54 research outputs found

    Erratum: View factors between disk/rectangle and rectangle in parallel and perpendicular planes (Journal of Thermophysics and Heat Transfer (2007) 21:1 (236-239))

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    RAGA IDENTIFICATION BY PAKAD MATCHING IN NORTH INDIAN CLASSICAL MUSIC

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    ABSTRACT Computational Musicology is new and emerging field of Data Mining. Raga is the most aspect of Indian Classical Music. It consists of unique set of notes (swara) and Pakad that correspond to a specific pitch. North Indian Classical Music has its root in Vedic ritual chants and has remained relatively untouched. Here, we depict a system that takes audio input file, convert it into sequence of notes and then find its most matching pattern. This pattern resembles with pakad of a raga and there by identifies the raga

    Analytical Expressions for View Factors with an Intervening Surface

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    Two-Dimensional Ablation in Cylindrical Geometry

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    Differential View Factor for a Rectangle with Intervening Parallelepiped or Sphere

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    A Photoelastic Assessment of Residual Stresses in Zirconia-Veneer Crowns

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    Residual stresses within the veneer are linked to the high prevalence of veneer chipping observed in clinical trials of zirconia prostheses. We hypothesized that the thermal mismatch between the zirconia infrastructure and the veneer porcelain, as well as the rate used for cooling zirconia-veneer crowns, would be directly proportional to the magnitude of residual stresses built within the veneer layer. Two porcelains with different coefficients of thermal expansion were used to veneer zirconia copings, to create high or low thermal mismatches. The crowns were cooled according to a fast- or a slow-cooling protocol. The retardation of polarized light waves was used to calculate the residual stress magnitude and distribution across the veneer, according to the photoelasticity principle, in 1.0-mm-thick crown sections. While thermal mismatch was an important factor influencing the maximum stress development in the veneer, cooling rate had a minor role. Curved surfaces were preferential sites for stress concentration regardless of thermal mismatch or cooling rate

    Histopathology of resected tissue from repair of anomalous aortic origin of a coronary artery: Potential mechanism of coronary artery compressionCentral MessagePerspective

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    Objective: This study aimed to describe the histomorphologic characteristics of resected (unroofed) common wall tissue from repair of anomalous aortic origin of a coronary artery and to determine whether the histologic features correlate with clinical and imaging findings. Methods: The histology of resected tissue was analyzed and reviewed for the presence of fibrointimal hyperplasia, smooth muscle disarray, mucoid extracellular matrix accumulation, mural fibrosis, and elastic fiber disorganization and fragmentation using hematoxylin and eosin and special stains. Clinical, computed tomography imaging, and surgical data were correlated with the histopathologic findings. Results: Twenty specimens from 20 patients (age range, 7-18 years; 14 males) were analyzed. Anomalous aortic origin of a coronary artery involved the right coronary in 16 (80%), and a slit-like ostium was noted in 18 (90%). By computed tomography imaging, the median proximal coronary artery eccentricity index was 0.4 (range, 0.20-0.90). The median length of intramural course was 8.2 mm (range, 2.6-15.2 mm). The anomalous vessel was determined to be interarterial in 14 patients (93%, 15 had evaluable images). The median distance from a commissure was 2.5 mm above the sinotubular junction (STJ) (range: 2 mm below the STJ–14 mm above the STJ). Prominent histopathologic findings included elastic fiber alterations, mural fibrosis, and smooth muscle disarray. The shared wall of the aorta and intramural coronary artery is more similar to the aorta histologically. Mural fibrosis and elastic fiber abnormalities tended to be more severe in patients >10 years of age at the time of surgery, but this did not reach statistical significance. The extent of vascular changes did not appear to have a clear relationship with the imaging features. Conclusions: The findings confirm the aortic wall–like quality of the intramural segment of the coronary artery and the presence of pathologic alterations in the wall microstructure
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