761 research outputs found
The enigma of facial asymmetry:is there a gender specific pattern of facedness?
Although facial symmetry correlates with facial attractiveness, human faces are often far from symmetrical with one side frequently being larger than the other (Kowner, 1998). Smith (2000) reported that male and female faces were asymmetrical in opposite directions, with males having a larger area on the left side compared to the right side, and females having a larger right side compared to the left side. The present study attempted to replicate and extend this finding. Two databases of facial images from Stirling and St Andrews Universities, consisting of 180 and 122 faces respectively, and a third set of 62 faces collected at Abertay University, were used to examine Smith's findings. Smith's unique method of calculating the size of each hemiface was applied to each set. For the Stirling and St Andrews sets a computer program did this automatically and for the Abertay set it was done manually. No significant overall effect of gender on facial area asymmetry was found. However, the St Andrews sample demonstrated a similar effect to that found by Smith, with females having a significantly larger mean area of right hemiface and males having a larger left hemiface. In addition, for the Abertay faces handedness had a significant effect on facial asymmetry with right-handers having a larger left side of the face. These findings give limited support for Smith's results but also suggest that finding such an asymmetry may depend on some as yet unidentified factors inherent in some methods of image collection
Waste Water Brine Purification through Electrodialysis Ion Exchange
Reutilizing resources onboard the International Space Station (ISS) and for future deep space missions are critical for mission longevity and sustainability. Waste water brine produced from water recovery systems contain chemical species that could be processed into a potential fertilizer for future plant systems.Fertilizer production can be achieved through a process called electrodialysis ion exchange. Waste water containing inorganic salt components are fed through a series of ion exchange membranes to produce fertilizer (a phosphate rich stream), electrolysis-grade water, and other useful commodities.A test bed was constructed to conduct controlled experiments and an experimental design procedure developed to determine the feasibility of the process. Conductivity and pH probes were utilized to determine the ion concentration in each of the product streams, along with ion chromatography (IC) to define the exact concentration of each ion in every stream throughout the experiment. This is crucial in order to convey the effectiveness of ion removal from the incoming waste water stream.The waste water and electrolyte streams were prepared in the lab prior to experimentation. Additionally, the ion exchange membrane configurations were developed and Opto 22 data analysis software incorporated to conduct measurements in real time.Ions successfully diffused across their respective membranes into the concentrate, acid, and base streams. This resulted in pure water, a phosphate rich stream, and a separate anion/hydrogen and cation/hydroxide stream
Optical Properties of High-Frequency Radio Sources from the Australia Telescope 20 GHz (AT20G) Survey
Our current understanding of radio-loud AGN comes predominantly from studies
at frequencies of 5 GHz and below. With the recent completion of the Australia
Telescope 20 GHz (AT20G) survey, we can now gain insight into the
high-frequency radio properties of AGN. This paper presents supplementary
information on the AT20G sources in the form of optical counterparts and
redshifts. Optical counterparts were identified using the SuperCOSMOS database
and redshifts were found from either the 6dF Galaxy survey or the literature.
We also report 144 new redshifts. For AT20G sources outside the Galactic plane,
78.5% have optical identifications and 30.9% have redshift information. The
optical identification rate also increases with increasing flux density.
Targets which had optical spectra available were examined to obtain a spectral
classification.
There appear to be two distinct AT20G populations; the high luminosity
quasars that are generally associated with point-source optical counterparts
and exhibit strong emission lines in the optical spectrum, and the lower
luminosity radio galaxies that are generally associated with passive galaxies
in both the optical images and spectroscopic properties. It is suggested that
these different populations can be associated with different accretion modes
(cold-mode or hot-mode). We find that the cold-mode sources have a steeper
spectral index and produce more luminous radio lobes, but generally reside in
smaller host galaxies than their hot-mode counterparts. This can be attributed
to the fact that they are accreting material more efficiently. Lastly, we
compare the AT20G survey with the S-cubed semi-empirical (S3-SEX) models and
conclude that the S3-SEX models need refining to correctly model the compact
cores of AGN. The AT20G survey provides the ideal sample to do this.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRA
Optical Detection of Degraded Therapeutic Proteins
The quality of therapeutic proteins such as hormones, subunit and conjugate vaccines, and antibodies is critical to the safety and efficacy of modern medicine. Identifying malformed proteins at the point-of-care can prevent adverse immune reactions in patients; this is of special concern when there is an insecure supply chain resulting in the delivery of degraded, or even counterfeit, drug product. Identification of degraded protein, for example human growth hormone, is demonstrated by applying automated anomaly detection algorithms. Detection of the degraded protein differs from previous applications of machine-learning and classification to spectral analysis: only example spectra of genuine, high-quality drug products are used to construct the classifier. The algorithm is tested on Raman spectra acquired on protein dilutions typical of formulated drug product and at sample volumes of 25 μL, below the typical overfill (waste) volumes present in vials of injectable drug product. The algorithm is demonstrated to c orrectly classify anomalous recombinant human growth hormone (rhGH) with 92% sensitivity and 98% specificity even when the algorithm has only previously encountered high-quality drug product.United States. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (Contract N66001-13-C-4025
Improved Sensitivity for Space Domain Awareness Observations with the Murchison Widefield Array
Our previously reported survey of the Low Earth Orbit (LEO) environment using
the Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) detected over 70 unique Resident Space
Objects (RSOs) over multiple passes, from 20 hours of observations in passive
radar mode. In this paper, we extend this work by demonstrating two methods
that improve the detection sensitivity of the system. The first method, called
shift-stacking, increases the statistical significance of faint RSO signals
through the spatially coherent integration of the reflected signal along the
RSO's trajectory across the sky. This method was tested on the observations
used during our previous blind survey, and we obtained a increase in the
total number of detections. The second method re-focuses the MWA to the
near-field RSO's position (post-observation), by applying a complex phase
correction to each visibility to account for the curved wave-front. The method
was tested successfully on an MWA extended array observation of an ISS pass.
However, the method is currently limited by signal de-coherence on the
long-baselines (due to the hardware constraints of the current correlator). We
discuss the sensitivity improvement for RSO detections we expect from the MWA
Phase 3 correlator upgrade. We conclude the paper by briefly commenting on
future dedicated Space Domain Awareness (SDA) systems that will incorporate MWA
technologies.Comment: Accepted in Advances in Space Research. 16 pages, 10 figures, and 1
Tabl
e-VLBI observations of GHz-Peaked Spectrum (GPS) radio sources in nearby galaxies from the AT20G survey
GHz-peaked spectrum (GPS) radio sources are thought to be young objects which
later evolve into FR-I and FR-II radio galaxies. We have used the Australia
Telescope 20GHz (AT20G) survey catalogue to select a uniform sample of GPS
sources with spectral peaks above 5GHz, which should represent the youngest
members of this class. In this paper, we present e-VLBI observations of ten
such objects which are associated with nearby (z<0.15) galaxies and so
represent a new population of local, low--power GPS sources. Our e-VLBI
observations were carried out at 4.8GHz with the Australia Telescope Long
Baseline Array (LBA) using a real--time software correlator. All ten sources
were detected, and were unresolved on scales of ~100mas, implying that they are
typically less than 100pc in linear size.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figures, 3 table
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