240 research outputs found

    Circuit board package with wedge shaped covers

    Get PDF
    A circuit board packaging and mounting technique that protects the wiring board from vibrations and contamination is described. The technique also augments chassis rigidity and damping and conducts component generated heat to the chassis

    Clamping assembly for inertial components Patent

    Get PDF
    Inertial component clamping assembly design for spacecraft guidance and control system mountin

    Soybean yields and plant composition as affected by phosphorus and potassium fertilizers

    Get PDF
    The primary objective of this study was to determine if soybean grain yields could be predicted by the P and K content of the growing plant. A supporting objective was to find what plant parts should be taken, and at what stage of growth, to give the best relationship. Multiple curvilinear regression analysis was used to determine this relationship from data collected in four field experiments. Yields, chemical composition of soybean plant parts and other data were available from four similar fertilizer experiments conducted at various locations in Iowa in 1958. A randomized block 9 x 9 central composite design, containing various combinations of P and K fertilizer rates, was used in all experiments. Soybean plant samples from each plot, taken in three different growth stages, were separated into various plant parts and chemically analyzed for total P and K contents. (Growth stages used were: Stage 5-Nine to 10 trifoliate leaves unrolled with stem branching evident; full bloom with withered flowers in lower leaf axils. Stage 7-Pods plainly evident in plant tops; lower pods nearly full length with beans developing; flowering ceased. Stage 9-Bottom leaves beginning to yellow; top pods almost fully developed with beans nearing green bean stage.

    The influence of nitrogen and phosphorus ferilization on nutrient status and profitability of Bromegrass on Ida soils

    Get PDF
    This study was undertaken to determine the profitability and the feasibility of fertilizing bromegrass for grazing in the Monona-Ida-Hamburg soil association area. This area is well adapted to growing forage crops. Because of the high content of calcium and potassium, alfalfa grows well if phosphorus is applied. Bromegrass is able in some way to get nitrogen from alfalfa, and the two crops grow well together. The bloat danger in pasturing alfalfa or bromegrass-alfalfa mixtures, however, is well known to cattlemen in the area. Many believe the cost of nitrogen fertilizer to maintain productivity of bromegrass pastures is less than the cost of losses from bloat on bromegrass-alfalfa pastures. The profitability of fertilizing bromegrass stands is examined in Part I of the study. The feasibility is examined in Part II. In Part I, returns at three levels of nitrogen cost and beef price and at three conversion ratios of forage to beef are calculated on the basis of experimental yields

    A nonequilibrium extension of the Clausius heat theorem

    Full text link
    We generalize the Clausius (in)equality to overdamped mesoscopic and macroscopic diffusions in the presence of nonconservative forces. In contrast to previous frameworks, we use a decomposition scheme for heat which is based on an exact variant of the Minimum Entropy Production Principle as obtained from dynamical fluctuation theory. This new extended heat theorem holds true for arbitrary driving and does not require assumptions of local or close to equilibrium. The argument remains exactly intact for diffusing fields where the fields correspond to macroscopic profiles of interacting particles under hydrodynamic fluctuations. We also show that the change of Shannon entropy is related to the antisymmetric part under a modified time-reversal of the time-integrated entropy flux.Comment: 23 pages; v2: manuscript significantly extende

    Effects of Allergen Sensitization on Response to Therapy in Children with Eosinophilic Esophagitis

    Get PDF
    Background: In children with eosinophilic esophagitis (EoE) foods are the most common disease triggers, but environmental allergens are also suspected culprits. Objective: To determine the effects of environmental allergen sensitization on response to treatment in children with EoE in the southeastern United States. Methods: Patients 2 to 18 years old who were referred to the Arkansas Children’s Hospital Eosinophilic Gastrointestinal Disorders Clinic from January 2012 to January 2016 were enrolled in a prospective, longitudinal cohort study with collection of demographics, clinical symptoms, medical history, allergy sensitization profiles, and response to treatment over time. Comparisons were made between complete responders (peak esophageal eosinophil count \u3c 15 per high-power field [HPF]) and nonresponders (\u3e 25 eosinophils per HPF) after treatment with diet elimination alone, swallowed corticosteroids alone, or diet elimination and swallowed corticosteroids. Sensitization patterns to environmental allergens found in the southeastern United States were analyzed for the effect on treatment response. Results: A total of 223 individuals were enrolled. Of these, 182 had environmental allergy profiling and at least one endoscopy while receiving proton pump inhibitor (PPI) therapy. Twenty-nine individuals had PPI-responsive EoE and were excluded from further analysis, leaving 123 individuals with none-PPI-responsive EoE who were further analyzed; 72 (58.5%) were complete responders and 33 (26.8%) were nonresponders. Seventeen individuals (13.8%) were partial responders (≥ 1 but ≤ 25 eosinophils per HPF) and excluded from further analysis. Nonresponders were more likely to be sensitized to perennial allergens (P = .02). There was no significant difference in response based on seasonal allergen sensitization. Individuals with mold or cockroach sensitization were more likely to fail combination diet and swallowed corticosteroid treatment (P = .02 and P = .002). Conclusion: Perennial allergen and mold sensitization may lead to nonresponse to EoE treatment in some patients. Additional studies are needed to further understand the effect of environmental allergens on EoE

    Interplay among transversity induced asymmetries in hadron leptoproduction

    Get PDF
    In the fragmentation of a transversely polarized quark several left-right asymmetries are possible for the hadrons in the jet. When only one unpolarized hadron is selected, it exhibits an azimuthal modulation known as Collins effect. When a pair of oppositely charged hadrons is observed, three asymmetries can be considered, a di-hadron asymmetry and two single hadron asymmetries. In lepton deep inelastic scattering on transversely polarized nucleons all these asymmetries are coupled with the transversity distribution. From the high statistics COMPASS data on oppositely charged hadron-pair production we have investigated for the first time the dependence of these three asymmetries on the difference of the azimuthal angles of the two hadrons. The similarity of transversity induced single and di-hadron asymmetries is discussed. A new analysis of the data allows to establish quantitative relationships among them, providing for the first time strong experimental indication that the underlying fragmentation mechanisms are all driven by a common physical process.Comment: 6 figure

    Interplay among transversity induced asymmetries in hadron leptoproduction

    Get PDF
    In the fragmentation of a transversely polarized quark several left-right asymmetries are possible for the hadrons in the jet. When only one unpolarized hadron is selected, it exhibits an azimuthal modulation known as Collins effect. When a pair of oppositely charged hadrons is observed, three asymmetries can be considered, a di-hadron asymmetry and two single hadron asymmetries. In lepton deep inelastic scattering on transversely polarized nucleons all these asymmetries are coupled with the transversity distribution. From the high statistics COMPASS data on oppositely charged hadron-pair production we have investigated for the first time the dependence of these three asymmetries on the difference of the azimuthal angles of the two hadrons. The similarity of transversity induced single and di-hadron asymmetries is discussed. A new analysis of the data allows to establish quantitative relationships among them, providing for the first time strong experimental indication that the underlying fragmentation mechanisms are all driven by a common physical process.Comment: 6 figure

    The Spin Structure Function g1pg_1^{\rm p} of the Proton and a Test of the Bjorken Sum Rule

    Get PDF
    New results for the double spin asymmetry A1pA_1^{\rm p} and the proton longitudinal spin structure function g1pg_1^{\rm p} are presented. They were obtained by the COMPASS collaboration using polarised 200 GeV muons scattered off a longitudinally polarised NH3_3 target. The data were collected in 2011 and complement those recorded in 2007 at 160\,GeV, in particular at lower values of xx. They improve the statistical precision of g1p(x)g_1^{\rm p}(x) by about a factor of two in the region x0.02x\lesssim 0.02. A next-to-leading order QCD fit to the g1g_1 world data is performed. It leads to a new determination of the quark spin contribution to the nucleon spin, ΔΣ\Delta \Sigma ranging from 0.26 to 0.36, and to a re-evaluation of the first moment of g1pg_1^{\rm p}. The uncertainty of ΔΣ\Delta \Sigma is mostly due to the large uncertainty in the present determinations of the gluon helicity distribution. A new evaluation of the Bjorken sum rule based on the COMPASS results for the non-singlet structure function g1NS(x,Q2)g_1^{\rm NS}(x,Q^2) yields as ratio of the axial and vector coupling constants gA/gV=1.22±0.05 (stat.)±0.10 (syst.)|g_{\rm A}/g_{\rm V}| = 1.22 \pm 0.05~({\rm stat.}) \pm 0.10~({\rm syst.}), which validates the sum rule to an accuracy of about 9\%.Comment: 19 pages, 8 figures and table

    Transverse-momentum-dependent Multiplicities of Charged Hadrons in Muon-Deuteron Deep Inelastic Scattering

    Get PDF
    A semi-inclusive measurement of charged hadron multiplicities in deep inelastic muon scattering off an isoscalar target was performed using data collected by the COMPASS Collaboration at CERN. The following kinematic domain is covered by the data: photon virtuality Q2>1Q^{2}>1 (GeV/cc)2^2, invariant mass of the hadronic system W>5W > 5 GeV/c2c^2, Bjorken scaling variable in the range 0.003<x<0.40.003 < x < 0.4, fraction of the virtual photon energy carried by the hadron in the range 0.2<z<0.80.2 < z < 0.8, square of the hadron transverse momentum with respect to the virtual photon direction in the range 0.02 (GeV/c)2<PhT2<3c)^2 < P_{\rm{hT}}^{2} < 3 (GeV/cc)2^2. The multiplicities are presented as a function of PhT2P_{\rm{hT}}^{2} in three-dimensional bins of xx, Q2Q^2, zz and compared to previous semi-inclusive measurements. We explore the small-PhT2P_{\rm{hT}}^{2} region, i.e. PhT2<1P_{\rm{hT}}^{2} < 1 (GeV/cc)2^2, where hadron transverse momenta are expected to arise from non-perturbative effects, and also the domain of larger PhT2P_{\rm{hT}}^{2}, where contributions from higher-order perturbative QCD are expected to dominate. The multiplicities are fitted using a single-exponential function at small PhT2P_{\rm{hT}}^{2} to study the dependence of the average transverse momentum PhT2\langle P_{\rm{hT}}^{2}\rangle on xx, Q2Q^2 and zz. The power-law behaviour of the multiplicities at large PhT2P_{\rm{hT}}^{2} is investigated using various functional forms. The fits describe the data reasonably well over the full measured range.Comment: 28 pages, 20 figure
    corecore