2,618 research outputs found
Pterodactyl: Thermal Protection System for Integrated Control Design of a Mechanically Deployed Entry Vehicle
The need for precision landing of high mass payloads on Mars and the return of sensitive samples from other planetary bodies to specific locations on Earth is driving the development of an innovative NASA technology referred to as the Deployable Entry Vehicle (DEV). A DEV has the potential to deliver an equivalent science payload with a stowed diameter 3 to 4 times smaller than a traditional rigid capsule configuration. However, the DEV design does not easily lend itself to traditional methods of directional control. The NASA Space Technology Mission Directorate (STMD)s Pterodactyl project is currently investigating the effectiveness of three different Guidance and Control (G&C) systems actuated flaps, Center of Gravity (CG) or mass movement, and Reaction Control System (RCS) for use with a DEV using the Adaptable, Deployable, Entry, and Placement Technology (ADEPT) design. This paper details the Thermal Protection System (TPS) design and associated mass estimation efforts for each of the G&C systems. TPS is needed for the nose cap of the DEV and the flaps of the actuated flap control system. The development of a TPS selection, sizing, and mass estimation method designed to deal with the varying requirements for the G&C options throughout the trajectory is presented. The paper discusses the methods used to i) obtain heating environments throughout the trajectory with respect to the chosen control system and resulting geometry; ii) determine a suitable TPS material; iii) produce TPS thickness estimations; and, iv) determine the final TPS mass estimation based on TPS thickness, vehicle control system, vehicle structure, and vehicle payload
Effects of circadian rhythm phase alteration on physiological and psychological variables: Implications to pilot performance (including a partially annotated bibliography)
The effects of environmental synchronizers upon circadian rhythmic stability in man and the deleterious alterations in performance and which result from changes in this stability are points of interest in a review of selected literature published between 1972 and 1980. A total of 2,084 references relevant to pilot performance and circadian phase alteration are cited and arranged in the following categories: (1) human performance, with focus on the effects of sleep loss or disturbance and fatigue; (2) phase shift in which ground based light/dark alteration and transmeridian flight studies are discussed; (3) shiftwork; (4)internal desynchronization which includes the effect of evironmental factors on rhythmic stability, and of rhythm disturbances on sleep and psychopathology; (5) chronotherapy, the application of methods to ameliorate desynchronization symptomatology; and (6) biorythm theory, in which the birthdate based biorythm method for predicting aircraft accident susceptability is critically analyzed. Annotations are provided for most citations
Evolution of Second-Order Cosmological Perturbations and Non-Gaussianity
We present a second-order gauge-invariant formalism to study the evolution of
curvature perturbations in a Friedmann-Robertson-Walker universe filled by
multiple interacting fluids. We apply such a general formalism to describe the
evolution of the second-order curvature perturbations in the standard
one-single field inflation, in the curvaton and in the inhomogeneous reheating
scenarios for the generation of the cosmological perturbations. Moreover, we
provide the exact expression for the second-order temperature anisotropies on
large scales, including second-order gravitational effects and extend the
well-known formula for the Sachs-Wolfe effect at linear order. Our findings
clarify what is the exact non-linearity parameter f_NL entering in the
determination of higher-order statistics such as the bispectrum of Cosmic
Microwave Background temperature anisotropies. Finally, we compute the level of
non-Gaussianity in each scenario for the creation of cosmological
perturbations.Comment: 14 pages, LaTeX file. Further comments adde
Medication communication between nurses and doctors for paediatric acute care: An ethnographic study
AIMS AND OBJECTIVES: To examine how communication between nurses and doctors occurred for managing medications in inpatient paediatric settings. BACKGROUND: Communication between health professionals influences medication incidents' occurrence and safe care. DESIGN: An ethnographic study was undertaken. METHODS: Semi-structured interviews, observations and focus groups were conducted in three clinical areas of an Australian tertiary paediatric hospital. Data were transcribed verbatim and thematically analysed using the Medication Communication Model. RESULTS: The actual communication act revealed professionals' commitment to effective medication management and the influence of professional identities on medication communication. Nurses and doctors were dedicated to providing safe, effective medication therapy for children, within their scope of practice and perceived role responsibilities. Most nurses and junior doctors used tentative language in their communication while senior doctors tended to use direct language. Irrespective of language style, nurses actively engaged with doctors to promote patients' needs. Yet, the medical hierarchical structure, staffing and attendant expectations influenced communication for medication management, causing frustration among nurses and doctors. Doctors' lack of verbal communication of documented changes to medication orders particularly troubled nurses. Nurses persisted in their efforts to acquire appropriate orders for safe medication administration to paediatric patients. CONCLUSIONS: Collaborative practice between nurses and doctors involved complex, symbiotic relationships. Their dedication to providing safe medication therapy to paediatric patients facilitated effective medication management. At times, shortcomings in inter-disciplinary communication impacted on potential and actual medication incidents. RELEVANCE TO CLINICAL PRACTICE: Understanding of the complexities affecting medication communication between nurses and doctors helps to ensure inter-professional respect for each other's roles and inherent demands. Interdisciplinary education delivered in health care organisations would facilitate greater clarity in communication related to medications. Encouraging the use of concise, clear words in communication would help to promote improved understanding between parties, and accuracy and efficacy of medication management. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved
Statistical mechanics of transcription-factor binding site discovery using Hidden Markov Models
Hidden Markov Models (HMMs) are a commonly used tool for inference of
transcription factor (TF) binding sites from DNA sequence data. We exploit the
mathematical equivalence between HMMs for TF binding and the "inverse"
statistical mechanics of hard rods in a one-dimensional disordered potential to
investigate learning in HMMs. We derive analytic expressions for the Fisher
information, a commonly employed measure of confidence in learned parameters,
in the biologically relevant limit where the density of binding sites is low.
We then use techniques from statistical mechanics to derive a scaling principle
relating the specificity (binding energy) of a TF to the minimum amount of
training data necessary to learn it.Comment: 25 pages, 2 figures, 1 table V2 - typos fixed and new references
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A Hubble Space Telescope Survey of Extended [OIII]5007A Emission in a Far-Infrared Selected Sample of Seyfert Galaxies: Results
We present the results of a Hubble Space Telescope (HST) survey of extended
[OIII] emission in a sample of 60 nearby Seyfert galaxies (22 Seyfert 1's and
38 Seyfert 2's), selected by mostly isotropic properties. The comparison
between the semi major axis size of their [OIII] emitting regions (R_Maj) shows
that Seyfert 1's and Seyfert 2's have similar distributions, which seems to
contradict Unified Model predictions. We discuss possible ways to explain this
result, which could be due either to observational limitations or the models
used for the comparison with our data. We show that Seyfert 1 Narrow Line
Regions (NLR's) are more circular and concentrated than Seyfert 2's, which can
be attributed to foreshortening in the former. We find a good correlation
between the NLR size and luminosity, following the relation R_Maj propto
L([OIII])^0.33, which is flatter than a previous one found for QSO's and
Seyfert 2's. We discuss possible reasons for the different results, and their
implications to photoionization models. We confirm previous results which show
that the [OIII] and radio emission are well aligned, and also find no
correlation between the orientation of the extended [OIII] emission and the
host galaxy major axis. This agrees with results showing that the torus axis
and radio jet are not aligned with the host galaxy rotation axis, indicating
that the orientation of the gas in the torus, and not the spin of the black
hole, determine the orientation of the accretion disk, and consequently the
orientation of the radio jet.Comment: 17 pages including 12 figures, to appear in Ap
Progress in Three-Dimensional Coherent X-Ray Diffraction Imaging
The Fourier inversion of phased coherent diffraction patterns offers images
without the resolution and depth-of-focus limitations of lens-based tomographic
systems. We report on our recent experimental images inverted using recent
developments in phase retrieval algorithms, and summarize efforts that led to
these accomplishments. These include ab-initio reconstruction of a
two-dimensional test pattern, infinite depth of focus image of a thick object,
and its high-resolution (~10 nm resolution) three-dimensional image.
Developments on the structural imaging of low density aerogel samples are
discussed.Comment: 5 pages, X-Ray Microscopy 2005, Himeji, Japa
Tensors, non-Gaussianities, and the future of potential reconstruction
We present projections for reconstruction of the inflationary potential
expected from ESA's upcoming Planck Surveyor CMB mission. We focus on the
effects that tensor perturbations and the presence of non-Gaussianities have on
reconstruction efforts in the context of non-canonical inflation models. We
consider potential constraints for different combinations of
detection/null-detection of tensors and non-Gaussianities. We perform Markov
Chain Monte Carlo and flow analyses on a simulated Planck-precision data set to
obtain constraints. We find that a failure to detect non-Gaussianities
precludes a successful inversion of the primordial power spectrum, greatly
affecting uncertainties, even in the presence of a tensor detection. In the
absence of a tensor detection, while unable to determine the energy scale of
inflation, an observable level of non-Gaussianities provides correlations
between the errors of the potential parameters, suggesting that constraints
might be improved for suitable combinations of parameters. Constraints are
optimized for a positive detection of both tensors and non-Gaussianities.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures, LaTeX; V2: version submitted to JCA
Completing Natural Inflation
If the inflaton is a pseudo-scalar axion, the axion shift symmetry can
protect the flatness of its potential from too large radiative corrections.
This possibility, known as natural inflation, requires an axion scale which is
greater than the (reduced) Planck scale. It is unclear whether such a high
value is compatible with an effective field theoretical description, and if the
global axionic symmetry survives quantum gravity effects. We propose a
mechanism which provides an effective large axion scale, although the original
one is sub-Planckian. The mechanism is based on the presence of two axions,
with a potential provided by two anomalous gauge groups. The effective large
axion scale is due to an almost exact symmetry between the couplings of the
axions to the anomalous groups. We also comment on a possible implementation in
heterotic string theory.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figur
Inhomogeneous Neutrino Degeneracy and Big Bang Nucleosynthesis
We examine Big Bang nucleosynthesis (BBN) in the case of inhomogenous
neutrino degeneracy, in the limit where the fluctuations are sufficiently small
on large length scales that the present-day element abundances are homogeneous.
We consider two representive cases: degeneracy of the electron neutrino alone,
and equal chemical potentials for all three neutrinos. We use a linear
programming method to constrain an arbitrary distribution of the chemical
potentials. For the current set of (highly-restrictive) limits on the
primordial element abundances, homogeneous neutrino degeneracy barely changes
the allowed range of the baryon-to-photon ratio. Inhomogeneous degeneracy
allows for little change in the lower bound on the baryon-to-photon ratio, but
the upper bound in this case can be as large as 1.1 \times 10^{-8} (only
electron neutrino degeneracy) or 1.0 \times 10^{-9} (equal degeneracies for all
three neutrinos). For the case of inhomogeneous neutrino degeneracy, we show
that there is no BBN upper bound on the neutrino energy density, which is
bounded in this case only by limits from structure formation and the cosmic
microwave background.Comment: 6 pages, no figure
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