28,387 research outputs found

    Addressing Geriatric Falls in the Outpatient Setting: A Prevention Initiative

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    With approximately 25% of older aged 65 or greater falling each year, and 20% of these incidents resulting in serious injury, falls are of significant concern for both the geriatric community and the healthcare system at large. In 2017, Vermont ranked 41st in the nation with respect to the percent of older adults with self-reported falls in the past 12 months, according to the United Health Foundation’s “America’s Health Rankings report. Many patients at risk for falling remain uneducated regarding environmental, pharmacological, and/or behavioral risk factors that may be contributing to their fall risk. In addition, providers often have limited time during office visits to counsel patients regarding strategies to combat these risk factors. The purpose of this work was to develop discharge instruction strategies for geriatric patients at Hinesburg Family Medicine to combat environmental (home hazards), behavioral, and pharmacological factors that may be increasing their risk for falls.https://scholarworks.uvm.edu/fmclerk/1545/thumbnail.jp

    Comparison of vortex lattice predicted forces with wind tunnel experiments for the F-4E(CCV) airplane with a closely coupled canard

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    The F-4E (CCV) wind tunnel model with closely coupled canard control surfaces was analyzed by means of a version of a vortex lattice program that included the effects of nonlinear leading edge or side edge vortex lift on as many as four individual planforms. The results were compared with experimental data from wind tunnel tests of a 5% scale model tested at a Mach number M = 0.6. They indicated that a nonlinear vortex lift developed on the side edges due to tip vortices, but did not appear to develop on the leading edges within the range of angles of attack that were studied. Instead, substantial leading edge thrust was developed on the lifting surfaces. A configuration buildup illustrated the mutual interference between the wing and control surfaces. On the configuration studied, addition of the wing increased the loading on the canard, but the additional load on the canard due to adding the stabilator was small

    The prediction of two-dimensional airfoil stall progression

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    A generalized boundary condition potential flow calculation method was combined with a momentum integral boundary layer method and a base flow theory of separation to predict airfoil viscous-inviscid interference up to and beyond stall. The resultant program considers laminar and turbulent separation and is, therefore, applicable to thin or thick airfoil stall. The calculated flow field includes the airfoil and the separation bubble recombination region behind the airfoil. Calculated pressure distributions and equivalent airfoil shapes, including the displacement thickness of the viscous regions, are compared with flow field measurements for several airfoils. The measured displacement thicknesses and wake centerlines corroborate the calculated shape. The comparison also suggests the use of the analytical solution to evaluate the measurements

    Multi-element airfoil viscous-inviscid interactions

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    Subsonic viscous-inviscid interactions for multi-element airfoils are predicted by iterating between inviscid and viscous solutions until the performance coefficients converge. Inviscid flow is modelled by using distributed source-vortex singularities on configuration surface panels. Viscous effects are calculated by an existing laminar separation bubble model and a NASA-Lockheed boundary layer-wake method. Numerical formulations and example calculations are presented

    CFD Code Survey for Thrust Chamber Application

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    In the quest fo find analytical reference codes, responses from a questionnaire are presented which portray the current computational fluid dynamics (CFD) program status and capability at various organizations, characterizing liquid rocket thrust chamber flow fields. Sample cases are identified to examine the ability, operational condition, and accuracy of the codes. To select the best suited programs for accelerated improvements, evaluation criteria are being proposed

    Calabi–Yau threefolds and moduli of abelian surfaces I

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    We describe birational models and decide the rationality/unirationality of moduli spaces A\cal Ad (and A\cal Alevd) of (1, d)-polarized Abelian surfaces (with canonical level structure, respectively) for small values of d. The projective lines identified in the rational/unirational moduli spaces correspond to pencils of Abelian surfaces traced on nodal threefolds living naturally in the corresponding ambient projective spaces, and whose small resolutions are new Calabi–Yau threefolds with Euler characteristic zero

    The moduli space of (111)-polarized abelian surfaces is unirational

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    We prove that the moduli space A\cal A11lev of (1,11)-polarized Abelian surfaces with level structure of canonical type is birational to Klein's cubic hypersurface in P4. Therefore, A\cal A11lev is unirational but not rational, and there are no Γ11-cusp forms of weight 3. The same methods also provide an easy proof of the rationality of A\cal A9lev

    Normalization of the covariant three-body bound state vertex function

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    The normalization condition for the relativistic three nucleon Bethe-Salpeter and Gross bound state vertex functions is derived, for the first time, directly from the three body wave equations. It is also shown that the relativistic normalization condition for the two body Gross bound state vertex function is identical to the requirement that the bound state charge be conserved, proving that charge is automatically conserved by this equation.Comment: 24 pages, 9 figures, published version, minor typos correcte
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