3,290 research outputs found
AGROFORESTRY POLICIES CONTRIBUTE TO SUSTAINABLE LAND USE
Resource /Energy Economics and Policy,
Topology and shape optimization of induced-charge electro-osmotic micropumps
For a dielectric solid surrounded by an electrolyte and positioned inside an
externally biased parallel-plate capacitor, we study numerically how the
resulting induced-charge electro-osmotic (ICEO) flow depends on the topology
and shape of the dielectric solid. In particular, we extend existing
conventional electrokinetic models with an artificial design field to describe
the transition from the liquid electrolyte to the solid dielectric. Using this
design field, we have succeeded in applying the method of topology optimization
to find system geometries with non-trivial topologies that maximize the net
induced electro-osmotic flow rate through the electrolytic capacitor in the
direction parallel to the capacitor plates. Once found, the performance of the
topology optimized geometries has been validated by transferring them to
conventional electrokinetic models not relying on the artificial design field.
Our results show the importance of the topology and shape of the dielectric
solid in ICEO systems and point to new designs of ICEO micropumps with
significantly improved performance.Comment: 18 pages, latex IOP-style, 7 eps figure
Effective Sample Size: Quick Estimation of the Effect of Related Samples in Genetic Case-Control Association Analyses
Correlated samples have been frequently avoided in case-control
genetic association
 studies in part because the methods for handling them are either not
easily implemented or not widely known. We
advocate one method for case-control association analysis of correlated
samples -- the effective sample size method -- as a simple and
accessible approach that does not require specialized computer programs.
The effective sample size method captures the variance inflation
of allele frequency estimation exactly, and can be used to modify the
chi-square test statistic, p-value, and 95% confidence interval of
odds-ratio simply by replacing the apparent number of allele counts with the
effective ones. For genotype frequency estimation, although a single
effective sample size is unable to completely characterize the variance inflation,
an averaged one can satisfactorily approximate the simulated result.
The effective sample size method is applied to the rheumatoid arthritis
siblings data collected from the North American Rheumatoid Arthritis Consortium (NARAC)
to establish a significant association with the interferon-induced
helicasel gene (IFIH1) previously being identified as a type 1 diabetes
susceptibility locus. Connections between the effective sample size
method and other methods, such as generalized estimation equation,
variance of eigenvalues for correlation matrices, and genomic controls,
are also discussed.

Birth asphyxia - Presenting the case for' A stitch in time'
Objectives. To. review the current birth asphyxia and subsequent cerebral palsy (CP) rates at a teaching hospital in a developing country, and to place these rates within the context of the current caesarean section (CS) rate. To determine the number of cases of birth asphyxia that are preventable.Design. Retrospective, descriptiv.e study.Setting. Neonatal nursery and intensive care unit, Johannesburg Hospital.Methods. Maternal and mionatal records were reviewed for 48 babies weighing less than 1 800 g born between 1 January and 31 December 1997 with birth asphyxia. Outcome after discharge was determined from the neonatal follow-up notes until 31 March 1998.Results. Mortality in the group of birth-asphyxiated babies was 12.5%. The birth asphyxia rate was 6/1 000 live births, and the CP rate in the study group was 1.15/1 000 live births. The CS rate for the group was 29%, with an overall CS rate at the hospital of 20.5%. In 22 cases (46%) the cause of birth asphyxia was considered to have been preventable.Conclusion. The cr rate is considerably higher than that quoted for developed countries, and a significant number of cases of birth asphyxia in the study were preventable. In the face of the high birth asphyxia and cr rates, the CS rate appears to be inappropriately Iow. The CS rate should be audited in the context of the birth asphyxia and cr rates
Topology and shape optimization of induced-charge electro-osmotic micropumps
For a dielectric solid surrounded by an electrolyte and positioned inside an externally biased parallel-plate capacitor, we study numerically how the resulting induced-charge electro-osmotic (ICEO) flow depends on the topology and shape of the dielectric solid. In particular, we extend existing conventional electrokinetic models with an artificial design field to describe the transition from the liquid electrolyte to the solid dielectric. Using this design field, we have succeeded in applying the method of topology optimization to find system geometries with non-trivial topologies that maximize the net induced electro-osmotic flow rate through the electrolytic capacitor in the direction parallel to the capacitor plates. Once found, the performance of the topology-optimized geometries has been validated by transferring them to conventional electrokinetic models not relying on the artificial design field. Our results show the importance of the topology and shape of the dielectric solid in ICEO systems and point to new designs of ICEO micropumps with significantly improved performance
Dichotomy in the Dynamical Status of Massive Cores in Orion
To study the evolution of high mass cores, we have searched for evidence of
collapse motions in a large sample of starless cores in the Orion molecular
cloud. We used the Caltech Submillimeter Observatory telescope to obtain
spectra of the optically thin (\H13CO+) and optically thick (\HCO+) high
density tracer molecules in 27 cores with masses 1 \Ms. The red- and
blue-asymmetries seen in the line profiles of the optically thick line with
respect to the optically thin line indicate that 2/3 of these cores are not
static. We detect evidence for infall (inward motions) in 9 cores and outward
motions for 10 cores, suggesting a dichotomy in the kinematic state of the
non-static cores in this sample. Our results provide an important observational
constraint on the fraction of collapsing (inward motions) versus non-collapsing
(re-expanding) cores for comparison with model simulations.Comment: 9 pages, 2 Figures. To appear in ApJ(Letters
Molecular Inventories and Chemical Evolution of Low-mass Protostellar Envelopes
This paper presents the first substantial study of the chemistry of the
envelopes around a sample of 18 low-mass pre- and protostellar objects for
which physical properties have previously been derived from radiative transfer
modeling of their dust continuum emission. Single-dish line observations of 24
transitions of 9 molecular species (not counting isotopes) including HCO+,
N2H+, CS, SO, SO2, HCN, HNC, HC3N and CN are reported. The line intensities are
used to constrain the molecular abundances by comparison to Monte Carlo
radiative transfer modeling of the line strengths. An empirical chemical
network is constructed on the basis of correlations between the abundances of
various species. For example, it is seen that the HCO+ and CO abundances are
linearly correlated, both increasing with decreasing envelope mass. Species
such as CS, SO and HCN show no trend with envelope mass. In particular no trend
is seen between ``evolutionary stage'' of the objects and the abundances of the
main sulfur- or nitrogen-containing species. Among the nitrogen-bearing species
abundances of CN, HNC and HC3N are found to be closely correlated, which can be
understood from considerations of the chemical network. The CS/SO abundance
ratio is found to correlate with the abundances of CN and HC3N, which may
reflect a dependence on the atomic carbon abundance. An anti-correlation is
found between the deuteration of HCO+ and HCN, reflecting different temperature
dependences for gas-phase deuteration mechanisms. The abundances are compared
to other protostellar environments. In particular it is found that the
abundances in the cold outer envelope of the previously studied class 0
protostar IRAS16293-2422 are in good agreement with the average abundances for
the presented sample of class 0 objects.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A. 29 pages, 23 figures. Abstract
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