9,602 research outputs found

    The Influence of Extended Cure on Mechanical Performance of Aerospace-Grade Film Adhesives

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    Bonded adhesive joints have seen increased usage in aircraft structures as weight and cost reductions drive manufacturers to composite designs. As the use of epoxy film adhesives become more prevalent, it is important to characterize the thermal and mechanical properties of the adhesive after exposure to various manufacturing conditions. Prior studies suggest that thermal characteristics and mechanical performance of epoxy resin formulations may be considered a function of chemical structure, cure temperature, and cure duration. It was therefore hypothesized that by controlling cure temperature and duration, the Tg, degree of cure, and mechanical performance of aerospace-grade film adhesives may be controlled. Three epoxy film adhesives cured with three different cure cycles were thermally characterized using DSC, DMA, and rheological techniques. It was shown that increased cure duration provided increased degrees of cure and Tg of the adhesives as a result of a more developed polymer network. V-notch shear and flat-wise tensile testing at ambient dry and elevated temperature wet conditions were used to mechanically characterize the performance of the adhesives cured with three different cure cycles. Mechanical test results showed that adhesives with more aromatic chemical structures saw less degradation as a result of moisture exposure and elevated temperature testing, while the adhesive with simpler chemical structure exhibited significantly reduced performance at elevated temperature wet conditions. It was concluded that while extended cure exposure did not provide significant gains in mechanical performance, the increased polymer network development provided increased resistance to the effects of moisture absorption and elevated temperature environments

    Planning as Theorem Proving with Heuristics

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    Planning as theorem proving in situation calculus was abandoned 50 years ago as an impossible project. But we have developed a Theorem Proving Lifted Heuristic (TPLH) planner that searches for a plan in a tree of situations using the A* search algorithm. It is controlled by a delete relaxation-based domain independent heuristic. We compare TPLH with Fast Downward (FD) and Best First Width Search (BFWS) planners over several standard benchmarks. Since our implementation of the heuristic function is not optimized, TPLH is slower than FD and BFWS. But it computes shorter plans, and it explores fewer states. We discuss previous research on planning within KR\&R and identify related directions. Thus, we show that deductive lifted heuristic planning in situation calculus is actually doable.Comment: Submitted for a review. Copyright (C) 2023 by Mikhail Soutchanski and Ryan Youn

    Evidence of a Plasmoid-Looptop Interaction and Magnetic Inflows During a Solar Flare/CME Eruptive Event

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    Observational evidence is presented for the merging of a downward-propagating plasmoid with a looptop kernel during an occulted limb event on 2007 January 25. RHESSI lightcurves in the 9-18 keV energy range, as well as that of the 245 MHz channel of the Learmonth Solar Observatory, show enhanced nonthermal emission in the corona at the time of the merging suggesting that additional particle acceleration took place. This was attributed to a secondary episode of reconnection in the current sheet that formed between the two merging sources. RHESSI images were used to establish a mean downward velocity of the plasmoid of 12 km/s. Complementary observations from the SECCHI suite of instruments onboard STEREO-Behind showed that this process occurred during the acceleration phase of the associated CME. From wavelet-enhanced EUVI, images evidence of inflowing magnetic field lines prior to the CME eruption is also presented. The derived inflow velocity was found to be 1.5 km/s. This combination of observations supports a recent numerical simulation of plasmoid formation, propagation and subsequent particle acceleration due to the tearing mode instability during current sheet formation.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figures, ApJ (Accepted

    Differential Tissue Response to Growth Hormone in Mice

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    Growth hormone (GH) has been shown to act directly on multiple tissues throughout the body. Historically, it was believed that GH acted directly in the liver and only indirectly in other tissues via insulin‐like growth hormone 1 (IGF‐1). Despite extensive work to describe GH action in individual tissues, a comparative analysis of acute GH signaling in key metabolic tissues has not been performed. Herein, we address this knowledge gap. Acute tissue response to human recombinant GH was assessed in mice by measuring signaling via phospho‐STAT5 immunoblotting. STAT5 activation is an easily and reliably detected early marker of GH receptor engagement. We found differential tissue sensitivities; liver and kidney were equally GH‐sensitive and more sensitive than white adipose tissue, heart, and muscle (gastrocnemius). Gastrocnemius had the greatest maximal response compared to heart, liver, white adipose tissue, and whole kidney. Differences in maximum responsiveness were positively correlated with tissue STAT5 abundance, while differences in sensitivity were not explained by differences in GH receptor levels. Thus, GH sensitivity and responsiveness of distinct metabolic tissues differ and may impact physiology and disease
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