16 research outputs found

    Aircraft wing structural detail design (wing, aileron, flaps, and subsystems)

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    The goal of this project was to design, in detail, the wing, flaps, and ailerons for a primary flight trainer. Integrated in this design are provisions for the fuel system, the electrical system, and the fuselage/cabin carry-through interface structure. This conceptual design displays the general arrangement of all major components in the wing structure, taking into consideration the requirements set forth by the appropriate sections of Federal Aviation Regulation Part 23 (FAR23) as well as those established in the statement of work

    Hamstring muscles: Architecture and innervation

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    Knowledge of the anatomical organization of the hamstring muscles is necessary to understand their functions, and to assist in the development of accurate clinical and biomechanical models. The hamstring muscles were examined by dissection in six embalmed human lower limbs with the purpose of clarifying their gross morphology. In addition to obtaining evidence for or against anatomical partitioning ( as based on muscle architecture and pattern of innervation), data pertaining to architectural parameters such as fascicular length, volume, physiological cross-sectional area, and tendon length were collected. For each muscle, relatively consistent patterns of innervation were identified between specimens, and each was unique with respect to anatomical organization. On the basis of muscle architecture, three regions were identified within semimembranosus. However, this was not completely congruent with the pattern of innervation, as a primary nerve branch supplied only two regions, with the third region receiving a secondary branch. Semitendinosus comprised two distinct partitions arranged in series that were divided by a tendinous inscription. A singular muscle nerve or a primary nerve branch innervated each partition. In the biceps femoris long head the two regions were supplied via a primary nerve branch which divided into two primary branches or split into a series of branches. Being the only muscle to cross a single joint, biceps femoris short head consisted of two distinct regions demarcated by fiber direction, with each innervated by a separate muscle nerve. Architecturally, each muscle differed with respect to parameters such as physiological cross-sectional area, fascicular length and volume, but generally all partitions within an individual muscle were similar in fascicular length. The long proximal and distal tendons of these muscles extended into the muscle bellies thereby forming elongated musculotendinous junctions. Copyright (C) 2005 S. Karger AG, Basel

    Pollination ecology of Magnolia ovata may explain the overall large flower size of the genus

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    Flowering and fruiting biology of Magnolia ovata was studied in Atlantic forests in the interior of São Paulo State, Brazil. The large, bisexual flowers are protogynous, nocturnal, thermogenic and emit a strong scent in two consecutive evenings. In the first night of anthesis, the flowers are in the pistillate stage and thermogenesis starts at about sunset and lasts about 3. h. In the second night, the flowers enter the staminate stage and produce heat for 4. h. Heat is generated by the petals, gynoecium and anthers. Temperatures measured inside the petals reach 26.7°C and 31.9°C in the pistillate and staminate stages, 6.0 and 10.6°C above ambient air, respectively. In the pistillate stage, the perianth opens after sunset and closes tightly a few hours later, and remains closed until the next evening. The initial opening and closing, however, is not synchronous for all flowers during the night. In the following evening, flowers in the staminate stage again open and remain so until the petals drop. Scent compounds, analyzed by GC-MS, contain C5-branched chain compounds, aliphatics, benzenoids and monoterpenoids. Emission of the most prominent compound, C5-branched methyl 2-methyl butyrate, commences before flower opening and continues throughout anthesis, but is accentuated in the thermogenic pistillate and staminate stages. Female and male individuals of only one beetle species, the dynastid scarab Cyclocephala literata, are attracted to the scented flowers in both pistillate and staminate stages. Once inside the flowers they feed on the petals and mate. Tests with synthetic methyl 2-methyl butyrate indicate that this compound is a strong attractant for the beetles. Because this scent compound is strongly emitted in both pistillate and staminate stages, the beetles fly indiscriminately between flowers of both stages. This behavior enhances pollen mixing and effective cross-pollination of the self-compatible species. The evolutionary history of Magnolia appears to be influenced by an ancestral condition of dynastid scarab beetle pollination. Large magnolia flowers are best explained as an archaic structure resulting from the initial association of tropical American species of section Talauma with large and voracious dynastid beetles. © 2011 Elsevier GmbH.Gerhard Gottsberger, Ilse Silberbauer-Gottsberger, Roger S. Seymour and Stefan Dötter

    Selenium increases seed production in Brassica

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    Selenium (Se) is essential for humans and animals but is not considered to be essential for higher plants. Although researchers have found increases in vegetative growth due to fertiliser Se, there has been no definitive evidence to date of increased reproductive capacity, in terms of seed production and seed viability. The aim of this study was to evaluate seed production and growth responses to a low dose of Se (as sodium selenite, added to solution culture) compared to very low-Se controls in fast-cycling Brassica rapa L. Although there was no change in total biomass, Se treatment was associated with a 43% increase in seed production. The Se-treated Brassica plants had higher total respiratory activity in leaves and flowers, which may have contributed to higher seed production. This study provides additional evidence for a beneficial role for Se in higher plants. © 2008 Springer Science+Business Media B.V.G. H. Lyons, Y. Genc, K. Soole, J. C. R. Stangoulis, F. Liu, R. D. Graha

    “Only Man Is Vile”

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