11,479 research outputs found
Preliminary evaluation of a heat pipe heat exchanger on a regenerative turbofan
A preliminary evaluation was made of a regenerative turbofan engine using a heat pipe heat exchanger. The heat exchanger had an effectiveness of 0.70, a pressure drop of 3 percent on each side, and used sodium for the working fluid in the stainless steel heat pipes. The engine was compared to a reference turbofan engine originally designed for service in 1979. Both engines had a bypass ratio of 4.5 and a fan pressure ratio of 2.0. The design thrust of the engines was in the 4000 N range at a cruise condition of Mach 0.98 and 11.6 km. It is shown that heat pipe heat exchangers of this type cause a large weight and size problem for the engine. The penalties were too severe to be overcome by the small uninstalled fuel consumption advantage. The type of heat exchanger should only be considered for small airflow engines in flight applications. Ground applications might prove more suitable and flexible
Spatially resolved photo ionization of ultracold atoms on an atom chip
We report on photo ionization of ultracold magnetically trapped Rb atoms on
an atom chip. The atoms are trapped at 5 K in a strongly anisotropic
trap. Through a hole in the chip with a diameter of 150 m two laser beams
are focussed onto a fraction of the atomic cloud. A first laser beam with a
wavelength of 778 nm excites the atoms via a two photon transition to the 5D
level. With a fiber laser at 1080 nm the excited atoms are photo ionized.
Ionization leads to depletion of the atomic density distribution observed by
absorption imaging. The resonant ionization spectrum is reported. The setup
used in this experiment is not only suitable to investigate BEC ion mixtures
but also single atom detection on an atom chip
Synthesis and thermal properties of strontium and calcium peroxides
A practical synthesis and a discussion of some chemical properties of pure strontium peroxide and calcium peroxide are presented. The general synthesis of these peroxides involves precipitation of their octahydrates by addition of H2O2 to aqueous ammoniacal Sr(NO3)2 or CaCl2. The octahydrates are converted to the anhydrous peroxides by various dehydration techniques. A new x-ray diffraction powder pattern for CaO2 x 8H2O is given from which lattice parameters a=6.212830 and c=11.0090 were calculated on the basis of the tetragonal crystal system
Preliminary Study of Advanced Turboprops for Low Energy Consumption
The fuel savings potential of advanced turboprops (operational about 1985) was calculated and compared with that of an advanced turbofan for use in an advanced subsonic transport. At the design point, altitude 10.67 km and Mach 0.80, turbine-inlet temperature was fixed at 1590 K while overall pressure ratio was varied from 25 to 50. The regenerative turboprop had a pressure ratio of only 10 and an 85 percent effective rotary heat exchanger. Variable camber propellers were used with an efficiency of 85 percent. The study indicated a fuel savings of 33 percent, a takeoff gross weight reduction of 15 percent, and a direct operating cost reduction of 18 percent was possible when turboprops were used instead of the reference turbofan at a range of 10 200 km. These reductions were 28, 11, and 14 percent, respectively, at a range of 5500 km. Increasing overall pressure ratio from 25 to 50 saved little fuel and slightly increased takeoff gross weight
Preliminary Evaluation of a Turbine/Rotary Combustion Compound Engine for a Subsonic Transport
The fuel consumption of a modern compound engine with that of an advanced high pressure ratio turbofan was compared. The compound engine was derived from a turbofan engine by replacing the combustor with a rotary combustion (RC) engine. A number of boost pressure ratios and compression ratios were examined. Cooling of the RC engine was accomplished by heat exchanging to the fan duct. Performance was estimated with an Otto-cycle for two levels of energy lost to cooling. The effects of added complexity on cost and maintainability were not examined and the comparison was solely in terms of cruise performance and weight. Assuming a 25 percent Otto-cycle cooling loss (representative of current experience), the best compound engine gave a 1.2 percent improvement in cruise. Engine weight increased by 23 percent. For a 10 percent Otto-cycle cooling loss (representing advanced insulation/high temperature materials technology), a compound engine with a boost PR of 10 and a compression ratio of 10 gave an 8.1 percent lower cruise than the reference turbofan
Replication in Genome-Wide Association Studies
Replication helps ensure that a genotype-phenotype association observed in a
genome-wide association (GWA) study represents a credible association and is
not a chance finding or an artifact due to uncontrolled biases. We discuss
prerequisites for exact replication, issues of heterogeneity, advantages and
disadvantages of different methods of data synthesis across multiple studies,
frequentist vs. Bayesian inferences for replication, and challenges that arise
from multi-team collaborations. While consistent replication can greatly
improve the credibility of a genotype-phenotype association, it may not
eliminate spurious associations due to biases shared by many studies.
Conversely, lack of replication in well-powered follow-up studies usually
invalidates the initially proposed association, although occasionally it may
point to differences in linkage disequilibrium or effect modifiers across
studies.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/09-STS290 the Statistical
Science (http://www.imstat.org/sts/) by the Institute of Mathematical
Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
Pharmacological and non-pharmacological treatments for the Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome (NAS).
Neonatal abstinence syndrome is defined by signs and symptoms of withdrawal that infants develop after intrauterine maternal drug exposure. All infants with documented in utero opioid exposure, or a high pre-test probability of exposure should have monitoring with a standard assessment instrument such as a Finnegan Score. A Finnegan score of \u3e8 is suggestive of opioid exposure, even in the absence of declared use during pregnancy. At least half of infants in most locales can be treated without the use of pharmacologic means. For this reason, symptom scores will drive the decision for pharmacologic therapy. Nevertheless, all infants, regardless of initial manifestations, should be first be managed with non-pharmacologic approaches which in turn, should not be considered as the sole alternative to drug therapy, but rather, as the base upon which all patients are treated. Those who continue to have symptoms despite supportive care should be pharmacologically treated, which in the most severe cases, is life-saving
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