1,216 research outputs found

    Particle Shape and Composition of NU-LHT-2M

    Get PDF
    Particle shapes of the lunar regolith simulant NU-LHT-2M were analyzed by scanning electron microscope of polished sections. These data provide shape, size, and composition information on a particle by particle basis. 5,193 particles were measured, divided into four sized fractions: less than 200 mesh, 200-100 mesh, 100-35 mesh, and greater than 35 mesh. 99.2% of all particles were monominerallic. Minor size versus composition effects were noted in minor and trace mineralogy. The two metrics used are aspect ratio and Heywood factor, plotted as normalized frequency distributions. Shape versus composition effects were noted for glass and possibly chlorite. To aid in analysis, the measured shape distributions are compared to data for ellipses and rectangles. Several other simple geometric shapes are also investigated as to how they plot in aspect ratio versus Heywood factor space. The bulk of the data previously reported, which were acquired in a plane of projection, are between the ellipse and rectangle lines. In contrast, these data, which were acquired in a plane of section, clearly show that a significant number of particles have concave hulls in this view. Appendices cover details of measurement error, use of geometric shapes for comparative analysis, and a logic for comparing data from plane of projection and plane of section measurements

    Injection of Oort Cloud comets: the fundamental role of stellar perturbations

    Get PDF
    Celestial Mechanics and Dynamical Astronomy, 102, pp. 111-132, http://dx.doi.org./10.1007/s10569-008-9140-yInternational audienc

    We’re Going Live When?! Implementing Digital Commons at Texas A&M University-Commerce

    Get PDF
    Texas A&M University-Commerce implemented Digital Commons as their institutional repository in Summer 2021. This is the first institutional repository launched at our university. The Implementation Committee divided into two groups, Scholarly Communications and Special Collections and University Archives, and each had unique needs and requirements. This included developing an organizational structure, workflows, creating policies, usage permissions, and identifying content. This was a complex project for our small staff, but we were able to launch successfully by our deadline. This session focuses on the most important decisions made in order to launch Digital Commons in under a month. We will discuss our implementation workflows, processes and challenges that were met. We will wrap up by discussing what worked and what did not work

    Figures of Merit Software: Description, User's Guide, Installation Notes, Versions Description, and License Agreement

    Get PDF
    Figures of Merit (FoMs) and the FoM software provide a method for quantitatively evaluating the quality of a regolith simulant by comparing the simulant to a reference material. FoMs may be used for comparing a simulant to actual regolith material, specification by stating the value a simulant s FoMs must attain to be suitable for a given application and comparing simulants from different vendors or production runs. FoMs may even be used to compare different simulants to each other. A single FoM is conceptually an algorithm that computes a single number for quantifying the similarity or difference of a single characteristic of a simulant material and a reference material and provides a clear measure of how well a simulant and reference material match or compare. FoMs have been constructed to lie between zero and 1, with zero indicating a poor or no match and 1 indicating a perfect match. FoMs are defined for modal composition, particle size distribution, particle shape distribution, (aspect ratio and angularity), and density. This TM covers the mathematics, use, installation, and licensing for the existing FoM code in detail

    The destruction of an Oort Cloud in a rich stellar cluster

    Get PDF
    Context. It is possible that the formation of the Oort Cloud dates back to the earliest epochs of solar system history. At that time, the Sun was almost certainly a member of the stellar cluster where it was born. Since the solar birth cluster is likely to have been massive (103−104ℳ⊙), and therefore long-lived, an issue concerns the survival of such a primordial Oort Cloud. Aims. We have investigated this issue by simulating the orbital evolution of Oort Cloud comets for several hundred Myr, assuming the Sun to start its life as a typical member of such a massive cluster. Methods. We have devised a synthetic representation of the relevant dynamics, where the cluster potential is represented by a King model, and about 20 close encounters with individual cluster stars are selected and integrated based on the solar orbit and the cluster structure. Thousands of individual simulations are made, each including 3000 comets with orbits with three different initial semi-major axes. Results. Practically the entire initial Oort Cloud is found to be lost for our choice of semi-major axes (5000−20 000 au), independent of the cluster mass, although the chance of survival is better for the smaller cluster, since in a certain fraction of the simulations the Sun orbits at relatively safe distances from the dense cluster centre. Conclusions. For the range of birth cluster sizes that we investigate, a primordial Oort Cloud will likely survive only as a small inner core with semi-major axes ≲3000 au. Such a population of comets would be inert to orbital diffusion into an outer halo and subsequent injection into observable orbits. Some mechanism is therefore needed to accomplish this transfer, in case the Oort Cloud is primordial and the birth cluster did not have a low mass. From this point of view, our results lend some support to a delayed formation of the Oort Cloud, that occurred after the Sun had left its birth cluste

    Space Shuttle Debris Impact Tool Assessment Using the Modern Design of Experiments

    Get PDF
    Complex computer codes are used to estimate thermal and structural reentry loads on the Shuttle Orbiter induced by ice and foam debris impact during ascent. Such debris can create cavities in the Shuttle Thermal Protection System. The sizes and shapes of these cavities are approximated to accommodate a code limitation that requires simple "shoebox" geometries to describe the cavities -- rectangular areas and planar walls that are at constant angles with respect to vertical. These approximations induce uncertainty in the code results. The Modern Design of Experiments (MDOE) has recently been applied to develop a series of resource-minimal computational experiments designed to generate low-order polynomial graduating functions to approximate the more complex underlying codes. These polynomial functions were then used to propagate cavity geometry errors to estimate the uncertainty they induce in the reentry load calculations performed by the underlying code. This paper describes a methodological study focused on evaluating the application of MDOE to future operational codes in a rapid and low-cost way to assess the effects of cavity geometry uncertainty

    Epitaxial Growth Kinetics with Interacting Coherent Islands

    Full text link
    The Stranski-Krastanov growth kinetics of undislocated (coherent) 3-dimensional islands is studied with a self-consistent mean field rate theory that takes account of elastic interactions between the islands. The latter are presumed to facilitate the detachment of atoms from the islands with a consequent decrease in their average size. Semi-quantitative agreement with experiment is found for the time evolution of the total island density and the mean island size. When combined with scaling ideas, these results provide a natural way to understand the often-observed initial increase and subsequent decrease in the width of the coherent island size distribution.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure

    Efficiency of free energy calculations of spin lattices by spectral quantum algorithms

    Full text link
    Quantum algorithms are well-suited to calculate estimates of the energy spectra for spin lattice systems. These algorithms are based on the efficient calculation of the discrete Fourier components of the density of states. The efficiency of these algorithms in calculating the free energy per spin of general spin lattices to bounded error is examined. We find that the number of Fourier components required to bound the error in the free energy due to the broadening of the density of states scales polynomially with the number of spins in the lattice. However, the precision with which the Fourier components must be calculated is found to be an exponential function of the system size.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures; corrected typographical and minor mathematical error

    Rotation-assisted wet-spinning of UV-cured gelatin fibres and nonwovens

    Get PDF
    Photoinduced network formation is an attractive strategy for designing water-insoluble gelatin fibres as medical device building blocks and for enabling late-stage property customisation. However, mechanically competent, long-lasting filaments are still hard to realise with current photoactive, e.g. methacrylated, gelatin systems due to inherent spinning instability and restricted coagulation capability. To explore this challenge, we present a multiscale approach combining the synthesis of 4-vinylbenzyl chloride (4VBC)-functionalised gelatin (Gel-4VBC) with a voltage-free spinning and UV-curing process so that biopolymer networks in the form of either individual fibres or nonwovens could be successfully manufactured. In comparison with state-of-the-art methacrylated gelatin, the mechanical properties of UV-cured Gel-4VBC fibres were readily modulated by adjustment of coagulation conditions, so that an ultimate tensile strength and strain at break of 25 ± 4–74 ± 3 MPa and 1.7 ± 0.3–8.6 ± 0.5% were measured, respectively. The sequential functionalisation/spinning route proved to be highly scalable, so that one-step spun-laid formation of fibroblast-friendly nonwoven fabrics was successfully demonstrated with wet-spun Gel-4VBC fibres. The presented approach could be exploited to generate a library of gelatin building blocks tuneable from the molecular to the macroscopic level to deliver computer-controlled extrusion of fibres and nonwovens according to defined clinical applications

    What is the optimum time to start antiretroviral therapy in people with HIV and tuberculosis coinfection? A systematic review and meta-analysis

    Get PDF
    Background: HIV and tuberculosis are frequently diagnosed concurrently. In March 2021, World Health Organization recommended that antiretroviral therapy (ART) should be started within two weeks of tuberculosis treatment start, at any CD4 count. We aimed to assess whether earlier ART improved outcomes in people with newly diagnosed HIV and tuberculosis. Methods: We did a systematic review by searching nine database for for trials that compared earlier ART to later ART initiation in people with HIV and tuberculosis. We included studied published from database inception to 12 March 2021. We compared ART within four weeks vs. ART more than four weeks after TB treatment, and ART within two weeks vs. ART between two and eight weeks, and stratified analysis by CD4 count. The main outcome was death; secondary outcomes included IRIS and AIDS-defining events. We used random effects meta-analysis to pool effect estimates. Results: 2468 abstracts were screened, from which we identified nine trials. Among people with all CD4 counts, there was no difference in mortality by earlier ART (≤ 4 week) vs. later ART (> 4 week) (risk difference [RD] 0%; 95% confidence interval [CI] -2% to +1%). Among people with CD4 count ≤50 cells/mm3, earlier ART (≤4 weeks) reduced risk of death (RD -6%; -10% to -1%). Among people with all CD4 counts earlier ART (≤4 weeks) increased the risk of IRIS (RD +6%, 95% CI +2% to +10%) and reduced the incidence of AIDS defining events (RD -2%, 95% CI -4% to 0%). Results were similar when trials were restricted to the five trials which permitted comparison of ART within two weeks to ART between two and eight weeks. Discussion: Earlier ART did not alter risk of death overall among people living with HIV who had TB disease. Trials were conducted between 2004 and 2014, before recommendations to treat HIV at any CD4 count or to rapidly start ART in people without TB. No trials included children or pregnant women. No trials included integrase inhibitors in ART regimens. For logistical and patient preference reasons, earlier ART initiation for everyone with TB and HIV may be preferred to later ART
    • …
    corecore