5,332 research outputs found
In situ characterization of two wireless transmission schemes for ingestible capsules
We report the experimental in situ characterization of 30-40 MHz and 868 MHz wireless transmission schemes for ingestible capsules, in porcine carcasses. This includes a detailed study of the performance of a magnetically coupled near-field very high-frequency (VHF) transmission scheme that requires only one eighth of the volume and one quarter of the power consumption of existing 868-MHz solutions. Our in situ measurements tested the performance of four different capsules specially constructed for this study (two variants of each transmission scheme), in two scenarios. One mimicked the performance of a body-worn receiving coil, while the other allowed the characterization of the direction-dependent signal attenuation due to losses in the surrounding tissue. We found that the magnetically coupled near-field VHF telemetry scheme presents an attractive option for future, miniturized ingestible capsules for medical applications
Variable-rate data sampling for low-power microsystems using modified Adams methods
A method for variable-rate data sampling is proposed for the purpose of low-power data acquisition in a small footprint microsystem. The procedure enables energy saving by utilizing dynamic power management techniques and is based on the Adams-Bashforth and Adams-Moulton multistep predictor-corrector methods for ordinary differential equations. Newton-Gregory backward difference interpolation formulae and past value substitution are used to facilitate sample rate changes. It is necessary to store only 2m+1 equispaced past values of t and the corresponding values of y, where y=g(t), and m is the number of steps in the Adams methods. For the purposes of demonstrating the technique, fourth-order methods are used, but it is possible to use higher orders to improve accuracy if required
Biocompatibility of a lab-on-a-pill sensor in artificial gastrointestinal environments
n this paper, we present a radiotelemetry sensor, designed as a lab-in-a-pill, which incorporates a two-channel microfabricated sensor platform for real-time measurements of temperature and pH. These two parameters have potential application for use in remote biological sensing (for example they may be used as markers that reflect the physiological environment or as indicators for disease, within the gastrointestinal tract). We have investigated the effects of biofouling on these sensors, by exploring their response time and sensitivity in a model in vitro gastrointestinal system. The artificial gastric and intestinal solutions used represent a model both for fasting, as well as for the ingestion of food and subsequent digestion to gastrointestinal chyme. The results showed a decrease in pH sensitivity after exposure of the sensors for 3 h. The response time also increased from an initial measurement time of 10 s in pure GI juice, to ca. 25 s following the ingestion of food and 80 s in simulated chyme. These in vitro results indicate that changes in viscosity in our model gastrointestinal system had a pronounced effect on the unmodified sensor
EXAMINING THE CAPACITY OF NEBRASKA RANGELANDS FOR CATTLE PRODUCTION AND EVALUATING DROUGHT MANAGEMENT STRATEGIES
This thesis has two chapters focusing on the grazing capacity of Nebraska rangelands, and drought management strategies. The first chapter conducts a gap analysis comparing forage supplied by perennial grasslands to the animal unit months (AUMs) required by the cattle. The purpose of this research was to quantify potential AUM supply (i.e., carrying capacity) of grazing lands dominated by perennial grasses on a regional basis in Nebraska to the AUM demand based on cattle inventories and standard production practices in each region of Nebraska. The results suggest that Nebraska is operating at 100% of potential carrying capacity. Harvest efficiency for Nebraska is higher then what is found in this research, due to the overestimation of forage production by using potential grazing acres and potential forage production.
The second chapter of this thesis evaluates drought management strategies for a sample ranch in the Nebraska Sandhills from 2001 to 2017. The drought management strategies evaluated included feeding hay (base case), early weaning the calves at 150 days old and selling them (strategy A), and three strategies which are combined with strategy A: PRF insurance during the growing season (strategy B), PRF insurance spread evenly throughout the year (strategy C) and feeding early weaned calves hay until 210 days old combined with LRP insurance (strategy D). The results of this research are that strategy C is the least risky and most profitable strategy on average over the 17 years. Even though strategy B is more profitable during drought years, the decision to purchase PRF insurance is required by November 15 of the prior year. You would not know if there is going to be a drought at that time. Results on using LRP insurance were inconclusive, as available LRP data was restricted to seven years total, and only one drought year. More extensive analysis and more data would be needed to decide if LRP should be combined with PRF insurance and/or hay feeding to form a drought management strategy.
Advisor: Jay Parson
Prevalence, incidence and etiology of hyponatremia in elderly patients with fragility fractures
Peer reviewedPublisher PD
A programmable microsystem using system-on-chip for real-time biotelemetry
A telemetry microsystem, including multiple sensors, integrated instrumentation and a wireless interface has been implemented. We have employed a methodology akin to that for System-on-Chip microelectronics to design an integrated circuit instrument containing several "intellectual property" blocks that will enable convenient reuse of modules in future projects. The present system was optimized for low-power and included mixed-signal sensor circuits, a programmable digital system, a feedback clock control loop and RF circuits integrated on a 5 mm × 5 mm silicon chip using a 0.6 μm, 3.3 V CMOS process. Undesirable signal coupling between circuit components has been investigated and current injection into sensitive instrumentation nodes was minimized by careful floor-planning. The chip, the sensors, a magnetic induction-based transmitter and two silver oxide cells were packaged into a 36 mm × 12 mm capsule format. A base station was built in order to retrieve the data from the microsystem in real-time. The base station was designed to be adaptive and timing tolerant since the microsystem design was simplified to reduce power consumption and size. The telemetry system was found to have a packet error rate of 10<sup>-</sup><sup>3</sup> using an asynchronous simplex link. Trials in animal carcasses were carried out to show that the transmitter was as effective as a conventional RF device whilst consuming less power
Crystallization of classical multi-component plasmas
We develop a method for calculating the equilibrium properties of the
liquid-solid phase transition in a classical, ideal, multi-component plasma.
Our method is a semi-analytic calculation that relies on extending the accurate
fitting formulae available for the one-, two-, and three-component plasmas to
the case of a plasma with an arbitrary number of components. We compare our
results to those of Horowitz, Berry, & Brown (Phys. Rev. E, 75, 066101, 2007),
who use a molecular dynamics simulation to study the chemical properties of a
17-species mixture relevant to the ocean-crust boundary of an accreting neutron
star, at the point where half the mixture has solidified. Given the same
initial composition as Horowitz et al., we are able to reproduce to good
accuracy both the liquid and solid compositions at the half-freezing point; we
find abundances for most species within 10% of the simulation values. Our
method allows the phase diagram of complex mixtures to be explored more
thoroughly than possible with numerical simulations. We briefly discuss the
implications for the nature of the liquid-solid boundary in accreting neutron
stars.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Nearby, Thermally Emitting Neutron Stars
We describe a sample of thermally emitting neutron stars discovered in the
ROSAT All-Sky Survey. We discuss the basic observational properties of these
objects and conclude that they are nearby, middle-aged pulsars with moderate
magnetic fields that we see through their cooling radiation. While these
objects are potentially very useful as probes of matter at very high densities
and magnetic fields, our lack of understanding of their surface emission limits
their current utility. We discuss this and other outstanding problems: the
spectral evolution of one sources and the relation of this population to the
overall pulsar population.Comment: 9 pages, one table, 3 figures. To appear in the proceedings of "40
Years of Pulsars: Millisecond Pulsars, Magnetars, and More", August 12-17,
2007, McGill University, Montreal, Canad
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