1,467 research outputs found

    TEMPERATURE-DEPENDENCE OF DOMAIN-WALL COERCIVE FIELD IN MAGNETIC GARNET-FILMS

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    The coercive properties of magnetically uniaxial liquid-phase epitaxy garnet films were investigated between 10 K and the Neel temperature (T(N) less-than-or-equal-to 500 K). Two independent methods, the results of which are nearly identical (magnetical response of oscillating domain walls and the method of coercive loops measured in a vibrating sample magnetometer), were used. Besides the usual domain-wall coercive field, H(dw), the critical coercive pressure, p(dw), was also introduced as it describes in a direct way the interactions of the domain walls with the wall-pinning traps. Both H(dw) and p(dw) were found to increase exponentially with decreasing temperature. Three different types of wall-pinning traps were identified in the sample and their strength, their rate of change with temperature, and their temperature range of activity were determined

    Relevant Component Analysis for static facial expression classification

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    This paper addresses the issue of automatic classification of the six universal emotional categories (joy, surprise, fear, anger, disgust, sadness) in the case of static images. Appearance parameters are extracted by an active appearance model(AAM) representing the input for the classifi- cation step. We introduce Relevant Component Analysis (RCA) in the context of facial expression recognition framework and we test this method against several other classi- fication techniques, including LDA, GDA and SVM, on the Cohn-Kanade database

    Multi-layer hierarchical clustering of pedestrian trajectories for automatic counting of people in video sequences

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    In this paper we propose an approach to count the number of pedestrians, given a trajectory data set provided by a tracking system. The tracking process itself is treated as a black box providing us the input data. The idea is to apply a hierarchical clustering algorithm, using different data representations and distance measures, as a post-processing step. The final goal is to reduce the difference between the number of tracked pedestrians and the real number of individuals present in the scene

    Comparison of stainless and mild steel welding fumes in generation of reactive oxygen species

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Welding fumes consist of a wide range of complex metal oxide particles which can be deposited in all regions of the respiratory tract. The welding aerosol is not homogeneous and is generated mostly from the electrode/wire. Over 390,000 welders were reported in the U.S. in 2008 while over 1 million full-time welders were working worldwide. Many health effects are presently under investigation from exposure to welding fumes. Welding fume pulmonary effects have been associated with bronchitis, metal fume fever, cancer and functional changes in the lung. Our investigation focused on the generation of free radicals and reactive oxygen species from stainless and mild steel welding fumes generated by a gas metal arc robotic welder. An inhalation exposure chamber located at NIOSH was used to collect the welding fume particles.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Our results show that hydroxyl radicals (<sup>.</sup>OH) were generated from reactions with H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2 </sub>and after exposure to cells. Catalase reduced the generation of <b><sup>.</sup></b>OH from exposed cells indicating the involvement of H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub>. The welding fume suspension also showed the ability to cause lipid peroxidation, effect O<sub>2 </sub>consumption, induce H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2 </sub>generation in cells, and cause DNA damage.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Increase in oxidative damage observed in the cellular exposures correlated well with <b><sup>.</sup></b>OH generation in size and type of welding fumes, indicating the influence of metal type and transition state on radical production as well as associated damage. Our results demonstrate that both types of welding fumes are able to generate ROS and ROS-related damage over a range of particle sizes; however, the stainless steel fumes consistently showed a significantly higher reactivity and radical generation capacity. The chemical composition of the steel had a significant impact on the ROS generation capacity with the stainless steel containing Cr and Ni causing more damage than the mild steel. Our results suggest that welding fumes may cause acute lung injury. Since type of fume generated, particle size, and elapsed time after generation of the welding exposure are significant factors in radical generation and particle deposition these factors should be considered when developing protective strategies.</p
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