1,689 research outputs found
Attractive internal wave patterns
This paper gives background information for the fluid dynamics video on
internal wave motion in a trapezoidal tank.Comment: 2 pg, movie at two resolutions _low(Low-resolution) and
_hr(High-resolution
Attractive internal wave patterns
This paper gives background information for the fluid dynamics video on
internal wave motion in a trapezoidal tank.Comment: 2 pg, movie at two resolutions _low(Low-resolution) and
_hr(High-resolution
The status of traditional Scottish animal breeds and plant varieties and the implications for biodiversity
The aim of this scoping study was to evaluate the effects on Scottish biodiversity of
changes in the use of traditional breeds and varieties. The overall objectives were:
a) The evaluation of the importance of genetic loss from the reduction in use of these
breeds and varieties, for example, the loss of unusual characteristics that might have
been of particular local use.
b) An assessment of the impacts of reduction in the ability to conduct further breeding or
research on rare and traditional varieties and breeds.
c) Identification of the loss of certain farming techniques associated with particular
varieties and breeds.
d) An assessment of possible losses of biodiversity associated with reduction in the use of
these breeds and varieties and the farming systems associated with them
A pattern matching technique for measuring sediment displacement levels
This paper describes a novel technique for obtaining accurate, high (spatial) resolution measurements of sediment redeposition levels. A sequence of different random patterns are projected onto a sediment layer and captured using a high-resolution camera, producing a set of reference images. The same patterns are used to obtain a corresponding sequence of deformed images after a region of the sediment layer has been displaced and redeposited, allowing the use of a high-accuracy pattern matching algorithm to quantify the distribution of the redeposited sediment. A set of experiments using the impact of a vortex ring with a glass ballotini particle layer as the resuspension mechanism are described to test and illustrate the technique. The accuracy of the procedure is assessed using a known crater profile, manufactured to simulate the features of the craters observed in the experiments
RELIABILITY OF CLINICAL ISOKINETIC DYNAMOMETRY IN PATHOLOGICAL ATHLETIC SHOULDERS
There have been relatively few studies of the reliability of isokinetic shoulder testing, and only Malerba et al. (1993) have investigated patients with shoulder joint pathology (patients ranged in activity level from sedentary to highly active). Furthermore, all existing studies have involved a level of procedural standardisation which, while desirable, cannot always be achieved in a clinical environment, that is, where most isokinetic testing is performed. Therefore, the aim of this study was to assess the reliability of isokinetic testing of pathological athletic shoulders in a clinical environment, under routine clinical conditions. Twenty-two athletic patients (mean age 26 years) presenting with a range of pathologies including post-subluxation, post-dislocation, and post-surgical reconstruction were tested. Patients were tested on two occasions, separated by a time interval during which their clinical status was not expected to change (most tests were one week apart; mean interval 10 days). Bilateral isokinetic strength of the shoulder internal and external rotators were tested on a Cybex 6000 dynamometer at 2.09 and 4.19 radianslsecond (concentric) and 2.09 radianslsecond (eccentric). Patients were tested in a seated position, in 45 degrees of shoulder abduction, and 90 degrees of elbow flexion. Tests were performed in essentially the same fashion on each occasion by the same tester. However, the constraints of a busy clinical environment meant that precise control and exact replication may not have always been achieved. Intra-class correlation coefficients (ICC) for absolute concentric peak torque, work, and average power were all above 0.9. Eccentric ICCs were generally above 0.8. These values are as high as, or higher than, those reported in the literature for studies of healthy subjects conducted under more stringent conditions than can be achieved in a clinical environment. The reliability of commonly calculated ratios, such as agonistlantagonist and involved/uninvolved, was lower than that of the constituent absolute scores, and in some cases were quite poor. Caution is therefore warranted in the use of such ratios. Malerba JL; Adam ML, Harris BA, Krebs DE (1993) Reliability of dynamic and isometric testing of shoulder external and internal rotators. Journal of Orthopaedic and Sports Physical Therapy 18543-552
Three-dimensional advective--diffusive boundary layers in open channels with parallel and inclined walls
We study the steady laminar advective transport of a diffusive passive scalar
released at the base of narrow three-dimensional longitudinal open channels
with non-absorbing side walls and rectangular or truncated-wedge-shaped
cross-sections. The scalar field in the advective--diffusive boundary layer at
the base of the channels is fundamentally three-dimensional in the general
case, owing to a three-dimensional velocity field and differing boundary
conditions at the side walls. We utilise three-dimensional numerical
simulations and asymptotic analysis to understand how this inherent
three-dimensionality influences the advective-diffusive transport as described
by the normalised average flux, the Sherwood or Nusselt numbers for mass
or heat transfer, respectively. We show that is well approximated by an
appropriately formulated two-dimensional calculation, even when the boundary
layer structure is itself far from two-dimensional. This important result can
significantly simplify the modelling of many laminar advection--diffusion
scalar transfer problems: the cleaning or decontamination of confined channels,
or transport processes in chemical or biological microfluidic devices
Thermal intermodulation backaction in a high-cooperativity optomechanical system
The pursuit of room temperature quantum optomechanics with tethered
nanomechanical resonators faces stringent challenges owing to extraneous
mechanical degrees of freedom. An important example is thermal intermodulation
noise (TIN), a form of excess optical noise produced by mixing of thermal noise
peaks. While TIN can be decoupled from the phase of the optical field, it
remains indirectly coupled via radiation pressure, implying a hidden source of
backaction that might overwhelm shot noise. Here we report observation of TIN
backaction in a high-cooperativity, room temperature cavity optomechanical
system consisting of an acoustic-frequency SiN trampoline coupled to a
Fabry-P\'{e}rot cavity. The backaction we observe exceeds thermal noise by 20
dB and radiation pressure shot noise by 40 dB, despite the thermal motion being
10 times smaller than the cavity linewidth. Our results suggest that mitigating
TIN may be critical to reaching the quantum regime from room temperature in a
variety of contemporary optomechanical systems.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
A Comparison of Disease Risk Analysis Tools for Conservation Translocations
Conservation translocations are increasingly used to manage threatened species and restore ecosystems. Translocations increase the risk of disease outbreaks in the translocated and recipient populations. Qualitative disease risk analyses have been used as a means of assessing the magnitude of any effect of disease and the probability of the disease occurring associated with a translocation. Currently multiple alternative qualitative disease risk analysis packages are available to practitioners. Here we compare the ease of use, expertise required, transparency, and results from, three different qualitative disease risk analyses using a translocation of the endangered New Zealand passerine, the hihi (Notiomystis cincta), as a model. We show that the three methods use fundamentally different approaches to define hazards. Different methods are used to produce estimations of the risk from disease, and the estimations are different for the same hazards. Transparency of the process varies between methods from no referencing, or explanations of evidence to justify decisions, through to full documentation of resources, decisions and assumptions made. Evidence to support decisions on estimation of risk from disease is important, to enable knowledge acquired in the future, for example from translocation outcome, to be used to improve the risk estimation for future translocations. Information documenting each disease risk analysis differs along with variation in emphasis of the questions asked within each package. The expertise required to commence a disease risk analysis varies and an action flow chart tailored for the non-wildlife health specialist are included in one method but completion of the disease risk analysis requires wildlife health specialists with epidemiological and pathological knowledge in all three methods. We show that disease risk analysis package choice may play a greater role in the overall risk estimation of the effect of disease on animal populations involved in a translocation than might previously have been realised
- …