1,722 research outputs found

    THE PLACE OF RESEARCH IN RANGE MANAGEMENT

    Get PDF
    There can be no progress without research. No industry can continue to meet the present day competition unless it is continually developing new products or new and better methods of production. This fact is well illusb·ated in the fi eld of plasticsa recent product developed by research. The importance of this research is emphasized by the financial budget of such indush·ies as Dow Chemical, DuPont, and others. It is of no less importance in the field of range management

    The metabolic and respiratory action of aspirin

    Get PDF
    Abstract Not Provided

    Masking Power of Dental Opaque Porcelains

    Full text link
    A technique was developed to qualify the masking power of undiluted opaque dental porcelain by dilution of opaque powder with a clear glaze powder and by extrapolation of quantitative data gathered by reflectance spectrophotometry. Quantification of reflectance data was made on dilute opaque porcelains using the scattering and absorption coefficients in the Kubelka-Munk equation. Qualitative comparisons of undiluted opaque porcelains were made from quantitative data gathered from diluted opaque porcelains.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/67998/2/10.1177_00220345840630062601.pd

    Conformational studies of the tetramerization site of human erythroid spectrin by cysteine-scanning spin-labeling EPR methods

    Get PDF
    We used cysteine-scanning and spin-labeling methods to prepare singly spin labeled recombinant peptides for electron paramagnetic resonance studies of the partial domain regions at the tetramerization site (N-terminal end of α and C-terminal end of β) of erythroid spectrin. The values of the inverse line width parameter (ΔH0-1) from a family of SpoI-1-368Δ peptides scanning residues 21-30 exhibited a periodicity of ∼3.5-4. We used molecular dynamics calculations to show that the asymmetric mobility of this helix is not necessarily due to tertiary contacts, but is likely due to intrinsic properties of helix C′, a helix with a heptad pattern sequence. The residues with low ΔH0-1 values (residues at positions 21, 25, and 28/29) were those on the hydrophobic side of this amphipathic helix. Native gel electrophoresis results showed that these residues were functionally important and are involved in the tetramerization process. Thus, EPR results readily identified functionally important residues in the α spectrin partial domain region. Mutations at these positions may lead to clinical symptoms. Similarly, the ΔH0-1 values from a family of spin-labeled SpβI-1898-2083Δ peptides also exhibited a periodicity of ∼3.5-4, indicating a helical conformation in the two scanned regions (residues 2008-2018 and residues 2060-2070). However, the region consisting of residues 2071-2076 was in a disordered conformation. Both helical regions include a hydrophilic side with high ΔH0-1 values and a hydrophobic side with low ΔH0-1 values, demonstrating the amphipathic nature of the helical regions. Residues 2008, 2011, 2014, and 2018 in the first scanned region and residues 2061, 2065, and 2068 in the second scanned region were on the hydrophobic side. These residues were critical in αβ spectrin association at the tetramerization site. Mutations at some of these positions have been reported to be detrimental in clinical studies. © 2005 American Chemical Society

    Cone Penetration Tests (CPTs) in layered soils: a Material Point approach

    Get PDF
    Cone Penetration Tests (CPTs) can be used to determine in-situ soil properties and represent a practical choice for site investigation offshore, especially for linear infrastructure, such as offshore wind export cables. Information gained from CPTs is key for predicting soil-structure interaction behaviour, for example when predicting the tow forces involved in seabed ploughing, as the CPT provides an analogue to the process. The numerical modelling of CPTs is challenging due to the significant distortion in the soil displaced by the penetrating cone. This means that solving this sort of problem using finite elements, although not impossible, is numerically tiresome in terms of remeshing and mapping of state variables. Therefore, in this paper we adopt the Material Point Method (MPM) to develop a CPT prediction tool in layered soils. This MPM is combined with a novel non-matching mesh frictional boundary to represent the penetrometer. The developed tool will be used to understand the response of layered soils commonly found offshore as a step towards predicting the interaction of ploughs and anchors with the seabed

    Technological Devices in the Archives: A Policy Analysis

    Get PDF
    Doing research in the archive is the cornerstone of humanities scholarship. Various archives institute policies regarding the use of technological devices, such as mobile phones, laptops, and cameras in their reading rooms. Such policies directly affect the scholars as the devices mediate the nature of their interaction with the source materials in terms of capturing, organizing, note taking, and record keeping for future use of found materials. In this paper, we present our analysis of the policies of thirty archives regarding the use of technology in their reading rooms. This policy analysis, along with data from interviews of scholars and archivists, is intended to serve as a basis for developing mobile applications for assisting scholars in their research activities. In this paper we introduce an early prototype of such a mobile application— AMTracker.Informatio

    Modelling the electric field applied to a tokamak

    Full text link
    The vector potential for the Ohmic heating coil system of a tokamak is obtained in semi-analytical form. Comparison is made to the potential of a simple, finite solenoid. In the quasi-static limit, the time rate of change of the potential determines the induced electromotive force through the Maxwell-Lodge effect. Discussion of the gauge constraint is included.Comment: 13 pages, 7 figures, final versio

    Momentum Distribution in Nuclear matter within a Perturbation Approximation

    Full text link
    It is shown that the norm corrections, introduced to avoid the violation of the constraints on the depletion of the hole states in the standard perturbative 2p2h approach, leads in nuclear matter to a dependence of the momentum distribution with the total nucleon number. This unphysical behavior, which in turn makes the depletion to be non-extensive, arises from contributions of disconnected diagrams contained in the norm. It is found that the extensivity is again recovered when the 4p4h excitations in the ground state are included, and a reasonable value for the total number of nucleons promoted above the Fermi level is obtained.Comment: 11 pages, LaTeX, 5 figures, figures 1 to 3 included in the latex file, postscript files of figures 4 and 5 available from the Authors. Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
    • …
    corecore