13,513 research outputs found
Interactive cutting path analysis programs
The operation of numerically controlled machine tools is interactively simulated. Four programs were developed to graphically display the cutting paths for a Monarch lathe, Cintimatic mill, Strippit sheet metal punch, and the wiring path for a Standard wire wrap machine. These programs are run on a IMLAC PDS-ID graphic display system under the DOS-3 disk operating system. The cutting path analysis programs accept input via both paper tape and disk file
High-throughput and computational approaches for diagnostic and prognostic host tuberculosis biomarkers
High-throughput techniques strive to identify new biomarkers that will be useful for the diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of tuberculosis (TB). However, their analysis and interpretation pose considerable challenges. Recent developments in the high-throughput detection of host biomarkers in TB are reported in this review
Low energy universality and scaling of Van der Waals forces
At long distances interactions between neutral ground state atoms can be
described by the Van der Waals potential V(r) =-C6/r^6-C8/r^8 - ... . In the
ultra-cold regime atom-atom scattering is dominated by s-waves phase shifts
given by an effective range expansion p cot d0 (p) = -1/a0 + r0 p^2/2 + ... in
terms of the scattering length a0 and the effective range r0. We show that
while for these potentials the scattering length cannot be predicted, the
effective range is given by the universal low energy theorem r0 = A + B/a0+
C/a0^2 where A,B and C depend on the dispersion coefficients Cn and the reduced
di-atom mass. We confront this formula to about a hundred determinations of r0
and a0 and show why the result is dominated by the leading dispersion
coefficient C6. Universality and scaling extends much beyond naive dimensional
analysis estimates.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Characterizing the Low-Redshift Intergalactic Medium towards PKS1302-102
We present a detailed analysis of the intergalactic metal-line absorption
systems in the archival HST/STIS and FUSE ultraviolet spectra of the
low-redshift quasar PKS1302-102 (z_QSO = 0.2784). We supplement the archive
data with CLOUDY ionization models and a survey of galaxies in the quasar
field. There are 15 strong Lya absorbers with column densities logN_HI > 14. Of
these, six are associated with at least CIII 977 absorption (logN(C^++) > 13);
this implies a redshift density dN_CIII/dz = 36+13/-9 (68% confidence limits)
for the five detections with rest equivalent width W_r > 50 mA. Two systems
show OVI 1031,1037 absorption in addition to CIII (logN(O^+5) > 14). One is a
partial Lyman limit system (logN_HI = 17) with associated CIII, OVI, and SiIII
1206 absorption. There are three tentative OVI systems that do not have CIII
detected. For one OVI doublet with both lines detected at 3 sigma with W_r > 50
mA, dN_OVI/dz = 7+9/-4. We also search for OVI doublets without Lya absorption
but identify none. From CLOUDY modeling, these metal-line systems have
metallicities spanning the range -4 < [M/H] < -0.3. The two OVI systems with
associated CIII absorption cannot be single-phase, collisionally-ionized media
based on the relative abundances of the metals and kinematic arguments. From
the galaxy survey, we discover that the absorption systems are in a diverse set
of galactic environments. Each metal-line system has at least one galaxy within
500 km/s and 600 h^-1 kpc with L > 0.1 L_*.Comment: 21 pages in emulatepj form, 24 figures, 10 tables, accepted to Ap
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