41,000 and 34,000 were separated. The amino acid composition and the carbohydrate content of the kallikrein preparation were determined; isoleucine was identified as the only aminoterminal amino acid. The bimolecular velocity constant for the inhibition by diisopropyl fluorophosphate was determined as 9±2 l molâ1 minâ1. The hydrolysis of a number of substrates was investigated and AcPheArgOEt was found to be the most sensitive substrate for human urinary kallikrein. Using this substrate an assay method for kallikrein in human urine was developed.
It was shown by radioimmunoassay that pig pancreatic kallikrein can be absorbed in the rat intestinal tract. Furthermore, in dogs the renal excretion of glandular kallikrein from blood was demonstrated by radioimmunological methods
Solution to the twin image problem in holography
While the invention of holography by Dennis Gabor truly constitutes an
ingenious concept, it has ever since been troubled by the so called twin image
problem limiting the information that can be obtained from a holographic
record. Due to symmetry reasons there are always two images appearing in the
reconstruction process. Thus, the reconstructed object is obscured by its
unwanted out of focus twin image. Especially for emission electron as well as
for x- and gamma-ray holography, where the source-object distances are small,
the reconstructed images of atoms are very close to their twin images from
which they can hardly be distinguished. In some particular instances only,
experimental efforts could remove the twin images. More recently, numerical
methods to diminish the effect of the twin image have been proposed but are
limited to purely absorbing objects failing to account for phase shifts caused
by the object. Here we show a universal method to reconstruct a hologram
completely free of twin images disturbance while no assumptions about the
object need to be imposed. Both, amplitude and true phase distributions are
retrieved without distortion
The health of the poor: Women living in informal settlements
Objectives: A large share of the urban population in developing countries lives in informal settlements or “slums” today. This study investigates the association between slum residence and health among adult Ghanaian women residing in the Accra Metropolitan Area.Methods: Health data collected as part of the Women’s Health Study of Accra round II (WHSA-II) was combined with data from the Household and Welfare Study of Accra (HAWS) to compare the health of female slum dwellers to the health of female non-slum dwellers living in the Accra Metropolitan Area. Group means were calculated and multivariate linear regression models were estimated to compare eight domains ofhealth as measured by the short-form 36 (SF-36) questionnaire.Results: Women living in informal settlements were found to display consistently better health. Conditional on all observable characteristics, women living in informal settlements scored higher on all self-reportedhealth outcomes than women living in non-slum areas. The differences appear largest for general health as well as for the physical role functioning domains, and appear smallest for the social role functioning and bodily pain domains.Conclusions: The results presented suggest that slum residence does not have a negative effect on self-reported health among women in Accra. Three factors may contribute to the generally positive association betweenslum residence and observed outcomes: i) selfselection of individuals with strong health into informal settlements and an accordingly small impact ofenvironmental factors on health ii) self-selection of more driven and ambitious individuals into slum neighborhoods who may have a generally more positive view of their health and iii) the geographic placement ofslum neighborhoods in central neighborhoods with relatively easy access to health facilities
Comment on Neutron-Proton Spin-Correlation Parameter A_{ZZ} at 68 Mev
We present two arguments indicating that the large value for the
mixing parameter at 50 MeV, which the Basel group extracted from their recent
measurement, may be incorrect. First, there are nucleon-nucleon (NN)
potentials which predict the at 50 MeV substantially below the
Basel value and reproduce the Basel data accurately. Second, the large
value for at 50 MeV proposed by the Basel group can only be
explained by a model for the NN interaction which is very unrealistic (no
-meson and essentially a point-like vertex) and overpredicts the
in the energy range where it is well determined (150--500 MeV) by
a factor of two.Comment: 6 pages text (LaTex) and 2 figures (paper, will be faxed upon
request), UI-NTH-930
Exceptional type-I superconductivity of the layered silver oxide AgPbO
We report zero-resistivity transition and the details of magnetic transition
of a layered silver oxide AgPbO single crystal, which make
definitive evidence of superconductivity in this compound. In the AC
susceptibility of a mono-crystal, we observed large supercooling, as well as
positive peaks in the real part of the susceptibility indicating the
reversibility of magnetic process. These observations reveal that
AgPbO is probably the first oxide that shows type-I
superconductivity. Evaluation of the superconducting parameters not only gives
confirming evidence of type-I superconductivity, but also indicates that it is
a dirty-limit superconductor. We also analyze supercooling to determine the
upper limit of the Ginzburg-Landau parameter.Comment: v2: PACS numbers are adde
Kinetic oscillations in the NO + CO reaction on Pt(100): Experiments and mathematical modeling
The reaction of NO and CO on Pt(100) exhibits two branches of steady state production of N2 and CO2 and the occurrence of kinetic oscillations. This system was studied under steady flow conditions in the 10â6mbar total pressure range using lowâenergy electron diffractionâ(LEED), work function measurement, and mass spectrometry for determination of the reaction rate. These studies revealed that kinetic oscillations can only be initiated from one of the two stable reaction branches. Two separate existence regions were detected in which the oscillations are always damped. Oscillations can be very reproducibly excited by slight decreases in temperature. The 1Ă1 hex phase transition of the surface structure was observed to take place only in one of the two regions of reaction rate oscillations. Its influence seems to be of minor relevance to the mechanism of oscillations as oscillations in one region occur on the surface that maintains a 1Ă1 structure. The experiments were modeled by a set of coupled differential equations based on knowledge about the elementary reaction steps. The model calculations reproduced the steady states of the reaction as well as the occurrence of kinetic oscillations in different ranges in excellent agreement with experimental observation. In the model, the phase transition also has no relevance for the oscillation mechanism. The occurrence of oscillations can be rationalized in terms of a periodic sequence of autocatalytic ââsurface explosionsââ and the restoration of an adsorbateâcovered surface. The damping, experimentally observed, is attributed to insufficient spatial coupling between different regions of the surface
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