2,529 research outputs found
Book Review: Promising Practices for Engaging Families in Literacy
Book Review:
Promising Practices for Engaging Families in Literacy by Holly Kreider, Margaret Caspe, and Diana B. Hiatt-Michael. Charlotte, NC: Information Publishing, Inc., 2013, 146 pp., $45.99 (paperback)
A simple circuit realization of the tent map
We present a very simple electronic implementation of the tent map, one of
the best-known discrete dynamical systems. This is achieved by using integrated
circuits and passive elements only. The experimental behavior of the tent map
electronic circuit is compared with its numerical simulation counterpart. We
find that the electronic circuit presents fixed points, periodicity, period
doubling, chaos and intermittency that match with high accuracy the
corresponding theoretical valuesComment: 6 pages, 6 figures, 10 references, published versio
Prokaryotic expression, purification and immunogenicity analysis of CpsD protein from Streptococcus iniae
Streptococcus iniae is a major cause of serious bacterial infections in both fish and human beings. Capsular polysaccharide (CPS) of S. iniae is vital to evade phagocytic clearance of the host and serves as an important protective antigen of S. iniae infection in aquatic animals. The CpsD gene was determined to be highly conservative in capsule polysaccharide operon. Prokaryotic expression of the CpsD gene of a clinical isolate of S. iniae from channel catfish and immunogenic examination of the recombinant protein were first described in this essay. The recombinant protein was expressed in the form of inclusion bodies (IBs). Induction conditions in Escherichia coli were optimized with 0.6mM Isopropyl β-D-1-Thiogalactopyranoside at 37°C for 5h after the culture mid-log phase in Luria Bertani (LB) medium. The recombinant protein CpsD was thus expressed and purified by immobilized metal affinity chromatography (IMAC), yielding approximate 582.47 mg the protein per liter culture. Western blot analysis showed that the purified CpsD had reactogenicity. It will possibly reveal more details of capsule synthesis and capsule regulation during various stages of the S. iniae infectious process
Impacts of potential future sea level rise on the North branch of the Changjiang river estuary: Quantifying the saline water intrusion in the dry season
The phenomenon of global sea level rise (SLR) is undeniable; the 4th IPCC report summaries that the\ud
average rise rate of global is 1.8 mm/y since 1961. It is widely taken for granted that SLR will have a severe impact on\ud
saline water intrusion processes in estuarine areas. In this paper, by using a two-dimensional hydrodynamic model\ud
(MIKE21) and SLR scenarios of 0.5m, 1m and 2m, the impacts of potential future SLR on the North Branch of the\ud
Changjiang River Estuary are evaluated by quantifying salinity changes in the dry season. The field data of tidal levels,\ud
flow velocities and salinities are employed to validate the model, and the computed results match the observed values\ud
well, which indicates that the validated model can provide reliable performances in reproducing the hydrodynamic and\ud
saline water intrusion processes in the Changjiang River Estuary, then this validated numerical model was run with\ud
present sea level as well as 0.5m, 1m and 2 m SLR scenarios in the dry season respectively. The computations show\ud
that: i)the amplification of tidal levels in the upper reach of the South Branch is greater than that in the upper reach of\ud
the North Branch with SLR; ii)the ebb and flood discharges in the upper cross-section of the North Branch both respond\ud
to SLR with a significant increase trend, with the ebb flow split ratio of the North Branch increasing from 3.8% to\ud
10.3% in 2m SLR scenario; iii)the salinity in the North Branch presents a decrease trend with SLR, and the decreasing\ud
extent in the upper reach is 11.4%-33.4%, which is obvious greater than that in the middle and lower reaches.\ud
Consequently, it can be concluded that SLR enhances the ebb hydrodynamics and alleviates the saline water intrusion in\ud
the North Branch
Computational modelling and experimental characterisation of heterogeneous materials
Heterogeneous materials can exhibit behaviour under load that cannot be described by classical continuum elasticity. Beams in bending can show a relative stiffening as the beam depth tends to zero, a size effect. Size effects are recognised in higher order continuum elastic theories such as micropolar elasticity. The drawback of higher order theories is the requirement of addition constitutive relations and associated properties that are often difficult to establish experimentally. Furthermore the finite element method, of great benefit in classical elasticity, has shown limitations when applied to micropolar elasticity. The determination of additional constitutive properties and the computational modelling of micropolar elasticity will be discussed in the context of a model heterogeneous material loaded in simple 3 point bending. The model material was created by drilling holes in aluminium bar in a regular pattern, with the hole axis normal to the plane of bending. The bending tests show that a size effect is present. These results are compared against modelling the detailed beam geometries in the finite element package ANSYS, which again shows the size effect. These two bending test are used to extract the additional micropolar elastic material properties. A comparison is then made against analytical solutions,numerical solutions using a micropolar beam finite element and a micropolar plane stress control volume method.It will be shown that the need for extensive experimental testing to determine the additional constitutive properties may not be necessary with the appropriate use of numerical methods
The flavor-changing bottom-strange quark production in the littlest Higgs model with T parity at the ILC
In the littlest Higgs model with T-parity (LHT) the mirror quarks induce the
special flavor structures and some new flavor-changing (FC) couplings which
could greatly enhance the production rates of the FC processes. We in this
paper study some bottom and anti-strange production processes in the LHT model
at the International Linear Collider (ILC), i.e.,
and . The results show that the production
rates of these processes are sizeable for the favorable values of the
parameters. Therefore, it is quite possible to test the LHT model or make some
constrains on the relevant parameters of the LHT through the detection of these
processes at the ILC.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figure
Transition Form Factor up to within the Factorization Approach
In the paper, we apply the factorization approach to deal with the
transition form factor in the large recoil
regions. The B-meson wave functions and that include the
three-particle Fock states' contributions are adopted to give a consistent PQCD
analysis of the form factor up to . It has been found that
both the wave functions and can give sizable
contributions to the form factor and should be kept for a better understanding
of the meson decays. Then the contributions from different twist structures
of the kaon wavefunction are discussed, including the -breaking
effects. A sizable contribution from the twist-3 wave function is
found, whose model dependence is discussed by taking two group of parameters
that are determined by different distribution amplitude moments obtained in the
literature. It is also shown that and
, which are more
reasonable and consistent with the light-cone sum rule results in the large
recoil regions.Comment: 22 pages and 6 figure
Camera motion estimation through planar deformation determination
In this paper, we propose a global method for estimating the motion of a
camera which films a static scene. Our approach is direct, fast and robust, and
deals with adjacent frames of a sequence. It is based on a quadratic
approximation of the deformation between two images, in the case of a scene
with constant depth in the camera coordinate system. This condition is very
restrictive but we show that provided translation and depth inverse variations
are small enough, the error on optical flow involved by the approximation of
depths by a constant is small. In this context, we propose a new model of
camera motion, that allows to separate the image deformation in a similarity
and a ``purely'' projective application, due to change of optical axis
direction. This model leads to a quadratic approximation of image deformation
that we estimate with an M-estimator; we can immediatly deduce camera motion
parameters.Comment: 21 pages, version modifi\'ee accept\'e le 20 mars 200
Pharmacological treatments in pregnant women with psoriasis in the U.S.A.
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/110872/1/bjd13306.pd
Anomalous metamagnetism in the low carrier density Kondo lattice YbRh3Si7
We report complex metamagnetic transitions in single crystals of the new low
carrier Kondo antiferromagnet YbRh3Si7. Electrical transport, magnetization,
and specific heat measurements reveal antiferromagnetic order at T_N = 7.5 K.
Neutron diffraction measurements show that the magnetic ground state of
YbRh3Si7 is a collinear antiferromagnet where the moments are aligned in the ab
plane. With such an ordered state, no metamagnetic transitions are expected
when a magnetic field is applied along the c axis. It is therefore surprising
that high field magnetization, torque, and resistivity measurements with H||c
reveal two metamagnetic transitions at mu_0H_1 = 6.7 T and mu_0H_2 = 21 T. When
the field is tilted away from the c axis, towards the ab plane, both
metamagnetic transitions are shifted to higher fields. The first metamagnetic
transition leads to an abrupt increase in the electrical resistivity, while the
second transition is accompanied by a dramatic reduction in the electrical
resistivity. Thus, the magnetic and electronic degrees of freedom in YbRh3Si7
are strongly coupled. We discuss the origin of the anomalous metamagnetism and
conclude that it is related to competition between crystal electric field
anisotropy and anisotropic exchange interactions.Comment: 23 pages and 4 figures in the main text. 7 pages and 5 figures in the
supplementary materia
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