511 research outputs found

    Fluidic Technology and Some Recent Applications to Space and Oceanography

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    This paper is presented to show the degree of advancements that fluidic technology is making in various technical disciplines. Examples are used and discussed based on the many programs sponsored by the government. The references used here represent only a small percent of the total. Individuals with specific interests or applications can expand the reference list on the choosen subject to take advantage of the considerable amount of advanced research and development already completed

    CoreTSAR: Task Scheduling for Accelerator-aware Runtimes

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    Heterogeneous supercomputers that incorporate computational accelerators such as GPUs are increasingly popular due to their high peak performance, energy efficiency and comparatively low cost. Unfortunately, the programming models and frameworks designed to extract performance from all computational units still lack the flexibility of their CPU-only counterparts. Accelerated OpenMP improves this situation by supporting natural migration of OpenMP code from CPUs to a GPU. However, these implementations currently lose one of OpenMPā€™s best features, its flexibility: typical OpenMP applications can run on any number of CPUs. GPU implementations do not transparently employ multiple GPUs on a node or a mix of GPUs and CPUs. To address these shortcomings, we present CoreTSAR, our runtime library for dynamically scheduling tasks across heterogeneous resources, and propose straightforward extensions that incorporate this functionality into Accelerated OpenMP. We show that our approach can provide nearly linear speedup to four GPUs over only using CPUs or one GPU while increasing the overall flexibility of Accelerated OpenMP

    Inelastic interaction mean free path of negative pions in tungsten

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    The inelastic interaction mean free paths lambda of 5, 10, and 15 GeV/c pions were measured by determining the distribution of first interaction locations in a modular tungsten-scintillator ionization spectrometer. In addition to commonly used interaction signatures of a few (2-5) particles in two or three consecutive modules, a chi2 distribution is used to calculate the probability that the first interaction occurred at a specific depth in the spectrometer. This latter technique seems to be more reliable than use of the simpler criteria. No significant dependence of lambda on energy was observed. In tungsten, lambda for pions is 206 plus or minus 6 g/sq cm

    The release of the prothoracicotropic hormone in the tobacco hornworm, Manduca sexta, is controlled intrinsically by juvenile hormone

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    Pupal development is elicited early in the last larval instar of the tobacco hornworm, Manduca sexta (Johannson), by a precise temporal and quantitative increase in the haemolymph titre of 20-hydroxyecdysone. This increase in the titre is referred to as the pupal commitment peak, and it occurs once the titre of juvenile hormone (JH) has dropped. If the haemolymph titre of JH remains elevated at this time due to topical application of the hormone or of its analogue ZR512, commitment is delayed or inhibited in a dose-dependent manner. This delay or inhibition is due to the curtailment of the commitment peak in the ecdysteroid titre, which results from a failure of the prothoracic glands (PG) to increase the synthesis/secretion of the premoulting hormone, ecdysone. Since the PG from ZR512- and JH 1-treated larvae are capable of being activated in vitro by the prothoracicotropic hormone (PTTH), the effect of JH on the PG does not involve suppression of gland sensitivity to PTTH. The locus of the JH effect was determined to be the brain-retrocerebral complexes (Br-CC-CA), on the basis of experiments which tested the effect of implanted Br-CC-CA from pre-commitment larvae treated with JH on the occurrence of pupal commitment in head-ligated larval hosts. The implanted, JH-treated Br-CC-CA exhibited a delayed release of PTTH, and the effect was at concentrations of JH that were physiological. These results argue that JH functions to control the time during the last larval instar when pupal commitment occurs by dictating when PTTH will undergo gated release

    Heterogeneous Task Scheduling for Accelerated OpenMP

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    Roscoe Pound Round-Table Discussion

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    Conference of Chief Justices and Conference of State Court Administrators Annual Meeting July 29-August 2, 2006 Indianapolis, Indiana

    Topographic, Hydraulic, and Vegetative Controls on Bar and Island Development in Mixed Bedrockā€Alluvial, Multichanneled, Dryland Rivers

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    We investigate processes of bedrockā€core bar and island development in a bedrockā€influenced anastomosed reach of the Sabie River, Kruger National Park (KNP), eastern South Africa. For sites subject to alluvial stripping during an extreme flood event (~4470ā€5630 m3 sā€1) in 2012, preā€ and postā€flood aerial photographs and LiDAR data, 2D morphodynamic simulations, and field observations reveal that the thickest surviving alluvial deposits tend to be located over bedrock topographic lows. At a simulated peak discharge (~4500 m3 sā€1), most sediment (sand, fine gravel) is mobile but localized deposition on bedrock topographic highs is possible. At lower simulated discharges (<1000 m3 sā€1), topographic highs are not submerged, and deposition occurs in lower elevation areas, particularly in areas disconnected from the main channels during falling stage. Field observations suggest that in addition to discharge, rainwash between floods may redistribute sediments from bedrock topographic highs to lower elevation areas, and also highlight the critical role of vegetation colonization in bar stability, and in trapping of additional sediment and organics. These findings challenge the assumptions of preferential deposition on topographic highs that underpin previous analyses of KNP river dynamics, and are synthesized in a new conceptual model that demonstrates how initial bedrock topographic lows become topographic highs (bedrock coreā€bars and islands) in the latter stages of sediment accumulation. The model provides particular insight into the development of mixed bedrockā€alluvial anastomosing along the KNP rivers, but similar processes of bar/island development likely occur along numerous other bedrockā€influenced rivers across dryland southern Africa and farther afield

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