9 research outputs found
Comparison of Models to Predict Low Engine Order Excitation in a High Pressure Turbine Stage
The paper compares three numerical strategies to predict the aerodynamic rotor excitation sources of "Low Engine Order" (LEO) in a high-pressure turbine stage. Main focus is laid on methods to compute the stator exit flow. The aim is to evaluate computationally cheap approaches to avoid modelling the whole circumference of the stator. A single passage viscous strategy, a single passage inviscid linear blade movement strategy and a viscous multi passage sector strategy are compared and evaluated. The assessment of the prediction quality is made by comparison of the computed stator exit flow to experimental data. The main result is that only the global behaviour of the stator exit flow is estimated right, both level and amplitude of Mach number and pressure are computed with poor agreement to experiments. Future evaluations of the resulting rotor excitation pressure are needed to estimate the level of necessary agreement to give acceptable predictions of the low engine order forced response
Distribution, functional impact, and origin mechanisms of copy number variation in the barley genome
A Snapshot of the Emerging Tomato Genome Sequence
The genome of tomato (Solanum lycopersicum L.) is being sequenced by an international consortium of 10 countries (Korea, China, the United Kingdom, India, the Netherlands, France, Japan, Spain, Italy, and the United States) as part of the larger \u201cInternational Solanaceae Genome Project (SOL): Systems Approach to Diversity and Adaptation\u201d initiative. The tomato genome sequencing project uses an ordered bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) approach to generate a high-quality tomato euchromatic genome sequence for use as a reference genome for the Solanaceae and euasterids. Sequence is deposited at GenBank and at the SOL Genomics Network (SGN). Currently, there are around 1000 BACs finished or in progress, representing more than a third of the projected euchromatic portion of the genome. An annotation effort is also underway by the International Tomato Annotation Group. The expected number of genes in the euchromatin is 3c40,000, based on an estimate from a preliminary annotation of 11% of finished sequence. Here, we present this first snapshot of the emerging tomato genome and its annotation, a short comparison with potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) sequence data, and the tools available for the researchers to exploit this new resource are also presented. In the future, whole-genome shotgun techniques will be combined with the BAC-by-BAC approach to cover the entire tomato genome. The high-quality reference euchromatic tomato sequence is expected to be near completion by 2010
The Medicago genome provides insight into the evolution of rhizobial symbioses
Legumes (Fabaceae or Leguminosae) are unique among cultivated plants for their ability to carry out endosymbiotic nitrogen fixation with rhizobial bacteria, a process that takes place in a specialized structure known as the nodule. Legumes belong to one of the two main groups of eurosids, the Fabidae, which includes most species capable of endosymbiotic nitrogen fixation(1). Legumes comprise several evolutionary lineages derived from a common ancestor 60 million years ago (Myr ago). Papilionoids are the largest clade, dating nearly to the origin of legumes and containing most cultivated species(2). Medicago truncatula is a long-established model for the study of legume biology. Here we describe the draft sequence of the M. truncatula euchromatin based on a recently completed BAC assembly supplemented with Illumina shotgun sequence, together capturing similar to 94% of all M. truncatula genes. A whole-genome duplication (WGD) approximately 58 Myr ago had a major role in shaping the M. truncatula genome and thereby contributed to the evolution of endosymbiotic nitrogen fixation. Subsequent to the WGD, the M. truncatula genome experienced higher levels of rearrangement than two other sequenced legumes, Glycine max and Lotus japonicus. M. truncatula is a close relative of alfalfa (Medicago sativa), a widely cultivated crop with limited genomics tools and complex autotetraploid genetics. As such, the M. truncatula genome sequence provides significant opportunities to expand alfalfa's genomic toolbox