19,187 research outputs found
Tetravalent Colloids by Nematic Wetting
In an elegant paper, D. Nelson suggested a method to produce tetravalent
colloids based on a tetrahedral configuration created on the surface of a
spherical particle. It emerges from a two-dimensional nematic liquid crystal
placed on a sphere due to the presence of four 1/2 disclinations, i.e.,
topological defects in the orientational order. In this paper we show that such
a tetrahedral configuration also occurs in the wetting layers which form around
spheres dispersed in a liquid crystal above the nematic-isotropic phase
transition. Nematic wetting therefore offers an alternative route towards
tetravalent colloids.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Europhys. Let
Limiting Risk by Turning Manifest Phantoms into Evil Zombies
Drawing a random sample of ballots to conduct a risk-limiting audit generally
requires knowing how the ballots cast in an election are organized into groups,
for instance, how many containers of ballots there are in all and how many
ballots are in each container. A list of the ballot group identifiers along
with number of ballots in each group is called a ballot manifest. What if the
ballot manifest is not accurate? Surprisingly, even if ballots are known to be
missing from the manifest, it is not necessary to make worst-case assumptions
about those ballots--for instance, to adjust the margin by the number of
missing ballots--to ensure that the audit remains conservative. Rather, it
suffices to make worst-case assumptions about the individual randomly selected
ballots that the audit cannot find. This observation provides a simple
modification to some risk-limiting audit procedures that makes them
automatically become more conservative if the ballot manifest has errors. The
modification--phantoms to evil zombies (~2EZ)--requires only an upper bound on
the total number of ballots cast. ~2EZ makes the audit P-value stochastically
larger than it would be had the manifest been accurate, automatically requiring
more than enough ballots to be audited to offset the manifest errors. This
ensures that the true risk limit remains smaller than the nominal risk limit.
On the other hand, if the manifest is in fact accurate and the upper bound on
the total number of ballots equals the total according to the manifest, ~2EZ
has no effect at all on the number of ballots audited nor on the true risk
limit
Estimating Time-Varying Effects of Prognostic Factors for Stomach Cancer Patients within a Dynamic Grouped Cox Model
We describe the identification of prognostic factors in the framework of a completely resected stomach cancer survival-study. For the analysis the dynamic grouped Cox-Model was used allowing for time-varying covariate effects. Therefore the hazard rate might be non-proportional. As estimation concept we applied the posterior mode, computed by iteratively weighted Kalman filtering and smoothing steps. The medical study and questions are described, the statistical method is illustrated, the results are given and interpreted and the method is discussed
The 3D model control of image processing
Telerobotics studies remote control of distant robots by a human operator using supervisory or direct control. Even if the robot manipulators has vision or other senses, problems arise involving control, communications, and delay. The communication delays that may be expected with telerobots working in space stations while being controlled from an Earth lab have led to a number of experiments attempting to circumvent the problem. This delay in communication is a main motivating factor in moving from well understood instantaneous hands-on manual control to less well understood supervisory control; the ultimate step would be the realization of a fully autonomous robot. The 3-D model control plays a crucial role in resolving many conflicting image processing problems that are inherent in resolving in the bottom-up approach of most current machine vision processes. The 3-D model control approach is also capable of providing the necessary visual feedback information for both the control algorithms and for the human operator
Elastic turbulence in two-dimensional Taylor-Couette flows
We report the onset of elastic turbulence in a two-dimensional Taylor-Couette
geometry using numerical solutions of the Oldroyd-B model, also performed at
high Weissenberg numbers with the program OpenFOAM. Beyond a critical
Weissenberg number, an elastic instability causes a supercritical transition
from the laminar Taylor-Couette to a turbulent flow. The order parameter, the
time average of secondary-flow strength, follows the scaling law with and . The power spectrum of the velocity fluctuations shows a power-law decay
with a characteristic exponent, which strongly depends on the radial position.
It is greater than two, which we relate to the dimension of the geometry
Model simulation studies to clarify the effect on saccadic eye movements of initial condition velocities set by the Vestibular Ocular Reflex (VOR)
Voluntary active head rotations produced vestibulo-ocular reflex eye movements (VOR) with the subject viewing a fixation target. When this target jumped, the size of the refixation saccades were a function of the ongoing initial velocity of the eye. Saccades made against the VOR were larger in magnitude. Simulation of a reciprocally innervated model eye movement provided results comparable to the experimental data. Most of the experimental effect appeared to be due to linear summation for saccades of 5 and 10 degree magnitude. For small saccades of 2.5 degrees, peripheral nonlinear interaction of state variables in the neuromuscular plant also played a role as proven by comparable behavior in the simulated model with known controller signals
Cryogenic zero-gravity prototype vent system
Design, fabrication, and tests of prototype cryogenic zero-gravity heat exchanger vent syste
Requirements for optimization of electrodes and electrolyte for the iron/chromium Redox flow cell
Improved catalyzation techniques that included a pretreatment of carbon substrate and provided normalized carbon surface for uniform gold deposition were developed. This permits efficient use of different batches of carbon felt materials which initially vary significantly in their physical and surface chemical properties, as well as their electrochemical behavior. Further modification of gold impregnation technique gave the best performing electrodes. In addition to the linear sweep voltammetry, cyclic voltammetry was used to determine the effects of different activation procedures on the Cr(3)/Cr(2) Redox and H2 evolution reactions. The roles of carbon, gold and lead in the overall Redox cycle are identified. The behavior of the electrodes at both normal battery operating potentials and more extreme potentials is discussed preparing efficient and stable electrodes for the energy storage battery is implicated
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