496 research outputs found

    Frequency and surface dependence of the mechanical loss in fused silica

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    We have compiled measurements of the mechanical loss in fused silica from samples spanning a wide range of geometries and resonant frequency in order to model the known variation of the loss with frequency and surface-to-volume ratio. This improved understanding of the mechanical loss has contributed significantly to the design of advanced interferometric gravitational wave detectors, which require ultra-low loss materials for their test mass mirrors.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure but 5 figure file

    The Trick Simulation Toolkit: A NASA/Open source Framework for Running Time Based Physics Models

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    This paper describes the design and use at of the Trick Simulation Toolkit, a simulation development environment for creating high fidelity training and engineering simulations at the NASA Johnson Space Center and many other NASA facilities. It describes Trick's design goals and how the development environment attempts to achieve those goals. It describes how Trick is used in some of the many training and engineering simulations at NASA. Finally it describes the Trick NASA/Open source project on Github

    Trick Simulation Environment 07

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    The Trick Simulation Environment is a generic simulation toolkit used for constructing and running simulations. This release includes a Monte Carlo analysis simulation framework and a data analysis package. It produces all auto documentation in XML. Also, the software is capable of inserting a malfunction at any point during the simulation. Trick 07 adds variable server output options and error messaging and is capable of using and manipulating wide characters for international support. Wide character strings are available as a fundamental type for variables processed by Trick. A Trick Monte Carlo simulation uses a statistically generated, or predetermined, set of inputs to iteratively drive the simulation. Also, there is a framework in place for optimization and solution finding where developers may iteratively modify the inputs per run based on some analysis of the outputs. The data analysis package is capable of reading data from external simulation packages such as MATLAB and Octave, as well as the common comma-separated values (CSV) format used by Excel, without the use of external converters. The file formats for MATLAB and Octave were obtained from their documentation sets, and Trick maintains generic file readers for each format. XML tags store the fields in the Trick header comments. For header files, XML tags for structures and enumerations, and the members within are stored in the auto documentation. For source code files, XML tags for each function and the calling arguments are stored in the auto documentation. When a simulation is built, a top level XML file, which includes all of the header and source code XML auto documentation files, is created in the simulation directory. Trick 07 provides an XML to TeX converter. The converter reads in header and source code XML documentation files and converts the data to TeX labels and tables suitable for inclusion in TeX documents. A malfunction insertion capability allows users to override the value of any simulation variable, or call a malfunction job, at any time during the simulation. Users may specify conditions, use the return value of a malfunction trigger job, or manually activate a malfunction. The malfunction action may consist of executing a block of input file statements in an action block, setting simulation variable values, call a malfunction job, or turn on/off simulation jobs

    An image and multimedia database for Tren Urbano : application to technology transfer programs

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    Thesis (M.C.P.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Urban Studies and Planning, 2001.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 135-136).Information systems can be expected to play a major role in urban infrastructure projects that require technology transfer. The volume of information that is addressed and the greatly increased accessibility to that information via the Internet make information systems many times more desirable than traditional forms of paper exchange or hard-copy warehousing. As technologies continue to grow and expand, it is becoming more feasible for laypersons to switch to database management solutions for handling vast stores of information. These solutions have become much easier to manage, more intuitive to design, and less costly and burdensome to implement. With a minimum of expertise these days, anyone can learn to manage a database and operate an information system over the Internet. The subject of this thesis is a simple database management system - called a "Spatial Database" - designed to support the Tren Urbano Technology Transfer Program. The Spatial Database allows instant publishing of spatial information (images and multimedia) and student research reports over the Internet. Its objectives are to improve communications and information exchange between Tren Urbano and the community; students at the University of Puerto Rico and MIT in the Professional Development Program; and students from both universities and Tren Urbano contractors and consultants. Open distribution benefits each group by providing immediate access to valuable information as it is captured and recorded about the Project in the field. This information is necessary to understanding Tren Urbano's unique history and set of issues involving its construction and daily operations. Freely distributed information over the Internet is of more use to the Technology Transfer Program in its efforts to transfer knowledge than if it were to remain undistributed (or distributed to a much lesser extent).by Alexander Kavanagh.M.C.P

    On-chip current sensing for monolithic buck LED driver

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    Thesis: M. Eng., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 2013."June 2013." Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.Includes bibliographical references (pages 81-82).This thesis explores and analyzes two different options for on-chip sensing and regulating current for a buck LED driver, as compared to a common external solution. With the rise of LED use in common lighting applications, it becomes increasingly necessary to develop solutions that are simple to use and accurate. In this paper, much of the focus is on reducing the external pin and component count while maintaining output current accuracy and power efficiency.by Alexander A. Penn.M. Eng

    Removal of luminal content protects the small intestine during hemorrhagic shock but is not sufficient to prevent lung injury.

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    The small intestine plays a key role in the pathogenesis of multiple organ failure following circulatory shock. Current results show that reduced perfusion of the small intestine compromises the mucosal epithelial barrier, and the intestinal contents (including pancreatic digestive enzymes and partially digested food) can enter the intestinal wall and transport through the circulation or mesenteric lymph to other organs such as the lung. The extent to which the luminal contents of the small intestine mediate tissue damage in the intestine and lung is poorly understood in shock. Therefore, rats were assigned to three groups: No-hemorrhagic shock (HS) control and HS with or without a flushed intestine. HS was induced by reducing the mean arterial pressure (30 mmHg; 90 min) followed by return of shed blood and observation (3 h). The small intestine and lung were analyzed for hemorrhage, neutrophil accumulation, and cellular membrane protein degradation. After HS, animals with luminal contents had increased neutrophil accumulation, bleeding, and destruction of E-cadherin in the intestine. Serine protease activity was elevated in mesenteric lymph fluid collected from a separate group of animals subjected to intestinal ischemia/reperfusion. Serine protease activity was elevated in the plasma after HS but was detected in lungs only in animals with nonflushed lumens. Despite removal of the luminal contents, lung injury occurred in both groups as determined by elevated neutrophil accumulation, permeability, and lung protein destruction. In conclusion, luminal contents significantly increase intestinal damage during experimental HS, suggesting transport of luminal contents across the intestinal wall should be minimized

    Transmural intestinal wall permeability in severe ischemia after enteral protease inhibition.

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    In intestinal ischemia, inflammatory mediators in the small intestine's lumen such as food byproducts, bacteria, and digestive enzymes leak into the peritoneal space, lymph, and circulation, but the mechanisms by which the intestinal wall permeability initially increases are not well defined. We hypothesize that wall protease activity (independent of luminal proteases) and apoptosis contribute to the increased transmural permeability of the intestine's wall in an acutely ischemic small intestine. To model intestinal ischemia, the proximal jejunum to the distal ileum in the rat was excised, the lumen was rapidly flushed with saline to remove luminal contents, sectioned into equal length segments, and filled with a tracer (fluorescein) in saline, glucose, or protease inhibitors. The transmural fluorescein transport was determined over 2 hours. Villi structure and epithelial junctional proteins were analyzed. After ischemia, there was increased transmural permeability, loss of villi structure, and destruction of epithelial proteins. Supplementation with luminal glucose preserved the epithelium and significantly attenuated permeability and villi damage. Matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) inhibitors (doxycycline, GM 6001), and serine protease inhibitor (tranexamic acid) in the lumen, significantly reduced the fluorescein transport compared to saline for 90 min of ischemia. Based on these results, we tested in an in-vivo model of hemorrhagic shock (90 min 30 mmHg, 3 hours observation) for intestinal lesion formation. Single enteral interventions (saline, glucose, tranexamic acid) did not prevent intestinal lesions, while the combination of enteral glucose and tranexamic acid prevented lesion formation after hemorrhagic shock. The results suggest that apoptotic and protease mediated breakdown cause increased permeability and damage to the intestinal wall. Metabolic support in the lumen of an ischemic intestine with glucose reduces the transport from the lumen across the wall and enteral proteolytic inhibition attenuates tissue breakdown. These combined interventions ameliorate lesion formation in the small intestine after hemorrhagic shock

    Temperature distribution in a gas-solid fixed bed probed by rapid magnetic resonance imaging

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    Controlling the temperature distribution inside catalytic fixed bed reactors is crucial for yield optimization and process stability. Yet, in situ temperature measurements with spatial and temporal resolution are still challenging. In this work, we perform temperature measurements in a cylindrical fixed bed reactor by combining the capabilities of real-time magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) with the temperature-dependent proton resonance frequency (PRF) shift of water. Three-dimensional (3D) temperature maps are acquired while heating the bed from room temperature to 60~^{\circ}C using hot air. The obtained results show a clear temperature gradient along the axial and radial dimensions and agree with optical temperature probe measurements with an average error of ±\pm 1.5~^{\circ}C. We believe that the MR thermometry methodology presented here opens new perspectives for the fundamental study of mass and heat transfer in gas-solid fixed beds and in the future might be extended to the study of reactive gas-solid systems
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