283 research outputs found
Investigation of Kevlar fabric-based materials for use with inflatable structures
Design, manufacture and testing of laminated and coated composite materials incorporating a structural matrix of Kevlar are reported. The practicality of using Kevlar in aerostat materials is demonstrated, and data are provided on practical weaves, lamination and coating particulars, rigidity, strength, weight, elastic coefficients, abrasion resistance, crease effects, peel strength, blocking tendencies, helium permeability, and fabrication techniques. Properties of the Kevlar-based materials are compared with conventional Dacron-reinforced counterparts. A comprehensive test and qualification program is discussed, and considerable quantitative biaxial tensile and shear test data are provided
Recommendations of evidence-based strategies
The purpose of the study was to evaluate the knowledge level and degree to which educational diagnosticians recommend evidenced-based strategies when writing full individual evaluations (FIE). The study used survey research. One hundred and ten educational diagnosticians completed the 34 question survey. Results indicate that participants possess limited knowledge of Strategic Instruction Model (SIM) strategies related to reading and storing and remembering information. Moreover, results suggest participants do not possess knowledge nor do they recommend SIM strategies related to expressing information
Hits and myths of cross battery assessment
The increased use of the cross-battery approach has resulted in the misunderstanding and misuse of this research-based tool. The purpose of this article is to provide practitioners with a more pointed approach in conducting cross-battery assessments, while highlighting the common pitfalls. Additionally, the authors provide suggestions for appropriate use of this assessment process
Electrophoretic separation of human kidney cells at zero gravity
Electrophoretic isolation of cells results in a loss of resolution power caused by the sedimentation of the cells in the media. The results of an experiment to extract urokinase from human embryos during the Apollo Soyuz mission are presented and discussed
Vitamin D and Allergic Disease: Sunlight at the End of the Tunnel?
A role for vitamin D in the regulation of immune function was first proposed after the identification of Vitamin D Receptors in lymphocytes. It has since been recognized that the active form of vitamin D, 1α,25(OH)2D3, has direct affects on naïve and activated helper T cells, regulatory T cells, activated B cells and dendritic cells. There is a growing body of literature linking vitamin D (serum 25(OH)D, oral intake and surrogate indicators such as latitude) to various immune-related conditions, including allergy, although the nature of this relationship is still unclear. This review explores the findings of epidemiological, clinical and laboratory research, and the potential role of vitamin D in promoting the inappropriate immune responses which underpin the rise in a broad range of immune diseases
Odd C-P contributions to diffractive processes
We investigate contributions to diffractive scattering, which are odd under
C- and P-parity. Comparison of p- and p-p scattering indicates that
these odderon contributions are very small and we show how a diquark clustering
in the proton can explain this effect. A good probe for the odderon exchange is
the photo- and electroproduction of pseudo-scalar mesons. We concentrate on the
pi^0 and show that the quasi elastic pi^0-production is again strongly
suppressed for a diquark structure of the proton whereas the cross sections for
diffractive proton dissociation are larger by orders of magnitude and rather
independent of the proton structure.Comment: 18 pages, LaTex2e, graphicx package, 14 eps figures include
Chiral Symmetry and Diffractive Neutral Pion Photo- and Electroproduction
We show that diffractive production of a single neutral pion in
photon-induced reactions at high energy is dynamically suppressed due to the
approximate chiral symmetry of QCD. These reactions have been proposed as a
test of the odderon exchange mechanism. We show that the odderon contribution
to the amplitude for such reactions vanishes exactly in the chiral limit. This
result is obtained in a nonperturbative framework and by using PCAC relations
between the amplitudes for neutral pion and axial vector current production.Comment: 22 pages, 7 figure
Decomposition of the QCD String into Dipoles and Unintegrated Gluon Distributions
We present the perturbative and non-perturbative QCD structure of the
dipole-dipole scattering amplitude in momentum space. The perturbative
contribution is described by two-gluon exchange and the non-perturbative
contribution by the stochastic vacuum model which leads to confinement of the
quark and antiquark in the dipole via a string of color fields. This QCD string
gives important non-perturbative contributions to high-energy reactions. A new
structure different from the perturbative dipole factors is found in the
string-string scattering amplitude. The string can be represented as an
integral over stringless dipoles with a given dipole number density. This
decomposition of the QCD string into dipoles allows us to calculate the
unintegrated gluon distribution of hadrons and photons from the dipole-hadron
and dipole-photon cross section via kT-factorization.Comment: 43 pages, 14 figure
Confining QCD Strings, Casimir Scaling, and a Euclidean Approach to High-Energy Scattering
We compute the chromo-field distributions of static color-dipoles in the
fundamental and adjoint representation of SU(Nc) in the loop-loop correlation
model and find Casimir scaling in agreement with recent lattice results. Our
model combines perturbative gluon exchange with the non-perturbative stochastic
vacuum model which leads to confinement of the color-charges in the dipole via
a string of color-fields. We compute the energy stored in the confining string
and use low-energy theorems to show consistency with the static quark-antiquark
potential. We generalize Meggiolaro's analytic continuation from parton-parton
to gauge-invariant dipole-dipole scattering and obtain a Euclidean approach to
high-energy scattering that allows us in principle to calculate S-matrix
elements directly in lattice simulations of QCD. We apply this approach and
compute the S-matrix element for high-energy dipole-dipole scattering with the
presented Euclidean loop-loop correlation model. The result confirms the
analytic continuation of the gluon field strength correlator used in all
earlier applications of the stochastic vacuum model to high-energy scattering.Comment: 65 pages, 13 figures, extended and revised version to be published in
Phys. Rev. D (results unchanged, 2 new figures, 1 new table, additional
discussions in Sec.2.3 and Sec.5, new appendix on the non-Abelian Stokes
theorem, old Appendix A -> Sec.3, several references added
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