704 research outputs found
Illusions of gunk
The possibility of gunk has been used to argue against mereological nihilism. This paper explores two responses on the part of the microphysical mereological nihilist: (1) the contingency defence, which maintains that nihilism is true of the actual world; but that at other worlds, composition occurs; (2) the impossibility defence, which maintains that nihilism is necessary true, and so gunk worlds are impossible. The former is argued to be ultimately unstable; the latter faces the explanatorily burden of explaining the illusion that gunk is possible. It is argued that we can discharge this burden by focussing on the contingency of the microphysicalist aspect of microphysical mereological nihilism. The upshot is that gunk-based arguments against microphysical mereological nihilism can be resisted
The design and implementation of an endoscopic enabled mouth gag
The purpose of this project was to design and produce a working prototype of a device that could be used in upper airway Otolaryngology surgeries to increase nasopharynx visualization. The nasopharynx is the anatomical region of the airway that is behind the nose and above the palate, and therefore very difficult for surgeons to access and properly visualize. Traditional methods include the blind removal of diseased tissue or the use of a small, hand-supported, dental-style mirror for visualization during tissue removal with a cutting tool. The blind method is severely limiting for the surgeon. The use of the mirror has advantages over the blind method, but has a restricted field of view and limits the surgeon's ability to visualize the procedure as well. The proposed endoscopic enabled mouth gag (EEMG) device attaches to the traditional mouth gag and allows for the fixation of a rigid endoscope that can be positioned as needed and locked into place. The improved field of view of the endoscope over the mirror allows for superior visualization for the surgeon. The device was designed using Solidworks, produced using Polyjet 3D printing technology, and tested in conjunction with a Crowe-Davis mouth gag, rigid endoscope and anatomical mannequin for functionality and ease of use
The effects of sodium bicarbonate supplementation at individual time-to-peak blood bicarbonate on 4-km cycling time trial performance in the heat.
The purpose of this study was to explore the effect of individualised sodium bicarbonate (NaHCO ) supplementation according to a pre-established individual time-to-peak (TTP) blood bicarbonate (HCO ) on 4-km cycling time trial (TT) performance in the heat. Eleven recreationally trained male cyclists (age: 28 ± 6 years, height: 180 ± 6 cm, body mass: 80.5 ± 8.4 kg) volunteered for this study in a randomised, crossover, triple-blind, placebo-controlled design. An initial visit was conducted to determine TTP HCO following 0.2 g.kg body mass (BM) NaHCO ingestion. Subsequently, on three separate occasions, participants completed a 4-km cycling TT in the heat (30 degrees centigrade; °C) (relative humidity ∼40%) following ingestion of either NaHCO (0.2 g.kg body mass), a sodium chloride placebo (0.2 g.kg BM; PLA) or no supplementation (control; CON) at the predetermined individual TTP HCO . Absolute peak [HCO ] prior to the 4-km cycling TT's was elevated for NaHCO compared to PLA (+2.8 mmol.l ;  = 0.002;  = 2.2) and CON (+2.5 mmol.l ;  < 0.001;  = 2.1). Completion time following NaHCO was 5.6 ± 3.2 s faster than PLA (1.6%; CI: 2.8, 8.3;  = 0.001;  = 0.2) and 4.7 ± 2.8 s faster than CON (1.3%; CI: 2.3, 7.1;  = 0.001;  = 0.2). These results demonstrate that NaHCO ingestion at a pre-established individual TTP HCO improves 4-km cycling TT performance in the heat, likely through enhancing buffering capacity
Financial Assessment of CO2 Capture and Storage with Electricity Trading in the U.S.: Role of Interim Storage and Enhanced Oil Recovery
AbstractThis paper investigates the economic attractiveness of exporting coal-generated electricity from the State of Wyoming to the State of California while investing in large-scale CO2 capture and sequestration to meet California's strict environmental regulations. The project involves partially capturing CO2 from coal power plants, storing it temporarily underground using CO2 Interim Storage, and ultimately using it for Enhanced Oil Recovery. A detailed financial assessment is performed in view of current electricity prices and federal and state regulations in the U.S., especially those related to CCS tax credits. The results show that the project is profitable under current regulations and technical assumptions, and it can be a good opportunity to drive large-scale deployment of CCS, along with the development of EOR activities and the deployment of the newly proposed CO2 Interim Storage technology
The Effects of a Nutrition Education Intervention on Sports Nutrition Knowledge during a Competitive Season in Highly Trained Adolescent Swimmers
The aim of this study was to evaluate the effects of a seven-week nutrition education intervention on the sports nutrition knowledge (SNK) of highly trained UK adolescent swimmers. Fifteen national and international adolescent swimmers (males = 5; females = 10, 15.5 ± 1.1 years, 170.2 ± 7.5 cm, 60.3 ± 5.7 kg) participated in the study during seven consecutive weeks of the competitive swimming season. The participants received 30 min of nutrition education once per week in a classroom-based setting after they had completed their regular swim training. An undergraduate sports nutrition student delivered all nutrition education sessions and SNK questionnaires were administered to the participants pre- and post-intervention. The mean total SNK score improved by 8.3% (SD = 8.4%, 95% CI = 4.1–12.6; p = 0.006; ES = 1.0) following the nutrition education sessions. On an individual basis, ten swimmers significantly improved their total SNK score, whereas four swimmers did not improve, and one swimmer performed significantly worse after the intervention. Moreover, the swimmers’ knowledge of hydration improved by 22.2% (SD = 20.6%, 95% CI = 11.8–32.6, p = 0.004, ES = 1.1) over the seven-week timeframe, which was the only nutrition topic to have a significantly increased knowledge score. The current study therefore suggests that a nutrition education intervention can positively influence the SNK of highly trained adolescent swimmers
Analyzing the Prophylactic and Therapeutic Role of Inoculation to Facilitate Resistance to Conspiracy Theory Beliefs
Conspiracy theories pose a variety of social and psychological consequences for individuals and society, and research suggests that around half of the U.S. population believes at least one. A two-phase inoculation experiment was conducted. Inoculated participants reported more negative general attitudes toward conspiracy theories and lower Phase II generic conspiracist beliefs, which are both indicators of harm-reduction and the beneficial healing impacts of therapeutic inoculation. The addition of therapeutic inoculation as a harm-reduction or healing technique in practitioners’ stakeholder response toolkit is a valuable contribution to both theory and practice
The Cosmic Crystallinity Conundrum: Clues from IRAS 17495-2534
Since their discovery, cosmic crystalline silicates have presented several
challenges to understanding dust formation and evolution. The mid-infrared
spectrum of IRAS 174952534, a highly obscured oxygen-rich asymptotic giant
branch (AGB) star, is the only source observed to date which exhibits a clear
crystalline silicate absorption feature. This provides an unprecedented
opportunity to test competing hypotheses for dust formation. Observed spectral
features suggest that both amorphous and crystalline dust is dominated by
forsterite (Mg\_2 SiO\_4) rather than enstatite (MgSiO\_3) or other silicate
compositions. We confirm that high mass-loss rates should produce more
crystalline material, and show why this should be dominated by forsterite. The
presence of Mg\_2 SiO\_4 glass suggests that another factor (possibly C/O) is
critical in determining astromineralogy. Correlation between crystallinity,
mass-loss rate and initial stellar mass suggests that only the most massive AGB
stars contribute significant quantities of crystalline material to the
interstellar medium, resolving the conundrum of its low crystallinity.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figure
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