1,017 research outputs found
Calculations of hot gas ingestion for a STOVL aircraft model
Hot gas ingestion problems for Short Take-Off, Vertical Landing (STOVL) aircraft are typically approached with empirical methods and experience. In this study, the hot gas environment around a STOVL aircraft was modeled as multiple jets in crossflow with inlet suction. The flow field was calculated with a Navier-Stokes, Reynolds-averaged, turbulent, 3D computational fluid dynamics code using a multigrid technique. A simple model of a STOVL aircraft with four choked jets at 1000 K was studied at various heights, headwind speeds, and thrust splay angles in a modest parametric study. Scientific visualization of the computed flow field shows a pair of vortices in front of the inlet. This and other qualitative aspects of the flow field agree well with experimental data
New approaches to investigating the function of mycelial networks
Fungi play a key role in ecosystem nutrient cycles by scavenging, concentrating, translocating and redistributing nitrogen. To quantify and predict fungal nitrogen redistribution, and assess the importance of the integrity of fungal networks in soil for ecosystem function, we need better understanding of the structures and processes involved. Until recently nitrogen translocation has been experimentally intractable owing to the lack of a suitable radioisotope tracer for nitrogen, and the impossibility of observing nitrogen translocation in real time under realistic conditions. We have developed an imaging method for recording the magnitude and direction of amino acid flow through the whole mycelial network as it captures, assimilates and channels its carbon and nitrogen resources, while growing in realistically heterogeneous soil microcosms. Computer analysis and modeling, based on these digitized video records, can reveal patterns in transport that suggest experimentally testable hypotheses. Experimental approaches that we are developing include genomics and stable isotope NMR to investigate where in the system nitrogen compounds are being acquired and stored, and where they are mobilized for transport or broken down. The results are elucidating the interplay between environment, metabolism, and the development and function of transport networks as mycelium forages in soil. The highly adapted and selected foraging networks of fungi may illuminate fundamental principles applicable to other supply networks
Gene induction during differentiation of human monocytes into dendritic cells: an integrated study at the RNA and protein levels
Changes in gene expression occurring during differentiation of human
monocytes into dendritic cells were studied at the RNA and protein levels.
These studies showed the induction of several gene classes corresponding to
various biological functions. These functions encompass antigen processing and
presentation, cytoskeleton, cell signalling and signal transduction, but also
an increase in mitochondrial function and in the protein synthesis machinery,
including some, but not all, chaperones. These changes put in perspective the
events occurring during this differentiation process. On a more technical
point, it appears that the studies carried out at the RNA and protein levels
are highly complementary.Comment: website publisher:
http://www.springerlink.com/content/ha0d2c351qhjhjdm
Selection for Field Survival Increases Freezing Tolerance in Festulolium
Festulolium (Festulolium braunii K.A.) is marginally adapted to the north central and northeastern USA and southern Canada. The purpose of this study was to evaluate four festulolium populations selected for field survival under harsh winter conditions for their freezing tolerance in controlled environments. Progenies of all four populations showed some improvement in freezing tolerance compared to their parents. Improvements were dependent on the temperature at which measurements were made and varied among germplasms. Improvements were manifested in both decreased plant mortality and decreased injury to surviving plants. Genetic variation for freezing tolerance appears to be a viable mechanism for enhancing field survival of festulolium
Participatory Development of a Forage Grass Cultivar
Perennial forage grasses exist in both nature and agriculture as a highly heterogeneous mixture of genotypes. Extreme environments, fluctuating environments, and severe managements can impose selection pressures that will result in loss of unadapted genotypes. Mortality of unadapted genotypes leads to dominance of fewer highly adapted genotypes which may be useful as superior germplasm in other similar environments
Fluid and Diffusion Limits for Bike Sharing Systems
Bike sharing systems have rapidly developed around the world, and they are
served as a promising strategy to improve urban traffic congestion and to
decrease polluting gas emissions. So far performance analysis of bike sharing
systems always exists many difficulties and challenges under some more general
factors. In this paper, a more general large-scale bike sharing system is
discussed by means of heavy traffic approximation of multiclass closed queueing
networks with non-exponential factors. Based on this, the fluid scaled
equations and the diffusion scaled equations are established by means of the
numbers of bikes both at the stations and on the roads, respectively.
Furthermore, the scaling processes for the numbers of bikes both at the
stations and on the roads are proved to converge in distribution to a
semimartingale reflecting Brownian motion (SRBM) in a -dimensional box,
and also the fluid and diffusion limit theorems are obtained. Furthermore,
performance analysis of the bike sharing system is provided. Thus the results
and methodology of this paper provide new highlight in the study of more
general large-scale bike sharing systems.Comment: 34 pages, 1 figure
Advection, diffusion and delivery over a network
Many biological, geophysical and technological systems involve the transport
of resource over a network. In this paper we present an algorithm for
calculating the exact concentration of resource at any point in space or time,
given that the resource in the network is lost or delivered out of the network
at a given rate, while being subject to advection and diffusion. We consider
the implications of advection, diffusion and delivery for simple models of
glucose delivery through a vascular network, and conclude that in certain
circumstances, increasing the volume of blood and the number of glucose
transporters can actually decrease the total rate of glucose delivery. We also
consider the case of empirically determined fungal networks, and analyze the
distribution of resource that emerges as such networks grow over time. Fungal
growth involves the expansion of fluid filled vessels, which necessarily
involves the movement of fluid. In three empirically determined fungal networks
we found that the minimum currents consistent with the observed growth would
effectively transport resource throughout the network over the time-scale of
growth. This suggests that in foraging fungi, the active transport mechanisms
observed in the growing tips may not be required for long range transport.Comment: 54 pages including appendix, 10 figure
Immune and acute phase markers in exercising adults
Many reports have documented the anti-inflammatory effects of regular exercise in adults. However clinicians and researchers remain uncertain on selecting specific biomarkers that are useful for predicting or monitoring chronic inflammatory states and/or disease. Clearer identification of markers (or clusters of markers) in physically active individuals that vary from established references ranges will indicate the extent of the purported anti-inflammatory effect of regular exercise.
Physically active adults were recruited from the community to participate in a prospective study comparing self-reported health outcomes and exercise activity across 150 days of dietary intervention. Of the 450 participants recruited, 64 males (mean age 37.4 y, mean BMI = 25.3) and 59 females (mean age 40.4y, mean BMI= 23.4) agreed to supply a baseline blood sample taken at rest. A total of 187 analytes were measured by standard techniques on these pre-intervention samples including 11 immune markers (cell-types and immunoglobulins) and 11 acute phase reactants (WCC, albumin, haptoglobin, CRP, C3, C4, IGF-1, transferrin, iron, ferritin & ceruloplasmin). We compared baseline values with relevent hospital reference range (RR) values where these are assumed to be more reflective of a much less physically-active community population.
A total of 5 out of 11 of the acute phase reactants (Hapt, C3, Fer, Trf (for females), and ceruloplasmin (for males)) had \u3e10% of values below the low ‘cut-off end’ of the relevant RR. Three immune cell-types (CD19, CD8 & CD16/56) had \u3e10% of values below the ‘low-cut-off end’ of the relevant RR. In contrast 25% of subjects had an IgE value that exceeded the RR. Collectively our results support the notion that regular exercise or physical activity exerts an anti-inflammatory affect. The results suggest putative roles for a host of exercise associated adaptive mechanisms beyond the generally accepted role for IL-6 derived from skeletal muscle and\or visceral fat.
We conclude that across a host of measures, exercising adults have values for immune and acute phase reactants largely within, but at the non-inflammatory ‘end’ of clinical reference ranges
Modeling 5 Years of Subglacial Lake Activity in the MacAyeal Ice Stream (Antarctica) Catchment Through Assimilation of ICESat Laser Altimetry
Subglacial lakes beneath Antarctica’s fast-moving ice streams are known to undergo ~1km3 volume changes on annual timescales. Focusing on the MacAyeal Ice Stream (MacIS) lake system, we create a simple model for the response of subglacial water distribution to lake discharge events through assimilation of lake volume changes estimated from Ice, Cloud and land Elevation Satellite (ICESat) laser altimetry. We construct a steady-state water transport model in which known subglacial lakes are treated as either sinks or sources depending on the ICESat-derived filling or drainingrates. The modeled volume change rates of five large subglacial lakes in the downstream portion of MacIS are shown to be consistent with observed filling rates if the dynamics of all upstream lakes are considered. However, the variable filling rate of the northernmost lake suggests the presence of an undetected lake of similar size upstream. Overall, we show that, for this fast-flowing ice stream, most subglacial lakes receive \u3e90% of their water from distant distributed sources throughout the catchment, and we confirm that water is transported from regions of net basal melt to regions of net basal freezing. Our study provides a geophysically based means of validating subglacial water models in Antarctica and is a potential way to parameterize subglacial lake discharge events in large-scale ice-sheet models where adequate data are available
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