3,026 research outputs found

    A global data set of soil particle size properties

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    A standardized global data set of soil horizon thicknesses and textures (particle size distributions) was compiled. This data set will be used by the improved ground hydrology parameterization designed for the Goddard Institute for Space Studies General Circulation Model (GISS GCM) Model 3. The data set specifies the top and bottom depths and the percent abundance of sand, silt, and clay of individual soil horizons in each of the 106 soil types cataloged for nine continental divisions. When combined with the World Soil Data File, the result is a global data set of variations in physical properties throughout the soil profile. These properties are important in the determination of water storage in individual soil horizons and exchange of water with the lower atmosphere. The incorporation of this data set into the GISS GCM should improve model performance by including more realistic variability in land-surface properties

    Rheology and Contact Lifetime Distribution in Dense Granular Flows

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    We study the rheology and distribution of interparticle contact lifetimes for gravity-driven, dense granular flows of non-cohesive particles down an inclined plane using large-scale, three dimensional, granular dynamics simulations. Rather than observing a large number of long-lived contacts as might be expected for dense flows, brief binary collisions predominate. In the hard particle limit, the rheology conforms to Bagnold scaling, where the shear stress is quadratic in the strain rate. As the particles are made softer, however, we find significant deviations from Bagnold rheology; the material flows more like a viscous fluid. We attribute this change in the collective rheology of the material to subtle changes in the contact lifetime distribution involving the increasing lifetime and number of the long-lived contacts in the softer particle systems.Comment: 4 page

    Papillary muscle traction in mitral valve prolapse: Quantitation by two-dimensional echocardiography

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    Previous angiographic observations in patients with mitral valve prolapse have suggested that superior leaflet displacement results in abnormal superior tension on the papillary muscle tips that causes their superior traction or displacement. It has further been postulated that such tension can potentially affect the mechanical and electrophysiologic function of the left ventricle. The purpose of this study was to confirm and quantitate this phenomenon noninvasively by using two-dimensional echocardiography to determine whether superior displacement of the papillary muscle tips occurs and its relation to the degree of mitral leaflet displacement.Directed echocardiographic examination of the papillary muscles and mitral anulus was carried out in a series of patients with classic mitral valve prolapse and results were compared with those in a group of normal control subjects. Distance from the anulus to the papillary muscle tip was measured both in early and at peak ventricular systole. In normal subjects, this distance did not change significantly through systole, whereas in the patient group it decreased, corresponding to a superior displacement of the papillary muscle tips toward the anulus in systole (8.5 ± 2.6 vs. 0.8 ± 0.7 mm; p < 0.0001). This superior papillary muscle motion paralleled the superior displacement of the leaflets in individual patients (y = l.0x + 0.8; r = 0.93) and followed a similar time course. The systolic motion of the mitral anulus toward the apex, assessed with respect to a fixed external reference, was not significantly different in the patients and control groups (14.3 ± 4 vs. 15.5 ± 4.4 mm; p = 0.4) and therefore could not explain the superior papillary muscle tip motion relative to the anulus in the patients with mitral valve prolapse.These results demonstrate that normal mechanisms maintain a relatively constant distance between the papillary muscle tips and the mitral anulus during systole. In classic mitral valve prolapse, superior leaflet displacement is paralleled by superior displacement of the papillary muscles that is consistent with superiorly directed forces causing their traction. Two-dimensional echocardiography can therefore be used to measure these relations and test hypotheses as to their clinical correlates in patients with mitral valve prolapse

    Encoding processes and sex-role preferences

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    Seven- and 10-year-old children were tested on memory and sex-role preference tasks. The memory task was the Wickens release from proactive inhibition paradigm in which short-term recall of words is tested on successive trials. On Trials 1-4, words were selected from one of two categories, either words with masculine or feminine connotations. On Trial 5, words were drawn from the second category. Sex-role preference was assessed by asking the child to select his favorite pictures from an array that included masculine and feminine items. Recall by boys at both ages increased following a shift between words with masculine or feminine connotations, suggesting that this dimension of a word's meaning was encoded in memory. Recall by girls who selected a feminine item as their favorite on the sex-role preference task increased following a category shift; recall by girls who chose a masculine item did not increase. These results are discussed in relation to previous research on the attributes of encoding in children's memory.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/21798/1/0000197.pd

    901-110 Three-Dimensional Ultrasound Can Accurately Reconstruct Intravascular Thrombi: In Vitro Validation

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    High-frequency ultrasound can potentially display gross morphologic changes during thrombus formation and lysis. Current intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) devices, however, provide only 2-dimensional cross-sectional images with limited overall appreciation of thrombus size and 3-dimensional (3D) configuration. The purpose of this study was to explore the ability of 3D reconstruction of serial ultrasound images to provide a quantitative assessment of intravascular thrombi. We therefore imaged 11 arterial thrombi of varying shape and volume (10 to 116mm3). To avoid thrombus disruption, we used an epivascular approach (also suitable for transvenous imaging) with a 20MHz IVUS catheter withdrawn at 1mm/sec. A 3D voxel image intensity data set was reconstructed, and thrombus volume was semiautomatically extracted based on its intensity. Calculated volume was compared with directly measured values by volume displacement in a miniature cylinder.Results3D reconstruction provided previously unobtainable longitudinal and 3D views that improved spatial appreciation of thrombus size, shape and channel formation. Calculated thrombus volumes agreed well with actual volumes: y=0.92x+2.4, r=0.98, SEE=5mm3, mean error = 1±5mm3(ns vs 0).Conclusion3D reconstruction can improve spatial appreciation of the shape of thrombi and accurately measure their volumes. This approach, suitable for epivascular or transvenous imaging, could potentially be used to study thrombus formation and lysis in research and clinical studies
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