1,028 research outputs found
Sweat collection capsule
A sweat collection capsule permitting quantitative collection of sweat is described. The device consists of a frame held immobile on the skin, a closure secured to the frame and absorbent material located next to the skin in a cavity formed by the frame and the closure. The absorbent material may be removed from the device by removing the closure from the frame while the frame is held immobile on the skin
Electromagnetic analysis of arbitrarily shaped pinched carpets
We derive the expressions for the anisotropic heterogeneous tensors of
permittivity and perme- ability associated with two-dimensional and
three-dimensional carpets of an arbitrary shape. In the former case, we map a
segment onto smooth curves whereas in the latter case we map a non convex
region of the plane onto smooth surfaces. Importantly, these carpets display no
singularity of the permeability and permeability tensor components, and this
may lead to some broadband cloaking.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures, Current Status of Manuscript: 19Apr10
26May10-Sent on appeal;report rcvd 29Dec09 13Apr10-Ed. decision and/or ref.
comments to author;response rcvd 04Dec09 21Dec09-Ed. decision and/or ref.
comments to author;response rcvd 01Dec09-Transferred from PRL to PRA 18Aug09
30Nov09-Ed.decision and/or ref. comments to author;response rcvd 14Aug09 -
Correspondence sent to autho
Maximal Oxygen Uptake, Sweating and Tolerance to Exercise in the Heat
The physiological mechanisms that facilitate acute acclimation to heat have not been fully elucidated, but the result is the establishment of a more efficient cardiovascular system to increase heat dissipation via increased sweating that allows the acclimated man to function with a cooler internal environment and to extend his performance. Men in good physical condition with high maximal oxygen uptakes generally acclimate to heat more rapidly and retain it longer than men in poorer condition. Also, upon first exposure trained men tolerate exercise in the heat better than untrained men. Both resting in heat and physical training in a cool environment confer only partial acclimation when first exposed to work in the heat. These observations suggest separate additive stimuli of metabolic heat from exercise and environmental heat to increase sweating during the acclimation process. However, the necessity of utilizing physical exercise during acclimation has been questioned. Bradbury et al. (1964) have concluded exercise has no effect on the course of heat acclimation since increased sweating can be induced by merely heating resting subjects. Preliminary evidence suggests there is a direct relationship between the maximal oxygen uptake and the capacity to maintain thermal regulation, particularly through the control of sweating. Since increased sweating is an important mechanism for the development of heat acclimation, and fit men have high sweat rates, it follows that upon initial exposure to exercise in the heat, men with high maximal oxygen uptakes should exhibit less strain than men with lower maximal oxygen uptakes. The purpose of this study was: (1) to determine if men with higher maximal oxygen uptakes exhibit greater tolerance than men with lower oxygen uptakes during early exposure to exercise in the heat, and (2) to investigate further the mechanism of the relationship between sweating and maximal work capacity
'Ip, phone home': the uneasy relationship between copyright and privacy, illustrated in the laws of Hong Kong and Australia
Includes bibliographical referendes (p. 27-28).Cover title.This is the second version (26 September 2001)...--P. 1.published_or_final_versio
Improvement of E-Commerce
Semaphores must work. In our research, authors verify the analysis of context-free grammar, which embodies the essential principles of robotics. In order to achieve this intent, we discover how scatter/gather I/O can be applied to the improvement of Markov models
Exterior optical cloaking and illusions by using active sources: a boundary element perspective
Recently, it was demonstrated that active sources can be used to cloak any
objects that lie outside the cloaking devices [Phys. Rev. Lett. \textbf{103},
073901 (2009)]. Here, we propose that active sources can create illusion
effects, so that an object outside the cloaking device can be made to look like
another object. invisibility is a special case in which the concealed object is
transformed to a volume of air. From a boundary element perspective, we show
that active sources can create a nearly "silent" domain which can conceal any
objects inside and at the same time make the whole system look like an illusion
of our choice outside a virtual boundary. The boundary element method gives the
fields and field gradients (which can be related to monopoles and dipoles) on
continuous curves which define the boundary of the active devices. Both the
cloaking and illusion effects are confirmed by numerical simulations
Method for Ultrasound Vibrometry Using Orthogonal Basis Functions
A method for measuring a mechanical property of a subject includes using an ultrasound transducer to apply ultrasonic vibration pulses to a location in a subject in order to induce shear waves at multiple prescribed orthogonal frequencies in the subject. The ultrasound transducer is directed by an excitation signal that is composed of multiple orthogonal basis functions, each having a given frequency component corresponding to the prescribed orthogonal frequencies. The power level of each orthogonal basis function is independently adjustable. The excitation signal can be sparsely sampled, or portions of the excitation signal can be removed in order to improve tissue vibration and to provide for the interleaving ultrasonic vibration and detection pulses. Ultrasonic detection pulses are applied to at least one motion detection point, from which echo signals are received. From the received echo signals, a motion signal is determined, from which mechanical properties of the subject are calculated.
Patent No.: US 8,602,994
Date of Patent: Dec 20, 2013
Filed: Mar 9, 2010
Int. Cl.: A61B 8/00 (2006.01); G01H 1/00 (2006.01)
U.S. Cl.: 600/438; 73/579
CPC Cl.: G01S 7/52022 (2013.01); A61B 8/485 (2013.01); G01S 15/8952 (2013.01); G01S 7/52036 (2013.01)
Field of Search: ;600/437,443 ;702/19,22 ;382/260 ;345/441,501,552 ;73/574,579,587,60
A Completely Covariant Approach to Transformation Optics
We show that the Plebanski based approach to transformation optics overlooks
some subtleties in the electrodynamics of moving dielectrics that restricts its
applicability to a certain class of transformations. An alternative, completely
covariant, approach is developed that is more generally applicable and provides
a clearer picture of transformation optics.Comment: 10 pages. This version: Additional references added, corrected a
small error in Eq. (28) (Eq. (29) in present version), some revision of the
text, appendix content moved to the main body of the text, figure removed.
Corresponds more closely to published version. Prepared for a special issue
on transformation optics published by Journal of Optic
Partial Transmutation of Singularities in Optical Instruments
Some interesting optical instruments such as the Eaton lens and the Invisible
Sphere require singularities of the refractive index for their implementation.
We show how to transmute those singularities into harmless topological defects
in anisotropic media without the need for anomalous material properties
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