3,745 research outputs found
Enhancement in Electro-Optic Properties of Dynamic Scattering Systems through Addition of Dichroic Dyes
Electro-optic properties of dynamic scattering in homeotropically aligned
pure and dichroic dye-doped nematic liquid crystal samples are examined. The
optical properties of the two systems are quantified using transmission
properties of scattered and unscattered as a function of amplitude and
frequency of an applied voltage. Auto-correlation of the scattered signal at
different applied voltages is used to compare the decay times in the two
systems. Lastly, the histogram of the scattered signal reveals a wavevector
dependent large light scattering event. The dye-doped system shows a
significant enhancement of light blocking property in both normal and off-axis
light propagation. The characteristics of the system are compared to other
scattering technologies. The results suggest that dye-doped system can overcome
shortcomings in scattering based devices used for near-eye applications
Activity of water in aqueous systems; A frequently neglected property
In this critical review, the significance of the term ‘activity’ is examined in the context of the properties of aqueous solutions. The dependence of the activity of water(ℓ) at ambient pressure and 298.15 K on solute molality is examined for aqueous solutions containing neutral solutes, mixtures of neutral solutes and salts. Addition of a solute to water(ℓ) always lowers its thermodynamic activity. For some solutes the stabilisation of water(ℓ) is less than and for others more than in the case where the thermodynamic properties of the aqueous solution are ideal. In one approach this pattern is accounted for in terms of hydrate formation. Alternatively the pattern is analysed in terms of the dependence of practical osmotic coefficients on the composition of the aqueous solution and then in terms of solute–solute interactions. For salt solutions the dependence of the activity of water on salt molalities is compared with that predicted by the Debye–Hückel limiting law. The analysis is extended to consideration of the activities of water in binary aqueous mixtures. The dependence on mole fraction composition of the activity of water in binary aqueous mixtures is examined. Different experimental methods for determining the activity of water in aqueous solutions are critically reviewed. The role of water activity is noted in a biochemical context, with reference to the quality, stability and safety of food and finally with regard to health science.
Knee joint neuromuscular activation performance during muscle damage and superimposed fatigue
This study examined the concurrent effects of exercise-induced muscle damage and superimposed acute fatigue on the neuromuscular activation performance of the knee flexors of nine males (age: 26.7 ± 6.1yrs; height 1.81 ± 0.05m; body mass 81.2 ± 11.7kg [mean ± SD]). Measures were obtained during three experimental conditions: (i) FAT-EEVID, involving acute fatiguing exercise performed on each assessment occasion plus a single episode of eccentric exercise performed on the first occasion and after the fatigue trial; (ii) FAT, involving the fatiguing exercise only and; (iii) CON consisting of no exercise. Assessments were performed prior to (pre) and at lh, 24h, 48h, 72h, and 168h relative to the eccentric exercise. Repeated-measures ANOVAs showed that muscle damage within the FAT-EEVID condition elicited reductions of up to 38%, 24%) and 65%> in volitional peak force, electromechanical delay and rate of force development compared to baseline and controls, respectively (F[io, 80] = 2.3 to 4.6; p to 30.7%>) following acute fatigue (Fp; i6] = 4.3 to 9.1; p ; Fp, iq = 3.9; p <0.05). The safeguarding of evoked muscle activation capability despite compromised volitional performance might reveal aspects of capabilities for emergency and protective responses during episodes of fatigue and antecedent muscle damaging exercise
Anomalous increase in nematic-isotropic transition temperature in dimer molecules induced by magnetic field
We have determined the nematic-isotropic transition temperature as a function of applied magnetic field in three different thermotropic liquid crystalline dimers. These molecules are comprised of two rigid calamitic moieties joined end to end by flexible spacers with odd numbers of methylene groups. They show an unprecedented magnetic field enhancement of nematic order in that the transition temperature is increased by up to 15K when subjected to 22T magnetic field. The increase is conjectured to be caused by a magnetic field-induced decrease of the average bend angle in the aliphatic spacers connecting the rigid mesogenic units of the dimers
Архаїчні рушники Півдня України (сюжети і семантика)
Groundwater is a life-sustaining resource that supplies water to
billions of people, plays a central part in irrigated agriculture
and influences the health of many ecosystems1,2. Most assessments
of global water resources have focused on surface water3–6, but
unsustainable depletion of groundwater has recently been
documented on both regional7,8 and global scales9–11. It remains
unclear how the rate of global groundwater depletion compares to
the rate of natural renewal and the supply needed to support
ecosystems. Here we define the groundwater footprint (the area
required to sustain groundwater use and groundwater-dependent
ecosystem services) and show that humans are overexploiting
groundwater in many large aquifers that are critical to agriculture,
especially in Asia and North America. We estimate that the size of
the global groundwater footprint is currently about 3.5 times the
actual area of aquifers and that about 1.7 billion people live in areas
where groundwater resources and/or groundwater-dependent
ecosystems are under threat. That said, 80 per cent of aquifers have
a groundwater footprint that is less than their area, meaning that
the net global value is driven by a few heavily overexploited
aquifers. The groundwater footprint is the first tool suitable for
consistently evaluating the use, renewal and ecosystem requirements
of groundwater at an aquifer scale. It can be combined
with the water footprint and virtual water calculations12–14, and
be used to assess the potential for increasing agricultural yields
with renewable groundwaterref15. The method could be modified
to evaluate other resources with renewal rates that are slow and
spatially heterogeneous, such as fisheries, forestry or soil
Effects of acute fatigue on the volitional and magnetically-evoked electromechanical delay of the knee flexors in males and females
Neuromuscular performance capabilities, including those measured by evoked responses, may be adversely affected by fatigue; however, the capability of the neuromuscular system to initiate muscle force rapidly under these circumstances is yet to be established. Sex-differences in the acute responses of neuromuscular performance to exercise stress may be linked to evidence that females are much more vulnerable to ACL injury than males. Optimal functioning of the knee flexors is paramount to the dynamic stabilisation of the knee joint, therefore the aim of this investigation was to examine the effects of acute maximal intensity fatiguing exercise on the voluntary and magnetically-evoked electromechanical delay in the knee flexors of males and females. Knee flexor volitional and magnetically-evoked neuromuscular performance was assessed in seven male and nine females prior to and immediately after: (i) an intervention condition comprising a fatigue trial of 30-seconds maximal static exercise of the knee flexors, (ii) a control condition consisting of no exercise. The results showed that the fatigue intervention was associated with a substantive reduction in volitional peak force (PFV) that was greater in males compared to females (15.0%, 10.2%, respectively, p < 0.01) and impairment to volitional electromechanical delay (EMDV) in females exclusively (19.3%, p < 0.05). Similar improvements in magnetically-evoked electromechanical delay in males and females following fatigue (21%, p < 0.001), however, may suggest a vital facilitatory mechanism to overcome the effects of impaired voluntary capabilities, and a faster neuromuscular response that can be deployed during critical times to protect the joint system
Aggregation, Pretransitional Behavior, And Optical Properties In The Isotropic Phase Of Lyotropic Chromonic Liquid Crystals Studied In High Magnetic Fields
We report results on the high-field magneto-optical response of four aqueous, lyotropic, chromonic liquid crystal formulations in the isotropic phase. Measurements of the field-induced birefringence at temperatures above the isotropic-nematic coexistence region at high magnetic fields reveal qualitative differences in different materials; these differences can be attributed to the nature of aggregation and are discussed within the context of competing aggregation models. Extending these measurements to very high fields and large optical phase differences reveals the presence of an unexpected optical phenomenon: magnetic field-induced circular birefringence, measured in the Voigt geometry, in a system containing no molecularly chiral species. Possible origins of this effect are discussed
GeNN: a code generation framework for accelerated brain simulations
Large-scale numerical simulations of detailed brain circuit models are important for identifying hypotheses on brain functions and testing their consistency and plausibility. An ongoing challenge for simulating realistic models is, however, computational speed. In this paper, we present the GeNN (GPU-enhanced Neuronal Networks) framework, which aims to facilitate the use of graphics accelerators for computational models of large-scale neuronal networks to address this challenge. GeNN is an open source library that generates code to accelerate the execution of network simulations on NVIDIA GPUs, through a flexible and extensible interface, which does not require in-depth technical knowledge from the users. We present performance benchmarks showing that 200-fold speedup compared to a single core of a CPU can be achieved for a network of one million conductance based Hodgkin-Huxley neurons but that for other models the speedup can differ.
GeNN is available for Linux, Mac OS X and Windows platforms. The source code, user manual, tutorials,
Wiki, in-depth example projects and all other related information can be found on the project website http://genn-team.github.io/genn/
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