1,227 research outputs found
Camera trapping the European wildcat (Felis silvestris silvestris) in Sicily (Southern Italy): preliminary results
The wildcat is an elusive species that is threatened with extinction in many parts of its range. In Sicily it still lives in a wide range of habitats. During 2006, camera traps were used to investigate the distribution of the wildcat over a 660 ha wide area on the south-western slope of Mount Etna (NE Sicily). Twelve out of 18 trapping stations provided a total of 24 photographs. Nine different individuals were identified using morphological criteria. Our work confirms the suitability of camera trapping for monitoring elusive carnivores
The Screen representation of spin networks: 2D recurrence, eigenvalue equation for 6j symbols, geometric interpretation and Hamiltonian dynamics
This paper treats 6j symbols or their orthonormal forms as a function of two
variables spanning a square manifold which we call the "screen". We show that
this approach gives important and interesting insight. This two dimensional
perspective provides the most natural extension to exhibit the role of these
discrete functions as matrix elements that appear at the very foundation of the
modern theory of classical discrete orthogonal polynomials. Here we present 2D
and 1D recursion relations that are useful for the direct computation of the
orthonormal 6j, which we name U. We present a convention for the order of the
arguments of the 6j that is based on their classical and Regge symmetries, and
a detailed investigation of new geometrical aspects of the 6j symbols.
Specifically we compare the geometric recursion analysis of Schulten and Gordon
with the methods of this paper. The 1D recursion relation, written as a matrix
diagonalization problem, permits an interpretation as a discrete
Schr\"odinger-like equations and an asymptotic analysis illustrates
semiclassical and classical limits in terms of Hamiltonian evolution.Comment: 14 pages,9 figures, presented at ICCSA 2013 13th International
Conference on Computational Science and Applicatio
Hyperspectral imaging to measure apricot attributes during storage
The fruit industry needs rapid and non-destructive techniques to evaluate the quality of the products in the field and during the post-harvest phase. The soluble solids content (SSC), in terms of °Brix, and the flesh firmness (FF) are typical parameters used to measure fruit quality and maturity state. Hyperspectral imaging (HSI) is a powerful technique that combines image analysis and infrared spectroscopy. This study aimed to evaluate the potential of the application of the Vis/NIR push-broom hyperspectral imaging (400 to 1000 nm) to predict the firmness and the °Brix in apricots (180 samples) during storage (11 days). Partial least squares (PLS) and artificial neural networks (ANN) were used to develop predictive models. For the PLS, R2 values (test set) up to 0.85 (RMSEP=1.64 N) and 0.72 (RMSEP=0.51 °Brix) were obtained for the FF and SSC, respectively. Concerning the ANN, the best results in the test set were achieved for the FF (R2=0.85, RMSEP=1.50 N). The study showed the potential of the HSI technique as a non-destructive tool for measuring apricot quality even along the whole supply chain
A Resilience and Robustness Oriented Design of Base-Isolated Structures: The New Camerino University Research Center
This paper analyses the new Research Centre designed for the University of Camerino and entirely financed by the national Civil Protection Department (DPC), following the seismic events in Central Italy in 2016. The building has been designed to guarantee speed of execution as well as a high level of safety, especially regarding seismic actions. The structural solution was to create an isolated system with a steel braced super-structure with pinned joints and r.c. sub-structures able to adapt to the complex morphology of the area. As described in the first part of the paper, design choices have been made to achieve a high level of resilience and robustness, i.e., to limit damage to structural and non-structural components and equipment under moderate and design seismic actions and to avoid disproportionate consequences in the event of extreme actions, larger than the design ones. In the second part of the paper, specific risk analyses have been carried out to evaluate the real performance of the building under increasing intensity levels, with reference to both serviceability and ultimate conditions. To this purpose a site-specific hazard study was first conducted, then non-linear analyses were performed using a hazard-consistent set of records with return periods ranging from TR = 60 years to TR = 10000 years. The main demand parameters of both the isolation system and the super-structure were recorded and capacity values corresponding to different ultimate and damage limit conditions were defined. The results obtained in terms of demand hazard curves show that the building performances in terms of robustness and resilience are very high, confirming the efficacy of the strategies adopted in the design
Analysis of driving seat vibrations in different transfer conditions
The vibration transmitted through the seat of a four-wheel drive tractor, developing 179 kW, and equipped with front suspension axle and shock absorber for the implement, were measured and analysed according to the ISO standard. Several tests were carried out in different conditions considering: type of operation (transfer with and without mounted implement); type of track (conglomerate bituminous road, country lane); connected and disconnected suspension and/or shock absorber; and forward speeds. For the transfer on bituminous conglomerate road, it was observed that the suspension always reduces acceleration av, in both tests
without and with implement, for all the considered forward speeds. For the tests conduced on country lane, the front axle suspension involved a reduction of the acceleration, but it was less evident than on the road Results showed that the forward speed and the mass distribution were the most important factors on tractor behaviour influencing the driver comfort. The daily exposure time which could compromise the driver's health increased
from 2.5 to 8 h decreasing the speed from 3.06 to 2.22 m/s during transfer in country lane without implement. In the other condition the time exposure is approximately more than a working day
Inclusive Human Intention Prediction with Wearable Sensors: Machine Learning Techniques for the Reaching Task Use Case â€
Human intentions prediction is gaining importance with the increase of human-robot interaction challenges in several contexts, like industrial and clinical. This paper compares Linear Discriminant Analysis (LDA) and Random Forest (RF) performance in predicting the intention of moving towards a target during reaching movements, on ten subjects wearing four electromagnetic sensors. LDA and RF prediction accuracy is compared with respect to observation-sample dimension and noise presence, training and prediction time. Both algorithms achieved good accuracy, which improves as the sample dimension increases, although LDA presents better results for the current dataset
An amino acid mixture, enriched with Krebs cycle intermediates, enhances extracellular matrix gene expression in cultured human fibroblasts
: In the human body, the skin is one of the organs most affected by the aging process. Nutritional approaches aimed to counteract the age-induced decline of extracellular matrix (ECM) deposition could be a valuable tool to decrease the degenerative processes underlying skin aging. Here, we investigated the ability of a six-amino acid plus hyaluronic acid (6AAH) formulation enriched with tricarboxylic acid (TCA) intermediates to stimulate ECM gene expression. To this aim, human BJ fibroblasts were treated with 6AAH alone or plus succinate or malate alone or succinate plus malate (6AAHSM), and mRNA levels of several ECM markers were evaluated. 6AAHSM increased the expression of all the ECM markers significantly above 6AAH alone or plus only succinate or malate. Furthermore, in an in vitro oxidative damage model, 6AAHSM blunted the hydrogen peroxide-induced decline in ECM gene expression. Our data suggest that feeding cells with 6AAH enriched with TCAs could efficiently be employed as a non-pharmacological approach for counteracting skin aging
Aeroacoustics of sawtooth trailing-edge serrations under aerodynamic loading
The impact of aerodynamic loading on a serrated trailing edge is studied experimentally. Aerodynamic and acoustic measurements are conducted on a sawtooth-shaped trailing edge, retrofitted to a flat plate featuring a trailing-edge flap, and placed at incidence to the free-stream flow. The turbulent flow across the trailing edge is inspected by time-resolved three-dimensional velocity field measurements obtained from 4D-PIV, while the wall-pressure fluctuations are measured with surface-embedded microphones. Results discuss the relation between the velocity fluctuations over the serrations, the surface pressure fluctuations, and the far-field noise spectra. The aerodynamic analysis discusses the effect of counter-rotating vortex pairs, generated by the pressure imbalance across the edges of the serrations under loading. It is shown that the interaction of these vortices with the incoming turbulence affects the intensity of the wall-pressure spectrum at the outer rim of the serration surface. On the suction side, the intensity of the pressure fluctuations from the incoming boundary layer dominates over that induced by the vortex pairs. On the pressure side, instead, the velocity gradient prescribed by the vortex pairs produces a significant increase of the pressure fluctuations around the edges. The resulting spatial distribution of the wall-pressure fluctuations directly affects the far-field noise. Scattering predictions carried out with the wall-pressure fluctuations in the centre and root (on the suction side) exhibit good agreement with the measured noise in the low-frequency range, whereas using the surface pressure data at the tip of the serration (on the pressure side) yields a better prediction in the high-frequency range
Physical-Mechanical Modifications of Eggs for Food-Processing During Storage
Abstract Physical-mechanical properties of egg constituents and their modifications during storage and poststorage greatly influence the efficiency of food processing, such as the separation of white and yolk by mechanical shelling. Thick albumen height, Haugh unit, yolk index and vitelline membrane-yolk system strength of eggs from Hy-Line White and Lohmann Brown hens were analyzed during 7 mo of storage at 0°C performing 3 poststorage treatments: i) immediately after refrigeration, T1; ii) after a further 6 h at 18°C after refrigeration, T2; and iii) after a week at 18°C after refrigeration, T3. For all qualitative parameters considered, this last poststorage treatment appeared to be the factor that produced the highest decrements; with respect to the first poststorage treatment, a further week at 18°C after refrigeration can involve mean decreases of about 19, 14, 14, and 16% in thick albumen height, Haugh unit, yolk index, and vitelline membrane-yolk system strength (in terms of maximum force), respectively. During about 7 mo of storage at 0°C, the latter parameter decreases, on average, by 10%. Increasing the storage time, physical-mechanical behavior was sometimes divergent from the observed trends
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