5,790 research outputs found

    Flight 1 technical report for experiment 74-36: Thermal migration of bubbles and their interaction with solidification interfaces

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    Specimens of gas saturated carbon tetrabromide were directionally solidified in a transparent furnace using a gradient freeze technique. The original temperature gradient was 5 C/cm and the cooling rate was 40 C/h. Progress of the experiment was monitored photographically. Gas bubbles were generated at the advancing solidification front in each of the three specimens. The gas bubbles were observed to increase in size, coalesce, and eventually be grown into the solid specimen under low gravity conditions. No bubble detachment from the interface was observed. Identical specimens processed in the laboratory showed bubble nucleation, bubble growth, and eventual bubble detachment due to buoyancy forces. Examination of the specimens showed a significantly greater void content in the low gravity processed samples. The grain size was observed to be finer in the low gravity processed samples

    Particle Swarm Optimization and gravitational wave data analysis: Performance on a binary inspiral testbed

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    The detection and estimation of gravitational wave (GW) signals belonging to a parameterized family of waveforms requires, in general, the numerical maximization of a data-dependent function of the signal parameters. Due to noise in the data, the function to be maximized is often highly multi-modal with numerous local maxima. Searching for the global maximum then becomes computationally expensive, which in turn can limit the scientific scope of the search. Stochastic optimization is one possible approach to reducing computational costs in such applications. We report results from a first investigation of the Particle Swarm Optimization (PSO) method in this context. The method is applied to a testbed motivated by the problem of detection and estimation of a binary inspiral signal. Our results show that PSO works well in the presence of high multi-modality, making it a viable candidate method for further applications in GW data analysis.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figure

    Electric Polarizability of Neutral Hadrons from Lattice QCD

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    By simulating a uniform electric field on a lattice and measuring the change in the rest mass, we calculate the electric polarizability of neutral mesons and baryons using the methods of quenched lattice QCD. Specifically, we measure the electric polarizability coefficient from the quadratic response to the electric field for 10 particles: the vector mesons ρ0\rho^0 and K0K^{*0}; the octet baryons n, Σ0\Sigma^0, Λo0\Lambda_{o}^{0}, Λs0\Lambda_{s}^{0}, and Ξ0\Xi^0; and the decouplet baryons Δ0\Delta^0, Σ0\Sigma^{*0}, and Ξ0\Xi^{*0}. Independent calculations using two fermion actions were done for consistency and comparison purposes. One calculation uses Wilson fermions with a lattice spacing of a=0.10a=0.10 fm. The other uses tadpole improved L\"usher-Weiss gauge fields and clover quark action with a lattice spacing a=0.17a=0.17 fm. Our results for neutron electric polarizability are compared to experiment.Comment: 25 pages, 20 figure

    Effects of Mistletoe and Other Defects on Lumber Quality in White Fir

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    The presence or absence of defects, including dwarf and true mistletoes, was determined for logs from twenty white fir trees. Grade and volume were determined for all boards sawed from these logs. Differences between defect categories and logs without defect, with regard to degrade and overrun, were not statistically significant. With the exception of shop grades derived from logs containing dwarf mistletoe, differences between logs without defect and those with defect were not statistically significant after the effect of diameter was accounted for; even in this single exception, the volume derived from dwarf mistletoe logs was greater than that derived from no-defect logs. This suggests that the presence in logs of dwarf mistletoe, true mistletoe, and the other defects considered in this study either does not adversely affect lumber grade or that present quality control procedures are ineffective in detecting the changes. The latter possibility appears most likely

    The Uniform Soybean Tests: Northern States 1978

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    Iodinated contrast media and cerebral hemorrhage after intravenous thrombolysis

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    <p>Background and Purpose: Iodinated contrast is increasingly used in CT perfusion or angiographic examinations in acute stroke. Increased risk of intracranial hemorrhage (ICH) complicating microcatheter contrast injections has recently been reported in the second Interventional Management of Stroke (IMS 2) trial with contrast toxicity potentially contributory.</p> <p>Methods: We reviewed clinical and radiological data on all patients treated with intravenous alteplase at a single center between May 2003 and November 2008.</p> <p>Results: Of 312 patients treated with intravenous alteplase, 69 (22.1%) received intravenous iodinated contrast in volumes between 50 and 150 mL. Incidence of symptomatic ICH defined as per European Cooperative Acute Stroke Study 2 was 16 of 312 (5.1%; 95% CI, 2.7% to 7.6%); among patients not given contrast, it was 12 of 243 (4.9%; 2.2% to 7.7%) compared with 4 of 69 (5.8%; 0.3% to 11.3%) in those given contrast. Incidence of symptomatic ICH defined as per Safe Implementation of Thrombolysis in Stroke-MOnitoring Study (SITS-MOST) criteria was 12 of 312 (3.9%; 1.7% to 6%), 9 of 243 (3.7%; 1.3% to 6%) among those not given contrast, and 3 of 69 (4.4%; 95% CI, -0.5% to 9.2%) among those given contrast. Patients with symptomatic ICH were older, had higher pretreatment National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale, and blood glucose than those without symptomatic ICH. In logistic regression analysis, pretreatment blood glucose was the only significant predictor of symptomatic ICH by either definition (OR, 1.23; 95% CI, 1.03 to 1.48 per mmol/L increment; P=0.024). Contrast administration or dose was not associated with symptomatic ICH.</p> <p>Conclusions: Intravenous iodinated contrast in doses typically required for CT angiography and perfusion imaging was not associated with symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage in patients treated with alteplase.</p&gt

    Solution growth of Triglycine Sulfate (TGS) crystals on the International Microgravity Laboratory (IML-1)

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    An experiment was planned for the International Microgravity Laboratory (IML-1) to be launched around Feb. 1991. Crystals of triglycine sulfate (TGS) will be grown by low temperature solution crystal growth technique using a multiuser facility called Fluid Experiment System (FES). A special cooled sting technique of solution crystal growth will be used where heat is extracted from the seed crystal through a semi-insulating sting, thereby creating the desired supersaturation near the growing crystal. Also, a holocamera will be used to provide tomography of the three dimensional flow field and particle image displacement velocimetry to monitor the convective flows

    A Linear Analysis of g-Jitter Effects on Viscous Cylindrical Liquid Bridges

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    This paper deals with the dynamics of isothermal, axisymmetric, cylindrical liquid columns held by capillary forces between two circular, concentric, solid disks; in particular, it deals with the dynamic response of the bridge to an excitation consisting of a small change in the value of the microgravity level. The problem has been solved by using a linearized one‐dimensional Cosserat model, which includes viscosity effects, and with the axial velocity considered as constant in each section of the liquid bridge. The analysis has been performed by using the Laplace transform, and the time variation of both the axial velocity field and the liquid bridge interface have been obtained
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