3,290 research outputs found
The biochemical, physiological, and metabolic evaluation of human subjects wearing pressure suits and on a diet of precooked freeze dehydrated foods
Biochemical, physiological and metabolic evaluation of human subjects wearing pressure suits and on diet of precooked frozen dehydrated food
The Biochemical, Physiological, and Metabolic Evaluation of Human Subjects in a Life Support Systems Evaluator and on a Diet of Precooked Freeze Dehydrated Foods Final Report, 12 Oct. - 24 Nov. 1964
Human water, caloric, and protein requirements in simulated life support system with dietary restrictio
Biochemical and physiological evaluation of human subjects in a life support systems evaluator
Biochemical and physiological evaluation of human nutritional requirements under simulated aerospace condition
The biochemical, physiological, and metabolic evaluation of human subjects in a life support systems evaluator and on a liquid food diet Final report, 12 Jun. 1964 - 23 Feb. 1965
Biochemical, physiological, and metabolic analysis of subjects in life support system on liquid food diets during space environment simulatio
A Scale Model Investigation of Rocket Exhaust Effects on an Improved Saturn V Booster Utilizing Solid Propellant Strap-Ons
Missions currently being considered by NASA beyond the Apollo manned lunar landing will require a larger payload capability than is available with the current generation of Saturn boosters. An attractive method of achieving the desired payload increase consists of adding large solid propellant rocket motors (strap-ons) to existing boosters to augment the thrust from the basic booster liquidpropellant engines. The soundness of this approach has already been demonstrated by such vehicles as the Titan III-C and Thrust Augmented Thor/Delta, where significant performance increases have been obtained within current state of the art and at minimum cost, while simultaneously retaining the proven reliability characteristics of the previously developed basic booster.
The possibility of increasing the performance of the Saturn V booster through the addition of previously developed 120-inch solid-propellant rochet motor strap-ons to the S-IC first stage is currently being evaluated by the Marshall Space Flight Center of NASA. One of the items of concern with such a configuration is the possibility of a detrimental alteration in the base environment of the S-IC from that which will exist with only the basic complement of five F-l liquid propellant rockets. For example, interactions between the liquid propellant and/or solid propellant rocket exhaust plumes (a total of nine rocket exhausts are involved) may result in increased flow recirculation and attendant increases in base pressure and convective heating. Further, radiant heating to the base may also be significantly greater because of the presence of the aluminized solid propellant exhaust plumes.
In addition to these potential flight problems, consideration must also be directed toward the launch stand environment. Rocket exhaust recirculation from the flame deflector can produce a severe thermal environment in the booster base region during the ignition and lift-off sequence, Launch stand components must also be suitably protected to withstand the 5000 °F exhaust gas impingement as the booster lifts off
XMM-Newton Observations of the Cataclysmic Variable GW Lib
XMM-Newton observations of the accreting, pulsating white dwarf in the
quiescent dwarf nova GW Librae were conducted to determine if the non-radial
pulsations present in previous UV and optical data affect the X-ray emission.
The non-radial pulsations are evident in the simultaneous Optical Monitor data
but are not detected in X-ray with an upper limit on the pulsation amplitude of
0.092 mags. The best fits to the X-ray spectrum are with a low temperature
diffuse gas model or a multi-temperature cooling flow model, with a strong
OVIII line, similar to other short period dwarf novae, but with a lower
temperature range than evident in normal short period dwarf novae. The lack of
pulsations and the spectrum likely indicate that the boundary layer does not
extend to the surface of the white dwarf.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figures; accepted for publication in A
Review of Quality Measures of the Most Integrated Health Care Settings for Children and the Need for Improved Measures: Recommendations for Initial Core Measurement Set for CHIPRA
AbstractObjectiveTo identify, assess, and make recommendations for inclusion of measures that assess the domain of âmost integrated health care setting,â with a specific focus on measures of the medical home, one particular mechanism for integrating care, to identify gaps in measurement; and to make recommendations for new measure development.MethodsWe developed a conceptual framework for care integration and reviewed literature on measures assessing the presence and quality of the medical home to determine their validity, reliability, and feasibility as a proxy for care integration.ResultsWe identified 2 broad approaches to assessing the extent to which patients receive care that fulfills the aims of the medical home: 1) organizational assessment of practice systems and processes thought associated with achieving these desired aims (viz, the National Committee for Quality Assurance Physician Practice ConnectionsâPatient Centered Medical Home measure and the Medical Home Index, and 2) direct assessment by patients/families of their experience of care in targeted dimensions. Based on concerns about the absence of reliability data and the feasibility of applying the practice audit/self-assessment approach on a population level for the purpose of state reporting, as well as the limited data linking performance on the specific measures with important child outcomes, we did not recommend any of the measures of organizational assessments of practice systems for inclusion in the core set as an indicator of care integration. In contrast, measures of the medical home based on items from the National Survey of Child Health on a population level of or the Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems for practice- and state-level assessment are more feasible, have known reliability and performance characteristics, and more closely reflect the aims of the medical home, including care integration.ConclusionsMeasures of health care integration as captured by the experience of care in a medical home can best be assessed for state-level performance through patient/family experience surveys. Better measures of care integration, care coordination, and integration of mental, developmental, and physical health into a comprehensive care system are high-priority topics for measure development
Studies of Charge Exchange in a HighâPressure Pulsed Electron Impact Source
This is the publisher's version, also available electronically from http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/jcp/56/3/10.1063/1.1677327.A high pressure pulsed ion source has been used in a timeâofâflight mass spectrometer in order to study the charge exchangereactions in ArâH2 and ArâD2 systems using the ion source in the ÄermĂĄk mode of operation. As the source was used in a pulsed mode, it was possible to identify the various secondary ions arising from the charge exchangereactions in these systems. Very good agreement has been shown to exist between the experimental results and simple theoretical deductions. Calculations have been made to determine the cross sections for the charge exchangereactions between the various species from the experimental data
The environmental security debate and its significance for climate change
Policymakers, military strategists and academics all increasingly hail climate change as a security issue. This article revisits the (comparatively) long-standing âenvironmental security debateâ and asks what lessons that earlier debate holds for the push towards making climate change a security issue. Two important claims are made. First, the emerging climate security debate is in many ways a re-run of the earlier dispute. It features many of the same proponents and many of the same disagreements. These disagreements concern, amongst other things, the nature of the threat, the referent object of security and the appropriate policy responses. Second, given its many different interpretations, from an environmentalist perspective, securitisation of the climate is not necessarily a positive development
XMM-Newton and optical follow-up observations of three new polars from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
We report follow-up XMM-Newton and optical observations of three new polars
found in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. Simple modeling of the X-ray spectra,
and consideration of the details of the X-ray and optical lightcurves
corroborate the polar nature of these three systems and provide further
insights into their accretion characteristics. During the XMM-Newton
observation of SDSS J072910.68+365838.3, X-rays are undetected apart from a
probable flare event, during which we find both the typical hard X-ray
bremsstrahlung component and a very strong line O VII (E=0.57 keV), but no
evidence of a soft blackbody contribution. In SDSS J075240.45+362823.2 we
identify an X-ray eclipse at the beginning of the observation, roughly in phase
with the primary minimum of the optical broad band curve. The X-ray spectra
require the presence of both hard and soft X-ray components, with their
luminosity ratio consistent with that found in other recent XMM-Newton results
on polars. Lastly, SDSS J170053.30+400357.6 appears optically as a very typical
polar, however its large amplitude optical modulation is 180 degrees out of
phase with the variation in our short X-ray lightcurve.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in the ApJ (January
2005
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