3,002 research outputs found
Analysis of Organophosphorus Compounds. 1. Application of Iodine-Azide Reaction for Detection of Thiophosphoorganic Compounds in Thin-Layer Chromatography
Wydrukowano z dostarczonych Wydawnictwu UŁ gotowych materiałówZadanie pt. Digitalizacja i udostępnienie w Cyfrowym Repozytorium Uniwersytetu Łódzkiego kolekcji czasopism naukowych wydawanych przez Uniwersytet Łódzki nr 885/P-DUN/2014 zostało dofinansowane ze środków MNiSW w ramach działalności upowszechniającej naukę
Radiation budget measurement/model interface
This final report includes research results from the period February, 1981 through November, 1982. Two new results combine to form the final portion of this work. They are the work by Hanna (1982) and Stevens to successfully test and demonstrate a low-order spectral climate model and the work by Ciesielski et al. (1983) to combine and test the new radiation budget results from NIMBUS-7 with earlier satellite measurements. Together, the two related activities set the stage for future research on radiation budget measurement/model interfacing. Such combination of results will lead to new applications of satellite data to climate problems. The objectives of this research under the present contract are therefore satisfied. Additional research reported herein includes the compilation and documentation of the radiation budget data set a Colorado State University and the definition of climate-related experiments suggested after lengthy analysis of the satellite radiation budget experiments
Analysis of tethered balloon, ceilometer and class sounding data taken on San Nicolas Island during the FIRE project
During the FIRE Marine Stratocumulus Program on San Nicolas Island, Colorado State University (CSU) and the British Meteorological Office (BMO) operated separate instrument packages on the NASA tethered balloon. The CSU package contained instrumentation for the measurement of temperature, pressure, humidity, cloud droplet concentration, and long and short wave radiation. Eight research flights, performed between July 7 and July 14, are summarized. An analysis priority to the July 7, 8 and 11 flights was assigned for the purposes of comparing the CSU and BMO data. Results are presented. In addition, CSU operated a laser ceilometer for the determination of cloud base, and a CLASS radiosonde site which launched 69 sondes. Data from all of the above systems are being analyzed
Maternal Psychiatric Disease and Epigenetic Evidence Suggest a Common Biology for Poor Fetal Growth
We sought to identify and characterize predictors of poor fetal growth among variables extracted from perinatal medical records to gain insight into potential etiologic mechanisms. In this process we reevaluated a previously observed association between poor fetal growth and maternal psychiatric disease. We evaluated 449 deliveries of \u3e36 weeks gestation that occurred between 9/2008 and 9/2010 at the Women and Infants Hospital in Providence Rhode Island. This study group was oversampled for Small-for-Gestational-Age (SGA) infants and excluded Large-for-Gestational-Age (LGA) infants. We assessed the associations between recorded clinical variables and impaired fetal growth: SGA or Intrauterine Growth Restriction (IUGR) diagnosis. After validating the previously observed association between maternal psychiatric disease and impaired fetal growth we addressed weaknesses in the prior studies by explicitly considering antidepressant use and the timing of symptoms with respect to pregnancy. We then evaluated DNA methylation levels at 27 candidate loci in placenta from a subset of these deliveries (n = 197) to examine if epigenetic variation could provide insight into the mechanisms that cause this co-morbidity
Dynamics of the Australian summer monsoon
March 6, 1992.Includes bibliographical references.When a west-east line of deep convection forms over northern Australia, the potential vorticity field begins to change due to the latent heat release, with low level negative and upper level positive anomalies being induced. These potential vorticity patterns can be analytically derived by using a zonal balance model formulated in isentropic and potential latitude coordinates. The associated wind and mass fields can be found by solving an invertibility principle which is valid for these equatorial balanced flows. Since the convectively induced potential vorticity anomalies develop from an initial state which has potential vorticity increasing toward the north, reversed poleward gradients of potential vorticity are produced. The regions of potential vorticity gradient reversal are found on the poleward side of the ITCZ at low levels and on the equatorward side of the ITCZ at upper levels, just as in the observed fields during AMEX. For typical convective heating rates, significant potential vorticity gradient reversals occur quickly - on the order of a few days. This sets the stage for combined barotropic-baroclinic instability, the formation of tropical waves, and t he breakdown of the ITCZ. We can understand the barotropic aspects of this breakdown t rough a normal mode stability analysis of the nondivergent barotropic model with either a hyperbolic tangent shear layer basic state zonal wind or an idealized three region profile in which there is a central (ITCZ) region of anomalous absolute vorticity, surrounded by regions of undisturbed absolute vorticity. The latter model can be solved analytically, which allows direct interpretation of the breakdown in terms of the phase locking and growth of the counterpropagating vorticity anomalies (essentially Rossby waves) located on the two interfaces separating the three regions. In this sense the ITCZ is self-destructive and should not be viewed as a strictly steady state feature of the tropical circulation. In addition, according to this scenario, the potential vorticity dynamics of the Australian region are not unique, but are characterized by an ITCZ formation-breakdown cycle similar to that occurring in other tropical regions such as the tropical east Pacific and western Africa
Multi-objective improvement of software using co-evolution and smart seeding
Optimising non-functional properties of software is an important part of the implementation process. One such property is execution time, and compilers target a reduction in execution time using a variety of optimisation techniques. Compiler optimisation is not always able to produce semantically equivalent alternatives that improve execution times, even if such alternatives are known to exist. Often, this is due to the local nature of such optimisations. In this paper we present a novel framework for optimising existing software using a hybrid of evolutionary optimisation techniques. Given as input the implementation of a program or function, we use Genetic Programming to evolve a new semantically equivalent version, optimised to reduce execution time subject to a given probability distribution of inputs. We employ a co-evolved population of test cases to encourage the preservation of the program’s semantics, and exploit the original program through seeding of the population in order to focus the search. We carry out experiments to identify the important factors in maximising efficiency gains. Although in this work we have optimised execution time, other non-functional criteria could be optimised in a similar manner
Elastic p-3He and n-3H scattering with two- and three-body forces
We report on a microscopic calculation of n-3H and p-3He scattering employing
the Argonne v_{18} and v_8' nucleon-nucleon potentials with and without
additional three-nucleon force. An R-matrix analysis of the p-3He and n-3H
scattering data is presented. Comparisons are made for the phase shifts and a
selection of measurements in both scattering systems. Differences between our
calculation and the R-matrix results or the experimental data can be attributed
to only two partial waves (3P0 and 3P2). We find the effect of the Urbana IX
and the Texas-Los Alamos three-nucleon forces on the phase shifts to be
negligible.Comment: submitted to Phys. Rev.
Maximal -regularity for stochastic evolution equations
We prove maximal -regularity for the stochastic evolution equation
\{{aligned} dU(t) + A U(t)\, dt& = F(t,U(t))\,dt + B(t,U(t))\,dW_H(t),
\qquad t\in [0,T],
U(0) & = u_0, {aligned}. under the assumption that is a sectorial
operator with a bounded -calculus of angle less than on
a space . The driving process is a cylindrical
Brownian motion in an abstract Hilbert space . For and
and initial conditions in the real interpolation space
\XAp we prove existence of unique strong solution with trajectories in
L^p(0,T;\Dom(A))\cap C([0,T];\XAp), provided the non-linearities
F:[0,T]\times \Dom(A)\to L^q(\mathcal{O},\mu) and B:[0,T]\times \Dom(A) \to
\g(H,\Dom(A^{\frac12})) are of linear growth and Lipschitz continuous in their
second variables with small enough Lipschitz constants. Extensions to the case
where is an adapted operator-valued process are considered as well.
Various applications to stochastic partial differential equations are worked
out in detail. These include higher-order and time-dependent parabolic
equations and the Navier-Stokes equation on a smooth bounded domain
\OO\subseteq \R^d with . For the latter, the existence of a unique
strong local solution with values in (H^{1,q}(\OO))^d is shown.Comment: Accepted for publication in SIAM Journal on Mathematical Analysi
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