13,002 research outputs found
Aerodynamic characteristics of an F-8 aircraft configuration with a variable camber wing at Mach numbers from 0.70 to 1.15
A 0.1-scale model of an F-8 aircraft was tested in the Ames 14-Foot Transonic Wind Tunnel at Mach numbers from 0.7 to 1.15. Angle of attack was varied from -2 deg. to 22 deg. at sideslip angles of 0 deg and -5 deg. Reynolds number, dictated by the atmospheric stagnation pressure, varied with Mach number from 3.4 to 4.0 million based on mean aerodynamic chord. The model was configured with a wing designed to simulate the downward deflection of the leading and trailing edges of an advanced-technology-conformal-variable camber wing. This wing was also equipped with conventional (simple hinge) flaps. In addition, the model was tested with the basic F-8 wing to provide a reference for extrapolating to flight data. In general, at all Mach numbers the use of conformal flap deflections at both the leading edge and trailing edge resulted in slightly higher maximum lift coefficients and lower drag coefficients than with the use of simple hinge flaps. There were also found to be small improvements in the pitching-moment characteristics with the use of conformal flaps
Virtual libraries of tissue and clinical samples: potential role of a 3-D microscope.
Our international innovative teaching group from different European Universities (De Montfort University, DMU, UK; and the Spanish University of Alcalá, University Miguel Hernández and University of San Pablo CEU), in conjunction with practicing biomedical scientists in the National Health Service (UK) and biomedical researchers, are developing two complete e-learning packages for teaching and learning medical parasitology, named DMU e-Parasitology (accessible at: http://parasitology.dmu.ac.uk), and biology and chemistry, named DMU e-Biology (accessible at: http://parasitology.dmu.ac.uk/ebiology/index.htm), respectively. Both packages will include a virtual microscope with a complete library of digitised tissue images, clinical slides and cell culture slides/mini-videos for enhancing the teaching and learning of a myriad of techniques applicable to health science undergraduate and postgraduate students. Thus, these packages include detecting human parasites, by becoming familiar with their infective structures and/or organs (e.g. eggs, cysts) and/or explore pathogenic tissues stained with traditional (e.g. haematoxylin & eosin) or more modern (e.g. immunohistochemistry) techniques. The Virtual Microscope (VM) module in the DMU e-Parasitology package is almost completed (accessible at: http://parasitology.dmu.ac.uk/learn/microscope.htm) and contains a section for the three major groups of human-pathogenic parasites (Peña-Fernández et al., 2018) [1]. Digitised slides are provided with the functionality of a microscope by using the gadget Zoomify®, and we consider that they can enhance learning, as previous studies reported in the literature have reported similar sensitivity and specificity rates for identification of parasites for both digitised and real slides. The DMU e-Biology’s VM, currently in development, will provide healthy and pathological tissue samples from a range of mammalian tissues and organs.
This communication will provide a description of both virtual libraries and the process of developing them. In conjunction, we will use a three-dimensional (3D) super-resolution microscopy, 3D Cell Explorer (Nanolive, Lausanne, Switzerland), to incorporate potential 3D microscopic photographs/short videos of cells to provide students with information about the spatial arrangement and morphologies of cells that are essential for life
Mixed action computations on fine dynamical lattices
We report on our first experiences in simulating Neuberger valence fermions
on CLS configurations with light sea quark masses and small lattice
spacings. Valence quark masses are considered that allow to explore the
matching to (partially quenched) chiral perturbation theory both in the
- and -regimes. The setup is discussed, and first results are
presented for spectral observables.Comment: 7 pages. Presented at the XXVII International Symposium on Lattice
Field Theory, July 26-31, 2009, Peking University, Beijing, Chin
Flavour symmetry restoration and kaon weak matrix elements in quenched twisted mass QCD
We simulate two variants of quenched twisted mass QCD (tmQCD), with
degenerate Wilson quarks of masses equal to or heavier than half the strange
quark mass. We use Ward identities in order to measure the twist angles of the
theory and thus check the quality of the tuning of mass parameters to a physics
condition which stays constant as the lattice spacing is varied. Flavour
symmetry breaking in tmQCD is studied in a framework of two fully twisted and
two standard Wilson quark flavours, tuned to be degenerate in the continuum.
Comparing pseudoscalar masses, obtained from connected quark diagrams made of
tmQCD and/or standard Wilson quark propagators, we confirm that flavour
symmetry breaking effects, which are at most 5%, decrease as we approach the
continuum limit. We also compute the pseudoscalar decay constant in the
continuum limit, with reduced systematics. As a consequence of improved tuning
of the mass parameters at , we reanalyse our previous
results. Our main phenomenological findings are and .Comment: 41 pages, figures included, one reference added. Final version as
accepted for publication on Nucl.Phys.
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