2,367 research outputs found
Linking meteorology and hydrology: measuring water balance terms in Cabauw, the Netherlands
Climate models need information about energy and water fluxes at the soil surface. In Cabauw (Netherlands) these fluxes and the belonging balances are measured. Water balances have been set up for a summer and a winter period to check the correctness of these fluxes. In winter precipitation is the largest input term and outflowing discharge the highest output term. In summer inflowing discharge is the largest input term and evapotranspiration the highest output term
A Case Study: Teaching Engineering Concepts in Science
This study was conducted to describe a teacher developed high school engineering course, to identify teaching strategies used in the process of delivering math and science literacy through this course, to identify challenges and constraints that occurred during its development and delivery, and to describe the strategies that were used to overcome those obstacles.
A case study was conducted using semi-structured interviews with the engineering instructor at Benilde-St. Margaret\u27s in St. Louis Park, Minnesota. In addition, the researcher conducted classroom observations and reviewed instructional materials, teacher lesson plans, and teacher journals.
Themes that developed regarding the strategies used to deliver this particular course identified that concepts created its platform for delivery, curricular trial and error was at work, science and engineering competitions were leveraged as a basis for learning activities, project based learning and teaching were employed, there was a clear emphasis on creative thought and work, and the teacher served as a guide rather than the sole ―sage‖.
Themes developed regarding the identification of challenges and constraints that occurred during the development and delivery of this engineering course were assessment of student learning was dubious and elusive and stakeholders tended to be uneasy with this new pedagogy. Lastly, themes developed regarding the strategies used to overcome these obstacles identified financial and instructional support through business partnership and administrative support as being critical
Morgellons disease: Analysis of a population with clinically confirmed microscopic subcutaneous fibers of unknown etiology
Virginia R Savely1, Raphael B Stricker21TBD Medical Associates, San Francisco, CA, USA; 2International Lyme and Associated Diseases Society, Bethesda, MD, USABackground: Morgellons disease is a controversial illness in which patients complain of stinging, burning, and biting sensations under the skin. Unusual subcutaneous fibers are the unique objective finding. The etiology of Morgellons disease is unknown, and diagnostic criteria have yet to be established. Our goal was to identify prevalent symptoms in patients with clinically confirmed subcutaneous fibers in order to develop a case definition for Morgellons disease.Methods: Patients with subcutaneous fibers observed on physical examination (designated as the fiber group) were evaluated using a data extraction tool that measured clinical and demographic characteristics. The prevalence of symptoms common to the fiber group was then compared with the prevalence of these symptoms in patients with Lyme disease and no complaints of skin fibers.Results: The fiber group consisted of 122 patients. Significant findings in this group were an association with tick-borne diseases and hypothyroidism, high numbers from two states (Texas and California), high prevalence in middle-aged Caucasian women, and an increased prevalence of smoking and substance abuse. Although depression was noted in 29% of the fiber patients, pre-existing delusional disease was not reported. After adjusting for nonspecific symptoms, the most common symptoms reported in the fiber group were: crawling sensations under the skin; spontaneously appearing, slow-healing lesions; hyperpigmented scars when lesions heal; intense pruritus; seed-like objects, black specks, or “fuzz balls” in lesions or on intact skin; fine, thread-like fibers of varying colors in lesions and intact skin; lesions containing thick, tough, translucent fibers that are highly resistant to extraction; and a sensation of something trying to penetrate the skin from the inside out.Conclusions: This study of the largest clinical cohort reported to date provides the basis for an accurate and clinically useful case definition for Morgellons disease.Keywords: Morgellons, subcutaneous fibers, pruritus, delusions of parasitosis, Lyme disease, skin lesion
Optical Response of SrRuO Reveals Universal Fermi-liquid Scaling and Quasiparticles Beyond Landau Theory
We report optical measurements demonstrating that the low-energy relaxation
rate () of the conduction electrons in SrRuO obeys scaling
relations for its frequency () and temperature () dependence in
accordance with Fermi-liquid theory. In the thermal relaxation regime,
1/\tau\propto (\hbar\omega)^2 + (p\pi\kB T)^2 with , and
scaling applies. Many-body electronic structure calculations using dynamical
mean-field theory confirm the low-energy Fermi-liquid scaling, and provide
quantitative understanding of the deviations from Fermi-liquid behavior at
higher energy and temperature. The excess optical spectral weight in this
regime provides evidence for strongly dispersing "resilient" quasiparticle
excitations above the Fermi energy
A New Limit on Signals of Lorentz Violation in Electrodynamics
We describe the results of an experiment to test for spacetime anisotropy
terms that might exist from Lorentz violations. The apparatus consists of a
pair of cylindrical superconducting cavity-stabilized oscillators operating in
the TM_{010} mode with one axis east-west and the other vertical. Spatial
anisotropy is detected by monitoring the beat frequency at the sidereal rate
and its first harmonic. We see no anisotropy to a part in 10^{13}. This puts a
comparable bound on four linear combinations of parameters in the general
Standard Model extension, and a weaker bound of <4 x 10^{-9} on three others.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, 2 table
Detection and classification of buried dielectric anomalies using neural networks–further results
Includes bibliographical references.The development of a neural network-based detection and classification system for use with buried dielectric anomalies is the main focus of this paper. Several methods of data representation are developed to study their effects on the trainability and generalization capabilities of the neural networks. The method of Karhonen-Loeve (KL) transform is used to extract energy dependent features and to reduce the dimensionality of the weight space of the original data set. To extract the shape-dependent features of the data, another data preprocessing method known as Zernike moments is also studied for its use in the detector/classifier system. The effects of different neural network paradigms, architectural variations, and selection of proper training data on detection and classification rates are studied. Simulation results for nylon and wood targets indicate superior performance when compared to conventional schemes.This work was supported by the U.S. Army Belvoir RDandE Center under contract No. DAAL03-86-D-0001
A variable neurodegenerative phenotype with polymerase gamma mutation
mtDNA replication and repair, causes mitochondrial diseases including autosomal dominant
progressive external ophthalmoplegia (PEO),1 childhood hepato-encephalopathy (Alpers–
Huttenlocher syndrome), adult-onset spinocerebellar ataxia, and sensory nerve degeneration with
dysarthria and ophthalmoparesis (SANDO)
Pharmacological Analyses of Protein Kinases Regulating Egg Maturation in Marine Nemertean Worms: A Review and Comparison with Mammalian Eggs
For development to proceed normally, animal eggs must undergo a maturation process that ultimately depends on phosphorylations of key regulatory proteins. To analyze the kinases that mediate these phosphorylations, eggs of marine nemertean worms have been treated with pharmacological modulators of intracellular signaling pathways and subsequently probed with immunoblots employing phospho-specific antibodies. This article both reviews such analyses and compares them with those conducted on mammals, while focusing on how egg maturation in nemerteans is affected by signaling pathways involving cAMP, mitogen-activated protein kinases, Src-family kinases, protein kinase C isotypes, AMP-activated kinase, and the Cdc2 kinase of maturation-promoting factor
Regenmeting met commerciële mobiele telefonienetwerken
Het is mogelijk om regen te meten met de bestaande infrastructuur die wordt gebruikt voor de communicatie tussen mobiele telefoons. De microgolfstraalverbindingen waaruit deze netwerken bestaan, zijn namelijk gevoelig voor regen. Zij kunnen als bron van neerslagmetingen daarom een zeer waardevolle aanvulling zijn op de operationele weerradar en regenmeternetwerken voor toepassingen in het waterbeheer. Deze toegevoegde waarde ligt in het feit dat regenintensiteiten geschat uit microgolfstraalverbindingen over het algemeen nauwkeuriger zijn dan schattingen naar aanleiding van radarbeelden en de dichtheid van het netwerk vele malen hoger ligt dan de dichtheid van regenmeternetwerke
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