7,731 research outputs found
Sediment management for Southern California mountains, coastal plains and shoreline
The Environmental Quality Laboratory at Caltech and the Shore
Processes Laboratory at Scripps Institution of Oceanography have jointly
undertaken a study of regional sediment balance problems in coastal
southern California (see map in Figure 1). The overall objective in
this study is to define specific alternatives in sediment management that
may be implemented to alleviate a) existing sediment imbalance problems
(e.g. inland debris disposal, local shoreline erosion) and b) probable
future problems that have not yet manifested themselves. These
alternatives will be identified through a consideration of economic,
legal, and institutional issues as well as an analysis of governing
physical processes and engineering constraints.
The first part of this study (Phase I), which is currently under
way, involves a compilation and analysis of all available data in
an effort to obtain an accurate definition of the inland/coastal
regional sediment balance under natural conditions, and specific
quantitative effects man-made controls have on the overall natural process.
During FY77, substantial progress was made at EQL and SPL in
achieving the objectives of the initial Planning and Assessment Phase
of the CIT/SIO Sediment Management Project. Financial support came
from Los Angeles County, U.S. Geological Survey, Orange County,
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, and discretionary funding provided by
a grant from the Ford Foundation. The current timetable for completion
of this phase is Fall 1978.
This report briefly describes the project status, including
general administration, special activities, and research work as of
January 1978
Zero temperature black holes in semiclassical gravity
The semiclassical Einstein equations are solved to first order in for the case of an extreme or nearly extreme Reissner-Nordstr\"{o}m
black hole perturbed by the vacuum stress-energy of quantized free fields. It
is shown that, for realistic fields of spin 0, 1/2, or 1, any zero temperature
black hole solution to the equations must have an event horizon at ,
with the charge of the black hole. It is further shown that no black hole
solutions with can be obtained by solving the semiclassical
Einstein equations perturbatively.Comment: 7 pages, to appear in the Proceedings of the Ninth Marcel Grossmann
Meeting, change in titl
RURAL ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT: NEW OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES FOR COMMERCIAL BANKERS
The report discusses commercial banks' role in supporting economic development in rural America. It details demographic and economic trends in rural America. It discusses a number of economic development programs available to commercial bankers and to private sector/public sector partnerships. Finally, the report proposes a set of new tools for commercial bankers to further strengthen their participation in rural community economic development. Note: Figures are not included in the machine readable copy--contact the authors for more information.demographic trends, economic trends, rural America, role of commercial banks, economic development programs, new tools for bankers, Community/Rural/Urban Development, Financial Economics,
An analysis of penetration and ricochet phenomena in oblique hypervelocity impact
An experimental investigation of phenomena associated with the oblique hypervelocity impact of spherical projectiles on multisheet aluminum structures is described. A model that can be employed in the design of meteoroid and space debris protection systems for space structures is developed. The model consists of equations that relate crater and perforation damage of a multisheet structure to parameters such as projectile size, impact velocity, and trajectory obliquity. The equations are obtained through a regression analysis of oblique hypervelocity impact test data. This data shows that the response of a multisheet structure to oblique impact is significantly different from its response to normal hypervelocity impact. It was found that obliquely incident projectiles produce ricochet debris that can severely damage panels or instrumentation located on the exterior of a space structure. Obliquity effects of high-speed impact must, therefore, be considered in the design of any structure exposed to the meteoroid and space debris environment
Technical guide on documentation requirements for open market contract acquisitions of information resources
A guide is presented to assist requestors in formulating and submitting the required Complete Package for Information Resources (IR) acquisitions. Advance discussions with cognizant procurement personnel are strongly recommended for complex IR requirements or for those requestors new to the acquisition process. Open Market means the requirement either is not available on GSA Schedule Contract or exceeds the 25,000 small purchase threshold), are addressed
Coarse-Grained Simulation of Myosin-V Movement
We describe the development of a hierarchic modelling method applied to simulating the processive movement of the myosin-V molecular motor protein along an actin filament track. In the hierarchic model, three different levels of protein structure resolution are represented: secondary structure, domain, and protein, with the level of detail changing according to the degree of interaction among the molecules. The integrity of the system is maintained using a tree of spatially organised bounding volumes and distance constraints. Although applied to an actin-myosin system, the hierarchic framework is general enough so that it may easily be adapted to a number of other large biomolecular systems containing in the order of 100 proteins. We compared the simulation results with biophysical data, and despite the lack of atomic detail in our model, we find good agreement and can even suggest some refinements to the current model of myosin-V motion
Consensus structural models for the amino terminal domain of the retrovirus restriction gene Fv1 and the Murine Leukaemia Virus capsid proteins
BACKGROUND: The mouse Fv1 (friend virus) susceptibility gene inhibits the development of the murine leukaemia virus (MLV) by interacting with its capsid (CA) protein. As no structures are available for these proteins we have constructed molecular models based on distant sequence similarity to other retroviral capsid proteins. RESULTS: Molecular models were constructed for the amino terminal domains of the probable capsid-like structure for the mouse Fv1 gene product and the capsid protein of the MLV. The models were based on sequence alignments with a variety of other retrovirus capsid proteins. As the sequence similarity of these proteins with MLV and especially Fv1 is very distant, a threading method was employed that incorporates predicted secondary structure and multiple sequence information. The resulting models were compared with equivalent models constructed using the sequences of the capsid proteins of known structure. CONCLUSIONS: These comparisons suggested that the MLV model should be accurate in the core but with significant uncertainty in the loop regions. The Fv1 model may have some additional errors in the core packing of its helices but the resulting model gave some support to the hypothesis that it adopts a capsid-like structure
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