527 research outputs found

    C-5M Super Galaxy Utilization with Joint Precision Airdrop System

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    The purpose of this research was to determine the viability of utilizing the Joint Precision Airdrop System with the C-5M Super Galaxy weapon system. Specifically, this thesis sought research the ability of the C-5M to use the Joint Precision Airdrop System and to answer four main research questions addressing a cost benefit analysis between the C-5M Super Galaxy and the C-17 Globemaster III. The research questions were answered through a comprehensive literature review and the creation of a model that determined the cost associated with specific range versus payload mission types. The payloads used ranged from 25 short tons, to 400 short tons, with mission ranges looked at between 1000 and 7000 miles. The results from the various model runs were compared to determine which airframe, C-5M or C-17, was less expensive to operate in the mission range

    Local pore size correlations determine flow distributions in porous media

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    The relationship between the microstructure of a porous medium and the observed flow distribution is still a puzzle. We resolve it with an analytical model, where the local correlations between adjacent pores, which determine the distribution of flows propagated from one pore downstream, predict the flow distribution. Numerical simulations of a two-dimensional porous medium verify the model and clearly show the transition of flow distributions from δ\delta-function-like via Gaussians to exponential with increasing disorder. Comparison to experimental data further verifies our numerical approach.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, supplemental materia

    Skating on a Film of Air: Drops Impacting on a Surface

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    Drops impacting on a surface are ubiquitous in our everyday experience. This impact is understood within a commonly accepted hydrodynamic picture: it is initiated by a rapid shock and a subsequent ejection of a sheet leading to beautiful splashing patterns. However, this picture ignores the essential role of the air that is trapped between the impacting drop and the surface. Here we describe a new imaging modality that is sensitive to the behavior right at the surface. We show that a very thin film of air, only a few tens of nanometers thick, remains trapped between the falling drop and the surface as the drop spreads. The thin film of air serves to lubricate the drop enabling the fluid to skate on the air film laterally outward at surprisingly high velocities, consistent with theoretical predictions. Eventually this thin film of air must break down as the fluid wets the surface. We suggest that this occurs in a spinodal-like fashion, and causes a very rapid spreading of a wetting front outwards; simultaneously the wetting fluid spreads inward much more slowly, trapping a bubble of air within the drop. Our results show that the dynamics of impacting drops are much more complex than previously thought and exhibit a rich array of unexpected phenomena that require rethinking classical paradigms.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure

    Environmental Stress and Adaptational Responses: Consequences for Human Health Outcomes

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    With the dramatic pace of modernization of the world’s population, human adaptation as a theoretical construct and paradigm will likely become a focal scientific issue involving scientists from many disciplinary areas during the 21st Century. Macro and micro environments are in rapid flux and human populations are exposed to rapid change. The concept of adaptation, at least in the field of biological anthropology and human biology, will likely remain tied to evolutionary processes and concepts of selection and fitness. In this paper, we discuss the theoretical constructs of adaptation and adaptability and select three current examples from our ongoing research that involve studies of adaptation and evolutionary processes in modernizing populations in different locations worldwide

    Comparison of Adaptive Optics Scanning Light Ophthalmoscopic Fluorescein Angiography and Offset Pinhole Imaging

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    Recent advances to the adaptive optics scanning light ophthalmoscope (AOSLO) have enabled finer in vivo assessment of the human retinal microvasculature. AOSLO confocal reflectance imaging has been coupled with oral fluorescein angiography (FA), enabling simultaneous acquisition of structural and perfusion images. AOSLO offset pinhole (OP) imaging combined with motion contrast post-processing techniques, are able to create a similar set of structural and perfusion images without the use of exogenous contrast agent. In this study, we evaluate the similarities and differences of the structural and perfusion images obtained by either method, in healthy control subjects and in patients with retinal vasculopathy including hypertensive retinopathy, diabetic retinopathy, and retinal vein occlusion. Our results show that AOSLO OP motion contrast provides perfusion maps comparable to those obtained with AOSLO FA, while AOSLO OP reflectance images provide additional information such as vessel wall fine structure not as readily visible in AOSLO confocal reflectance images. AOSLO OP offers a non-invasive alternative to AOSLO FA without the need for any exogenous contrast agent
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