5,827 research outputs found

    Alien Registration- Robinson, James S. (Bangor, Penobscot County)

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    https://digitalmaine.com/alien_docs/11155/thumbnail.jp

    A Tension Shell Structure for Application to Entry Vehicles

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    The shape of a shell of revolution designed t o have only tensile stresses under axisymmetric aerodynamic loadings has been derived on the basis of linear membrane theory. values of circumferential tension is also given. The results of this paper indicate that the design of an entry vehicle based on the tension shell concept leads to desirable aerodynamic and structural characteristics, namely, high drag and low weight

    Understanding the effect of oxidative and ER stress on CHO cell culture and product quality through multivariate analysis

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    Guidelines for Selecting Feeds and Techniques of Feeding Fish.

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    4 p

    NURBS modeling and structural shape optimization of cardiovascular stents

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    Cardiovascular stents have been used since the 1990s to treat atherosclerosis, one of leading causes of death in the western world, and structural optimization has led to significant improvements in stent performance. Much of the potential variation in stent geometry, however, has remained unconsidered. This paper presents a non-uniform rational basis spline (NURBS) parameterization of a stent, the inclusion of structural fatigue resistance as a design consideration, and the results of a design optimization based on response surface techniques. Results show the feasibility and merits of the NURBS approach, which models a much broader range of shapes than was previously possible. Multi-objective optimization produces a range of geometrically diverse Pareto-optimal designs; these can be used to develop future clinical design guides, accounting for the variation observed across patients. We conclude by motivating future work with increasingly complex physical modeling and optimization capabilities

    Leaf Litter Decomposition and Mitigation of CO<sub>2</sub> Emissions in Cocoa Ecosystems

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    Studies simultaneously quantifying litter weight losses and rates of CO2-C evolved are few, though essential for accurate estimates of forest carbon budgets. A 120-day dry matter loss and a 130-day carbon emission experiments were concurrently conducted at the soil laboratory of the University of Reading, UK. Leaf litters of tree species comprising cocoa (Theobroma cacao), Newbouldia laevis (dominant shade tree in Eastern region (ER)) and Persea americana (dominant shade tree in Western region (WR)) of Ghana were incubated using a single tree leaf litter and/or a 1:1 mixed species leaf litters to determine and predict the litter decomposition and C dynamics in cocoa systems with or without the shade trees. Decomposition and C release trends in the ER systems followed: shade > mixed cocoa-shade = predicted mixed litter > cocoa; and in the WR, the order was: cocoa = mixed cocoa-shade > predicted mixed > shade. Differences between released C estimated from litter weight loss and CO2-C evolution measurement methods were not consistent. Regression analysis revealed a strong (R2 = 0.71) relationship between loss of litter C and the CO2-C evolution during litter decomposition. The large C pool for shaded cocoa systems indicates the potential to store more C and thus, its promotion could play a significant role in atmospheric CO2 mitigations

    Local existence for the non-resistive MHD equations in Besov spaces

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    In this paper we prove the existence of solutions to the viscous, non-resistive magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) equations on the whole of Rn, n = 2, 3, for divergence-free initial data in certain Besov spaces, namely u0 ∈ Bn/2−1 2,1 and B0 ∈ Bn/2 2,1. The a priori estimates include the term t 0 u(s) 2 Hn/2 ds on the right-hand side, which thus requires an auxiliary bound in Hn/2−1. In 2D, this is simply achieved using the standard energy inequality; but in 3D an auxiliary estimate in H1/2 is required, which we prove using the splitting method of Calderón (1990) [2]. By contrast, our proof that such solutions are unique only applies to the 3D case
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