64 research outputs found
Advanced instrumentation for aircraft icing research
A compact and rugged probe based on the phase Doppler method was evaluated as a means for characterizing icing clouds using airborne platforms and for advancing aircraft icing research in large scale wind tunnels. The Phase Doppler Particle Analyzer (PDPA) upon which the new probe was based is now widely recognized as an accurate method for the complete characterization of sprays. The prototype fiber optic-based probe was evaluated in simulated aircraft icing clouds and found to have the qualities essential to providing information that will advance aircraft icing research. Measurement comparisons of the size and velocity distributions made with the standard PDPA and the fiber optic probe were in excellent agreement as were the measurements of number density and liquid water content. Preliminary testing in the NASA Lewis Icing Research Tunnel (IRT) produced reasonable results but revealed some problems with vibration and signal quality at high speeds. The cause of these problems were identified and design changes were proposed to eliminate the shortcomings of the probe
A Review of Comprehensive Plans and Water Quality Issues for Municipalities Located Within the Lower Casco Bay Watershed
Damariscotta River Estuary: a Management Plan
One purpose ofthe Damariscotta River Estuary Project has been to ask and answer these and other questions. A second and equally important purpose ofthe Project has been to help the seven estuary communities improve communication and the ability to coordinate land and water use decisions to ensure the future good health of the estuary’s resources
Telescope: Telemetry at Terabyte Scale
Data-hungry applications that require terabytes of memory have become
widespread in recent years. To meet the memory needs of these applications,
data centers are embracing tiered memory architectures with near and far memory
tiers. Precise, efficient, and timely identification of hot and cold data and
their placement in appropriate tiers is critical for performance in such
systems. Unfortunately, the existing state-of-the-art telemetry techniques for
hot and cold data detection are ineffective at the terabyte scale.
We propose Telescope, a novel technique that profiles different levels of the
application's page table tree for fast and efficient identification of hot and
cold data. Telescope is based on the observation that, for a memory- and
TLB-intensive workload, higher levels of a page table tree are also frequently
accessed during a hardware page table walk. Hence, the hotness of the higher
levels of the page table tree essentially captures the hotness of its subtrees
or address space sub-regions at a coarser granularity. We exploit this insight
to quickly converge on even a few megabytes of hot data and efficiently
identify several gigabytes of cold data in terabyte-scale applications.
Importantly, such a technique can seamlessly scale to petabyte-scale
applications.
Telescope's telemetry achieves 90%+ precision and recall at just 0.009%
single CPU utilization for microbenchmarks with a 5 TB memory footprint. Memory
tiering based on Telescope results in 5.6% to 34% throughput improvement for
real-world benchmarks with a 1-2 TB memory footprint compared to other
state-of-the-art telemetry techniques
Cervical adenocarcinoma presenting as a cardiac tamponade in a 57-year-old woman: a case report
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Introduction</p> <p>Pericardial effusion as a complication of malignant gynecological disorders is rare. Few cases of endometrial cancer, squamous cell carcinoma of the cervix, ovarian cancer and uterine carcinosarcoma have been previously reported. We report the first case of cardiac tamponade secondary to a cervical adenocarcinoma.</p> <p>Case presentation</p> <p>A 54-year-old Caucasian woman, without any relevant medical history and no gynecological aftercare, was admitted to our hospital emergency room with severe dyspnea. Echocardiography revealed severe pericardial effusion with a swinging heart. An emergency pericardial drainage was performed through a pericardial window, which permitted the draining of 700 mL of bloody fluid and a pericardial biopsy. Cytological examination of the fluid revealed atypical cells, and the biopsy specimen showed tumor emboli suggestive of adenocarcinoma. Magnetic resonance imaging showed a 35 mm cervical lesion indicative of an endocervical tumor. Exploratory laparoscopy revealed diffuse peritoneal lesions and histological examination of cervical curettage showed a poorly differentiated micropapillary adenocarcinoma of the cervix.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Carcinomatous pericarditis as the first symptom of a malignant gynecological adenocarcinoma has not, to the best of our knowledge, been documented before. This case highlights the extreme severity of pericardial effusion secondary to cervical adenocarcinoma, a sign of advanced disease. Gynecological malignancies have to be considered in cases of neoplastic pericardial effusion.</p
Application of Laser Interferometry to the Study of Droplet' Gas Phase Interaction and Behavior in Liquid Spray Combustion Systems
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