8,002 research outputs found
Growing & Marketing Low Linolenic Soybeans - A Value Added Oppportunity
The Food and Drug Administration\u27s statement that trans-fatty acids are undesirable for human health and the requirement that food processors list trans fats on food nutrition labels beginning in 2006 has poised l% low linolenic soybean oil as part of the solution to the trans fat problem. Unhydrogenated soybean oil does not contain trans fat, but most soybean oil is hydrogenated to increase the shelf life of products that use soybean oil as an ingredient. Low linolenic soybean oil is stable enough without requiring hydrogenation, eliminating trans fat and not increasing saturated fat. According to the United Soybean Board, the low linolenic soybean oil could add an estimated $100 million per year to the value of soybean commodities
Telepresence and Space Station Freedom workstation operations
The Space Station Freedom workstation system is a distributed network of computer based workstations that provides the man-machine interfaces for controlling space station systems. This includes control of external manipulator, robotic and free flyer devices by crewmembers in the space station's pressurized shirt-sleeve environment. These remotely controlled devices help minimize the requirement for costly crew extravehicular activity (EVA) time for such tasks as station assembly and payload support. Direct window views may be used for controlling some of the systems, but many activities will be remote or require levels of detail not possible by direct observation. Since controlling remote devices becomes more difficult when direct views are inadequate or unavailable, many performance enhancing techniques have been considered for representing information about remote activities to the operator. Described here are the telepresence techniques under consideration to support operations and training. This includes video enhancements (e.g., graphic and text overlays and stereo viewing), machine vision systems, remote activity animation, and force reflection representation
Contributions to HiLiftPW-3 Using Structured, Overset Grid Methods
The High-Lift Common Research Model (HL-CRM) and the JAXA Standard Model (JSM) were analyzed computationally using both the OVERFLOW and LAVA codes for the third AIAA High-Lift Prediction Workshop. Geometry descriptions and the test cases simulated are described. With the HL-CRM, the effects of surface smoothness during grid projection and the effect of partially sealing a flap gap were studied. Grid refinement studies were performed at two angles of attack using both codes. For the JSM, simulations were performed with and without the nacelle/pylon. Without the nacelle/pylon, evidence of multiple solutions was observed when a quadratic constitutive relation is used in the turbulence modeling; however, using time-accurate simulation seemed to alleviate this issue. With the nacelle/pylon, no evidence of multiple solutions was observed. Laminar-turbulent transition modeling was applied to both JSM configuration, and had an overall favorable impact on the lift predictions
Spin dynamics of the quasi two dimensional spin-1/2 quantum magnet Cs_2CuCl_4
We study dynamical properties of the anisotropic triangular quantum
antiferromagnet Cs_2CuCl_4. Inelastic neutron scattering measurements have
established that the dynamical spin correlations cannot be understood within a
linear spin wave analysis. We go beyond linear spin wave theory by taking
interactions between magnons into account in a 1/S expansion. We determine the
dynamical structure factor and carry out extensive comparisons with
experimental data. We find that compared to linear spin wave theory a
significant fraction of the scattering intensity is shifted to higher energies
and strong scattering continua are present. However, the 1/S expansion fails to
account for the experimentally observed large quantum renormalization of the
exchange energies.Comment: 13 pages, 11 figures, higher quality figures can be obtained from the
author
Hastings-Levitov aggregation in the small-particle limit
We establish some scaling limits for a model of planar aggregation. The model is described by the composition of a sequence of independent and identically distributed random conformal maps, each corresponding to the addition of one particle. We study the limit of small particle size and rapid aggregation. The process of growing clusters converges, in the sense of Caratheodory, to an inflating disc. A more refined analysis reveals, within the cluster, a tree structure of branching fingers, whose radial component increases deterministically with time. The arguments of any finite sample of fingers, tracked inwards, perform coalescing Brownian motions. The arguments of any finite sample of gaps between the fingers, tracked outwards, also perform coalescing Brownian motions. These properties are closely related to the evolution of harmonic measure on the boundary of the cluster, which is shown to converge to the Brownian web
Resonant Steps in the Characteristics of a Josephson Junction Coupled to a Transmission Line
A novel circuit is described which functions as an electronic analog of lumped element transmission line. The circuit requires only operational amplifiers, resistors, and capacitors. This module was coupled to a Josephsonj unction simulator and current voltage characteristics of the combined system were recorded. Steps were observed at voltages determined by the appropriate line resonances. When the transmission line was terminated with loads less than the characteristic impedance, chaos was seen in the lower steps. Similar results were obtained by numerical integration of the corresponding system of differential equations
Accounting Hall of Fame induction: Charles Arthur Bowsher; Accounting Hall of Fame induction: Donald James Kirk; Accounting Hall of Fame induction: William Henry Beaver
For Charles Arthur Bowsher\u27s induction, the Citation was written by Daniel L. Jensen, Professor , The Ohio State University and read by Arhtur R. Wyatt, professor, University of Illinois and a Rseponse was made by Charles A. Bowsher. For Donald James Kirk\u27s induction, Remarks were made by Paul Kolton, the Citation written by Daniel L. Jensen, Professor, Fisher College of Business, The Ohio State University and read by Paul Kolton, Stamford, Connecticut and a Response made by Donald James Kirk. For the induction of William Henry Beaver, the Remarks were made by Charles T. Horngren, Professor, Stanford University, Hall of Fame Member and the Citation was written by Daniel L. Jensen, Professor, The Ohio State University and read by Charles T. Horngren, Professor, Stanford University, Hall of Fame member and a Response was made by William H. Beaver
Molecular clock-like evolution of human immunodeficiency virus type 1
AbstractThe molecular clock hypothesis states that the rate of nucleotide substitution per generation is constant across lineages. If generation times were equal across lineages, samples obtained at the same calendar time would have experienced the same number of generations since their common ancestor. However, if sequences are not derived from contemporaneous samples, differences in the number of generations may be misinterpreted as variation in substitution rates and hence may lead to false rejection of the molecular clock hypothesis. A recent study has called into doubt the validity of clock-like evolution for HIV-1, using molecular sequences derived from noncontemporaneous samples. However, after separating their within-individual data according to sampling time, we found that what appeared to be nonclock-like behavior could be attributed, in most cases, to noncontemporaneous sampling, with contributions also likely to derive from recombination. Natural selection alone did not appear to obscure the clock-like evolution of HIV-1
Sprinkler Irrigation Spray Temperatures
THE temperature of irrigation water
may vary from zero, where the
source is a melting snowbank, to near
90 C where the source is a hot spring
or well such as those along the Snake
River. Water heated by nuclear reactors
may provide hot water for irrigation
in the future. Water of these extreme
temperatures is frequently used
in sprinkler irrigation. It is important
to crop production and management to
know the temperature of the water as
it comes in contact with the crop or
soil because of the effect of temperature
on germination of seed; development
of fruit, vegetables, and other
crops; frost protection, and crop-cooling
operations
HD 101088, An Accreting 14 AU Binary in Lower Centaurus Crux With Very Little Circumstellar Dust
We present high resolution (R=55,000) optical spectra obtained with MIKE on
the 6.5 m Magellan Clay Telescope as well as Spitzer MIPS photometry and IRS
low resolution (R~60) spectroscopy of the close (14 AU separation) binary, HD
101088, a member of the ~12 Myr old southern region of the Lower Centaurus Crux
(LCC) subgroup of the Scorpius-Centaurus OB association. We find that the
primary and/or secondary is accreting from a tenuous circumprimary and/or
circumsecondary disk despite the apparent lack of a massive circumbinary disk.
We estimate a lower limit to the accretion rate of > 1x10^-9 solar masses per
year, which our multiple observation epochs show varies over a timescale of
months. The upper limit on the 70 micron flux allows us to place an upper limit
on the mass of dust grains smaller than several microns present in a
circumbinary disk of 0.16 moon masses. We conclude that the classification of
disks into either protoplanetary or debris disks based on fractional infrared
luminosity alone may be misleading.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, ApJ accepte
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