1,454 research outputs found
Potential for Usage of Thermoelectric Generators on Ships
Published version of an article from the journal: Journal of Electronic Materials. he original publication is available at Springerlink. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11664-010-1189-1The useful waste heat potential for a bulk carrier has been evaluated as a preliminary step towards developing a thermoelectric generator (TEG) waste heat recovery system for ships. A medium-sized bulk carrier produces 6.2 MW of waste heat, and the most promising usable sources for the TEG are shown herein to be the exhausts from the main engine and the sludge oil incinerator
The regularized visible fold revisited
The planar visible fold is a simple singularity in piecewise smooth systems.
In this paper, we consider singularly perturbed systems that limit to this
piecewise smooth bifurcation as the singular perturbation parameter
. Alternatively, these singularly perturbed systems can
be thought of as regularizations of their piecewise counterparts. The main
contribution of the paper is to demonstrate the use of consecutive blowup
transformations in this setting, allowing us to obtain detailed information
about a transition map near the fold under very general assumptions. We apply
this information to prove, for the first time, the existence of a locally
unique saddle-node bifurcation in the case where a limit cycle, in the singular
limit , grazes the discontinuity set. We apply this
result to a mass-spring system on a moving belt described by a Stribeck-type
friction law
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Using data insertion with the NAME model to simulate the 8 May 2010 Eyjafjallajökull volcanic ash cloud
A data insertion method, where a dispersion model is initialized from ash properties derived from a series of satellite observations, is used to model the 8 May 2010 Eyjafjallajökull volcanic ash cloud which extended from Iceland to northern Spain. We also briefly discuss the application of this method to the April 2010 phase of the Eyjafjallajökull eruption and the May 2011 Grímsvötn eruption. An advantage of this method is that very little knowledge about the eruption itself is required because some of the usual eruption source parameters are not used. The method may therefore be useful for remote volcanoes where good satellite observations of the erupted material are available, but little is known about the properties of the actual eruption. It does, however, have a number of limitations related to the quality and availability of the observations. We demonstrate that, using certain configurations, the data insertion method is able to capture the structure of a thin filament of ash extending over northern Spain that is not fully captured by other modeling methods. It also verifies well against the satellite observations according to the quantitative
object-based quality metric, SAL—structure, amplitude, location, and the spatial coverage metric, Figure of
Merit in Space
Computation of saddle type slow manifolds using iterative methods
This paper presents an alternative approach for the computation of trajectory
segments on slow manifolds of saddle type. This approach is based on iterative
methods rather than collocation-type methods. Compared to collocation methods,
that require mesh refinements to ensure uniform convergence with respect to
, appropriate estimates are directly attainable using the method of
this paper. The method is applied to several examples including: A model for a
pair of neurons coupled by reciprocal inhibition with two slow and two fast
variables and to the computation of homoclinic connections in the
FitzHugh-Nagumo system.Comment: To appear in SIAM Journal of Applied Dynamical System
Semiclassical quantization of Rotating Strings in Pilch-Warner geometry
Some of the recent important developments in understanding string/ gauge
dualities are based on the idea of highly symmetric motion of ``string
solitons'' in geometry originally suggested by Gubser,
Klebanov and Polyakov. In this paper we study symmetric motion of certain
string configurations in so called Pilch-Warner geometry. The two-form field
breaks down the supersymmetry to but for the string
configurations considered in this paper the classical values of the energy and
the spin are the same as for string in . Although trivial at
classical level, the presence of NS-NS antisymmetric field couples the
fluctuation modes that indicates changes in the quantum corrections to the
energy spectrum. We compare our results with those obtained in the case of
pp-wave limit in hep-th/0206045.Comment: 31 pages, no figures, v2 - a few typos correcte
Lithium in drinking water and incidence of suicide:A nationwide individual-level cohort study with 22 years of follow-up
Suicide is a major public health concern. High-dose lithium is used to stabilize mood and prevent suicide in patients with affective disorders. Lithium occurs naturally in drinking water worldwide in much lower doses, but with large geographical variation. Several studies conducted at an aggregate level have suggested an association between lithium in drinking water and a reduced risk of suicide; however, a causal relation is uncertain. Individual-level register-based data on the entire Danish adult population (3.7 million individuals) from 1991 to 2012 were linked with a moving five-year time-weighted average (TWA) lithium exposure level from drinking water hypothesizing an inverse relationship. The mean lithium level was 11.6 μg/L ranging from 0.6 to 30.7 μg/L. The suicide rate decreased from 29.7 per 100,000 person-years at risk in 1991 to 18.4 per 100,000 person-years in 2012. We found no significant indication of an association between increasing five-year TWA lithium exposure level and decreasing suicide rate. The comprehensiveness of using individual-level data and spatial analyses with 22 years of follow-up makes a pronounced contribution to previous findings. Our findings demonstrate that there does not seem to be a protective effect of exposure to lithium on the incidence of suicide with levels below 31 μg/L in drinking water
Aging and health among migrants in a European perspective
Kristiansen M, Razum O, Tezcan-Güntekin H, Krasnik A. Aging and health among migrants in a European perspective. Public Health Reviews. 2016;37(1): 20
CMBPol Mission Concept Study: Prospects for polarized foreground removal
In this report we discuss the impact of polarized foregrounds on a future
CMBPol satellite mission. We review our current knowledge of Galactic polarized
emission at microwave frequencies, including synchrotron and thermal dust
emission. We use existing data and our understanding of the physical behavior
of the sources of foreground emission to generate sky templates, and start to
assess how well primordial gravitational wave signals can be separated from
foreground contaminants for a CMBPol mission. At the estimated foreground
minimum of ~100 GHz, the polarized foregrounds are expected to be lower than a
primordial polarization signal with tensor-to-scalar ratio r=0.01, in a small
patch (~1%) of the sky known to have low Galactic emission. Over 75% of the sky
we expect the foreground amplitude to exceed the primordial signal by about a
factor of eight at the foreground minimum and on scales of two degrees. Only on
the largest scales does the polarized foreground amplitude exceed the
primordial signal by a larger factor of about 20. The prospects for detecting
an r=0.01 signal including degree-scale measurements appear promising, with 5
sigma_r ~0.003 forecast from multiple methods. A mission that observes a range
of scales offers better prospects from the foregrounds perspective than one
targeting only the lowest few multipoles. We begin to explore how optimizing
the composition of frequency channels in the focal plane can maximize our
ability to perform component separation, with a range of typically 40 < nu <
300 GHz preferred for ten channels. Foreground cleaning methods are already in
place to tackle a CMBPol mission data set, and further investigation of the
optimization and detectability of the primordial signal will be useful for
mission design.Comment: 42 pages, 14 figures, Foreground Removal Working Group contribution
to the CMBPol Mission Concept Study, v2, matches AIP versio
Individual variation in levels of haptoglobin-related protein in children from Gabon
Background: Haptoglobin related protein (Hpr) is a key component of trypanosome lytic factors (TLF), a subset of highdensity lipoproteins (HDL) that form the first line of human defence against African trypanosomes. Hpr, like haptoglobin (Hp) can bind to hemoglobin (Hb) and it is the Hpr-Hb complexes which bind to these parasites allowing uptake of TLF. This unique form of innate immunity is primate-specific. To date, there have been no population studies of plasma levels of Hpr, particularly in relation to hemolysis and a high prevalence of ahaptoglobinemia as found in malaria endemic areas. Methods and Principal Findings: We developed a specific enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay to measure levels of plasma Hpr in Gabonese children sampled during a period of seasonal malaria transmission when acute phase responses (APR), malaria infection and associated hemolysis were prevalent. Median Hpr concentration was 0.28 mg/ml (range 0.03-1.1). This was 5-fold higher than that found in Caucasian children (0.049 mg/ml, range 0.002-0.26) with no evidence of an APR. A general linear model was used to investigate associations between Hpr levels, host polymorphisms, parasitological factors and the acute phase proteins, Hp, C-reactive protein (CRP) and albumin. Levels of Hpr were associated with Hp genotype, decreased with age and were higher in females. Hpr concentration was strongly correlated with that of Hp, but not CRP
Regulated Expansion of Electricity Transmission Networks: The Effects of Fluctuating Demand and Wind Generation
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