2,938 research outputs found
A Colpitts Oscillator Design Technique Using S-Parameters
This research report describes a method for designing a Colpitts oscillator using S-parameters. The oscillator components are grouped into three functional blocks: 1) an unstable active network (which includes the transistor, feedback capacitor, and input resistor); 2) an output matching network (which includes the inductor, tuning capacitor, and load); and, 3) an input matching network (which consists of the remaining tank capacitor). This configuration not only satisfies the standard Colpitts oscillator topology, but allows the use of three simple criteria (based on the network S-parameters) to predict oscillation. A computer program was developed to calculate specific tank component values based on these criteria. An example oscillator (at 100 MHz) was built to verify the procedure
Employee Age as a Moderator of the Relationship Between Ambition and Work Role Affect
Past research has demonstrated a negative relationship between ambition, or the desire to get ahead, and job satisfaction. In the present paper, age was hypothesized to moderate the relationship between ambition and job satisfaction such that the relationship between ambition and satisfaction is more negative for older employees than for younger employees. Three studies, with three criterion variables (promotion satisfaction, extrinsic job satisfaction, overall job satisfaction), were used to test the hypothesis. Results indicated support for the hypothesized interaction. The discussion focuses on the implications of the results for organizational and individual career management strategies
Mutational and transcriptional analyses of an avian pathogenic Escherichia coli ColV plasmid
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Previously we described a 184-kb ColV plasmid, pAPEC-O2-ColV, that contributed to the ability of an <it>E. coli </it>to kill avian embryos, grow in human urine, and colonize the murine kidney. Here, the roles of several genes encoded by this plasmid in virulence were assessed using mutational and transcriptional analyses.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Genes chosen for deletion were <it>iss</it>, <it>tsh</it>, <it>iutA</it>, <it>iroN</it>, <it>sitA</it>, and <it>cvaB</it>. In addition, a 35-kb region of the plasmid, containing <it>iss</it>, <it>tsh</it>, and the ColV and <it>iro </it>operons, along with a 15-kb region containing both the aerobactin and <it>sit </it>operons, were deleted. Mutants were compared to the wild-type (APEC O2) for lethality to chick embryos and growth in human urine. Expression of the targeted genes was also assessed under these same conditions using RT-PCR</p> <p>Results</p> <p>No significant differences between the mutants and the wild-type in these phenotypic traits were detected. However, genes encoding known or predicted iron transport systems were up-regulated during growth in human urine, as compared to growth in LB broth, while <it>iss</it>, <it>hlyF</it>, and <it>iroN </it>were strongly up-regulated in chick embryos.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>While no difference was observed between the mutant strains and their wild-type parent in the phenotypic traits assayed, we reasoned that some compensatory virulence mechanism, insensitivity of the virulence assays, or other factor could have obscured changes in the virulence of the mutants. Indeed we found several of these genes to be up-regulated in human urine and/or in the chick embryo, suggesting that certain genes linked to ColV plasmids are involved in the establishment of avian extraintestinal infection.</p
The influence of dynamic environmental interactions on detection efficiency of acoustic transmitters in a large, deep, freshwater lake
Background: Acoustic telemetry is an increasingly common method used to address ecological questions about the movement, behaviour, and survival of freshwater and marine organisms. The variable performance of acoustic telemetry equipment and ability of receivers to detect signals from transmitters have been well studied in marine and coral reef environments to inform study design and improve data interpretation. Despite the growing use of acoustic telemetry in large, deep, freshwater systems, detection efficiency and range, particularly in relation to environmental variation, are poorly understood. We used an array of 90 69-kHz acoustic receivers and 8 sentinel range transmitters of varying power output deployed at different depths and locations approximately 100-9500 m apart for 215 days to evaluate how the detection efficiency of acoustic receivers varied spatially and temporally in relation to environmental conditions. Results: The maximum distance that tags were detected ranged from 5.9 to 9.3 km. Shallow tags consistently had lower detection efficiency than deep tags of the same power output and detection efficiency declined through the winter months (December-February) of the study. In addition to the distance between tag and receiver, thermocline strength, surface water velocity, ice thickness, water temperature, depth range between tag and receiver, and number of fish detections contributed to explaining variation in detection efficiency throughout the study period. Furthermore, the most significant models incorporated interactions between several environmental variables and tag-receiver distance, demonstrating the complex temporal and spatial relationships that exist in heterogeneous environments. Conclusions: Relying on individual environmental variables in isolation to interpret receiver performance, and thus animal behaviour, may be erroneous when detection efficiency varies across distances, depths, or tag types. As acoustic telemetry becomes more widely used to study ecology and inform management, it is crucial to understand its limitations in heterogeneous environments, such as freshwater lakes, to improve the quality and interpretation of data. We recommend that in situ range testing and retrospective analysis of detection efficiency be incorporated into study design for telemetry projects. Furthermore, we caution against oversimplifying the dynamic relationship between detection efficiency and environmental conditions for the sake of producing a correction that can be applied directly to detection data of tagged animals when the intended correction may not be justified
Treatment Longevity and Changes in Surface Fuel Loads After PinyonâJuniper Mastication
In the Intermountain West, land managers masticate pinyon pine (Pinus spp.) and juniper (Juniperus spp.) trees that have encroached sagebrush steppe communities to reduce canopy fuels, alter potential fire behavior, and promote growth of understory grasses, forbs, and shrubs. At three study sites in Utah, 45 sampling plots spanning a range of tree cover from 5% to 50% were masticated. We measured surface fuel load components three times over a 10âyr period. We also measured tree cover, density, and height as indicators of treatment longevity. Changes in these variables were analyzed across the range of preâtreatment tree cover using linear mixed effects modeling. We detected decreases in 1âh down woody debris by 5â6 yr postâtreatment, and from 5â6 to 10 yr postâtreatment, but did not detect changes in 10âh or 100 + 1000âh down woody debris. By 10 yr postâtreatment, there was very little duff and tree litter left for all preâtreatment tree cover values. Herbaceous fuels (all standing live and dead biomass) increased through 10 yr postâtreatment. At 10 yr postâtreatment, pinyonâjuniper cover ranged 0â2.6%, and the majority of trees were1âh fuels were the only class of down woody debris that decreased, it may be beneficial to masticate woody fuels to the finest size possible. Decreases in 1âh down woody debris and duff + litter fuels over time may have important implications for fire behavior and effects, but increases in herbaceous and shrub fuel loads should also be taken into account. At 10 yr postâtreatment, understory grasses and shrubs were not being outcompeted by trees, and average pinyonâjuniper canopy cover wa
Complete Spontaneous Regression of Pulmonary Metastatic Melanoma
Complete spontaneous regression of melanoma metastatic to the lungs is a rare event. objective . To report a case of biopsy-proven melanoma metastatic to the lung with complete spontaneous regression. methods . Multidisciplinary case report. results . A 35-year-old white female was diagnosed with metastatic melanoma to the lung. A pleural biopsy confirmed the diagnosis. Partial spontaneous regression was noted by a staging computed tomography scan prior to enrollment in an investiga-tional protocol. Complete spontaneous regression occurred over 5 months without any form of conventional or alternative therapy, and the patient remains disease-free 3 years after diagnosis. conclusions . Our case represents the seventh case of complete spontaneous regression of melanoma metastatic to the lung, and the only case with histologic confirmation of both the primary and pulmonary metastatic lesions. The patient was pregnant twice between the time of her initial diagnosis of primary melanoma and pulmonary metastatic disease.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/75559/1/j.1524-4725.1998.tb04275.x.pd
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Aerosol physical properties and processes in the lower marine boundary layer: A comparison of shipboard sub-micron data from ACE-1 and ACE-2
The goals of the IGAC Aerosol Characterization Experiments (ACE) are to determine and understand the properties and controlling processes of the aerosol in a globally representative range of natural and anthropogenically perturbed environments. ACE-1 was conducted in the remote marine atmosphere south of Australia while ACE-2 was conducted in the anthropogenically modified atmosphere of the Eastern North Atlantic. In-situ shipboard measurements from the RV Discoverer(ACE-1) and the RV Professor Vodyanitskiy(ACE-2), combined with calculated back trajectories can be used to define the physical properties of the sub-micron aerosol in marine boundary layer (MBL) air masses from the remote Southern Ocean, Western Europe, the Iberian coast, the Mediterranean and the background Atlantic Ocean. The differences in these aerosol properties, combined with dimethylsulfide, sulfur dioxide and meteorological measurements provide a means to assess processes that affect the aerosol distribution. The background sub-micron aerosol measured over the Atlantic Ocean during ACE-2 was more abundant (number and volume) and appeared to be more aged than that measured over the Southern Ocean during ACE-1. Based on seawater DMS measurements and wind speed, the oceanic source of non-sea-salt sulfur and sea-salt to the background marine atmosphere during ACE-1 and ACE-2 was similar. However, the synoptic meteorological pattern was quite different during ACE-1 and ACE-2. The frequent frontal passages during ACE-1 resulted in the mixing of nucleation mode particles into the marine boundary layer from the free troposphere and relatively short aerosol residence times. In the more stable meteorological setting of ACE-2, a significant nucleation mode aerosol was observed in the MBL only for a half day period associated with a weak frontal system. As a result of the longer MBL aerosol residence times, the average background ACE-2 accumulation mode aerosol had a larger diameter and higher number concentration than during ACE-1. The sub-micron aerosol number size distributions in the air masses that passed over Western Europe, the Mediterranean, and coastal Portugal were distinctly different from each other and the background aerosol. The differences can be attributed to the age of the air mass and the degree of cloud processing
Electrosurgery and Implantable Electronic Devices: Review and Implications for OfficeâBased Procedures
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/86867/1/j.1524-4725.2011.02006.x.pd
Classification of broadband echoes from prey of a foraging Blainville's beaked whale
Author Posting. © Acoustical Society of America, 2008. This article is posted here by permission of Acoustical Society of America for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 123 (2008): 1753-1762, doi:10.1121/1.2828210.Blainville's beaked whales (Mesoplodon densirostris) use broadband, ultrasonic echolocation signals with a â10 dB bandwidth from 26 to 51 kHz to search for, localize, and approach prey that generally consist of mid-water and deep-water fishes and squid. Although it is well known that the spectral characteristics of broadband echoes from marine organisms vary as a function of size, shape, orientation, and anatomical group, there is little evidence as to whether or not free-ranging toothed whales use spectral cues in discriminating between prey and nonprey. In order to study the prey-classification process, a stereo acoustic tag was deployed on a Blainville's beaked whale so that emitted clicks and the corresponding echoes from targets in the water could be recorded. A comparison of echoes from targets apparently selected by the whale and those from a sample of scatterers that were not selected suggests that spectral features of the echoes, target strengths, or both may have been used by the whale to discriminate between echoes. Specifically, the whale appears to favor targets with one or more nulls in the echo spectra and to seek prey with higher target strengths at deeper depths.Field work was supported by the U.S. National
Oceanographic Partnership Program, the U.S. Office of Naval
Research, and the Canary Islands government.
Analysis of the data was supported by the Office
of the Oceanographer of the U.S. Navy, The Academic Programs
Office at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
and the Danish Natural Science Research Council through a
Steno scholarship to Peter T. Madsen
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