2,164 research outputs found
Hydrologic Inventory of the Great Salt Lake Desert Area
The Great Salt Lake Desert, located in the southwest corner of the State of Utah is a very dry region with sparse population and relatively small scattered areas of development. Since only a meager amount of hydrologic data has been collected and compiled for this relatively undeveloped area, the inventory presented herein is but a general appraisal of hydrologic conditions. Because of the small amount of development that has taken place and the general lack of hydrologic data, a water budget analysis is included for the Tooele Valley only
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
Protocols for calibrating multibeam sonar
Author Posting. © Acoustical Society of America, 2005. 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 117 (2005): 2013-2027, doi:10.1121/1.1869073.Development of protocols for calibrating multibeam sonar by means of the standard-target method is documented. Particular systems used in the development work included three that provide the water-column signals, namely the SIMRAD SM2000/90- and 200-kHz sonars and RESON SeaBat 8101 sonar, with operating frequency of 240 kHz. Two facilities were instrumented specifically for the work: a sea well at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution and a large, indoor freshwater tank at the University of New Hampshire. Methods for measuring the transfer characteristics of each sonar, with transducers attached, are described and illustrated with measurement results. The principal results, however, are the protocols themselves. These are elaborated for positioning the target, choosing the receiver gain function, quantifying the system stability, mapping the directionality in the plane of the receiving array and in the plane normal to the central axis, measuring the directionality of individual beams, and measuring the nearfield response. General preparations for calibrating multibeam sonars and a method for measuring the receiver response electronically are outlined. Advantages of multibeam sonar calibration and outstanding problems, such as that of validation of the performance of multibeam sonars as configured for use, are mentioned.Support by the National Science Foundation through Award
No. OCE-0002664, NOAA through Grant No.
NA97OG0241, and the Cooperative Institute for Climate and
Ocean Research (CICOR) through NOAA Contract No.
NA17RJ1223 is acknowledged
Applying TLC (a Targeted Learning Community) to Transform Teaching and Learning in Science
This article describes the development of a Targeted Learning Community (TLC) that supports first-year science students enrolled in a General Chemistry course. Drawing on student feedback and knowledge and expertise in their respective disciplines, four faculty members from two colleges at Kennesaw State University came together to develop a learning community that would prevent early attrition in the science majors and increase student metacognition. In this paper, the design of the TLC is presented, and the effect it had on faculty vitality is discussed.
Ruth A. Goldfine is Chair of the Department of First-Year and Transition Studies at Kennesaw State University in Kennesaw, GA.
Hillary H. Steiner (Assistant Professor of Educational Psychology) and Stephanie M. Foote (Associate Professor of Education and Director of the Master of Science in First Year Studies) are also members of the Department of First-Year and Transition Studies at Kennesaw State University.
Michelle L. Dean is an Assistant Professor of Chemistry at Kennesaw State University
Dysflective cones: Visual function and cone reflectivity in long-term follow-up of acute bilateral foveolitis.
PURPOSE:Confocal adaptive optics scanning laser ophthalmoscope (AOSLO) images provide a sensitive measure of cone structure. However, the relationship between structural findings of diminished cone reflectivity and visual function is unclear. We used fundus-referenced testing to evaluate visual function in regions of apparent cone loss identified using confocal AOSLO images. METHODS:A patient diagnosed with acute bilateral foveolitis had spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT) (Spectralis HRA + OCT system [Heidelberg Engineering, Vista, CA, USA]) images indicating focal loss of the inner segment-outer segment junction band with an intact, but hyper-reflective, external limiting membrane. Five years after symptom onset, visual acuity had improved from 20/80 to 20/25, but the retinal appearance remained unchanged compared to 3 months after symptoms began. We performed structural assessments using SD-OCT, directional OCT (non-standard use of a prototype on loan from Carl Zeiss Meditec) and AOSLO (custom-built system). We also administered fundus-referenced functional tests in the region of apparent cone loss, including analysis of preferred retinal locus (PRL), AOSLO acuity, and microperimetry with tracking SLO (TSLO) (prototype system). To determine AOSLO-corrected visual acuity, the scanning laser was modulated with a tumbling E consistent with 20/30 visual acuity. Visual sensitivity was assessed in and around the lesion using TSLO microperimetry. Complete eye examination, including standard measures of best-corrected visual acuity, visual field tests, color fundus photos, and fundus auto-fluorescence were also performed. RESULTS:Despite a lack of visible cone profiles in the foveal lesion, fundus-referenced vision testing demonstrated visual function within the lesion consistent with cone function. The PRL was within the lesion of apparent cone loss at the fovea. AOSLO visual acuity tests were abnormal, but measurable: for trials in which the stimulus remained completely within the lesion, the subject got 48% correct, compared to 78% correct when the stimulus was outside the lesion. TSLO microperimetry revealed reduced, but detectible, sensitivity thresholds within the lesion. CONCLUSIONS AND IMPORTANCE:Fundus-referenced visual testing proved useful to identify functional cones despite apparent photoreceptor loss identified using AOSLO and SD-OCT. While AOSLO and SD-OCT appear to be sensitive for the detection of abnormal or absent photoreceptors, changes in photoreceptors that are identified with these imaging tools do not correlate completely with visual function in every patient. Fundus-referenced vision testing is a useful tool to indicate the presence of cones that may be amenable to recovery or response to experimental therapies despite not being visible on confocal AOSLO or SD-OCT images
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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Maternal Hyperleptinemia Increases Arterial Stiffening and Alters Vasodilatoy Responses to Insulin in Adult Male Mice Offspring
Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is the number one cause of death in the U.S., and exposure to adverse maternal environments has been associated with the development of CVD including hypertension. Gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) is an adverse maternal environment that has been associated with metabolic and CVD outcomes in the offspring. Key features of GDM and CVD are maternal hyperleptinemia and vascular disfunction/remodeling, respectively. Yet, there is limited information on the effects of maternal hyperleptinemia has on the function and structure of the offspring’s resistance vasculature. We hypothesize that alterations in offspring’s resistance artery structure and function underlie programming mechanisms for cardiovascular disease that are associated with maternal hyperleptinemia and GDM. To test this hypothesis, we used Leprdb/+ mice dams, which exhibit maternal hyperleptinemia and wildtype (WT) as controls. Vascular function was assessed in WT male offspring of control and hyperleptinemic dams at 31 weeks of age, after half the offspring had been fed a high fat diet (HFD) for 6 weeks. On a standard diet (SD), offspring of hyperleptinemic dams had mesenteric arteries with larger internal diameters than those of WT dams (258.36±14.99 vs 233.65±9.36 μm, p<0.05) indicative of outwardly remodeled, and enhanced maximal vasodilatory responses to insulin (39.97±6.71 vs 32.23±5.07 %, p<0.05). In offspring of WT, but not hyperleptinemic dams, HFD increased vessel wall cross-sectional area (18590.01±1251.16 vs 12807.20±1060.70 μm2, p<0.05), and enhanced the maximal vasodilatory response to acetylcholine (33.74±4.92 vs 21.86±2.73 %, p<0.05). HFD reduced the maximal response to insulin in offspring of hyperleptinemic dams compared to their WT and lean controls (21.88±3.80 vs 37.42±7.84 and 39.97±6.71 % respectively, p<0.05). Offspring of hyperleptinemic dams fed a HFD had increased elastic moduli normalized as a function of the percolation of the internal elastic lamina compared to their WT and lean controls (0.53±0.038 vs 0.34±0.023 and 0.38±0.032 ×106 dynes/cm2 respectively, p<0.05). Offspring of hyperleptinemic dams also had stiffer arteries at high pressure under both dietary conditions (2.36±0.35 vs 1.45±0.11 ×106 dynes/cm2, p<0.05). We conclude that when mice were fed a SD, maternal hyperleptinemia had beneficial effects to offspring’s vascular health, but did not protect offspring fed a HFD. Furthermore, maternal hyperleptinemia induced arterial stiffness in offspring regardless of diet. These results suggest that GDM programs offspring vascular function and structure through mechanisms that may be in part dependent on circulating maternal leptin levels and are differentially affected by postnatal developmental exposures
Saving Lives and Dollars Through Comprehensive Preventive Health Care
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/68280/2/10_1111_j_1741-6248_1993_00163_x.pd
Feasibility of Photofrin II as a radiosensitizing agent in solid tumors - Preliminary results
Background: Photofrin II has been demonstrated to serve as a specific and selective radiosensitizing agent in in vitro and in vivo tumor models. We aimed to investigate the feasibility of a clinical application of Photofrin II. Material and Methods: 12 patients were included in the study (7 unresectable solid tumors of the pelvic region, 3 malignant gliomas, 1 recurrent oropharyngeal cancer, 1 recurrent adenocarcinoma of the sphenoid sinus). The dose of ionizing irradiation was 30-50.4 Gy; a boost irradiation of 14 Gy was added for the pelvic region. All patients were intravenously injected with 1 mg/kg Photofrin II 24 h prior to the commencement of radiotherapy. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) controls and in some cases positron emission tomography (PET) were performed in short intervals. The mean follow-up was 12.9 months. Results: No major adverse events were noted. Minor adverse events consisted of mild diarrhea, nausea and skin reactions. A complete remission was observed in 4/12 patients. A reduction in local tumor volume of > 45% was achieved in 4/12 patients. Stable disease was observed in 4/12 patients. 1 patient showed local disease progression after 5 months. Conclusion: The early follow-up results are encouraging regarding the feasibility of the application of Photofrin II as a radiosensitizing agent
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