303 research outputs found
Determination of Gd concentration profile in UO2-Gd2O3 fuel pellets
A transversal mapping of the Gd concentration was measured in UO2-Gd2O3
nuclear fuel pellets by electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy (EPR). The
quantification was made from the comparison with a Gd2O3 reference sample. The
nominal concentration in the pellets is UO2: 7.5 % Gd2O3. A concentration
gradient was found, which indicates that the Gd2O3 amount diminishes towards
the edges of the pellets. The concentration varies from (9.3 +/- 0.5)% in the
center to (5.8 +/- 0.3)% in one of the edges. The method was found to be
particularly suitable for the precise mapping of the distribution of Gd3+ ions
in the UO2 matrix.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, 2 tables. Submitted to Journal of Nuclear
Material
Eye-Movements in a Text Reading Task: A Comparison of Preterm Children, Children with Dyslexia and Typical Readers
Preterm birth is associated with weaknesses in reading skills that are usually less severe than those of children with dyslexia. To understand the characteristics of reading processes in preterm children, we adopted a cross-population and multi-modal approach comparing eye movements in reading tasks among three groups: children with preterm birth, children with a diagnosis of dyslexia, and children with typical development. The study involved 78 participants (10.5 years). Eye movements (number and duration of fixations, amplitude and number of saccades, number of regressions) were recorded during the silent reading of two texts; cognitive and reading standardized tasks were also administered. Children with dyslexia had more fixations and more frequent and smaller saccades compared to the preterm group and children with typical development. They also showed more regressions compared to the control group. Preterm children showed shorter fixations compared to the other groups. Cognitive and reading standardized tasks confirmed severe delays in reading in children with dyslexia and some weaknesses in text reading speed and comprehension in preterm children. These results are discussed with reference to candidate mechanisms that underlie reading processes in preterm children and considering possible implications for research
Succor System and Failure Indication for the Starter Batteries of Emergency Gensets
Nowadays there are 3 % of missed start-ups of emergency gensets in Italian hospitals every year. The subject of this work is the analysis of the failure to start an emergency genset due to the failure of the batteries. The work is based on ten years statistics of maintenance on hospital facilities. A real case study is here described; measurements were made on a 1000 kVA genset of a hospital to study the real operating conditions of the system. The whole electrical, mechanical and dynamic model of the starter system of a genset is studied. Computer simulations for this study are based on the Matlab/Simulink model of the considered starter system. An automatic system of parallel between the batteries of different generators is presented as a solution to the problem. This system can also indicate to the maintenance technician the need to replace a partially deteriorated battery in a timely manner. It is also proved that it is possible to succor the failed battery instantly without losing the first part of the starting transient. The work demonstrates that the failure to start, due to a fault in the batteries, can be significantly reduced by using the proposed solution. With this technical proposal the risk of blackouts and relative human losses are largely reduced
Shortest Paths in Graphs of Convex Sets
Given a graph, the shortest-path problem requires finding a sequence of edges
with minimum cumulative length that connects a source to a target vertex. We
consider a generalization of this classical problem in which the position of
each vertex in the graph is a continuous decision variable, constrained to lie
in a corresponding convex set. The length of an edge is then defined as a
convex function of the positions of the vertices it connects. Problems of this
form arise naturally in road networks, robot navigation, and even optimal
control of hybrid dynamical systems. The price for such a wide applicability is
the complexity of this problem, which is easily seen to be NP-hard. Our main
contribution is a strong mixed-integer convex formulation based on perspective
functions. This formulation has a very tight convex relaxation and allows to
efficiently find globally-optimal paths in large graphs and in high-dimensional
spaces
The shapes of an epidemic: using Functional Data Analysis to characterize COVID-19 in Italy
We investigate patterns of COVID-19 mortality across 20 Italian regions and
their association with mobility, positivity, and socio-demographic,
infrastructural and environmental covariates. Notwithstanding limitations in
accuracy and resolution of the data available from public sources, we pinpoint
significant trends exploiting information in curves and shapes with Functional
Data Analysis techniques. These depict two starkly different epidemics; an
"exponential" one unfolding in Lombardia and the worst hit areas of the north,
and a milder, "flat(tened)" one in the rest of the country -- including Veneto,
where cases appeared concurrently with Lombardia but aggressive testing was
implemented early on. We find that mobility and positivity can predict COVID-19
mortality, also when controlling for relevant covariates. Among the latter,
primary care appears to mitigate mortality, and contacts in hospitals, schools
and work places to aggravate it. The techniques we describe could capture
additional and potentially sharper signals if applied to richer data
AN ENZYMATIC FUNCTION ASSOCIATED WITH TRANSFORMATION OF FIBROBLASTS BY ONCOGENIC VIRUSES : I. CHICK EMBRYO FIBROBLAST CULTURES TRANSFORMED BY AVIAN RNA TUMOR VIRUSES
Chick embryo fibroblast cultures develop fibrinolytic activity after transformation by Rous sarcoma virus (RSV). This fibrinolytic activity is not present in normal cultures, and it does not appear after infection with either nontransforming strains of avian leukosis viruses or cytocidal RNA and DNA viruses. In cultures infected with a temperature sensitive mutant of RSV the onset of fibrinolysis appears after exposure to permissive temperatures and precedes by a short interval the appearance of morphological evidence of transformation. See PDF for Structure The rate of fibrinolysis in transformed cultures depends on the nature of the serum that is present in the growth medium: some sera (e.g., monkey or chicken serum) promote high enzymatic activity, while others (calf, fetal bovine) do not. Some sera contain inhibitors of the fibrinolysin. Based on the effect of a small number of known inhibitors, at least one step of the fibrinolytic process shows specificity resembling that of trypsin. The sera of sarcoma-bearing chickens contain an inhibitor of the fibrinolysin, whereas normal chicken sera do not. For general discussion, conclusions, and summary see the accompanying paper, part II, (J. Exp. Med. 137:112)
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