3,953 research outputs found
The Brin-Thompson groups sV are of type F_\infty
We prove that the Brin-Thompson groups sV, also called higher dimensional
Thompson's groups, are of type F_\infty for all natural numbers s. This result
was previously shown for s up to 3, by considering the action of sV on a
naturally associated space. Our key step is to retract this space to a subspace
sX which is easier to analyze.Comment: Final version, in Pacific J. Math., 10 pages, 4 figure
Visualizing a Woman\u27s Journey Through the Old Testament Prophetic Books: Improving Female Study Methods Through Visual Supplementation
Graduate
Three Minute Thesi
Dendritic Cell Vaccination, Immune Regulation, and Clinical Outcomes in Ovarian Cancer
Clinical optimism for dendritic cell vaccination against ovarian cancer has been tempered by the knowledge that tumors avail themselves of multiple mechanisms of immune evasion, thus blunting the efficacy of therapeutic vaccination. Mechanisms of immune suppression include infiltration by regulatory T cells (Treg) and myeloid suppressor cell populations, expression of co-inhibitory receptors, and expression of indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO). Expression of both B7-H1 and IDO are associated with differentiation and recruitment of Treg, and clinical studies have shown that each of these mechanisms correlates independently with increased morbidity and mortality in ovarian cancer patients. In sharp contrast, recent studies have indicated that Th17 cell infiltration in ovarian cancer correlates with improved patient outcomes and prolonged overall survival. Given that IDO plays a pivotal role in the balance between Treg and Th17 immunity, elucidation of the mechanisms that regulate IDO activity and immune suppression may lead to novel adjuvants to boost the clinical efficacy of dendritic cell vaccination against ovarian cancer and other malignancies
Optimal energy management for hybrid electric aircraft
A convex formulation is proposed for optimal energy management in aircraft
with hybrid propulsion systems consisting of gas turbine and electric motor
components. By combining a point-mass aircraft dynamical model with models of
electrical and mechanical powertrain losses, the fuel consumed over a planned
future flight path is minimised subject to constraints on the battery, electric
motor and gas turbine. The resulting optimisation problem is used to define a
predictive energy management control law that takes into account the variation
in aircraft mass during flight. A simulation study based on a representative
100-seat aircraft with a prototype parallel hybrid electric propulsion system
is used to investigate the properties of the controller. We show that an
optimisation-based control strategy can provide significant fuel savings over
heuristic energy management strategies in this context
Robust trajectory optimisation for transitions of tiltwing VTOL aircraft
We propose a method to generate robust and optimal trajectories for the transition of a tiltwing Vertical Take-Off and Landing (VTOL) aircraft leveraging concepts from convex optimisation, tube-based nonlinear Model Predictive Control (MPC) and Difference of Convex (DC) functions decomposition. The approach relies on computing DC decompositions of dynamic models in order to exploit convexity properties and develop a tractable robust optimisation that solves a sequence of convex programs converging to a local optimum of the trajectory generation problem. The algorithm developed is applied to an Urban Air Mobility case study. The resulting solutions are robust to approximation errors in dynamic models and provide safe trajectories for aggressive transition manoeuvres at constant altitude
Contrasting local and long-range-transported warm ice-nucleating particles during an atmospheric river in coastal California, USA
Ice-nucleating particles (INPs) have been found to influence the amount, phase and efficiency of precipitation from winter storms, including atmospheric rivers.Warm INPs, those that initiate freezing at temperatures warmer than -10°C, are thought to be particularly impactful because they can create primary ice in mixed-phase clouds, enhancing precipitation efficiency. The dominant sources of warm INPs during atmospheric rivers, the role of meteorology in modulating transport and injection of warm INPs into atmospheric river clouds, and the impact of warm INPs on mixed-phase cloud properties are not well-understood. In this case study, time-resolved precipitation samples were collected during an atmospheric river in northern California, USA, during winter 2016. Precipitation samples were collected at two sites, one coastal and one inland, which are separated by about 35 km. The sites are sufficiently close that air mass sources during this storm were almost identical, but the inland site was exposed to terrestrial sources of warm INPs while the coastal site was not. Warm INPs were more numerous in precipitation at the inland site by an order of magnitude. Using FLEXPART (FLEXible PARTicle dispersion model) dispersion modeling and radar-derived cloud vertical structure, we detected influence from terrestrial INP sources at the inland site but did not find clear evidence of marine warm INPs at either site.We episodically detected warm INPs from long-range-transported sources at both sites. By extending the FLEXPART modeling using a meteorological reanalysis, we demonstrate that long-range-transported warm INPs were observed only when the upper tropospheric jet provided transport to cloud tops. Using radar-derived hydrometeor classifications, we demonstrate that hydrometeors over the terrestrially influenced inland site were more likely to be in the ice phase for cloud temperatures between 0 and -10°C. We thus conclude that terrestrial and long-rangetransported aerosol were important sources of warm INPs during this atmospheric river. Meteorological details such as transport mechanism and cloud structure were important in determining (i) warm INP source and injection temperature and (ii) ultimately the impact of warm INPs on mixed-phase cloud properties
The M81 Group Dwarf Irregular Galaxy DDO 165. I. High Velocity Neutral Gas in a Post-Starburst System
We present new multi-configuration VLA HI spectral line observations of the
M81 group dIrr post-starburst galaxy DDO 165. The HI morphology is complex,
with multiple column density peaks surrounding a large region of very low HI
surface density that is offset from the center of the stellar distribution. The
bulk of the neutral gas is associated with the southern section of the galaxy;
a secondary peak in the north contains ~15% of the total HI mass. These
components appear to be kinematically distinct, suggesting that either tidal
processes or large-scale blowout have recently shaped the ISM of DDO 165. Using
spatially-resolved position-velocity maps, we find multiple localized
high-velocity gas features. Cross-correlating with radius-velocity analyses, we
identify eight shell/hole structures in the ISM with a range of sizes (~400-900
pc) and expansion velocities (~7-11 km/s). These structures are compared with
narrow- and broad-band imaging from KPNO and HST. Using the latter data, recent
works have shown that DDO 165's previous "burst" phase was extended temporally
(>1 Gyr). We thus interpret the high-velocity gas features, HI holes, and
kinematically distinct components of the galaxy in the context of the immediate
effects of "feedback" from recent star formation. In addition to creating HI
holes and shells, extended star formation events are capable of creating
localized high velocity motion of the surrounding interstellar material. A
companion paper connects the energetics from the HI and HST data.Comment: The Astrophysical Journal, in press. Full-resolution version
available on request from the first autho
Hells Canyon National Recreation Area Case Study
30, A-8, B-5 p. : ill., maphttps://scholar.law.colorado.edu/books_reports_studies/1020/thumbnail.jp
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