650 research outputs found
Orbital transfer vehicle oxygen turbopump technology. Volume 1: Design, fabrication, and hydrostatic bearing testing
The design, fabrication, and initial testing of a rocket engine turbopump (TPA) for the delivery of high pressure liquid oxygen using hot oxygen for the turbine drive fluid are described. This TPA is basic to the dual expander engine which uses both oxygen and hydrogen as working fluids. Separate tasks addressed the key issue of materials for this TPA. All materials selections emphasized compatibility with hot oxygen. The OX TPA design uses a two-stage centrifugal pump driven by a single-stage axial turbine on a common shaft. The design includes ports for three shaft displacement/speed sensors, various temperature measurements, and accelerometers
How does money influence health?
Why do people in poverty tend to have poorer health? This study looks at hundreds of theories to consider how income influences health. There is a graded association between money and health ? increased income equates to better health. But the reasons are debated. Researchers have reviewed theories from 272 wide-ranging papers, most of which examined the complex interactions between people?s income and their health throughout their lives. Key points This research identifies four main ways money affects people?s wellbeing: Material: Money buys goods and services that improve health. The more money families have, the better the goods they can buy. Psychosocial: Managing on a low income is stressful. Comparing oneself to others and feeling at the bottom of the social ladder can be distressing, which can lead to biochemical changes in the body, eventually causing ill health. Behavioural: For various reasons, people on low incomes are more likely to adopt unhealthy behaviours ? smoking and drinking, for example ? while those on higher incomes are more able to afford healthier lifestyles. Reverse causation (poor health leads to low income): Health may affect income by preventing people from taking paid employment. Childhood health may also affect educational outcomes, limiting job opportunities and potential earnings. The research is part of our programme of work on poverty in the UK
Biomechanics of predator–prey arms race in lion, zebra, cheetah and impala
The fastest and most manoeuvrable terrestrial animals are found in savannah habitats, where predators chase and capture running prey. Hunt outcome and success rate are critical to survival, so both predator and prey should evolve to be faster and/or more manoeuvrable. Here we compare locomotor characteristics in two pursuit predator–prey pairs, lion–zebra and cheetah–impala, in their natural savannah habitat in Botswana. We show that although cheetahs and impalas were universally more athletic than lions and zebras in terms of speed, acceleration and turning, within each predator–prey pair, the predators had 20% higher muscle fibre power than prey, 37% greater acceleration and 72% greater deceleration capacity than their prey. We simulated hunt dynamics with these data and showed that hunts at lower speeds enable prey to use their maximum manoeuvring capacity and favour prey survival, and that the predator needs to be more athletic than its prey to sustain a viable success rate
Model initialization in a tidally energetic regime : a dynamically adjusted objective analysis
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2011. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Elsevier B.V. for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Ocean Modelling 36 (2011): 219-227, doi:10.1016/j.ocemod.2011.01.001.A simple improvement to objective analysis of hydrographic data is proposed
to eliminate spatial aliasing e ects in tidally energetic regions. The proposed
method consists of the evaluation of anomalies from observations with respect
to circulation model elds. The procedure is run iteratively to achieve convergence.
The method is applied in the Bay of Fundy and compared with
traditional objective analysis procedures and dynamically adjusted climatological
elds. The hydrographic skill (di erence between observed and model
temperature and salinity) of the dynamically adjusted objective analysis is
signi cantly improved by reducing bias and correcting the vertical structure.
Representation of the observed velocities is also improved. The resulting
ow
is consistent with the known circulation in the Bay.The preparation of this paper was supported by NSF/NIEHS grant OCE-
0430724 (Woods Hole Center for Oceans and Human Health) and NOAA
grant NA06NOS4780245 (GOMTOX)
Uncovered diversity of a predominantly andean butterfly clade in the brazilian atlantic forest : a revision of the genus praepedaliodes forster (Lepidoptera: Nymphalidae, Satyrinae, Satyrini)
The genus Praepedaliodes Forster, 1964, the only representative of the mega-diverse mostly Andean Pedaliodes complex lineage in the Brazilian Atlantic Forest, is revised. Prior to this study, four species were known, P. phanias (Hewitson, 1862), P. granulata (Butler, 1868), P. amussis (Thieme, 1905) and P. exul (Thieme, 1905). Here, a further six are described, all from SE Brazil, expanding to 10 the number of species in this genus. Lectotypes are designated for P. phanias, P. granulata and P. amussis. The genus is most diverse in the Serra da Mantiqueira (São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, Minas Gerais) and in the Serra Geral (Paraná, Santa Catarina) with seven species occurring in both ranges. Praepedaliodes phanias is the most widespread species and the only one found in the western part of the Atlantic Forest; only this species and P. duartei Dias, Dolibaina & Pyrcz n. sp. occurring to near sea level. Other species, P. zaccae Dolibaina, Dias & Pyrcz n. sp., P. francinii Freitas & Pyrcz n. sp., P. sequeirae Pyrcz, Dias & Dolbaina n. sp., P. landryi Pyrcz & Freitas n. sp. and P. pawlaki Pyrcz & Boyer n. sp. are strictly montane and the highest species richness is reached at 1400–1800 m. One species, P. sequeirae n. sp., is a narrow endemic found only at timberline in the Agulhas Negras massif above 2300 m. Immature stages are described for two species, P. phanias and P. landryi n. sp. Molecular data (barcode region of cytochrome oxidase, subunit I) and adult morphology, including male and female genitalia, support the genus as monophyletic, belonging to a predominantly Andean clade of the Pedaliodes Butler, 1867 complex. Morphological evidences, in particular female genitalia comparative analysis, indicate the genera Physcopedaliodes Forster, 1964 and Panyapedaliodes Forster, 1964 as possibly the closest relatives to Praepedaliodes. Molecular data are inconclusive in this respect472211255CONSELHO NACIONAL DE DESENVOLVIMENTO CIENTÍFICO E TECNOLÓGICO - CNPQCOORDENAÇÃO DE APERFEIÇOAMENTO DE PESSOAL DE NÍVEL SUPERIOR - CAPESFUNDAÇÃO DE AMPARO À PESQUISA DO ESTADO DE SÃO PAULO - FAPESP302585/2011-7, 303834/2015-3; 563332/2010-7; 41143/2009-6; 150542/2013-5; 308247/2013-2; 304639/2014-1Não tem2016/15873-8; 2011/50225-3; 2013/50297-0We would like to express our gratitude the following persons who contributed at different stages in the elaboration of this paper: Alfred Moser (Porto Alegre), Ronaldo Francini (UNISANTOS) and André Tacioli, Junia Y. O. Carreira, Jessie P. Santos and Ana K. Silva (Unicamp) for logistical help in the field, comparison material and hosting Tamara M. C. Aguiar spread most of the adult DNA vouchers and the old material collected by K. S. Brown Jr. The following people helped by sending material and information: Roberto R. Greve (Foz do Iguaçu), Richard Raby (Serra da Bocaina), Augusto H. B. Rosa (Mantiqueira region), Geanne C. N. Pereira (Serra do Cipó) and Keith S. Brown Jr. (several places in SE Brazil). The authors also thank the ICMBio for the permits (#10438-1, #26712-4 and #10802-9), the CNPq by aproving our Scientific Expedition (portaria N° 240, de 11 de março de 2014) and all managers of the Conservation Unities visited during the development of the present study, in special Waldomiro P. Lopes (Parque Nacional do Caparaó), Léo Nascimento (Parque Nacional do Itatiaia), Mara P. Pais (Parque Nacional da Serra da Bocaina), Ingo Grantsau (Paranapiacaba) and Cecilia Cronemberger (Parque Nacional da Serra dos Órgãos). EPB thanks Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa no Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP) for a Post-doc fellowship (2016/15873-8). AVLF thanks the CNPq (fellowships 302585/2011-7, 303834/2015-3 and SISBIOTABrasil/CNPq - 563332/2010-7), the National Science Foundation (DEB-1256742), the “Rede Nacional de Identificação Molecular da Biodiversidade - BR-BoL” (MCT/CNPq/FNDCT 50/2010) and the BIOTA-FAPESP Program (2011/50225-3 and 2013/50297-0). Kim Garwood kindly provided the photographs of two species of Praepedaliodes in their natural habitat. Keith Willmott read the manuscript and added several valuable suggestions. Carlos Prieto provided the photograph of the syntype of Praepedaliodes amussis. TWP field work in SE Brazil was supported by MZ/IZ/UJ internal grants. FMSD, DRD, OHHM and MMC thank Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES, Edital 15/2014 CAPES/EMBRAPA) and Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq, 141143/2009-6, 150542/2013-5, 308247/2013-2, 304639/2014-1), for the fellowships granted to the author
The experience of conducting collaborative and intensive pragmatic qualitative (CLIP-Q) research to support rapid public health and healthcare innovation
A key challenge for qualitative methods in applied health research is the fast pace that can characterize the public health and health and care service landscape, where there is a need for research informed by immediate pragmatic questions and relevant findings are required quickly to inform decision-making. The COVID-19 pandemic accelerated the pace at which evidence was needed to inform urgent public health and healthcare decision-making. This required qualitative researchers to step up to the challenge of conducting research at speed whilst maintaining rigor and ensuring the findings are credible. This article illustrates how working with multidisciplinary, collaborative teams and the tailoring of qualitative methods to be more pragmatic and efficient can provide timely and credible results. Using time-limited case studies of applied qualitative health research drawn from the work of the Behavioral and Qualitative Science Team from the National Institute for Health and Care Research Applied Research Collaboration West (NIHR ARC West), we illustrate our collaborative and intensive pragmatic qualitative (CLIP-Q) approach. CLIP-Q involves (i) collaboration at all stages of the design, conduct and implementation of projects and, where possible, co-production with people with lived experience, (ii) an intensive team-based approach to data collection and analysis at pace, and (iii) pragmatic study design and efficient strategies at each stage of the research process. The case studies include projects conducted pre COVID-19 and during the first wave of the pandemic, where urgent evidence was required in weeks rather than months to inform rapid public health and healthcare decision making
20-fs 1.6-mJ pulses from a cw-diode-pumped single-stage 1-kHz Yb amplifier
200-fs 2.5-mJ pulses from a fiber-oscillator-seeded DPSS Yb:CaF2 MOPA are spectrally broadened in Ar and recompressed to 20 fs using a pair of LAK14 prisms. Multi-millijoule 12-fs pulses are feasible upon higher-order spectral phase correction. © 2010 Optical Society of America
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