16,373 research outputs found
Preschool Children in Childcare Settings Do Not Consume a Healthy Diet Despite Menus that Meet Recommended Dietary Standards
Purpose/Objective: To compare preschool lunch menus that meet dietary guidelines to what is actually served and consumed.Methods: Fifty-two preschool children (mean±SD, age 3y and 10m ± 8m) from a university early childhood center participated in the 10-week study. Dietary intake was measured by a registered dietitian using direct observation for pre and post meal analysis. Energy and nutrient content was completed using Food Processor Nutrition Analysis by ESHA.Results: There was a significant (p<0.05) difference for total kilocalories (kcals) between what was on the menu (448 ± 130) and to what was served to the children (523 ± 148) compared to what was consumed (361 ± 178) by the children.There was a significant (p<0.05) difference for grams of fat between what food was listed on the menu (16.0 ± 8.7g), the food served to the children (21.2 ± 9.7g), and the food consumed (14.5 ± 10.0g) by the children. There was a significant (p<0.05) difference for grams of carbohydrate between what food was listed on the menu (55.3 ± 18.9g) and the food served to the children (56.5 ± 20.5g) compared to what was consumed (38.5 ± 21.7g) by the children. Children consumed only 46.9% of the vegetables, 88.9% of dairy products, 82.0% of fruits, 81.8% of grains and 72.8% of meats served, and 77.9% of all fats/sweets served to them at lunch.Conclusion: The results indicated that menus that meet recommended dietary standards do not translate into what children are served or consumed, in particular, for vegetables
Gauge Theoretic Invariants of, Dehn Surgeries on Knots
New methods for computing a variety of gauge theoretic invariants for
homology 3-spheres are developed. These invariants include the Chern-Simons
invariants, the spectral flow of the odd signature operator, and the rho
invariants of irreducible SU(2) representations. These quantities are
calculated for flat SU(2) connections on homology 3-spheres obtained by 1/k
Dehn surgery on (2,q) torus knots. The methods are then applied to compute the
SU(3) gauge theoretic Casson invariant (introduced in [H U Boden and C M
Herald, The SU(3) Casson invariant for integral homology 3--spheres, J. Diff.
Geom. 50 (1998) 147-206]) for Dehn surgeries on (2,q) torus knots for q=3,5,7
and 9.Comment: Version 3: minor corrections from version 2. Published by Geometry
and Topology at http://www.maths.warwick.ac.uk/gt/GTVol5/paper6.abs.htm
Ion energy measurements on MAST using a midplane RFEA
Ion energy measurements have been made in the scrape off layer of the Mega
Amp Spherical Tokamak (MAST) using a midplane retarding field energy analyser
(RFEA) in H-mode plasmas during the inter-edge localised mode (ELM) period and
during type I and type III ELMs. During the inter-ELM period at distances of 3
to 8 cm from the last closed flux surface (LCFS), ion temperatures of 20 to 70
eV have been measured giving an ion to electron temperature ratio of 2 to 7
with a mean of 4. During type III ELMs, an ion temperature of 50 eV has been
measured 3 to 6 cm from the LCFS which decreases to 30 eV at distances 11 to 16
cm from the LCFS. During type I ELMs, an ion temperature of 40 eV has been
measured at a distance of 10 to 15 cm from the LCFS.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figure
A Corona Australis cloud filament seen in NIR scattered light. III. Modelling and comparison with Herschel sub-millimetre data
With recent Herschel observations, the northern filament of the Corona
Australis cloud has now been mapped in a number of bands from 1.2um to 870um.
The data set provides a good starting point for the study of the cloud over
several orders of magnitude in density. We wish to examine the differences of
the column density distributions derived from dust extinction, scattering, and
emission, and to determine to what extent the observations are consistent with
the standard dust models. From Herschel data, we calculate the column density
distribution that is compared to the corresponding data derived in the
near-infrared regime from the reddening of the background stars, and from the
surface brightness attributed to light scattering. We construct
three-dimensional radiative transfer models to describe the emission and the
scattering. The scattered light traces low column densities of A_V~1mag better
than the dust emission, remaining useful to A_V ~ 10-15 mag. Based on the
models, the extinction and the level of dust emission are surprisingly
consistent with a sub-millimetre dust emissivity typical of diffuse medium.
However, the intensity of the scattered light is very low at the centre of the
densest clump and this cannot be explained without a very low grain albedo.
Both the scattered light and dust emission indicate an anisotropic radiation
field. The modelling of the dust emission suggests that the radiation field
intensity is at least three times the value of the normal interstellar
radiation field. The inter-comparison between the extinction, light scattering,
and dust emission provides very stringent constraints on the cloud structure,
the illuminating radiation field, and the grain properties.Comment: 13 pages, 16 figures, accepted to A&
The NuMAX Long Baseline Neutrino Factory Concept
A Neutrino Factory where neutrinos of all species are produced in equal
quantities by muon decay is described as a facility at the intensity frontier
for exquisite precision providing ideal conditions for ultimate neutrino
studies and the ideal complement to Long Baseline Facilities like LBNF at
Fermilab. It is foreseen to be built in stages with progressively increasing
complexity and performance, taking advantage of existing or proposed facilities
at an existing laboratory like Fermilab. A tentative layout based on a
recirculating linac providing opportunities for considerable saving is
discussed as well as its possible evolution toward a muon collider if and when
requested by Physics. Tentative parameters of the various stages are presented
as well as the necessary R&D to address the technological issues and
demonstrate their feasibility.Comment: JINST Special Issue on Muon Accelerators. arXiv admin note: text
overlap with arXiv:1308.0494, arXiv:1502.0164
Strike point splitting induced by the application of magnetic perturbations on MAST
Divertor strike point splitting induced by resonant magnetic perturbations
(RMPs) has been observed on MAST for a variety of RMP configurations in a
plasma scenario with Ip=750kA where those configurations all have similar
resonant components. Complementary measurements have been obtained with
divertor Langmuir probes and an infrared camera. Clear splitting consistently
appears in this scenario only in the even configuration of the perturbation
coils, similarly to the density pump-out. These results present a challenge for
models of plasma response to RMPs.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, submitted to the proceedings of the 20th
Conference on Plasma Surface Interactions, to be published in the Journal of
Nuclear Material
An Ergonomic Evaluation of Douglas Fir Manual Pruning in New Zealand
This report summarizes the findings of an ergonomie evaluation of first lift manual pruning of Douglas fir under New Zealand plantation forestry conditions. Six subjects were each observed undertaking their normal work methods throughout their complete working day. Heart rate data were collected and analysed using several heart rate indices in order to determine the workload of first lift pruning. The average working heart rate was 112 bt.min"1 ± 10.6 (SD). Results indicate first lift pruning to be a moderate to heavy workload activity. The manual pruning work method may place severe pressures on the workers' tendons, related bones and nerves of the hand, wrist, and elbow. Alternative pruning methods may contain inherent health and safety risks which must be carefully considered by those involved in the occupation of professional tree pruning
- …