2,209 research outputs found
Experiments on multiplane balancing using a laser for material removal
The modifications of a flexible rotor system for two-plane laser balancing is described. Experimental testing of the laser material removal method for balancing through the first bending critical speed was demonstrated. The test rig, optical configuration, and a neodymium glass laser system were assembled and calibrated for static and rotating material removal rates. The laser control computer program was combined with the influence coefficient balancing process, resulting in a completely automated data acquisition, laser, and balancing system. The laser system rotor was balanced through the first bending critical speed using the laser material removal procedure to apply trial weights and correction weights without stopping the rotor
Maternal Expression Relaxes Constraint on Innovation of the Anterior Determinant, bicoid
The origin of evolutionary novelty is believed to involve both positive selection and relaxed developmental constraint. In flies, the redesign of anterior patterning during embryogenesis is a major developmental innovation and the rapidly evolving Hox gene, bicoid (bcd), plays a critical role. We report evidence for relaxation of selective constraint acting on bicoid as a result of its maternal pattern of gene expression. Evolutionary theory predicts 2-fold greater sequence diversity for maternal effect genes than for zygotically expressed genes, because natural selection is only half as effective acting on autosomal genes expressed in one sex as it is on genes expressed in both sexes. We sample an individual from ten populations of Drosophila melanogaster and nine populations of D. simulans for polymorphism in the tandem gene duplicates bcd, which is maternally expressed, and zerknüllt (zen), which is zygotically expressed. In both species, we find the ratio of bcd to zen nucleotide diversity to be two or more in the coding regions but one in the noncoding regions, providing the first quantitative support for the theoretical prediction of relaxed selective constraint on maternal-effect genes resulting from sex-limited expression. Our results suggest that the accelerated rate of evolution observed for bcd is owing, at least partly, to variation generated by relaxed selective constraint
A global evaluation of streamflow drought characteristics
How drought is characterised depends on the purpose and region of the study and the available data. In case of regional applications or global comparison a standardisation of the methodology to characterise drought is preferable. In this study the threshold level method in combination with three common pooling procedures is applied to daily streamflow series from a wide range of hydrological regimes. Drought deficit characteristics, such as drought duration and deficit volume, are derived, and the methods are evaluated for their applicability for regional studies. Three different pooling procedures are evaluated: the moving-average procedure (MA-procedure), the inter-event time method (IT-method), and the sequent peak algorithm (SPA). The MA-procedure proved to be a flexible approach for the different series, and its parameter, the averaging interval, can easily be optimised for each stream. However, it modifies the discharge series and might introduce dependency between drought events. For the IT-method it is more difficult to find an optimal value for its parameter, the length of the excess period, in particular for flashy streams. The SPA can only be recommended as pooling procedure for the selection of annual maximum series of deficit characteristics and for very low threshold levels to ensure that events occurring shortly after major events are recognized. Furthermore, a frequency analysis of deficit volume and duration is conducted based on partial duration series of drought events. According to extreme value theory, excesses over a certain limit are Generalized Pareto (GP) distributed. It was found that this model indeed performed better than or equally to other distribution models. In general, the GP-model could be used for streams of all regime types. However, for intermittent streams, zero-flow periods should be treated as censored data. For catchments with frost during the winter season, summer and winter droughts have to be analysed separately
Implementation of a process-based catchment model in a poorly gauged, highly glacierized Himalayan headwater
The paper presents a catchment modeling approach for remote glacierized
Himalayan catchments. The distributed catchment model TAC<sup>D</sup>, which is
widely based on the HBV model, was further developed for the application in
highly glacierized catchments on a daily timestep and applied to the
Nepalese Himalayan headwater Langtang Khola (360 km<sup>2</sup>). Low laying
reference stations are taken for temperature extrapolation applying a second
order polynomial function. Probability based statistical methods enable
bridging data gaps in daily precipitation time series and the redistribution
of cumulated precipitation sums over the previous days. Snow and ice melt
was calculated in a distributed way based on the temperature-index method
employing calculated daily potential sunshine durations. Different melting
conditions of snow and ice and melting of ice under debris layers were
considered. The spatial delineation of hydrological response units was
achieved by taking topographic and physiographic information from maps and
satellite images into account, and enabled to incorporate process knowledge
into the model. Simulation results demonstrated that the model is able to
simulate daily discharge for a period of 10 years and point glacier mass
balances observed in the research area with an adequate reliability. The
simple but robust data pre-processing and modeling approach enables the
determination of the components of the water balance of a remote, data
scarce catchment with a minimum of input data
Dynamics and pattern formation in invasive tumor growth
In this work, we study the in-vitro dynamics of the most malignant form of
the primary brain tumor: Glioblastoma Multiforme. Typically, the growing tumor
consists of the inner dense proliferating zone and the outer less dense
invasive region. Experiments with different types of cells show qualitatively
different behavior. Wild-type cells invade a spherically symmetric manner, but
mutant cells are organized in tenuous branches. We formulate a model for this
sort of growth using two coupled reaction-diffusion equations for the cell and
nutrient concentrations. When the ratio of the nutrient and cell diffusion
coefficients exceeds some critical value, the plane propagating front becomes
unstable with respect to transversal perturbations. The instability threshold
and the full phase-plane diagram in the parameter space are determined. The
results are in a good agreement with experimental findings for the two types of
cells.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Lieb-Thirring Bound for Schr\"odinger Operators with Bernstein Functions of the Laplacian
A Lieb-Thirring bound for Schr\"odinger operators with Bernstein functions of
the Laplacian is shown by functional integration techniques. Several specific
cases are discussed in detail.Comment: We revised the first versio
Singular Modes of the Electromagnetic Field
We show that the mode corresponding to the point of essential spectrum of the
electromagnetic scattering operator is a vector-valued distribution
representing the square root of the three-dimensional Dirac's delta function.
An explicit expression for this singular mode in terms of the Weyl sequence is
provided and analyzed. An essential resonance thus leads to a perfect
localization (confinement) of the electromagnetic field, which in practice,
however, may result in complete absorption.Comment: 14 pages, no figure
Interwire coupling for In(4x1) /Si(111) probed by surface transport
The In/Si(111) system reveals an anisotropy in the electrical conductivity and is a prototype system for atomic wires on surfaces. We use this system to study and tune the interwire interaction by adsorption of oxygen. Through rotational square four-tip transport measurements, both the parallel (σ||) and perpendicular (σ⊥) components are measured separately. The analysis of the I(V) curves reveals that σ⊥ is also affected by adsorption of oxygen, showing clearly an effective interwire coupling, in agreement with density-functional-theory-based calculations of the transmittance. In addition to these surface-state mediated transport channels, we confirm the existence of conducting parasitic space-charge layer channels and address the importance of substrate steps by performing the transport measurements of In phases grown on Si(111) mesa structures.DFG/FOR/170
Precise design of environmental data warehouses
People use data warehouses to help them make decisions. For example, public policy decision-makers can improve their decisions by using this technology to analyze the environmental effects of human activity. In production systems, data warehouses provide structures for extracting the knowledge required to optimize systems. Designing data warehouses is a complex task; designers need flexible and precise methods to help them create data warehouses and adapt their analysis criteria to developments in the decision-making process. In this paper, we introduce a flexible method based on UML (Unified Modeling Language). We introduce a UML profile for building multi-dimensional models and for choosing different criteria according to analysis requirements. This profile makes it possible to specify integrity constraints in OCL (Object Constraint Language). We apply our method to the construction of an environmental system for analyzing the use of certain agricultural fertilizers. We integrate various data sources into a multi-dimensional model showing several categories of analysis, and the consistency of data can be checked with OCL constraints
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