1,379 research outputs found

    Investigation of warm fog properties and fog modification concepts Annual summary report

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    Ground based and aerial seeding of warm fog with hygroscopic materials and computer modeling of fog response to seedin

    Marshall Hall, the reflex arc and epilepsy

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    Marshall Hall (1790-1857), who graduated from the University of Edinburgh's Medical School in 1812, was considered one of the greatest physiologists of his day. He advanced knowledge in various areas of medicine, in particular elucidating the mechanism of reflex activity in 1833. Hall suggested that convulsive epileptic seizures arose from heightened activity in the afferent limb or the central component of the reflex arc. From 1838 onwards he developed the idea that reflex-mediated neck muscle spasm in seizures obstructed cerebral venous return, congested the brain and thus caused unconsciousness. Associated reflex-mediated laryngeal spasm then caused convulsing. This was the most comprehensive physiologically based explanation of the major features of the convulsive epileptic seizure then available. Hall subsequently advocated and employed tracheotomy to prevent epileptic convulsing. His idea was taken up, modified and made more acceptable by others, and for a generation was the widely acknowledged basis for interpreting epileptogenesis. However, from 1870 onwards it was superseded by John Hughlings Jackson's accumulating evidence that epileptic seizures often arose in the cerebral cortex

    Absinthe, epileptic seizures and Valentin Magnan

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    Absinthe is an alcoholic liquor containing extracts from the wormwood plant. It was widely consumed in France in the late nineteenth century. Its production was banned in 1915, partly because it was thought to cause neurological disturbances, including mental changes and epileptic seizures. Modern knowledge of an acceptable content of the convulsant alpha-thujone in absinthe has allowed the lifting of the production bans, and called into question the experimental work of Valentin Magnan in the 1870s, which formed the scientific background to the campaign against absinthe. An examination of Magnan's published investigations suggests that his science was very adequate by the standards of his time, and that he had shown that an alcohol-soluble component of wormwood did produce lapses of consciousness, myoclonic jerks and tonic-clonic convulsions in animals. Whether that component, presumably thujone, was present at convulsant concentrations in some of the available absinthes of Magnan's time cannot now be known

    Hubert Airy, contemporary men of science and the migraine aura

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    Although there had been occasional references to the visual aura of migraine even in ancient medicine, little attention was given to the phenomenon until the first half of the nineteenth century when French authors began to describe it. In the medicine of English-speaking countries, apart from a few descriptions, it went largely unnoticed until the British Astronomer Royal, Sir George Airy, described his own experience of the visual aura in 1865. Five years later his son, Hubert Airy, also described his experience of it and that of a number of eminent contemporary men of science. The topic of the migraine aura was almost immediately taken up by two of the younger Airy's contemporaries and fellow Cambridge medical graduates, Peter Wallrock Latham and Edward Liveing, in their monographs. Subsequently, migraine with aura quickly became a well-recognised clinical entity in British medicine

    Project Fog Drops 5. Task 1: A numerical model of advection fog. Task 2: Recommendations for simplified individual zero-gravity cloud physics experiments

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    A two-dimensional numerical model was used to investigate the formation of marine advection fog. The model predicts the evolution of potential temperature, horizontal wind, water vapor content, and liquid water content in a vertical cross section of the atmosphere as determined by vertical turbulent transfer and horizontal advection, as well as radiative cooling and drop sedimentation. The model is designed to simulate the formation, development, or dissipation of advection fog in response to transfer of heat and moisture between the atmosphere and the surface as driven by advection over horizontal discontinuities in the surface temperature. Results from numerical simulations of advection fog formation are discussed with reference to observations of marine fog. A survey of candidate fog or cloud microphysics experiments which might be performed in the low gravity environment of a shuttle-type spacecraft in presented. Recommendations are given for relatively simple experiments which are relevent to fog modification problems

    Investigation of warm fog properties and fog modification concepts

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    Warm fog seeding to determine potential of various sized and unsized hygroscopic chemicals for fog dissipatio

    Should valproate be taken during pregnancy?

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    The Australian Registry of Antiepileptic Drug Use in Pregnancy includes 172 instances in which women took sodium valproate, with or without other antiepileptic drugs, during pregnancy. These pregnancies resulted in a substantially higher (p < 0.05) rate of malformed offspring (15.1%) compared with 348 pregnant women who took antiepileptic drugs other than valproate (2.3%) and 40 pregnancies in epileptic women who took no antiepileptic drugs (2.5%). At valproate doses of 1400 mg and below per day, the mean rate of pregnancies with fetal malformations was 6.42% and did not seem to be dose-dependent. At higher valproate doses, the mean rate of pregnancy with fetal malformation was 33.9% and appeared to increase with increasing drug dosage. This finding suggests the need for reappraisal of the use of valproate in women who may become pregnant or are pregnant whilst the drug is taken. The therapeutic policy adopted may depend on whether valproate doses below 1400 mg per day are regarded as safe for the fetus. This study indicates that the risk of malformation associated with such doses was just statistically significantly (p < 0.05) higher than that associated with other antiepileptic drugs. Various possible clinical scenarios are discussed

    Globular Cluster Systems in Brightest Cluster Galaxies. III: Beyond Bimodality

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    We present new deep photometry of the rich globular cluster (GC) systems around the Brightest Cluster Galaxies UGC 9799 (Abell 2052) and UGC 10143 (Abell 2147), obtained with the HST ACS and WFC3 cameras. For comparison, we also present new reductions of similar HST/ACS data for the Coma supergiants NGC 4874 and 4889. All four of these galaxies have huge cluster populations (to the radial limits of our data, comprising from 12000 to 23000 clusters per galaxy). The metallicity distribution functions (MDFs) of the GCs can still be matched by a bimodal-Gaussian form where the metal-rich and metal-poor modes are separated by ~0.8 dex, but the internal dispersions of each mode are so large that the total MDF becomes very broad and nearly continuous from [Fe/H] = -2.4 to Solar. There are, however, significant differences between galaxies in the relative numbers of \emph{metal-rich} clusters, suggesting that they underwent significantly different histories of mergers with massive, gas-rich halos. Lastly, the proportion of metal-poor GCs rises especially rapidly outside projected radii R > 4 R_eff, suggesting the importance of accreted dwarf satellites in the outer halo. Comprehensive models for the formation of GCs as part of the hierarchical formation of their parent galaxies will be needed to trace the systematic change in structure of the MDF with galaxy mass, from the distinctly bimodal form in smaller galaxies up to the broad continuum that we see in the very largest systems.Comment: In press for Astrophysical Journa
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