1,277 research outputs found
Instruction manual for UTEP weld gas hydrogen detector
The instrument described in this manual was developed at the University of Texas at El Paso under contract from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration Marshall Space Flight Center. The instrument has been used to detect hydrogen in the shielding gas of Variable Polarity Plasma Arc (VPPA) welds at concentrations of less than 100 ppm. The instrument makes measurements in real time during the welding operation and provides the operator with an easily readable graphic display of the present level of hydrogen in the arc as well as the level of hydrogen over the past approximately five minutes. In this way the welder can not only tell if the present level of hydrogen is excessive, but can see what changes in weld parameters have done to the level of hydrogen. The welder can set the level of hydrogen that is considered critical and the instrument display will indicate when that level has been exceeded. All detection is from the torch side. All needed equipment is supplied by the developer except for an IBM PC compatible computer which must be supplied by the user. Source code is supplied in this manual so that the user can modify the control program as desired
Milky Way Kinematics: Measurements at the Subcentral Point of the Fourth Quadrant
We use atomic hydrogen (HI) data from the Southern Galactic Plane Survey to
study the kinematics of the fourth quadrant of the Milky Way. By measuring the
terminal velocity as a function of longitude throughout the fourth Galactic
quadrant we have derived the most densely sampled rotation curve available for
the Milky Way between 3 < R < 8 kpc. We determine a new joint rotation curve
fit for the first and fourth quadrants, which can be used for kinematic
distances interior to the Solar circle. From our data we place new limits on
the peak to peak variation of streaming motions in the fourth quadrant to be
~10 km/s. We show that the shape of the average HI profile beyond the terminal
velocity is consistent with gas of three velocity dispersions, a cold component
with km/s, a warmer component with km/s and a
fast component with km/s. Examining the widths with Galactic
radius we find that the narrowest two components show little variation with
radius and their small scale fluctuations track each other very well,
suggesting that they share the same cloud-to-cloud motions. The width of the
widest component is constant until R<4 kpc, where it increases sharply.Comment: 36 pages, 10 figures, accepted to ApJ. Full electronic version of
table 1 available at
ftp://ftp.atnf.csiro.au/pub/people/nmcclure/papers/velocity_tab1.te
Meta-analysis of death and myocardial infarction in the DEFINE-FLAIR and iFR-SWEDEHEART trials: a hypothesis generating note of caution
In patients with coronary heart disease, revascularization can improve symptoms and in certain high-risk subgroups may improve prognosis. Coronary angiography provides anatomical information and the physiological significance of a stenosis can be determined using fractional flow reserve (FFR). Decisions on the need for and mode of revascularization can be optimized using FFR, however this involves administering adenosine to induce hyperemia. Generally, this test is well tolerated, but in some healthcare systems adenosine is either not licensed, unavailable, or expensive, limiting the use of FFR-guided management
Public Libraries and the Internet 2006
Examines the capability of public libraries to provide and sustain public access Internet services and resources that meet community needs, including serving as the first choice for content, resources, services, and technology infrastructure
The heritage problem: is current policy on earthquake-prone heritage buildings too costly?
Earthquakes are a major hazard around the world (Bjornerud, 2016). A recent example is New Zealand, where three major earthquake events occurred within a six-year period. The 2010–11 earthquakes in Canterbury, centred close to the city of Christchurch, led to 185 fatalities, mainly due to two collapsed buildings and crumbling facades (Crampton and Meade, 2016). In addition, the rebuild of Christchurch after the earthquakes cost $40 billion (English, 2013), a large sum for a small country. Subsequent large earthquakes occurred in 2013 in Seddon (close to Wellington) and in 2016 in Kaiköura. 
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