594 research outputs found
P5_5 Drag on Dragons
By comparison of the lift and drag forces of two dragons, one fat with a supplementary hydrogen source and one thin without, we have calculated the turning point velocity in which it is more beneficial to be either size. The wind velocity, or turning point velocity, was found to be 14.9 ms-1; below this value the fat dragon will be more advantageous and, conversely above, the thin dragon
P5_6 A Race in Space
By comparing solar and laser radiation sources, each driving a nano-satellite of mass 1 gram, we find that the solar sail is more advantageous up to 9.5 AU, and the laser sail is better beyond this distance. We also find that the laser sail has a constant acceleration throughout, but the solar sail acceleration decreases at a velocity of 150,000 ms-1
P5_4 Where’s Wall-E?
We have calculated that a fire extinguisher under incompressible flow has a ∆v = 4.1 ms-1 and a ∆v = 8.4 ms-1 under adiabatic flow. If Wall-E was to use fire extinguishers as a method of propulsion in space rather than NASA’s MMU (with ∆v = 25 ms-1) he would require 10 fire extinguishers for incompressible flow and 4 for adiabatic flow.
"5 Days in August" – How London Local Authorities used Twitter during the 2011 riots
© IFIP International Federation for Information Processing 2012This study examines effects of microblogging communications during emergency events based on the case of the summer 2011 riots in London. During five days in August 2011, parts of London and other major cities in England suffered from extensive public disorders, violence and even loss of human lives. We collected and analysed the tweets posted by the official accounts maintained by 28 London local government authorities. Those authorities used Twitter for a variety of purposes such as preventing rumours, providing official information, promoting legal actions against offenders and organising post-riot community engagement activities. The study shows how the immediacy and communicative power of microblogging can have a significant effect at the response and recovery stages of emergency events
Recommended from our members
(3S)-3-(2,3-difluorophenyl)-3-methoxypyrrolidine (IRL752) - a novel cortical-preferring catecholamine transmission- and cognition-promoting agent
YesHere we describe for the first time the distinctive pharmacological profile for IRL752, a new phenyl-pyrrolidine derivative with regio-selective CNS transmission-enhancing properties. IRL752 (3.7-150 μmol/kg, s.c.) was characterised through extensive in vivo studies, using behavioural, tissue neurochemical and gene expression, as well as microdialysis methods. Behaviourally, the compound normalised tetrabenazine-induced hypoactivity, while unable to stimulate basal locomotion in normal animals or to either accentuate or reverse hyperactivity induced by amphetamine or MK-801. IRL752 induced but minor changes in monoaminergic tissue neurochemistry across NA- and DA-dominated brain regions. The expression of neuronal activity-, plasticity-, and cognition-related IEGs (immediate early genes) however increased by 1.5- to 2-fold. Furthermore, IRL752 dose-dependently enhanced cortical catecholamine dialysate output to 600-750% above baseline, while striatal DA remained unaltered and NA rose to ~250%; cortical and hippocampal dialysate ACh increased to ~250% and 190% above corresponding baseline, respectively. In line with this cortically preferential transmission-promoting action, the drug was also pro-cognitive in the novel object recognition and reversal learning tests. In vitro neurotarget affinity and functional data, coupled to drug exposure support the hypothesis that 5‑HT7 receptor and α2(C)-adrenoceptor antagonism are key contributors to the in vivo efficacy and original profile of IRL752. The cortical-preferring facilitatory impact on catecholamine (and ACh) neurotransmission, along with effects on IEG expression and cognition-enhancing features, are in line with the potential clinical usefulness of IRL752 in conditions where these aspects may be dysregulated, such as in axial motor and cognitive deficits in Parkinson's Disease
Spectroscopic parameters for silacyclopropynylidene, SiC, from extensive astronomical observations toward CW Leo (IRC +10216) with the Herschel satellite
A molecular line survey has been carried out toward the carbon-rich
asymptotic giant branch star CW Leo employing the HIFI instrument on board of
the Herschel satellite. Numerous features from 480 GHz to beyond 1100 GHz could
be assigned unambiguously to the fairly floppy SiC molecule. However,
predictions from laboratory data exhibited large deviations from the observed
frequencies even after some lower frequency data from this survey were
incorporated into a fit. Therefore, we present a combined fit of all available
laboratory data together with data from radio-astronomical observations.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figure, J. Mol. Spectrosc., appeared; CDMS links corrected
(version 2; current version: 3; may be updated later this year
Low abundance, strong features: window-dressing crystalline forsterite in the disk wall of HD 100546
To make or take: bacterial lipid homeostasis during Infection
Bacterial fatty acids are critical components of the cellular membrane. A shift in environmental conditions or in the bacterium’s lifestyle may result in the requirement for a distinct pool of fatty acids with unique biophysical properties. This can be achieved by the modification of existing fatty acids or via de novo synthesis. Furthermore, bacteria have evolved efficient means to acquire these energy-rich molecules from their environment. However, the balance between de novo fatty acid synthesis and exogenous acquisition during pathogenesis is poorly understood. Here, we studied the mouse fatty acid landscape prior to and after infection with Acinetobacter baumannii, a Gram-negative, opportunistic human pathogen. The lipid fluxes observed following infection revealed fatty acid- and niche-specific changes. Lipidomic profiling of A. baumannii isolated from the pleural cavity of mice identified novel A. baumannii membrane phospholipid species and an overall increased abundance of unsaturated fatty acid species. Importantly, we found that A. baumannii relies largely upon fatty acid acquisition in all but one of the studied niches, the blood, where the pathogen biosynthesizes its own fatty acids. This work is the first to reveal the significance of balancing the making and taking of fatty acids in a Gram-negative bacterium during infection, which provides new insights into the validity of targeting fatty acid synthesis as a treatment strategy.Felise G. Adams, Claudia Trappetti, Jack K. Waters, Maoge Zang, Erin B. Brazel, James C. Paton, Marten F. Snel, Bart A. Eijkelkam
A Mathematical Model of Liver Cell Aggregation In Vitro
The behavior of mammalian cells within three-dimensional structures is an area of intense biological research and underpins the efforts of tissue engineers to regenerate human tissues for clinical applications. In the particular case of hepatocytes (liver cells), the formation of spheroidal multicellular aggregates has been shown to improve cell viability and functionality compared to traditional monolayer culture techniques. We propose a simple mathematical model for the early stages of this aggregation process, when cell clusters form on the surface of the extracellular matrix (ECM) layer on which they are seeded. We focus on interactions between the cells and the viscoelastic ECM substrate. Governing equations for the cells, culture medium, and ECM are derived using the principles of mass and momentum balance. The model is then reduced to a system of four partial differential equations, which are investigated analytically and numerically. The model predicts that provided cells are seeded at a suitable density, aggregates with clearly defined boundaries and a spatially uniform cell density on the interior will form. While the mechanical properties of the ECM do not appear to have a significant effect, strong cell-ECM interactions can inhibit, or possibly prevent, the formation of aggregates. The paper concludes with a discussion of our key findings and suggestions for future work
- …