517 research outputs found

    Sliding of ice past an obstacle at Engabreen, Norway

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    At Engabreen, Norway, an instrumented panel containing a decimetric obstacle was mounted flush with the bed surface beneath 210 m of ice. Simultaneous measurements of normaland shear stresses, ice velocity and temperature were obtained as dirty basal ice flowed past the obstacle. Our measurements were broadly consistent with ice thickness, flow conditions and bedrock topography near the site of the experiment. Ice speed 0.45 m above the bed was about 130 mm d–1, much less than the surface velocity of 800 mm d–1. Average normalstress on the panelwas 1.0–1.6 MPa, smaller than the expected ice overburden pressure. Normal stress was larger and temperature was lower on the stoss side than on the lee side, in accord with flow dynamics and equilibrium thermodynamics. Annualdifferences in normal stresses were correlated with changes in sliding speed and ice-flow direction. These temporal variations may have been caused by changes in ice rheology associated with changes in sediment concentration, water content or both. Temperature and normalstress were generally correlated, except when clasts presumably collided with the panel. Temperature gradients in the obstacle indicated that regelation was negligible, consistent with the obstacle size. Melt rate was about 10% of the sliding speed. Despite high sliding speed, no significant ice/bed separation was observed in the lee of the obstacle. Frictional forces between sediment particles in the ice and the panel, estimated from Hallet\u27s (1981) model, indicated that friction accounted for about 5% of the measured bed-parallel force. This value is uncertain, as friction theories are largely untested. Some of these findings agree with sliding theories, others do not

    The Robertson v. Princeton Case: Too Important to Be Left to the Lawyers

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    Offers comments from eleven contributors on the Robertson family's donor rights suit against the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs for violation of donor intent. Explores its effects on and implications for the nonprofit sector

    Field Behavior Comparison of 8 Species of California Desert Ants

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    Replicate colonies were observed at three study sites in southern California. Hourly activity was monitored during winter and spring. The time outside the nest ranged from strictly diurnal in Pogonomyrmex californicus to bimodal to nocturnal in Pheidole barbata. Four aspects of surface activity, foraging, nest work, patrolling, and convening, also differed among species in hour and/or in relative proportion of such activity. Finally, interesting species differences were seen in climbing ability, running time between stops, and response to air blasts (Messor oergandei and Pheidole barbata were the least aggressive). Solenopsis maniosa was one of the three worst glass climbers, along with Pogonomyrmex californicus and Pogonomyrmex magnacanthus; Conomyrma bicolor and Myrmecocystus species were the best. In summary, this study suggests many variables for further analysis of diversity, such as activity each hour, climbing ability, and response to disturbance

    THE EFFECTS OF ELECTRON BEAM IRRADIATION AND SANITIZERS IN THE REDUCTION OF PATHOGENS AND ATTACHMENT PREVENTION ON SPINACH

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    The effects of electron beam (e-beam) irradiation and sanitizers in the reduction of Escherichia coli O157:H7 and Salmonella counts and attachment prevention on spinach was studied. Survival of these pathogens in spinach was observed at multiple times and temperatures. Inoculated spinach was examined by confocal microscopy to determine attachment sites and internalization of these pathogens. To determine the effectiveness of sanitizers in reducing pathogen numbers, inoculated spinach was treated with L-lactic acid, peroxyacetic acid, calcium hypochlorite, ozone, and chlorine dioxide. Inoculated spinach was exposed to e-beam irradiation and tested for counts of both pathogens immediately after irradiation treatment to determine bacterial reduction, and at 2 day intervals over 8 days to determine effects of ionizing irradiation on pathogen survival. Respiration rates were measured on spinach exposed to e-beam. The effectiveness of e-beam irradiation on the microbiological and sensory characteristics of spinach was studied. For spinach samples stored at 4�C and 10�C for 8 days, E. coli O157:H7 survived and grew significantly in samples stored at 21�C for 24 h. Confocal microscopy images provided valuable information on the attachment sites and internalization of the pathogens on spinach. The greatest reduction by a chemical sanitizer was 55�C L-lactic acid with a 2.7 log CFU/g reduction for E. coli O157:H7 and 2.3 log CFU/g reduction for Salmonella. Each dose of e-beam irradiation significantly reduced populations of both pathogens. Respiration rates of spinach increased as irradiation treatment doses increased. Total aerobic plate counts were reduced by 2.6 and 3.2 log CFU/g at 0.7 and 1.4 kGy, respectively. Lactic acid bacteria were reduced at both doses but grew slowly over the 35 day period. Yeasts and molds were not reduced in samples exposed to 0.7 kGy whereas 1.4 kGy had significantly reduced counts. Gas compositions for samples receiving 0.7 and 1.4 kGy were significantly different than controls. Irradiation did not affect the objective color or basic taste, aromatic or mouthfeel attributes of spinach. These results suggest that low dose e-beam irradiation may be a viable tool for reducing microbial populations or eliminating E. coli O157:H7 and Salmonella from spinach with minimal product damage

    Precessing Jet and Large Dust Grains in the V380 Ori NE Star-forming Region

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    The V380 Ori NE bipolar outflow was imaged in the SiO and CO J = 1 - 0 lines, and dense cores in L1641 were observed in the 2.0-0.89 mm continuum. The highly collimated SiO jet shows point-symmetric oscillation patterns in both position and velocity, which suggests that the jet axis is precessing and the driving source may belong to a non-coplanar binary system. By considering the position and velocity variabilities together, accurate jet parameters were derived. The protostellar system is viewed nearly edge-on, and the jet has a flow speed of 35 km/s and a precession period of 1600 years. The CO outflow length gives a dynamical timescale of 6300 years, and the protostar must be extremely young. The inferred binary separation of 6-70 au implies that this protobinary system may have been formed through the disk instability process. The continuum spectra of L1641 dense cores indicate that the emission comes from dust, and the fits with modified blackbody functions give emissivity power indices of beta = 0.3-2.2. The emissivity index shows a positive correlation with the molecular line width, but no strong correlation with bolometric luminosity or temperature. V380 Ori NE has a particularly low value of beta = 0.3, which tentatively suggests the presence of millimeter-sized dust grains. Because the dust growth takes millions of years, much longer than the protostellar age, this core may have produced large grains in the starless core stage. HH 34 MMS and HH 147 MMS also have low emissivity indices.Comment: To appear in the Astrophysical Journal Supplement Serie

    Bolocam Survey for 1.1 mm Dust Continuum Emission in the c2d Legacy Clouds. II. Ophiuchus

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    We present a large-scale millimeter continuum map of the Ophiuchus molecular cloud. Nearly 11 square degrees, including all of the area in the cloud with visual extinction more than 3 magnitudes, was mapped at 1.1 mm with Bolocam on the Caltech Submillimeter Observatory (CSO). By design, the map also covers the region mapped in the infrared with the Spitzer Space Telescope. We detect 44 definite sources, and a few likely sources are also seen along a filament in the eastern streamer. The map indicates that dense cores in Ophiuchus are very clustered and often found in filaments within the cloud. Most sources are round, as measured at the half power point, but elongated when measured at lower contour levels, suggesting spherical sources lying within filaments. The masses, for an assumed dust temperature of 10 K, range from 0.24 to 3.9 solar masses, with a mean value of 0.96 solar masses. The total mass in distinct cores is 42 solar masses, 0.5 to 2% of the total cloud mass, and the total mass above 4 sigma is about 80 solar masses. The mean densities in the cores are quite high, with an average of 1.6 x 10^6 per cc, suggesting short free-fall times. The core mass distribution can be fitted with a power law with slope of 2.1 plus or minus 0.3 for M>0.5 solar masses, similar to that found in other regions, but slightly shallower than that of some determinations of the local IMF. In agreement with previous studies, our survey shows that dense cores account for a very small fraction of the cloud volume and total mass. They are nearly all confined to regions with visual extinction at least 9 mag, a lower threshold than found previously.Comment: 47 pages, 16 figures, accepted for Ap

    Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco

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    The proceedings of the inaugural scientific meeting of the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco (SRNT) are summarized. The primary objective of the meeting was to foster the exchange of information on the effects of nicotine and tobacco use, as well as factors which influence their use, drawing from biological, behavioral and social sciences. Much of this research can be viewed as a tale of two drugs nicotine as a key to an important public health problem, and nicotine as a classical tool of physiological and pharmacological research. A historical overview of research on both drugs is provided first. Public policy alternatives for reducing the prevalence of tobacco use have been derived in part from basic and clinical research results and are briefly outlined. Evidence for genetic determinants on nicotine use and effects is presented using data from twin studies and from molecular genetic research with humans and animals. Consistent with this research, there is evidence of individual differences in pharmacokinetics and effects of nicotine, which could account for differences in smoking behavior and nicotine dependence. Finally, recent developments in the therapeutic uses of nicotine and novel nicotinic agonists with schizophrenia, Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, Tourette's syndrome and ulcerative colitis are presented. Overall, the research presented at the meeting demonstrated the vast diversity of areas of study involving nicotine and tobacco, as well as the rich opportunities for cross-communication among researchers from different disciplines.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/72963/1/j.1360-0443.1996.91112915.x.pd

    Relationship between urinary calcium and calcium intake during calcitriol administration

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    Relationship between urinary calcium and calcium intake during calcitriol administration. The hypercalciuria that occurs when 1,25(OH)2D3 (calcitriol) is given to humans with normal renal function depends on dietary Ca absorption and may also relate, in part, to enhanced bone resorption. To evaluate the relationship between urinary and dietary Ca during treatment with calcitriol, 12 metabolic balance studies were performed in normal volunteers ingesting a diet containing 350 mg/day of Ca, to which Ca gluconate was added. After 10 days on either 350 mg/day or 1550 mg/day of Ca, calcitriol, 0.5 µg every 12hr, was given. Then diet Ca was changed in successive 5-day treatment periods from 350 to 650, 950 and 1550 mg/day (group A) or from 1550 to 950, 650 and 350 mg/day (group B). On the lowest diet Ca, urinary Ca was less than Ca intake during calcitriol treatment (group A, 220 ± 50 mg/day; group B, 247 ± 40). As diet Ca was changed during calcitriol treatment, urinary Ca correlated with diet Ca (r = 0.60) until diet Ca reached 950 mg/day. With calcitriol, serum iPTH fell by 18 to 25% (P < 0.01) and urinary hydroxyproline fell by 11 to 19% (P < 0.05 to 0.01). Baseline serum levels of 1,25(OH)2D were 47 ± 8 and 34 ± 5 pg/ml in group A and B, respectively, and the values increased to 51 ± 12 and 45 ±7.4 pg/ml during treatment with calcitriol. Serum Ca from fasted subjects was not affected by calcitriol, but the mean postabsorptive serum Ca (noon) was increased by 0.35 mg/dl. Although urine Ca/creatinine from fasted subjects increased with calcitriol treatment, the values varied directly with the 24-hr urine Ca and inversely with serum iPTH levels. Thus, dietary Ca is the major determinant of urinary Ca during treatment with calcitriol, and the latter may decrease dietary Ca requirements. There was no evidence for an increased bone resorption. The reduction of hydroxyproline excretion suggests that bone resorption was initially depressed, perhaps due to iPTH suppression. The data also suggest that urine Ca/creatinine after fasting for 12 hr is influenced by previous dietary Ca intake or intestinal Ca absorption, perhaps related to changing iPTH levels

    Preventing Plasmon Coupling between Gold Nanorods Improves the Sensitivity of Photoacoustic Detection of Labeled Stem Cells in Vivo

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    © 2016 American Chemical Society.Gold nanorods are excellent contrast agents for imaging technologies which rely on near-infrared absorption such as photoacoustic imaging. For cell tracking applications, the cells of interest are labeled with the contrast agent prior to injection. However, after uptake into cells by endocytosis, the confinement and high concentration in endosomes leads to plasmon band broadening and reduced absorbance. This would limit the potential of multispectral optoacoustic tomography in terms of spectral processing and, consequently, sensitivity. Here, we show that steric hindrance provided by silica coating of the nanorods leads to the preservation of their spectral properties and improved photoacoustic sensitivity. This strategy allowed the detection and monitoring of as few as 2 × 104 mesenchymal stem cells in mice over a period of 15 days with a high spatial resolution. Importantly, the silica-coated nanorods did not affect the viability or differentiation potential of the transplanted mesenchymal stem cells
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