23,649 research outputs found
Tripropellant combustion process
The addition of small amounts of hydrogen to the combustion of LOX/hydrocarbon propellants in large rocket booster engines has the potential to enhance the system stability. Programs being conducted to evaluate the effects of hydrogen on the combustion of LOX/hydrocarbon propellants at supercritical pressures are described. Combustion instability has been a problem during the development of large hydrocarbon fueled rocket engines. At the higher combustion chamber pressures expected for the next generation of booster engines, the effect of unstable combustion could be even more destructive. The tripropellant engine cycle takes advantage of the superior cooling characteristics of hydrogen to cool the combustion chamber and a small amount of the hydrogen coolant can be used in the combustion process to enhance the system stability. Three aspects of work that will be accomplished to evaluate tripropellant combustion are described. The first is laboratory demonstration of the benefits through the evaluation of drop size, ignition delay and burning rate. The second is analytical modeling of the combustion process using the empirical relationship determined in the laboratory. The third is a subscale demonstration in which the system stability will be evaluated. The approach for each aspect is described and the analytical models that will be used are presented
Standard Transistor Array (STAR). Volume 1, addendum 1: CAPSTAR user's guide
The cell placement techniques developed for use with the standard transistor array were incorporated in the cell arrangement program for STAR (CAPSTAR). Instructions for use of this program are given
The Radius of the Proton: Size Does Matter
The measurement by Pohl et al. [1] of the 2S_1/2^F=1 to 2P_3/2^F=2 transition
in muonic hydrogen and the subsequent analysis has led to a conclusion that the
rms charge radius of the proton differs from the accepted (CODATA [2]) value by
approximately 4%, leading to a 4.9 s.d. discrepancy. We investigate the muonic
hydrogen spectrum relevant to this transition using bound-state QED with Dirac
wave-functions and comment on the extent to which the perturbation-theory
analysis which leads to the above conclusion can be confirmed.Comment: Delayed arXiv submission. To appear in 'Proceedings of T(R)OPICALQCD
2010' (September 26 - October 1, 2010). 7 pages, 1 figure. Superseded by
arXiv:1104.297
Stressful life events are associated with low secretion rates of immunoglobulin A in saliva in the middle aged and elderly
Whether chronic stress experience is related to down-regulation of secretory immunoglobulin A (S-IgA) was tested in two substantial cohorts, one middle-aged (N = 640) and one elderly (N = 582), comprising similar numbers of men (N = 556) and women (N = 666) and manual (N = 606) and non-manual (N = 602) workers. Participants indicated from a list of major stressful life events up to six they had experienced in the previous two years. They also rated how disruptive and stressful the events were, at the time and now, as well as their perceived seriousness; the products of these impact values and event frequency were adopted as measures of stress load. From unstimulated 2-minute saliva samples, saliva volume and S-IgA concentration were measured, and S-IgA secretion rate determined as their product. There was a negative association between the stress load measures and S-IgA secretion rate, still evident following adjustment for such variables as smoking and saliva volume. The associations also withstood adjustment for sex, cohort, and household occupational status. Although these associations are small in terms of the amount of variance explained, they nonetheless suggest that chronic stress experience either decreases IgA production by the local plasma cells or reduces the efficiency with which S-IgA is transported from the glandular interstitium into saliva. Given the importance of S-IgA in immune defence at mucosal surfaces and the frequency with which infections are initiated at these surfaces, S-IgA down-regulation could be a means by which chronic stress increases susceptibility to upper respiratory tract infection
Limitations of adjustment for reporting tendency in observational studies of stress and self reported coronary heart disease
Recently, observational evidence has been suggested to show a causal association between various "psychosocial" exposures, including psychological stress, and heart disease. Much of this evidence derives from studies in which a self reported psychosocial exposure is related to an outcome dependent on the subjective experience of coronary heart disease (CHD) symptoms. Such outcomes may be measured using standard symptom questionnaires (like the Rose angina schedule). Alternatively they may use diagnoses of disease from medical records, which depend on an individual perceiving symptoms and reporting them to a health worker. In these situations, reporting bias may generate spurious exposure-outcome associations. For example if people who perceive and report their life as most stressful also over-report symptoms of cardiovascular disease then an artefactual association between stress and heart disease will result
Phase transition from quark-meson coupling hyperonic matter to deconfined quark matter
We investigate the possibility and consequences of phase transitions from an
equation of state (EOS) describing nucleons and hyperons interacting via mean
fields of sigma, omega, and rho mesons in the recently improved quark-meson
coupling (QMC) model to an EOS describing a Fermi gas of quarks in an MIT bag.
The transition to a mixed phase of baryons and deconfined quarks, and
subsequently to a pure deconfined quark phase, is described using the method of
Glendenning. The overall EOS for the three phases is calculated for various
scenarios and used to calculate stellar solutions using the
Tolman-Oppenheimer-Volkoff equations. The results are compared with recent
experimental data, and the validity of each case is discussed with consequences
for determining the species content of the interior of neutron stars.Comment: 12 pages, 14 figures; minor typos correcte
A symmetry for vanishing cosmological constant
Two different realizations of a symmetry principle that impose a zero
cosmological constant in an extra-dimensional set-up are studied. The symmetry
is identified by multiplication of the metric by minus one. In the first
realization of the symmetry this is provided by a symmetry transformation that
multiplies the coordinates by the imaginary number i. In the second realization
this is accomplished by a symmetry transformation that multiplies the metric
tensor by minus one. In both realizations of the symmetry the requirement of
the invariance of the gravitational action under the symmetry selects out the
dimensions given by D = 2(2n+1), n=0,1,2,... and forbids a bulk cosmological
constant. Another attractive aspect of the symmetry is that it seems to be more
promising for quantization when compared to the usual scale symmetry. The
second realization of the symmetry is more attractive in that it is posible to
make a possible brane cosmological constant zero in a simple way by using the
same symmetry, and the symmetry may be identified by reflection symmetry in
extra dimensions.Comment: Talk in the conference IRGAC 2006, 2nd International Conference on
Quantum Theories and Renormalization Group in Gravity and Cosmology,
Barcelon
Quintessence, inflation and baryogenesis from a single pseudo-Nambu-Goldstone boson
We exhibit a model in which a single pseudo-Nambu-Goldstone boson explains
dark energy, inflation and baryogenesis. The model predicts correlated signals
in future collider experiments, WIMP searches, proton decay experiments, dark
energy probes, and the PLANCK satellite CMB measurements.Comment: 16 pages, 3 color figure
Psychological stress and cardiovascular disease: empirical demonstration of bias in a prospective observational study of Scottish men
Objectives: To examine the association between self perceived psychological stress and cardiovascular disease in a population where stress was not associated with social disadvantage.
Design: Prospective observational study with follow up of 21 years and repeat screening of half the cohort 5 years from baseline. Measures included perceived psychological stress, coronary risk factors, self reported angina, and ischaemia detected by electrocardiography.
Setting: 27 workplaces in Scotland.
Participants: 5606 men (mean age 48 years) at first screening and 2623 men at second screening with complete data on all measures
Main outcome measures: Prevalence of angina and ischaemia at baseline, odds ratio for incident angina and ischaemia at second screening, rate ratios for cause specific hospital admission, and hazard ratios for cause specific mortality.
Results: Both prevalence and incidence of angina increased with increasing perceived stress (fully adjusted odds ratio for incident angina, high versus low stress 2.66, 95% confidence interval 1.61 to 4.41; P for trend <0.001). Prevalence and incidence of ischaemia showed weak trends in the opposite direction. High stress was associated with a higher rate of admissions to hospital generally and for admissions related to cardiovascular disease and psychiatric disorders (fully adjusted rate ratios for any general hospital admission 1.13, 1.01 to 1.27, cardiovascular disease 1.20, 1.00 to 1.45, and psychiatric disorders 2.34, 1.41 to 3.91). High stress was not associated with increased admission for coronary heart disease (1.00, 0.76-1.32) and showed an inverse relation with all cause mortality, mortality from cardiovascular disease, and mortality from coronary heart disease, that was attenuated by adjustment for occupational class (fully adjusted hazard ratio for all cause mortality 0.94, 0.81 to 1.11, cardiovascular mortality 0.91, 0.78 to 1.06, and mortality from coronary heart disease 0.98, 0.75 to 1.27).
Conclusions: The relation between higher stress, angina, and some categories of hospital admissions probably resulted from the tendency of participants reporting higher stress to also report more symptoms. The lack of a corresponding relation with objective indices of heart disease suggests that these symptoms did not reflect physical disease. The data suggest that associations between psychosocial measures and disease outcomes reported from some other studies may be spurious
- …
