2,740 research outputs found
Autonomous robots path planning: An adaptive roadmap approach
Developing algorithms that allow robots to independently navigate unknown environments is a widely researched area of robotics. The potential for autonomous mobile robots use, in industrial and military applications, is boundless. Path planning entails computing a collision free path from a robots current position to a desired target. The problem of path planning for these robots remains underdeveloped. Computational complexity, path optimization and robustness are some of the issues that arise. Current algorithms do not generate general solutions for different situations and require user experience and optimization. Classical algorithms are computationally extensive. This reduces the possibility of their use in real time applications. Additionally, classical algorithms do not allow for any control over attributes of the generated path. A new roadmap path planning algorithm is proposed in this paper. This method generates waypoints, through which the robot can avoid obstacles and reach its goal. At the heart of this algorithm is a method to control the distance of the waypoints from obstacles, without increasing its computational complexity. Several simulations were run to illustrate the robustness and adaptability of this approach, compared to the most commonly used path planning methods
The influence of Fusarium infection on wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) proteins distribution and baking quality
Under artificial Fusarium infection the total glutenin content determined by chromatographic (RP-HPLC) method was significantly reduced in comparison to gliadins which were increased. Among protein types, α-GLI and HMW-GS were the highest affected. Artificial Fusarium infection significantly increased GLI/GLU ratio when compared with the natural infected samples. Artificial Fusarium infection dramatically decreased the dough mixing tolerance and had a considerable negative effect on dough energy, maximum resistance, and resistance/extensibility ratio. Disturbed GLI/GLU ratio and an increased amount of mycotoxin DON under artificial Fusarium infection showed a strong negative impact on affected functional properties of dough and bread. Total and γ-GLI as well as GLI/GLU ratio were significantly positively affected by mycotoxin DON in contrast to total GLU, HMW-GS and LMW-GS which were negatively affected. Results indicated that the stability of baking quality parameters of cultivars more tolerance to the Fusarium infection can be well define by lower accumulation of mycotoxin DON
3D-4D Interlinkage Of qqq Wave Functions Under 3D Support For Pairwise Bethe-Salpeter Kernels
Using the method of Green's functions within a Bethe-Salpeter framework
characterized by a pairwise qq interaction with a Lorentz-covariant 3D support
to its kernel, the 4D BS wave function for a system of 3 identical relativistic
spinless quarks is reconstructed from the corresponding 3D form which satisfies
a fully connected 3D BSE. This result is a 3-body generalization of a similar
2-body result found earlier under identical conditions of a 3D support to the
corresponding qq-bar BS kernel under Covariant Instaneity (CIA for short). (The
generalization from spinless to fermion quarks is straightforward).
To set the CIA with 3D BS kernel support ansatz in the context of
contemporary approaches to the qqq baryon problem, a model scalar 4D qqq BSE
with pairwise contact interactions to simulate the NJL-Faddeev equations is
worked out fully, and a comparison of both vertex functions shows that the CIA
vertex reduces exactly to the NJL form in the limit of zero spatial range. This
consistency check on the CIA vertex function is part of a fuller accounting for
its mathematical structure whose physical motivation is traceable to the role
of `spectroscopy' as an integral part of the dynamics.Comment: 20 pages, Latex, submitted via the account of K.-C. Yan
Investigation of top mass measurements with the ATLAS detector at LHC
Several methods for the determination of the mass of the top quark with the
ATLAS detector at the LHC are presented. All dominant decay channels of the top
quark can be explored. The measurements are in most cases dominated by
systematic uncertainties. New methods have been developed to control those
related to the detector. The results indicate that a total error on the top
mass at the level of 1 GeV should be achievable.Comment: 47 pages, 40 figure
Torcetrapib impairs endothelial function in hypertension
Aims A marked increase in HDL notwithstanding, the cholesterol ester transfer protein (CETP) inhibitor torcetrapib was associated with an increase in all-cause mortality in the ILLUMINATE trial. As underlying mechanisms remain elusive, the present study was designed to delineate potential off-target effects of torcetrapib. Methods and results Spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHRs) and Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) rats were treated with torcetrapib (100 mg/kg/day; SHR-T and WKY-T) or placebo (SHR-P and WKY-P) for 3 weeks. Blood pressure transiently increased during the first 3 days of torcetrapib administration in SHRs and returned to baseline thereafter despite continued drug administration. Acetylcholine-induced endothelium-dependent relaxations of aortic rings were markedly impaired, and endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) mRNA and protein were down-regulated after 3 weeks of torcetrapib treatment in SHR (P < 0.0001, <0.01, and <0.05, resp. vs. SHR-P). Torcetrapib reduced NO release in cultured aortic endothelial cells (P < 0.01 vs. vehicle-treated cells) and increased generation of reactive oxygen species in aortas of SHR-T (P < 0.05, vs. SHR-P). Vascular reactivity to endothelin-1 (ET-1) and aortic ET-1 tissue content were increased in SHR-T (P < 0.05 vs. SHR-P). Importantly, the ET-1 receptor A/B (ETA/B) antagonist bosentan normalized endothelial function in SHR-T (P < 0.05). Conclusion Torcetrapib induces a sustained impairment of endothelial function, decreases eNOS mRNA, protein as well as NO release, stimulates vascular ROS and ET production, an effect that is prevented by chronic ETA/B-receptor blockade. These unexpected off-target effects of torcetrapib need to be ruled out in the clinical development of novel CETP inhibitors, particularly before a large patient population at increased cardiovascular risk is exposed to these compound
1000 Norms Project: Protocol of a cross-sectional study cataloging human variation
Background Clinical decision-making regarding diagnosis and management largely depends on comparison with healthy or ‘normal’ values. Physiotherapists and researchers therefore need access to robust patient-centred outcome measures and appropriate reference values. However there is a lack of high-quality reference data for many clinical measures. The aim of the 1000 Norms Project is to generate a freely accessible database of musculoskeletal and neurological reference values representative of the healthy population across the lifespan. Methods/design In 2012 the 1000 Norms Project Consortium defined the concept of ‘normal’, established a sampling strategy and selected measures based on clinical significance, psychometric properties and the need for reference data. Musculoskeletal and neurological items tapping the constructs of dexterity, balance, ambulation, joint range of motion, strength and power, endurance and motor planning will be collected in this cross-sectional study. Standardised questionnaires will evaluate quality of life, physical activity, and musculoskeletal health. Saliva DNA will be analysed for the ACTN3 genotype (‘gene for speed’). A volunteer cohort of 1000 participants aged 3 to 100 years will be recruited according to a set of self-reported health criteria. Descriptive statistics will be generated, creating tables of mean values and standard deviations stratified for age and gender. Quantile regression equations will be used to generate age charts and age-specific centile values. Discussion This project will be a powerful resource to assist physiotherapists and clinicians across all areas of healthcare to diagnose pathology, track disease progression and evaluate treatment response. This reference dataset will also contribute to the development of robust patient-centred clinical trial outcome measures
Cascades with Adjoint Matter: Adjoint Transitions
A large class of duality cascades based on quivers arising from non-isolated
singularities enjoy adjoint transitions - a phenomenon which occurs when the
gauge coupling of a node possessing adjoint matter is driven to strong coupling
in a manner resulting in a reduction of rank in the non-Abelian part of the
gauge group and a subsequent flow to weaker coupling. We describe adjoint
transitions in a simple family of cascades based on a Z2-orbifold of the
conifold using field theory. We show that they are dual to Higgsing and produce
varying numbers of U(1) factors, moduli, and monopoles in a manner which we
calculate. This realizes a large family of cascades which proceed through
Seiberg duality and Higgsing. We briefly describe the supergravity limit of our
analysis, as well as a prescription for treating more general theories. A
special role is played by N=2 SQCD. Our results suggest that additional light
fields are typically generated when UV completing certain constructions of
spontaneous supersymmetry breaking into cascades, potentially leading to
instabilities.Comment: 29 pages, a few typos fixed, improved discussion, added figure; now
there is 1 figur
Chiral effective action with heavy quark symmetry
We derive an effective action combining chiral and heavy quark symmetry,
using approximate bosonization techniques of QCD. We explicitly show that the
heavy-quark limit is compatible with the large (number of color) limit in
the meson sector, and derive specific couplings between the light and heavy
mesons (, , ...) and their chiral partners. The relevance of this
effective action to solitons with heavy quarks describing heavy baryons is
discussed.Comment: 14 pages, SUNY-NTG-92/2
Differential Transverse Flow in Central C-Ne and C-Cu Collisions at 3.7 GeV/nucleon
Differential transverse flow of protons and pions in central C-Ne and C-Cu
collisions at a beam energy of 3.7 GeV/nucleon was measured as a function of
transverse momentum at the SKM-200-GIBS setup of JINR. In agreement with
predictions of a transversely moving thermal model, the strength of proton
differential transverse flow is found to first increase gradually and then
saturate with the increasing transverse momentum in both systems. While pions
are preferentially emitted in the same direction of the proton transverse flow
in the reaction of C-Ne, they exhibit an anti-flow to the opposote direction of
the proton transverse flow in the reaction of C-Cu due to stronger shadowing
effects of the heavier target in thr whole range of transverse momentum.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figure
- …
