2,561 research outputs found
Lunar science prior to Apollo 11
Evolutional aspects and geological interpretations in lunar scienc
Commercial Spacewalking: Designing an EVA Qualification Program for Space Tourism
In the near future, accessibility to space will be opened to anyone with the means and the desire to experience the weightlessness of microgravity, and to look out upon both the curvature of the Earth and the blackness of space, from the protected, shirt-sleeved environment of a commercial spacecraft. Initial forays will be short-duration, suborbital flights, but the experience and expertise of half a century of spaceflight will soon produce commercial vehicles capable of achieving low Earth orbit. Even with the commercial space industry still in its infancy, and manned orbital flight a number of years away, there is little doubt that there will one day be a feasible and viable market for those courageous enough to venture outside the vehicle and into the void, wearing nothing but a spacesuit, armed with nothing but preflight training. What that Extravehicular Activity (EVA) preflight training entails, however, is something that has yet to be defined. A number of significant factors will influence the composition of a commercial EVA training program, but a fundamental question remains: 'what minimum training guidelines must be met to ensure a safe and successful commercial spacewalk?' Utilizing the experience gained through the development of NASA's Skills program - designed to qualify NASA and International Partner astronauts for EVA aboard the International Space Station - this paper identifies the attributes and training objectives essential to the safe conduct of an EVA, and attempts to conceptually design a comprehensive training methodology meant to represent an acceptable qualification standard
Brain Amino Acids and Biogenic Amines Under Various Atmospheric Mixtures Semiannual Report, 1 Mar. 1965 - 30 Apr. 1966
Effects of exposure to different gaseous atmospheric mixtures on free amino acids and biogenic amines in rat brain
"Wet-to-Dry" Conformational Transition of Polymer Layers Grafted to Nanoparticles in Nanocomposite
The present communication reports the first direct measurement of the
conformation of a polymer corona grafted around silica nano-particles dispersed
inside a nanocomposite, a matrix of the same polymer. This measurement
constitutes an experimental breakthrough based on a refined combination of
chemical synthesis, which permits to match the contribution of the neutron
silica signal inside the composite, and the use of complementary scattering
methods SANS and SAXS to extract the grafted polymer layer form factor from the
inter-particles silica structure factor. The modelization of the signal of the
grafted polymer on nanoparticles inside the matrix and the direct comparison
with the form factor of the same particles in solution show a clear-cut change
of the polymer conformation from bulk to the nanocomposite: a transition from a
stretched and swollen form in solution to a Gaussian conformation in the matrix
followed with a compression of a factor two of the grafted corona. In the
probed range, increasing the interactions between the grafted particles (by
increasing the particle volume fraction) or between the grafted and the free
matrix chains (decreasing the grafted-free chain length ratio) does not
influence the amplitude of the grafted brush compression. This is the first
direct observation of the wet-to-dry conformational transition theoretically
expected to minimize the free energy of swelling of grafted chains in
interaction with free matrix chains, illustrating the competition between the
mixing entropy of grafted and free chains, and the elastic deformation of the
grafted chains. In addition to the experimental validation of the theoretical
prediction, this result constitutes a new insight for the nderstanding of the
general problem of dispersion of nanoparticles inside a polymer matrix for the
design of new nanocomposites materials
Macroscopic Dynamics of Neural Networks with Heterogeneous Spiking Thresholds
Mean-field theory links the physiological properties of individual neurons to
the emergent dynamics of neural population activity. These models provide an
essential tool for studying brain function at different scales; however, for
their application to neural populations on large scale, they need to account
for differences between distinct neuron types. The Izhikevich single neuron
model can account for a broad range of different neuron types and spiking
patterns, thus rendering it an optimal candidate for a mean-field theoretic
treatment of brain dynamics in heterogeneous networks. Here, we derive the
mean-field equations for networks of all-to-all coupled Izhikevich neurons with
heterogeneous spiking thresholds. Using methods from bifurcation theory, we
examine the conditions under which the mean-field theory accurately predicts
the dynamics of the Izhikevich neuron network. To this end, we focus on three
important features of the Izhikevich model that are subject here to simplifying
assumptions: (i) spike-frequency adaptation, (ii) the spike reset conditions,
and (iii) the distribution of single-cell spike thresholds across neurons.
Our results indicate that, while the mean-field model is not an exact model
of the Izhikevich network dynamics, it faithfully captures its different
dynamic regimes and phase transitions. We thus present a mean-field model that
can represent different neuron types and spiking dynamics. The model is
comprised of biophysical state variables and parameters, incorporates realistic
spike resetting conditions, and accounts for heterogeneity in neural spiking
thresholds. These features allow for a broad applicability of the model as well
as for a direct comparison to experimental data.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figure
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