41,659 research outputs found
A new millipede of the genus Gonographis from an inundation forest near Manaus, Brazil (Pyrgodesmidae)
Gonographis adisi (Pyrgodesmidae, Diplopoda) is newly described from a blackwater inundation forest near Manaus, Amazonas, Brazil. The species is able to survive submersion of up to eleven months
Spaceflight performance of silver coated FEP Teflon as a thermal control surface on the IMP-1 spacecraft
A second surface mirror type coating, vapor deposited silver on FEP Teflon, was used as a thermal control surface for one of the experiments aboard the Imp-I spacecraft. This coating was selected to obtain the low operating temperature required for this experiment. Initial flight temperature of this thermal control surface was -70.5 C, very close to the predicted value of -73 C and at a very satisfactory level. Since temperatures within the spacecraft interior are not at this desired low level, the detectors had to be mounted exterior to the spacecraft with a good view of space, preferably in an area shaded from sunlight. When this latter preference proved unobtainable, the detectors were mounted on an aluminum plate located on the exterior of the spacecraft, parallel to the spin axis but rotating about the solar vector. The mounting plate was approximately 6.5 inches by 7.5 inches by 0.125 inches thick. To achieve the desired temperature level with the mounting plate in such a location, the thermal design had to minimize not only the effects of the relatively warm spacecraft environment but also the effects of the incident solar energy
The big Dehn surgery graph and the link of S^3
In a talk at the Cornell Topology Festival in 2005, W. Thurston discussed a
graph which we call "The Big Dehn Surgery Graph", B. Here we explore this
graph, particularly the link of S^3, and prove facts about the geometry and
topology of B. We also investigate some interesting subgraphs and pose what we
believe are important questions about B.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures, 4 ancillary files. Reorganized and shortened
from previous versions, while correcting one error in the proof of Theorem
5.4. Also, ancillary files detailing our computations with the computer
program ORB have been provide
Cyclic debonding of adhesive joints
Bonded lap joints were manufactured and tested under static and fatigue loading. Specimens were designed to fail in the bondline, and all fatigue tests included monitoring the crack growth to failure. Test specimens included aluminum details joined by two different adhesives. Specimens also included titanium and boron-epoxy details joined by an epoxy laminating resin. Additonal program variables included bondline thickness, adherend and spice plate thickness, specimen width, and specimen fabrication procedure. Adhesive aging was found to be generally detrimental to the lives of most of the specimens bonded with one adhesive system. Adhesive material was found to have a major influence on debond rate. Co-cured titanium/boron-epoxy specimens were found to resist debonding better than specimens fabricated with a sequential cure. Splice plate thickness and test section width were found to have little effect on debond rate. The data also suggested the existence of an optimum bondline thickness
Brown-Tail Moth, \u3ci\u3eEuproctis Chrysorrhoea,\u3c/i\u3e an Indigenous Pest of Parks and Public in the Benelux Countries (Lepidoptera: Lymantriidae)
Euproctis chrysorrhoea is a pest of park and shade trees and of the public in the Benelux countries as well as in the northeastern United States and Canada. In the Benelux countries the brown-tail moth is present every year in the dune regions, where it mainly feeds on Hippophae rhamnoides. Hairs from the larvae are irritating to the human skin producing a papular urticaria. An outbreak of the caterpillars produced widespread discomfort at a beach in the Netherlands in 1982 following defoliation of food plants and migration of the larvae seeking food, with resulting human contact, as well as wind dispersal of the hairs
- …