809 research outputs found
Feasibility Study for Machine Processing Croakers into Fillets and for Forming the Fillets into Larger Portions
The purpose of this project was to discover ways to economically process croakers into forms the market would more readily accept. Several manufacturing companies\u27 processing machines were investigated. Two manufacturing companies\u27 processing machines were brought to Hampton for testing. No company makes machinery specifically designed to process croaker. Small croaker fillets were also bound into larger fillets successfully. Processing machines were identified that will work and were purchased. The machinery is currently being successfully used to produce croaker fillets for both the frozen and fresh market. However, the machines are still being modified to improve the quality of the cut. While croaker fillets were successfully bound into larger pieces, further work needs to be done before that process is commercially viable
Relative Astrometry of Compact Flaring Structures in Sgr A* with Polarimetric VLBI
We demonstrate that polarimetric interferometry can be used to extract
precise spatial information about compact polarized flares of Sgr A*. We show
that, for a faint dynamical component, a single interferometric baseline
suffices to determine both its polarization and projected displacement from the
quiescent intensity centroid. A second baseline enables two-dimensional
reconstruction of the displacement, and additional baselines can self-calibrate
using the flare, enhancing synthesis imaging of the quiescent emission. We
apply this technique to simulated 1.3-mm wavelength observations of a "hot
spot" embedded in a radiatively inefficient accretion disk around Sgr A*. Our
results indicate that, even with current sensitivities, polarimetric
interferometry with the Event Horizon Telescope can achieve ~5 microarcsecond
relative astrometry of compact flaring structures near Sgr A* on timescales of
minutes.Comment: 9 Pages, 4 Figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Masses of Nearby Supermassive Black Holes with Very-Long Baseline Interferometry
Dynamical mass measurements to date have allowed determinations of the mass M
and the distance D of a number of nearby supermassive black holes. In the case
of Sgr A*, these measurements are limited by a strong correlation between the
mass and distance scaling roughly as M ~ D^2. Future very-long baseline
interferometric (VLBI) observations will image a bright and narrow ring
surrounding the shadow of a supermassive black hole, if its accretion flow is
optically thin. In this paper, we explore the prospects of reducing the
correlation between mass and distance with the combination of dynamical
measurements and VLBI imaging of the ring of Sgr A*. We estimate the signal to
noise ratio of near-future VLBI arrays that consist of five to six stations,
and we simulate measurements of the mass and distance of Sgr A* using the
expected size of the ring image and existing stellar ephemerides. We
demonstrate that, in this best-case scenario, VLBI observations at 1 mm can
improve the error on the mass by a factor of about two compared to the results
from the monitoring of stellar orbits alone. We identify the additional sources
of uncertainty that such imaging observations have to take into account. In
addition, we calculate the angular diameters of the bright rings of other
nearby supermassive black holes and identify the optimal targets besides Sgr A*
that could be imaged by a ground-based VLBI array or future space-VLBI missions
allowing for refined mass measurements.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, 2 tables, refereed version, accepted for
publication in Ap
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Impact of incomplete ventricular coverage on diagnostic performance of myocardial perfusion imaging.
In the context of myocardial perfusion imaging (MPI) with cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR), there is ongoing debate on the merits of using technically complex acquisition methods to achieve whole-heart spatial coverage, rather than conventional 3-slice acquisition. An adequately powered comparative study is difficult to achieve given the requirement for two separate stress CMR studies in each patient. The aim of this work is to draw relevant conclusions from SPECT MPI by comparing whole-heart versus simulated 3-slice coverage in a large existing dataset. SPECT data from 651 patients with suspected coronary artery disease who underwent invasive angiography were analyzed. A computational approach was designed to model 3-slice MPI by retrospective subsampling of whole- heart data. For both whole-heart and 3-slice approaches, the diagnostic performance and the stress total perfusion deficit (TPD) score-a measure of ischemia extent/severity-were quantified and compared. Diagnostic accuracy for the 3-slice and whole-heart approaches were similar (area under the curve: 0.843 vs. 0.855, respectively; P = 0.07). The majority (54%) of cases missed by 3-slice imaging had primarily apical ischemia. Whole-heart and 3-slice TPD scores were strongly correlated (R2 = 0.93, P < 0.001) but 3-slice TPD showed a small yet significant bias compared to whole-heart TPD (- 1.19%; P < 0.0001) and the 95% limits of agreement were relatively wide (- 6.65% to 4.27%). Incomplete ventricular coverage typically acquired in 3-slice CMR MPI does not significantly affect the diagnostic accuracy. However, 3-slice MPI may fail to detect severe apical ischemia and underestimate the extent/severity of perfusion defects. Our results suggest that caution is required when comparing the ischemic burden between 3-slice and whole-heart datasets, and corroborate the need to establish prognostic thresholds specific to each approach
Preparing For Extended Field Tests of the Intelligent Water System
The Intelligent Water System, which improves access to clean water by autonomously monitoring and reporting on the health of hand pumps in developing countries, has been under development for several years. This development has included short-term prototype field tests in several countries. The design has matured to the point that an extended field trial to demonstrate performance and reliability has been requested by our client. In light of this, the team has implemented design changes to address issues from our most recent prototype field test and begun manufacture of the first five systems intended for installation in Burkina Faso. This poster highlights the code changes enabling more accurate determination of the volume of water pumped and the simplified mounting of the system’s Handle Motion Sensor.https://mosaic.messiah.edu/engr2021/1006/thumbnail.jp
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