5,197 research outputs found
Jumble Java Byte Code to Measure the Effectiveness of Unit Tests
Jumble is a byte code level mutation testing tool for Java which inter-operates with JUnit. It has been designed to operate in an industrial setting with large projects. Heuristics have been included to speed the checking of mutations, for example, noting which test fails for each mutation and running this first in subsequent mutation checks. Significant effort has been put into ensuring that it can test code which uses custom class loading and reflection. This requires careful attention to class path handling and coexistence with foreign class-loaders. Jumble is currently used on a continuous basis within an agile programming environment with approximately 370,000 lines of Java code under source control. This checks out project code every fifteen minutes and runs an incremental set of unit tests and mutation tests for modified classes. Jumble is being made available as open source
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A Lagrangian analysis of ice-supersaturated air over the North Atlantic
Understanding the nature of air parcels that exhibit ice-supersaturation is important because they are the regions of potential formation of both cirrus and aircraft contrails, which affect the radiation balance. Ice-supersaturated air parcels in the upper troposphere and lower stratosphere over the North Atlantic are investigated using Lagrangian trajectories. The trajectory calculations use ERA-Interim data for three winter and three summer seasons, resulting in approximately 200,000 trajectories with ice-supersaturation for each season. For both summer and winter, the median duration of ice-supersaturation along a trajectory is less than 6 hours. 5% of air which becomes ice-supersaturated in the troposphere, and 23% of air which becomes ice-supersaturated in the stratosphere will remain ice-supersaturated for at least 24 hours. Weighting the ice-supersaturation duration with the observed frequency indicates the likely overall importance of the longer duration ice-supersaturated trajectories. Ice-supersaturated air parcels typically experience a decrease in moisture content while ice-supersaturated, suggesting that cirrus clouds eventually form in the majority of such air. A comparison is made between short-lived (less than 24 h) and long-lived (greater than 24 h) ice-supersaturated air flows. For both air flows, ice-supersaturation occurs around the northernmost part of the trajectory. Short-lived ice-supersaturated air flows show no significant differences in speed or direction of movement to subsaturated air parcels. However, long-lived ice-supersaturated air occurs in slower moving air flows, which implies that they are not associated with the fastest moving air through a jet stream
Separable approximation to two-body matrix elements
Two-body matrix elements of arbitrary local interactions are written as the
sum of separable terms in a way that is well suited for the exchange and
pairing channels present in mean-field calculations. The expansion relies on
the transformation to center of mass and relative coordinate (in the spirit of
Talmi's method) and therefore it is only useful (finite number of expansion
terms) for harmonic oscillator single particle states. The converge of the
expansion with the number of terms retained is studied for a Gaussian two body
interaction. The limit of a contact (delta) force is also considered. Ways to
handle the general case are also discussed.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures (for high resolution versions of some of the
figures contact the author
Lithographically and electrically controlled strain effects on anisotropic magnetoresistance in (Ga,Mn)As
It has been demonstrated that magnetocrystalline anisotropies in (Ga,Mn)As
are sensitive to lattice strains as small as 10^-4 and that strain can be
controlled by lattice parameter engineering during growth, through post growth
lithography, and electrically by bonding the (Ga,Mn)As sample to a
piezoelectric transducer. In this work we show that analogous effects are
observed in crystalline components of the anisotropic magnetoresistance (AMR).
Lithographically or electrically induced strain variations can produce
crystalline AMR components which are larger than the crystalline AMR and a
significant fraction of the total AMR of the unprocessed (Ga,Mn)As material. In
these experiments we also observe new higher order terms in the
phenomenological AMR expressions and find that strain variation effects can
play important role in the micromagnetic and magnetotransport characteristics
of (Ga,Mn)As lateral nanoconstrictions.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures, references fixe
Projected free energies for polydisperse phase equilibria
A `polydisperse' system has an infinite number of conserved densities. We
give a rational procedure for projecting its infinite-dimensional free energy
surface onto a subspace comprising a finite number of linear combinations of
densities (`moments'), in which the phase behavior is then found as usual. If
the excess free energy of the system depends only on the moments used, exact
cloud, shadow and spinodal curves result; two- and multi-phase regions are
approximate, but refinable indefinitely by adding extra moments. The approach
is computationally robust and gives new geometrical insights into the
thermodynamics of polydispersity.Comment: 4 pages, REVTeX, uses multicol.sty and epsf.sty, 1 postscript figure
include
Biomaterial Strategies for Immunomodulation
Strategies to enhance, suppress, or qualitatively shape the immune response are of importance for diverse biomedical applications, such as the development of new vaccines, treatments for autoimmune diseases and allergies, strategies for regenerative medicine, and immunotherapies for cancer. However, the intricate cellular and molecular signals regulating the immune system are major hurdles to predictably manipulating the immune response and developing safe and effective therapies. To meet this challenge, biomaterials are being developed that control how, where, and when immune cells are stimulated in vivo, and that can finely control their differentiation in vitro. We review recent advances in the field of biomaterials for immunomodulation, focusing particularly on designing biomaterials to provide controlled immunostimulation, targeting drugs and vaccines to lymphoid organs, and serving as scaffolds to organize immune cells and emulate lymphoid tissues. These ongoing efforts highlight the many ways in which biomaterials can be brought to bear to engineer the immune system.Bill & Melinda Gates FoundationUnited States. Army Research Office. Institute for Soldier Nanotechnologies (Contract W911NF-13-D-0001)Ragon Institute of MGH, MIT and HarvardCancer Research Institute (New York, N.Y.) (Irvington Postdoctoral Fellowship)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Awards AI104715, CA172164, CA174795, and AI095109
The Cooperative Participatory Evaluation of Renewable Technologies on Ecosystem Services (CORPORATES)
Publisher PD
Climatic versus biotic constraints on carbon and water fluxes in seasonally drought-affected ponderosa pine ecosystems
We investigated the relative importance of climatic versus biotic controls on gross primary production (GPP) and water vapor fluxes in seasonally drought-affected ponderosa pine forests. The study was conducted in young (YS), mature (MS), and old stands (OS) over 4 years at the AmeriFlux Metolius sites. Model simulations showed that interannual variation of GPP did not follow the same trends as precipitation, and effects of climatic variation were smallest at the OS (50%), and intermediate at the YS (<20%). In the young, developing stand, interannual variation in leaf area has larger effects on fluxes than climate, although leaf area is a function of climate in that climate can interact with age-related shifts in carbon allocation and affect whole-tree hydraulic conductance. Older forests, with well-established root systems, appear to be better buffered from effects of seasonal drought and interannual climatic variation. Interannual variation of net ecosystem exchange (NEE) was also lowest at the OS, where NEE is controlled more by interannual variation of ecosystem respiration, 70% of which is from soil, than by the variation of GPP, whereas variation in GPP is the primary reason for interannual changes in NEE at the YS and MS. Across spatially heterogeneous landscapes with high frequency of younger stands resulting from natural and anthropogenic disturbances, interannual climatic variation and change in leaf area are likely to result in large interannual variation in GPP and NEE
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