16 research outputs found

    An experimental study of the near wake of a two-dimensional hypersonic blunt body with mass addition

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    An experimental investigation of the steady, laminar near-wake flow field of a two-dimensional, adiabatic, circular cylinder with surface mass transfer has been made at a free-stream Mach number of 6.0. The pressure and mass-concentration fields associated with the transfer of argon, nitrogen or helium into the near wake were studied for mass transfer from the forward stagnation region, and from the base. For sufficiently low mass transfer rates from the base, for which a recirculating zone exists, the entire near-wake flow field correlates with the momentum flux, not the mass flux, of the injectant, and the mass-concentration field is determined by counter-current diffusion into the reversed flow. For mass addition from the forward stagnation region, the pressure field is undisturbed and the mass-concentration field is nearly uniform in the region of reversed flow. The axial decay of argon mass concentration in the intermediate wake, downstream of the neck, is explained with the aid of an integral solution in the incompressible plane, from which the location of the virtual origin for the asymptotic far-wake solution has been derived as one result

    Associations between Subjective Sleep Quality and Brain Volume in Gulf War Veterans

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    Study objectivesTo investigate whether subjective sleep quality is associated with brain volume independent of comorbid psychiatric conditions.DesignCross-sectional.SettingDepartment of Veterans Affairs (VA) Medical Center.ParticipantsOne hundred forty-four Gulf War Veterans (mean age 45 years; range: 31-70 years; 14% female).InterventionsNone.Measurements and resultsTotal cortical, lobar gray matter, and hippocampal volumes were quantified from 1.5 Tesla magnetic resonance images using Freesurfer version 4.5. Subjective sleep quality was assessed with the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI). Multiple linear regressions were used to determine the association of sleep quality with total and regional brain volumes. The global PSQI score was positively correlated with lifetime and current posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and current depressive symptoms (P < 0.001) and was higher in veterans with Gulf War Illness, trauma exposure, and those using psychotropic medication (P ≤ 0.03). After adjusting for these comorbid variables, age, intracranial volume, and multiple comparisons, global PSQI was inversely associated with total cortical and frontal gray matter volume (adjusted P ≤ 0.03). Within the frontal lobe, total PSQI was inversely associated with the superior and middle frontal, orbitofrontal, anterior cingulate, and frontal pole volumes (adjusted P ≤ 0.02). Examination of the 3-factor structure of the PSQI revealed that the associations were driven by perceived sleep quality.ConclusionsPoorer subjective sleep quality was associated with reduced total cortical and regional frontal lobe volumes independent of comorbid psychiatric conditions. Future work will be needed to examine if effective treatment of disturbed sleep leads to improved structural and functional integrity of the frontal lobes
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