1,543 research outputs found
High Efficiency and High Speed PM Motors for the More Electric Aircraft
More electric aircraft has been a subject of increasing discussions and research for more
than ten years now, both in Europe and in North America. These efforts follow the growing
realisation of the benefits that are likely to emerge from the future growth of the more electric aircraft
technology. This is evident from the sizes and numbers of research and development programmes
currently undertaken on the subject by both aerospace industry and academic institutions. High speed
permanent magnet motors, excited by rare-earth magnetic materials, are used extensively in majority
of these research programmes. The applications, on more electric aircrafts, often demand motor
drives that have very high reliability, energy efficiency and high power density. On of the factors that
require significant design consideration is the effect of high speed on the operational performance of
the motor. High rotational speed impacts heavily on the rotational losses whilst the high peripheral
speed influences the mechanical construction of the rotor. Iron and windage losses can become
dominating factors in determining the overall rating and efficiency of the motor. The other important
consideration relate to the ability of the motor to generate high torque at low speed, a feature that is
very essential in actuation drive systems on the aircraft
Peut-on retrouver son chemin ? RĂ©soudre les errances dans les suites du Roman comique
Deux suites du Roman comique datant du XVIIe siĂšcle sont Ă©tudiĂ©es, celle dite dâOffray et celle de PrĂ©chac, afin de dĂ©terminer comment elles rĂ©pondent Ă lâinachĂšvement du texte de Scarron. On observe dans quelle mesure elles proposent une continuation qui achĂšve ou une suite qui rejoue
Neutrophils infected with highly virulent influenza H3N2 virus exhibit augmented early cell death and rapid induction of type I interferon signaling pathways
AbstractWe developed a model of influenza virus infection of neutrophils by inducing differentiation of the MPRO promyelocytic cell line. After 5days of differentiation, about 20â30% of mature neutrophils could be detected. Only a fraction of neutrophils were infected by highly virulent influenza (HVI) virus, but were unable to support active viral replication compared with MDCK cells. HVI infection of neutrophils augmented early and late apoptosis as indicated by annexin V and TUNEL assays. Comparison between the global transcriptomic responses of neutrophils to HVI and low virulent influenza (LVI) revealed that the IFN regulatory factor and IFN signaling pathways were the most significantly overrepresented pathways, with activation of related genes in HVI as early as 3h. Relatively consistent results were obtained by real-time RT-PCR of selected genes associated with the type I IFN pathway. Early after HVI infection, comparatively enhanced expression of apoptosis-related genes was also elicited
On the Multimomentum Bundles and the Legendre Maps in Field Theories
We study the geometrical background of the Hamiltonian formalism of
first-order Classical Field Theories. In particular, different proposals of
multimomentum bundles existing in the usual literature (including their
canonical structures) are analyzed and compared. The corresponding Legendre
maps are introduced. As a consequence, the definition of regular and
almost-regular Lagrangian systems is reviewed and extended from different but
equivalent ways.Comment: LaTeX file, 19 pages. Replaced with the published version. Minor
mistakes are correcte
Comment on "Evolution of a Quasi-Stationary State"
Approximately forty years ago it was realized that the time development of
decaying systems might not be precisely exponential. Rolf Winter (Phys. Rev.
{\bf 123}, 1503 (1961)) analyzed the simplest nontrivial system - a particle
tunneling out of a well formed by a wall and a delta-function. He calculated
the probability current just outside the well and found irregular oscillations
on a short time scale followed by an exponential decrease followed by more
oscillations and finally by a decrease as a power of the time. We have
reanalyzed this system, concentrating on the survival probability of the
particle in the well rather than the probability current, and find a different
short time behavior.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, RevTex
Disorder and thermally driven vortex-lattice melting in La{2-x}Sr{x}CuO{4} crystals
Magnetization measurements in La{2-x}Sr{x}CuO{4} crystals indicate vortex
order-disorder transition manifested by a sharp kink in the second
magnetization peak. The transition field exhibits unique temperature
dependence, namely a strong decrease with temperature in the entire measured
range. This behavior rules out the conventional interpretation of a
disorder-driven transition into an entangled vortex solid phase. It is shown
that the transition in La{2-x}Sr{x}CuO{4} is driven by both thermally- and
disorder-induced fluctuations, resulting in a pinned liquid state. We conclude
that vortex solid-liquid, solid-solid and solid to pinned-liquid transitions
are different manifestations of the same thermodynamic order-disorder
transition, distinguished by the relative contributions of thermal and
disorder-induced fluctuations.Comment: To be published in phys. Rev. B Rapid Com
Geometric reduction in optimal control theory with symmetries
A general study of symmetries in optimal control theory is given, starting
from the presymplectic description of this kind of system. Then, Noether's
theorem, as well as the corresponding reduction procedure (based on the
application of the Marsden-Weinstein theorem adapted to the presymplectic case)
are stated both in the regular and singular cases, which are previously
described.Comment: 24 pages. LaTeX file. The paper has been reorganized. Additional
comments have been included in Section 3. The example in Section 5.2 has been
revisited. Some references have been adde
Differential Flo8p-dependent regulation of FLO1 and FLO11 for cellâcell and cellâsubstrate adherence of S. cerevisiae S288c
Cellâcell and cellâsurface adherence represents initial steps in forming multicellular aggregates or in establishing cellâsurface interactions. The commonly used Saccharomyces cerevisiae laboratory strain S288c carries a flo8 mutation, and is only able to express the flocculin-encoding genes FLO1 and FLO11, when FLO8 is restored. We show here that the two flocculin genes exhibit differences in regulation to execute distinct functions under various environmental conditions. In contrast to the laboratory strain ÎŁ1278b, haploids of the S288c genetic background require FLO1 for cellâcell and cellâsubstrate adhesion, whereas FLO11 is required for pseudohyphae formation of diploids. In contrast to FLO11, FLO1 repression requires the Sin4p mediator tail component, but is independent of the repressor Sfl1p. FLO1 regulation also differs from FLO11, because it requires neither the KSS1 MAP kinase cascade nor the pathways which lead to the transcription factors Gcn4p or Msn1p. The protein kinase A pathway and the transcription factors Flo8p and Mss11p are the major regulators for FLO1 expression. Therefore, S. cerevisiae is prepared to simultaneously express two genes of its otherwise silenced FLO reservoir resulting in an appropriate cellular surface for different environments
Starch and oil in the donor cow diet and starch in substrate differently affect the in vitro ruminal biohydrogenation of linoleic and linolenic acids
Trans isomers of fatty acids exhibit different health properties. Among them, trans-10,cis-12 conjugated linoleic acid has negative effects on milk fat production and can affect human health. A shift from the trans-11 to the trans-10 pathway of biohydrogenation (BH) can occur in the rumen of dairy cows receiving high-concentrate diets, especially when the diet is supplemented with highly unsaturated fat sources. The differences of BH patterns between linoleic acid (LeA) and linolenic acid (LnA) in such ruminal conditions remain unknown; thus, the aim of this work was to investigate in vitro the effects of starch and sunflower oil in the diet of the donor cows and starch level in the incubates on the BH patterns and efficiencies of LeA and LnA. The design was a 4 Ă 4 Latin square design with 4 cows, 4 periods, and 4 diets with combinations of 21 or 34% starch and 0 or 5% sunflower oil. The rumen content of each cow during each period was incubated with 4 substrates, combining 2 starch levels and either LeA or LnA addition. Capillary electrophoresis single-strand conformation polymorphism of incubates showed that dietary starch decreased the diversity of the bacterial community and the high-starch plus oil diet modified its structure. High-starch diets poorly affected isomerization and first reduction of LeA and LnA, but decreased the efficiencies of trans-11,cis-15-C18:2 and trans C18:1 reduction. Dietary sunflower oil increased the efficiency of LeA isomerization but decreased the efficiency of trans C18:1 reduction. An interaction between dietary starch and dietary oil resulted in the highest trans-10 isomers production in incubates when the donor cow received the high-starch plus oil diet. The partition between trans-10 and trans-11 isomers was also affected by an interaction between starch level and the fatty acid added to the incubates, showing that the trans-10 shift only occurred with LeA, whereas LnA was mainly hydrogenated via the more usual trans-11 pathway, whatever the starch level in the substrate, although the bacterial communities were not different between LeA and LnA incubates. In LeA incubates, trans-10 isomer production was significantly related to the structure of the bacterial community
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