325 research outputs found

    Distribution of E/N and N sub e in a cross-flow electric discharge laser

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    The spatial distribution of the ratio of electric field to neutral gas density on a flowing gas, multiple pin-to-plane discharge was measured in a high-power, closed loop laser. The laser was operated at a pressure of 140 torr (1:7:20, CO2, N2, He) with typically a 100 meter/second velocity in the 5 x 8 x 135 centimeter discharge volume. E/N ratios ranged from 2.7 x 10 to the minus 16th power to 1.4 x 10 to the minus 16th power volts/cu cm along the discharge while the electron density ranged from 2.8 x 10 to the 10th power to 1.2 x 10 to the 10th power cm/3

    Comparison of computer-acquired performance data from several fixed spaced planar diodes

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    Comparison of performance data envelopes for thermionic diodes with various tungsten or rhenium emitters and niobium or molybdenum collector

    Computer acquired performance data from a chemically vapor-deposited-rhenium, niobium planar diode

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    Performance data from a chemically vapor-deposited-rhenium, niobium thermionic converter are presented. The planar converter has a guard-ringed collector and a nominal fixed spacing of 0.25 mm (10 mils). The data were obtained by using a computerized acquisition system and are available on request to one of the authors on microfiche as individual and composite parametric current, voltage curves. The parameters are the temperatures of the emitter T sub E collector T sub C, and cesium reservoir T sub R. The composite plots have constant T sub E and varying T sub C or T sub R, or both. Current, voltage envelopes having constant T sub E with and without fixed T sub C appear in the present report. The diode was tested at increments between 1600 and 2000 K for the emitter Hohlraum, 800 to 1100 K for the collector, and 540 and 650 K for the reservoir. A total of 312 current, voltage curves were obtained in the present performance evaluation. Current, voltage envelopes from three rhenium emitter converters evaluated in the present program are also given. The data are compared at commom emitter Hohlraum temperatures

    Faecal incontinence persisting after childbirth : a 12 year longitudinal study

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    © 2012 The Authors BJOG An International Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology © 2012 RCOG.Peer reviewedPostprin

    From meadows to milk to mucosa – adaptation of Streptococcus and Lactococcus species to their nutritional environments

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    Lactic acid bacteria (LAB) are indigenous to food-related habitats as well as associated with the mucosal surfaces of animals. The LAB family Streptococcaceae consists of the genera Lactococcus and Streptococcus. Members of the family include the industrially important species Lactococcus lactis, which has a long history safe use in the fermentative food industry, and the disease-causing streptococci Streptococcus pneumoniae and Streptococcus pyogenes. The central metabolic pathways of the Streptococcaceae family have been extensively studied because of their relevance in the industrial use of some species, as well as their influence on virulence of others. Recent developments in high-throughput proteomic and DNA-microarray techniques, in in vivo NMR studies, and importantly in whole-genome sequencing have resulted in new insights into the metabolism of the Streptococcaceae family. The development of cost-effective high-throughput sequencing has resulted in the publication of numerous whole-genome sequences of lactococcal and streptococcal species. Comparative genomic analysis of these closely related but environmentally diverse species provides insight into the evolution of this family of LAB and shows that the relatively small genomes of members of the Streptococcaceae family have been largely shaped by the nutritionally rich environments they inhabit.

    Parental cigarette smoking and childhood risks of hepatoblastoma: OSCC data

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    Historically health care data and especially health care cost data were not collected by disease. This is due on one side to a lack of readily available information on the diagnosis that led to the health care given and on the other side to the diversity of actors and organizations taking charge of patients. This results in a major difficulty of linking together incompatible and separate data. A few countries have tried to desagregate their global health cost data in a top-down approach. The limits of such undertakings appeared however quickly, not the least because of the difficulties in allocating the expenditures by sector and disease. Other approaches, probably more fecund in the long run, such as the one used by the SEER-Medicare database in the U.S. favour the linkage of individual patient clinical and cost data in a bottom-up approach. However one should not ignore the potential bias problems raised by the use of even large databases such as this one. A major advantage of clinical trials for costing purposes is that they include homogeneous groups of patients randomly allocated to several treatments for comparative purposes. They are therefore potentially better adapted for comparing new treatments with standard reference care

    The JSpecView Project: an Open Source Java viewer and converter for JCAMP-DX, and XML spectral data files

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    The JSpecView Open Source project began with the intention of providing both a teaching and research tool for the display of JCAMP-DX spectra. The development of the Java source code commenced under license in 2001 and was released as Open Source in March 2006. The scope was then broadened to take advantage of the XML initiative in Chemistry and routines to read and write AnIML and CMLspect documents were added

    Logical design of yield pillar base in longwall mining

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    Longwall is one of the most widely used methods in mining horizontal and gently dipping coal seams. It is a high production method that requires high initial capital investment. Such characteristics enhance the importance of initial design and hence design process. The entries on both sides of the face are integral parts of the method whose accurate design adds to increased profitability and safety of the mining operation. In this paper, two strain-softening models based on analytical fundamentals have been adopted. These models have been applied to a series of yield chain pillars in a coal seam with the depth of 700 meters. Results obtained from this analysis show that such models can be used in deep coal mining and they produce optimum design dimensions and hence they could be adopted as a valid base for logical design of chain pillars. Finally, sensitivity analysis of the results shows that the final design is highly sensitive to the pillar behavior after the coal peak strength. This further demonstrates the validity of the method as a useful tool in designing pillars in longwall deep coal mining
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