16,589 research outputs found

    Coded-aperture imaging in nuclear medicine

    Get PDF
    Coded-aperture imaging is a technique for imaging sources that emit high-energy radiation. This type of imaging involves shadow casting and not reflection or refraction. High-energy sources exist in x ray and gamma-ray astronomy, nuclear reactor fuel-rod imaging, and nuclear medicine. Of these three areas nuclear medicine is perhaps the most challenging because of the limited amount of radiation available and because a three-dimensional source distribution is to be determined. In nuclear medicine a radioactive pharmaceutical is administered to a patient. The pharmaceutical is designed to be taken up by a particular organ of interest, and its distribution provides clinical information about the function of the organ, or the presence of lesions within the organ. This distribution is determined from spatial measurements of the radiation emitted by the radiopharmaceutical. The principles of imaging radiopharmaceutical distributions with coded apertures are reviewed. Included is a discussion of linear shift-variant projection operators and the associated inverse problem. A system developed at the University of Arizona in Tucson consisting of small modular gamma-ray cameras fitted with coded apertures is described

    A Preliminary Evaluation of the Groll Rotary Vane Compressor

    Get PDF

    Agriculture Environmental Management System Electronic Manure Handling Process Map

    Get PDF
    Utah State University Cooperative Extension Agriculture Environmental Management Systems participants developed an electronic process flow method for identifying aspects and assessing impacts from the manure handling systems on animal feeding operations. This method breaks the manure handling system into manageable portions by delineating every process and support activity on a process flow diagram. Then each process and activity is individually examined to identify associated aspects. This approach expedites the identification of aspects in relation to those processes and activities. It also fulfills the operational control condition to identify those operations and activities that are associated with identified significant environmental aspects

    PHOTOCHEMICAL RING-OPENING IN meso-CHLORINATED CHLOROPHYLLS

    Get PDF
    Irradiation of 20-chloro-chlorophylls of the a-type with visible light produces long-wavelength shifted photoproducts, which transform in the dark to linear tetrapyrroles (bile pigments). The possible significance for chlorophyll degradation is discussed

    Nest site selection and nest survival of Greater Prairie-Chickens near a wind energy facility

    Get PDF
    Rapid development of wind energy facilities in the Great Plains of North America has raised concerns regarding their potential negative impact on the nesting ecology of Greater Prairie-Chickens (Tympanuchus cupido pinnatus). We investigated the effects of a pre-existing, 36-turbine wind energy facility on nest site selection and nest survival of Greater Prairie-Chickens in the unfragmented grasslands of the Nebraska Sandhills, USA. In 2013 and 2014, we monitored 91 nests along a 24-km disturbance gradient leading away from the wind energy facility. We found little evidence of an effect of the wind energy facility on Greater Prairie-Chicken nest site selection and nest survival. Instead, we found that the primary drivers of nest site selection and nest survival were related to landscape and habitat factors. Greater Prairie-Chickens avoided nesting near roads, with 74% of Greater Prairie-Chickens selecting nest sites .700 m from roads. Greater Prairie-Chickens selected nest sites with more than twice the visual obstruction and residual standing dead vegetation of random points. Our results suggest that small wind energy facilities, such as the facility in our study, may have little effect on Greater Prairie-Chicken nest site selection and nest survival. We suggest that livestock grazing and other grassland management practices still have the most important regional effects on Great Prairie-Chickens, but we caution future planners of wind energy facilities to account for the potential negative effect of roads on nest site selection. El ra´pido desarrollo de los parque de energ´ıa e´ olica en las Grandes Llanuras de Am´ erica del Norte ha generado preocupaci ´on sobre su potencial impacto negativo en la ecolog´ıa de anidaci ´on de Tympanuchus cupido pinnatus. Investigamos el efecto de un parque de energ´ıa preexistente de 36 turbinas e´ olicas sobre la selecci ´on del sitio de anidaci ´on y la supervivencia del nido de T. c. pinnatus en los pastizales no fragmentados de las Sandhills de Nebraska. En 2013 y 2014, monitoreamos 91 nidos a lo largo de un gradiente de disturbio de 24 km que se alejaba del parque de energ´ıa e´ olica. Encontramos poca evidencia de un efecto del parque de energ´ıa e´ olica sobre la selecci ´on del sitio de anidaci ´on y la supervivencia del nido en T. c. pinnatus. En cambio, encontramos que las causas principales de la selecci ´on del sitio de anidaci ´on y la supervivencia del nido se relacionaron con el paisaje y los factores del ha´bitat. La especie T. c. pinnatus evit ´o anidar cerca de las rutas, con un 74% de los individuos seleccionando sitios de anidaci ´on .700 m desde las rutas. Los individuos seleccionaron sitios de anidaci ´on con ma´s del doble de obstrucci ´on visual y vegetaci ´on residual muerta en pie con relaci ´on a puntos elegidos al azar. Nuestros resultados sugieren que peque˜ nos parques e ´ olicos, como el de nuestro estudio, tendr´ıan un efecto menor en la selecci ´on del sitio de anidaci ´on y en la supervivencia del nido en T. c. pinnatus. Sugerimos que el pastoreo del ganado y otras pra´cticas de manejo de los pastizales se mantienen como los impactos regionales ma´s importantes para T. c. pinnatus, pero alertamos a los futuros gestores de los parques de energ´ıa e´ olica para que contemplen los potenciales efectos negativos de las rutas en la selecci ´on del sitio de anidaci ´ on

    South Korea's automotive labour regime, Hyundai Motors’ global production network and trade‐based integration with the European Union

    Get PDF
    This article explores the interrelationship between global production networks(GPNs) and free trade agreements (FTAs) in the South Korean auto industry and its employment relations. It focuses on the production network of the Hyundai Motor Group (HMG) — the third biggest automobile manufacturer in the world — and the FTA between the EU and South Korea. This was the first of the EU’s ‘new generation’ FTAs, which among other things contained provisions designed to protect and promote labour standards. The article’s argument is twofold. First, that HMG’s production network and Korea’s political economy (of which HMG is a crucial part) limited the possibilities for the FTA’s labour provisions to take effect. Second, that the commercial provisions in this same FTA simultaneously eroded HMG’s domestic market and corporate profitability, leading to adverse consequences for auto workers in the more insecure and low-paid jobs. In making this argument, the article advances a multiscalar conceptualization of the labour regime as an analytical intermediary between GPNs and FTAs. It also provides one of the first empirical studies of the EU–South Korea FTA in terms of employment relations, drawing on 105 interviews with trade unions, employer associations, automobile companies and state officials across both parties

    XTE J1739-302 as a Supergiant Fast X-ray Transient

    Full text link
    XTE J1739-302 is a transient X-ray source with unusually short outbursts, lasting on the order of hours. Here we give a summary of X-ray observations we have made of this object in outburst with the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer (RXTE) and at a low level of activity with the Chandra X-ray Observatory, as well as observations made by other groups. Visible and infrared spectroscopy of the mass donor of XTE J1739-302 are presented in a companion paper. The X-ray spectrum is hard both at low levels and in outburst, but somewhat variable, and there is strong variability in the absorption column from one outburst to another. Although no pulsation has been observed, the outburst data from multiple observatories show a characteristic timescale for variability on the order of 1500-2000 s. The Chandra localization (right ascension 17h 39m 11.58s, declination -30o 20' 37.6'', J2000) shows that despite being located less than 2 degrees from the Galactic Center and highly absorbed, XTE J1739-302 is actually a foreground object with a bright optical counterpart. The combination of a very short outburst timescale and a supergiant companion is shared with several other recently-discovered systems, forming a class we designate as Supergiant Fast X-ray Transients (SFXTs). Three persistently bright X-ray binaries with similar supergiant companions have also produced extremely short, bright outbursts: Cyg X-1, Vela X-1, and 1E 1145.1-6141.Comment: 16 pages, 7 figures, 2 tables, in press in The Astrophysical Journal; see also the companion paper by Negueruela et a

    Implications of irradiance exposure and non-photochemical quenching for multi-wavelength (bbe FluoroProbe) fluorometry

    Get PDF
    The final publication is available at Elsevier via https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jphotobiol.2018.09.013 Š 2018. This manuscript version is made available under the CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 license https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/Multi-wavelength fluorometers, such as the bbe FluoroProbe (FP), measure excitation spectra of chlorophyll a (Chl-a) fluorescence to infer the abundance and composition of phytoplankton communities as well as the concentration of chromophoric dissolved organic matter (CDOM). Experiments were conducted on laboratory cultures and on natural communities of freshwater phytoplankton to determine how the response of phytoplankton to high irradiance might affect fluorometric estimates of community composition and concentrations of Chl-a and CDOM. Cultures of a representative cyanobacterium, bacillariophyte, synurophyte, cryptophyte, and chlorophyte revealed changes in Chl-a excitation spectra as irradiance was increased to saturating levels and non-photochemical quenching (NPQ) increased. The degree of change and resulting classification error varied among taxa, being strong for the synurophyte and cryptophyte but minimal for the cyanobacterium. Acute-exposure experiments on phytoplankton communities of varying taxonomic composition from five lakes yielded variable results on apparent community composition. There was a consistent decrease in CDOM estimates, whereas Chl-a estimates were generally increased. Subsequent exposure to low PAR relaxed NPQ and tended to reverse the effects of high irradiance on composition, total Chl-a, and CDOM estimates. Relaxation experiments on near-surface communities in a sixth, large lake, Georgian Bay, showed that total Chl-a estimates increased by 44% on average when dark treatments were used to relax NPQ, though, in contrast to the findings from the small lakes, there was little effect on CDOM estimates. We observed a statistically-significant, negative linear relationship between the photon flux density of in situ irradiance and the accuracy of taxonomic assignment by FP in Georgian Bay. Not discounting the correlations between light intensity and the accuracy of the FP that were observed in this study, we conclude that the applicability of the reference spectra to the system under investigation is a more important consideration than variability in natural irradiance conditions.Lake Simcoe/South-eastern Georgian Bay Clean-Up Fun
    • …
    corecore