23,741 research outputs found
Zero gravity liquid transfer screen
A liquid transfer device for use in a zero gravity environment, for transferring liquid from one container to another is described. The device includes a spiral shaped screen type member which is carried in the container for collecting the randomly dispersed liquid and transferring such to an exit port
Floating baffle to improve efficiency of liquid transfer from tanks
When liquid tank is full, baffle is held up against a stop on top of shaft to prevent restriction of flow from outlet. As tank is being emptied, baffle, floating on top of liquid surface, descends with liquid level toward outlet until it reaches its bottom stop. Baffle prevents gas pull-through until practically all liquid is emptied from tank
Geysering inhibitor pipe
Smaller concentric pipe is welded to main pipe beginning above bottom of isolation valve and terminating in storage tank at top. There is continuous circulation of fluid which maintains fluid temperature below boiling temperature of liquid oxygen
Steady-state MreB helices inside bacteria: dynamics without motors
Within individual bacteria, we combine force-dependent polymerization
dynamics of individual MreB protofilaments with an elastic model of
protofilament bundles buckled into helical configurations. We use variational
techniques and stochastic simulations to relate the pitch of the MreB helix,
the total abundance of MreB, and the number of protofilaments. By comparing our
simulations with mean-field calculations, we find that stochastic fluctuations
are significant. We examine the quasi-static evolution of the helical pitch
with cell growth, as well as timescales of helix turnover and denovo
establishment. We find that while the body of a polarized MreB helix treadmills
towards its slow-growing end, the fast-growing tips of laterally associated
protofilaments move towards the opposite fast-growing end of the MreB helix.
This offers a possible mechanism for targeted polar localization without
cytoplasmic motor proteins.Comment: 7 figures, 1 tabl
Persistence in the zero-temperature dynamics of the -states Potts model on undirected-directed Barab\'asi-Albert networks and Erd\"os-R\'enyi random graphs
The zero-temperature Glauber dynamics is used to investigate the persistence
probability in the Potts model with , ,..., states on {\it directed} and {\it
undirected} Barab\'asi-Albert networks and Erd\"os-R\'enyi random graphs. In
this model it is found that decays exponentially to zero in short times
for {\it directed} and {\it undirected} Erd\"os-R\'enyi random graphs. For {\it
directed} and {\it undirected} Barab\'asi-Albert networks, in contrast it
decays exponentially to a constant value for long times, i.e, is
different from zero for all values (here studied) from ; this shows "blocking" for all these values. Except that for
in the {\it undirected} case tends exponentially to zero;
this could be just a finite-size effect since in the other "blocking" cases you
may have only a few unchanged spins.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figures for IJM
Properties of Intercalated 2H-NbSe2, 4Hb-TaS2 and 1T-TaS2
The layered compounds 2H-NbSe, 24Hb-TaS, 2and 1T-TaS2 have been intercalated with organic molecules; and the resulting crystal structure, heat capacity, conductivity, and superconductivity have been studied. The coordination in the disulfide layers was found to be unchanged in the product phase. Resistance minima appear and the superconducting transition temperature is reduced in the NbSe2 complex. Conversely, superconductivity is induced in the 4Hb-TaS2 complex. Corresponding evidence of a large change of the density of states, negative for 2H-NbSe2 and positive for 4Hb-TaS2, was also observed upon intercalation. The transport properties of all the intercalation complexes show a pronounced dependence upon the coordination of the transition metal
The Residual Hearsay Exceptions: Maryland\u27s Lukewarm Welcome
On July 1, 1994 Maryland codified its rules of evidence, bringing them into accord with the substance of the Federal Rules of Evidence. In doing so, Maryland followed the trend set by thirty-seven other states. The codified evidence rules, known collectively as Title 5 of the Maryland Rules, were made applicable to all actions and proceedings in the courts of this State, with some exceptions
Internal Motility in Stiffening Actin-Myosin Networks
We present a study on filamentous actin solutions containing heavy meromyosin
subfragments of myosin II motor molecules. We focus on the viscoelastic phase
behavior and internal dynamics of such networks during ATP depletion. Upon
simultaneously using micro-rheology and fluorescence microscopy as
complementary experimental tools, we find a sol-gel transition accompanied by a
sudden onset of directed filament motion. We interpret the sol-gel transition
in terms of myosin II enzymology, and suggest a "zipping" mechanism to explain
the filament motion in the vicinity of the sol-gel transition.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
The Residual Hearsay Exceptions: Maryland\u27s Lukewarm Welcome
On July 1, 1994 Maryland codified its rules of evidence, bringing them into accord with the substance of the Federal Rules of Evidence. In doing so, Maryland followed the trend set by thirty-seven other states. The codified evidence rules, known collectively as Title 5 of the Maryland Rules, were made applicable to all actions and proceedings in the courts of this State, with some exceptions
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