4,159 research outputs found
The environmental control and life-support system for a lunar base: What drives its design
The purpose of this paper is to identify and briefly discuss some of the ground rules and mission scenario details that become drivers of the environmental control and life support (ECLS) system design and of the logistics related to the design. This paper is written for mission planners and non-ECLS system engineers to inform them of the details that will be important to the ECLS engineer when the design phase is reached. In addition, examples illustrate the impact of some selected mission characteristics on the logistics associated with ECLS systems. The last section of this paper focuses on the ECLS system technology development sequence and highlights specific portions that need emphasis
Analytic results for two-loop Yang-Mills
Recent Developments in computing very specific helicity amplitudes in two
loop QCD are presented. The techniques focus upon the singular structure of the
amplitude rather than on a diagramatic and integration approachComment: Talk presented at 13th International Symposium on Radiative
Corrections, 24-29 September, 2017,St. Gilgen, Austria, 9 page
Identifying Student Difficulties with Entropy, Heat Engines, and the Carnot Cycle
We report on several specific student difficulties regarding the Second Law
of Thermodynamics in the context of heat engines within upper-division
undergraduates thermal physics courses. Data come from ungraded written
surveys, graded homework assignments, and videotaped classroom observations of
tutorial activities. Written data show that students in these courses do not
clearly articulate the connection between the Carnot cycle and the Second Law
after lecture instruction. This result is consistent both within and across
student populations. Observation data provide evidence for myriad difficulties
related to entropy and heat engines, including students' struggles in reasoning
about situations that are physically impossible and failures to differentiate
between differential and net changes of state properties of a system. Results
herein may be seen as the application of previously documented difficulties in
the context of heat engines, but others are novel and emphasize the subtle and
complex nature of cyclic processes and heat engines, which are central to the
teaching and learning of thermodynamics and its applications. Moreover, the
sophistication of these difficulties is indicative of the more advanced
thinking required of students at the upper division, whose developing knowledge
and understanding give rise to questions and struggles that are inaccessible to
novices
Expression signatures of cisplatin- and trametinib-treated early-stage medaka melanomas
Small aquarium fish models provide useful systems not only for a better understanding of the molecular basis of many human diseases, but also for first-line screening to identify new drug candidates. For testing new chemical substances, current strategies mostly rely on easy to perform and efficient embryonic screens. Cancer, however, is a disease that develops mainly during juvenile and adult stage. Long-term treatment and the challenge to monitor changes in tumor phenotype make testing of large chemical libraries in juvenile and adult animals cost prohibitive. We hypothesized that changes in the gene expression profile should occur early during anti-tumor treatment, and the disease-associated transcriptional change should provide a reliable readout that can be utilized to evaluate drug-induced effects. For the current study, we used a previously established medaka melanoma model. As proof of principle, we showed that exposure of melanoma developing fish to the drugs cisplatin or trametinib, known cancer therapies, for a period of seven days is sufficient to detect treatment-induced changes in gene expression. By examining whole body transcriptome responses we provide a novel route toward gene panels that recapitulate anti-tumor outcomes thus allowing a screening of thousands of drugs using a whole-body vertebrate model. Our results suggest that using disease-associated transcriptional change to screen therapeutic molecules in small fish model is viable and may be applied to pre-clinical research and development stages in new drug discovery
Bostonia. Volume 12
Founded in 1900, Bostonia magazine is Boston University's main alumni publication, which covers alumni and student life, as well as university activities, events, and programs
Wide dynamic range 2-D nanoindentation: Friction and partial slip at contacts
A new nanomechanical testing system is described. It provides the same force controlled displacement sensing capability as nanoindentation, but now with two completely separated orthogonal axes. Load modulation enables direct determination of contact area and stiffness, both lateral and vertical, along with energy losses from the phase shifts. Two features in particular, wide dynamic ranges of several orders of magnitude of stiffness and a very high degree of mechanical separation (low crosstalk) between the axes, distinguish the technique from AFM. AFM is one of the few techniques to date to investigate tribological single asperity contacts but its mechanical limitations make it difficult to discern the underlying mechanisms.
With this new technique, the evolution of a contact under 2-D stresses from deformation-free atomistic scale to initial plasticity along with the associated changes in geometry, can be monitored. Results will be presented showing that unlike in elastic contacts, Mindlin partial slip does not occur immediately under lateral stress in plastically deformed contacts. The evolution of contact area in the initial stages of sliding in the presence of plastic flow will be described, and resembles the predictions of classical Tabor and Johnson models. It will be shown that energy dissipation measured from phase shift of a modulating signal is largely due to interfacial friction rather than volumetric deformation. Prospects for further studies using both shear and normal loading will be discussed
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