17,278 research outputs found
Numerical solution of the time-dependent compressible Navier-Stokes equations in inlet regions
The results of a study to determine the effects of compressibility on the viscous flow through channels that have straight, parallel walls are presented. Two channel configurations are considered, the flow between two semi-infinite flat plates with uniform flow prescribed at the inlet plane and a cascade of semi-infinite flat plates with uniform flow introduced upstream. The flow field is modeled by using the time dependent, compressible Navier-Stokes equations. Time dependent solutions are obtained by using an explicit finite difference technique which advances the pressure on near field subsonic boundaries such that accurate steady state solutions are obtained. Steady state results at Reynolds number 20 and 150 are presented for Mach numbers between 0.09 and 0.36 and compared with the incompressible solutions of previous studies
Plasma Sterilization Technology for Spacecraft Applications
The application of plasma gas technology to sterilization and decontamination of spacecraft components is considered. Areas investigated include: effective sterilizing ranges of four separate gases; lethal constituents of a plasma environment; effectiveness of plasma against a diverse group of microorganisms; penetrating efficiency of plasmas for sterilization; and compatibility of spacecraft materials with plasma environments. Results demonstrated that plasma gas, specifically helium plasma, is a highly effective sterilant and is compatible with spacecraft materials
Restoration of multichannel microwave radiometric images
A constrained iterative image restoration method is applied to multichannel diffraction-limited imagery. This method is based on the Gerchberg-Papoulis algorithm utilizing incomplete information and partial constraints. The procedure is described using the orthogonal projection operators which project onto two prescribed subspaces iteratively. Some of its properties and limitations are also presented. The selection of appropriate constraints was emphasized in a practical application. Multichannel microwave images, each having different spatial resolution, were restored to a common highest resolution to demonstrate the effectiveness of the method. Both noise-free and noisy images were used in this investigation
Point Defect Dynamics in Two-Dimensional Colloidal Crystals
We study the topological configurations and dynamics of individual point
defect vacancies and interstitials in a two-dimensional colloidal crystal. Our
Brownian dynamics simulations show that the diffusion mechanism for vacancy
defects occurs in two phases. The defect can glide along the crystal lattice
directions, and it can rotate during an excited topological transition
configuration to assume a different direction for the next period of gliding.
The results for the vacancy defects are in good agreement with recent
experiments. For the interstitial point defects, which were not studied in the
experiments, we find several of the same modes of motion as in the vacancy
defect case along with two additional diffusion pathways. The interstitial
defects are more mobile than the vacancy defects due to the more
two-dimensional nature of the diffusion of the interstitial defects.Comment: 8 pages, 9 postscript figures. Version to appear in Phys. Rev.
Effects of infrequent dried distillers grain supplementation on spring-calving cow performance
Feed and supplement costs and the expenses associated with delivery of winter supplements
account for a large proportion of the total operating expenditures for cow-calf
producers. Cattle grazing low-quality dormant native range (<6% crude protein) typically
are unable to consume sufficient protein from the forage base, which limits microbial
activity and forage digestion. Supplemental protein often is required to maintain
cow body weight and body condition score during the last trimester of pregnancy. Low
cow body condition scores at calving are common and may negatively affect lactation,
rebreeding rates, and calf weaning weight. Failure to maintain proper nutritional status
during this period severely affects short-term cow performance, reduces overall herd
productivity, and limits profit potential.
The most effective means of supplying supplemental protein to cows consuming
dormant native range is to provide a small amount of high-protein feedstuff (>30%
crude protein). Dried distillers grains with solubles (DDGS) are a by-product of the
ethanol refining process. Distillers grains supply the recommended 30% crude protein
level, are readily available, and often are favorably priced compared with more traditional
feedstuffs.
With the rising costs of inputs in today’s cow-calf sector, reducing cost is necessary to
maintain viability of the national cowherd. Reducing the frequency of supplementation
results in less labor and fuel use, effectively reducing input costs; however, this is viable
only as long as cow performance is maintained at acceptable levels. Therefore, the objective
of this study was to examine the effects of infrequent supplementation of dried
distillers grains with solubles on cow body weight and body condition score
Resolution enhancement of multichannel microwave imagery from the Nimbus-7 SMMR for maritime rainfall analysis
A restoration of the 37, 21, 18, 10.7, and 6.6 GHz satellite imagery from the scanning multichannel microwave radiometer (SMMR) aboard Nimbus-7 to 22.2 km resolution is attempted using a deconvolution method based upon nonlinear programming. The images are deconvolved with and without the aid of prescribed constraints, which force the processed image to abide by partial a priori knowledge of the high-resolution result. The restored microwave imagery may be utilized to examined the distribution of precipitating liquid water in marine rain systems
Calf health and performance during receiving is not changed by fence-line preconditioning on flint hills range vs. drylot preconditioning
Ranch-of-origin preconditioning can improve the welfare and performance of beef
calves by decreasing the stress associated with weaning, transport, diet change, and
commingling with other calves. Preconditioning methods that involve pasture weaning
coupled with maternal contact (i.e., fence-line weaning) have been promoted as possible
best management practices for minimizing stress. Prior studies focused on performance
and behavior during preconditioning on the ranch of origin. Little information has
been published relating to carryover effects of fence-line preconditioning compared
with conventional drylot preconditioning on performance and behavior during feedlot
receiving.
Our objectives were to measure growth and health during a 28-day ranch-of-origin
preconditioning phase and during a 60-day feedlot receiving phase among beef calves
subjected to 1 of 3 ranch-of-origin preconditioning programs: (1) drylot preconditioning
+ dam separation, (2) pasture preconditioning + fence-line contact with dams, and
(3) pasture preconditioning + fence-line contact with dams + supplemental feed delivered
in a bunk. In addition, we recorded incidences of behavioral distress among these
treatments during first 7 days of feedlot receiving
Unsupervised decoding of long-term, naturalistic human neural recordings with automated video and audio annotations
Fully automated decoding of human activities and intentions from direct
neural recordings is a tantalizing challenge in brain-computer interfacing.
Most ongoing efforts have focused on training decoders on specific, stereotyped
tasks in laboratory settings. Implementing brain-computer interfaces (BCIs) in
natural settings requires adaptive strategies and scalable algorithms that
require minimal supervision. Here we propose an unsupervised approach to
decoding neural states from human brain recordings acquired in a naturalistic
context. We demonstrate our approach on continuous long-term
electrocorticographic (ECoG) data recorded over many days from the brain
surface of subjects in a hospital room, with simultaneous audio and video
recordings. We first discovered clusters in high-dimensional ECoG recordings
and then annotated coherent clusters using speech and movement labels extracted
automatically from audio and video recordings. To our knowledge, this
represents the first time techniques from computer vision and speech processing
have been used for natural ECoG decoding. Our results show that our
unsupervised approach can discover distinct behaviors from ECoG data, including
moving, speaking and resting. We verify the accuracy of our approach by
comparing to manual annotations. Projecting the discovered cluster centers back
onto the brain, this technique opens the door to automated functional brain
mapping in natural settings
PON1 status does not influence cholinesterase activity in Egyptian agricultural workers exposed to chlorpyrifos.
Animal studies have shown that paraoxonase 1 (PON1) genotype can influence susceptibility to the organophosphorus pesticide chlorpyrifos (CPF). However, Monte Carlo analysis suggests that PON1 genotype may not affect CPF-related toxicity at low exposure conditions in humans. The current study sought to determine the influence of PON1 genotype on the activity of blood cholinesterase as well as the effect of CPF exposure on serum PON1 in workers occupationally exposed to CPF. Saliva, blood and urine were collected from agricultural workers (n=120) from Egypt's Menoufia Governorate to determine PON1 genotype, blood cholinesterase activity, serum PON1 activity towards chlorpyrifos-oxon (CPOase) and paraoxon (POase), and urinary levels of the CPF metabolite 3,5,6-trichloro-2-pyridinol (TCPy). The PON1 55 (P≤0.05) but not the PON1 192 genotype had a significant effect on CPOase activity. However, both the PON1 55 (P≤0.05) and PON1 192 (P≤0.001) genotypes had a significant effect on POase activity. Workers had significantly inhibited AChE and BuChE after CPF application; however, neither CPOase activity nor POase activity was associated with ChE depression when adjusted for CPF exposure (as determined by urinary TCPy levels) and stratified by PON1 genotype. CPOase and POase activity were also generally unaffected by CPF exposure although there were alterations in activity within specific genotype groups. Together, these results suggest that workers retained the capacity to detoxify chlorpyrifos-oxon under the exposure conditions experienced by this study population regardless of PON1 genotype and activity and that effects of CPF exposure on PON1 activity are minimal
Simulations of Spinodal Nucleation in Systems with Elastic Interactions
Systems with long-range interactions quenched into a metastable state near
the pseudospinodal exhibit nucleation that is qualitatively different than the
classical nucleation observed near the coexistence curve. We have observed
nucleation droplets in our Langevin simulations of a two-dimensional model of
martensitic transformations and have determined that the structure of the
nucleating droplet differs from the stable martensite structure. Our results,
together with experimental measurements of the phonon dispersion curve, allow
us to predict the nature of the droplet. These results have implications for
nucleation in many solid-solid transitions and the structure of the final
state
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