4,111 research outputs found

    The results of an agricultural analysis of the ERTS-1 MSS data at the Johnson Space Center

    Get PDF
    The initial analysis of the ERTS-1 multispectral scanner (MSS) data at the Johnson Space Center (JSC), Houston, Texas is discussed. The primary data set utilized was the scene over Monterey Bay, California, on July 25, 1972, NASA ERTS ID No. 1002-18134. It was submitted to both computerized and image interpretative processing. An area in the San Joaquin Valley was submitted to an intensive evaluation of the ability of the data to (1) discriminate between crop types and (2) to provide a reasonably accurate area measurement of agricultural features of interest. The results indicate that the ERTS-1 MSS data is capable of providing the identifications and area extent of agricultural lands and field crop types

    The 1980 US/Canada wheat and barley exploratory experiment. Volume 2: Addenda

    Get PDF
    Three study areas supporting the U.S./Canada Wheat and Barley Exploratory Experiment are discussed including an evaluation of the experiment shakedown test analyst labeling results, an evaluation of the crop proportion estimate procedure 1A component, and the evaluation of spring wheat and barley crop calendar models for the 1979 crop year

    Poisoning with the recreational drug paramethoxyamphetamine ("death")

    Get PDF
    The document attached has been archived with permission from the editor of the Medical Journal of Australia. An external link to the publisher’s copy is included.Objective: To describe the clinical features of paramethoxyamphetamine (PMA; "death") poisoning and to compare these with those of people with self-reported "ecstasy" poisoning. Design: Retrospective casenote review. Participants and setting: 22 patients who presented to the Emergency Department of the Royal Adelaide Hospital (RAH), a major metropolitan teaching hospital, between 1 January 1996 and 31 December 1998 with PMA poisoning identified through urine drug screens; and 61 patients with self-reported ecstasy poisoning between 1 September 1997 and 31 December 1998 found through the hospital databases. Results: Patients with PMA poisoning presented with tachycardia (64%), hyperthermia (temperature > 37.5ºC; 36%), coma (41%), seizures (32%), arrhythmias (23%), and QRS intervals 100 ms (50%) with greater frequency and often greater severity than those with self-reported ecstasy poisoning. Two patients with PMA poisoning presented with severe hypoglycaemia (blood glucose level, 7.5 mmol/L). Conclusions: At our hospital, PMA poisonings accounted for most of the severe reactions among people who believed they had taken ecstasy. Hypoglycaemia and hyperkalaemia may be specific to PMA poisoning. PMA toxicity should be suspected with severe or atypical reactions to "ecstasy", and confirmed by chromatographic urine drug screens.Liang Han Ling, Colin Marchant, Nicholas A. Buckley, Michael Prior and Rod J. Irvin

    Clinical quiz.

    Get PDF
    J Pediatr Gastroenterol Nutr. 2005 Oct;41(4):483-4, 484. Clinical quiz. Prior AC, Selores M, Pina R, Dias JA, Costa FM, Vale L, Gomes L. Department of Pediatrics, Hospital Geral de Santo António, Portugal. PMID: 16205521 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLIN

    New Hamiltonian formalism and quasi-local conservation equations of general relativity

    Full text link
    I describe the Einstein's gravitation of 3+1 dimensional spacetimes using the (2,2) formalism without assuming isometries. In this formalism, quasi-local energy, linear momentum, and angular momentum are identified from the four Einstein's equations of the divergence-type, and are expressed geometrically in terms of the area of a two-surface and a pair of null vector fields on that surface. The associated quasi-local balance equations are spelled out, and the corresponding fluxes are found to assume the canonical form of energy-momentum flux as in standard field theories. The remaining non-divergence-type Einstein's equations turn out to be the Hamilton's equations of motion, which are derivable from the {\it non-vanishing} Hamiltonian by the variational principle. The Hamilton's equations are the evolution equations along the out-going null geodesic whose {\it affine} parameter serves as the time function. In the asymptotic region of asymptotically flat spacetimes, it is shown that the quasi-local quantities reduce to the Bondi energy, linear momentum, and angular momentum, and the corresponding fluxes become the Bondi fluxes. The quasi-local angular momentum turns out to be zero for any two-surface in the flat Minkowski spacetime. I also present a candidate for quasi-local {\it rotational} energy which agrees with the Carter's constant in the asymptotic region of the Kerr spacetime. Finally, a simple relation between energy-flux and angular momentum-flux of a generic gravitational radiation is discussed, whose existence reflects the fact that energy-flux always accompanies angular momentum-flux unless the flux is an s-wave.Comment: 36 pages, 3 figures, RevTex

    Endothelial Function is Preserved in Ultra-Marathon Runners Following a 50 km Race

    Get PDF
    Click the PDF icon to download the abstract

    Carbon K-shell Photo Ionization of CO: Molecular frame angular Distributions of normal and conjugate shakeup Satellites

    Full text link
    We have measured the molecular frame angular distributions of photoelectrons emitted from the Carbon K shell of fixed-in-space CO molecules for the case of simultaneous excitation of the remaining molecular ion. Normal and conjugate shake up states are observed. Photo electrons belonging to normal \Sigma -satellite lines show an angular distribution resembling that observed for the main photoline at the same electron energy. Surprisingly a similar shape is found for conjugate shake up states with \Pi -symmetry. In our data we identify shake rather than electron scattering (PEVE) as the mechanism producing the conjugate lines. The angular distributions clearly show the presence of a \Sigma -shape resonance for all of the satellite lines.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figure

    ‘It’s better than daytime television’: questioning the socio-spatial impacts of massage parlours on residential communities

    Get PDF
    It has been shown that street sex work is problematic for some communities, but there is less evidence of the effects of brothels. Emerging research also suggests that impact discourses outlined by residential communities and in regulatory policies should be critiqued, because they are often based on minority community voices, and limited tangible evidence is used to masquerade wider moral viewpoints about the place of sex work. Using a study of residents living in close proximity to brothels in Blackpool, this paper argues that impact is socially and spatially fluid. Impact needs to be evaluated in a more nuanced manner, which is considerate of the heterogeneity of (even one type of) sex work, and the community in question. Brothels in Blackpool had a variety of roles in the everyday socio-spatial fabric; thus also questioning the common assumption that sex work only impacts negatively on residential communities

    Process of extracting procyanidins by alkaline hydrolysis

    Get PDF
    A process of extracting procyanidins by alkaline hydrolysis is described. In particular, a procyanidin-containing material, pomace or residue is treated with an alkali, such as sodium or potassium hydroxide, for a predetermined amount of time and at a predetermined temperature to release procyanidins bound to polysaccharides and/or proteins of the cell wall or depolymerize polymeric procyanidins. After the procyanidins are released by alkaline hydrolysis, the extracts are acidified to obtain a pH level where the procyanidins do not degrade. The process of extracting procyanidins may be utilized to estimate the total amount of bound procyanidins in a plant material, enhance the bioavailability of beneficial procyanidins monomers and/or to treat the residue remaining after conventional solvent extraction for increased procyanidin extraction
    • …
    corecore