713 research outputs found

    Subjective reports of the effects induced with contact lens- spectacle telescopes

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    Subjective reports of the effects induced with contact lens- spectacle telescope

    Continuous oral chloroquine as a novel route for Plasmodium prophylaxis and cure in experimental murine models

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Chloroquine (CQ) is utilized as both cure and prophylaxis to <it>Plasmodium </it>infection. In animal studies, CQ administration to experimental animals is via intraperitoneal (i.p.) injection of a single dose that varies from daily to several times per week. Such daily administration can be distressing to the animals and provoke aggressive behaviors that may affect the immune responses of the animal and interfere with data read-outs.</p> <p>Findings</p> <p>We describe a novel, viable and efficacious prophylactic and curative administration route whereby chloroquine is continuously supplied in the drinking water to experimental animals. The prophylactic effect is robust and the curative effect against patent blood stage infection comparable to the traditional route of i.p. administration. Continuous drinking water administration may decrease animal stress responses and thus improve the reliability of experimental data.</p

    Understanding home water treatment systems (1995)

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    "New 7/93, Reprinted 6/95/5M.""Water Quality.""Focus area : drinking water.""Published by University Extension. University of Missouri-Columbia.""Reviewed and adapted for Missouri by Wanda Eubank, Jerry Carpenter, Bev Maltsberger, University of Missouri-Columbia, and Nix Anderson, Missouri Department of Health. From Buying Home Water Treatment Equipment by Adel L. Pfeil, Department of Consumer Sciences and Retailing, Purdue University.

    Feasibility Study and Demonstration of an Aluminum and Ice Solid Propellant

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    Aluminum-water reactions have been proposed and studied for several decades for underwater propulsion systems and applications requiring hydrogen generation. Aluminum and water have also been proposed as a frozen propellant, and there have been proposals for other refrigerated propellants that could be mixed, frozen in situ, and used as solid propellants. However, little work has been done to determine the feasibility of these concepts. With the recent availability of nanoscale aluminum, a simple binary formulation with water is now feasible. Nanosized aluminum has a lower ignition temperature than micronsized aluminum particles, partly due to its high surface area, and burning times are much faster than micron aluminum. Frozen nanoscale aluminum and water mixtures are stable, as well as insensitive to electrostatic discharge, impact, and shock. Here we report a study of the feasibility of an nAl-ice propellant in small-scale rocket experiments. The focus here is not to develop an optimized propellant; however improved formulations are possible. Several static motor experiments have been conducted, including using a flight-weight casing. The flight weight casing was used in the first sounding rocket test of an aluminum-ice propellant, establishing a proof of concept for simple propellant mixtures making use of nanoscale particles

    PRS5 COSTS OF COMMUNITY-ACQUIRED PNEUMONIA FROM THE HOSPITAL'S PERSPECTIVE IN GERMANY-FINAL RESULTS OF A PROSPECTIVE OBSERVATIONAL STUDY

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    Dispersion Effects in Nucleon Polarisabilities

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    We present a formalism to extract the dynamical nucleon polarisabilities defined via a multipole expansion of the structure amplitudes in nucleon Compton scattering. In contradistinction to the static polarisabilities, dynamical polarisabilities gauge the response of the internal degrees of freedom of a composed object to an external, real photon field of arbitrary energy. Being energy dependent, they therefore contain additional information about dispersive effects induced by internal relaxation mechanisms, baryonic resonances and meson production thresholds of the nucleon. We give explicit formulae to extract the dynamical electric and magnetic dipole as well as quadrupole polarisabilities from low energy nucleon Compton scattering up to the one pion production threshold and discuss the connection to the definition of static nucleon polarisabilities. As a concrete example, we examine the results of leading order Heavy Baryon Chiral Perturbation Theory for the four leading spin independent iso-scalar polarisabilities of the nucleon. Finally, we consider the possible r{\^o}le of energy dependent effects in low energy extractions of the iso-scalar dipole polarisabilities from Compton scattering on the deuteron.Comment: 17 pages LaTeX2e with 2 figures, using includegraphicx (5 .eps files). Minor corrections, references updated. Contents identical to version to appear in Phys. Rev. C 65, spelling differen

    The Threshold Pion-Photoproduction of Nucleons In The Chiral Quark Model

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    In this paper, we show that the low energy theorem (LET) of the threshold pion-photoproduction can be fully recovered in the quark model. An essential result of this investigation is that the quark-pion operators are obtained from the effective chiral Lagrangian, and the low energy theorem does not require the constraints on the internal structures of the nucleon. The pseudoscalar quark-pion coupling generates an additional term at order μ=mπ/M\mu=m_{\pi}/M only in the isospin amplitude A(−)A^{(-)}. The role of the transitions between the nucleon and the resonance P33(1232)P_{33}(1232) and P-wave baryons are also discussed, we find that the leading contributions to the isospin amplitudes at O(μ2)O(\mu^2) are from the transition between the P-wave baryons and the nucleon and the charge radius of the nucleon. The leading contribution from the P-wave baryons only affects the neutral pion production, and improve the agreement with data significantly. The transition between the resonance P33(1232)P_{33}(1232) and the nucleon only gives an order μ3\mu^3 corrections to A(−)A^{(-)}

    Near Real Time Data Processing In ICOS RI

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    This paper describes the implementation of (near) real-time (NRT) data processing in the recently launched European environmental research infrastructure ICOS. NRT applications include handling of raw sensor data (including safe storage and quality control), processing and evaluation of greenhouse gas mixing ratios and exchange fluxes, and the provision of data to the RI’s user communities

    The position and the residues of the delta resonance pole in pion photoproduction

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    We have analyzed the M1+(3/2)M_{1+}^{(3/2)} and E1+(3/2)E_{1+}^{(3/2)} multipole amplitudes of pion photoproduction in the framework of fixed-tt dispersion relations. Applying the speed plot technique to our results for these multipoles, we have determined the position and the residues of the Δ\Delta (1232) resonance pole. The pole is found at total c.m.c.m. energy W=(1211−50i)W = (1211 - 50i) MeV on the second Riemann sheet, and the ratio of the electric and magnetic residues is RΔ=−0.035−0.046iR_{\Delta} = - 0.035 - 0.046 i, resulting in an E2/M1 ratio for the "dressed" delta resonance of −3.5%- 3.5 \%.Comment: 16 pages LATEX including 5 postscript figures in a self-extracting uufile archiv

    Overview of the Nordic Seas CARINA data and salinity measurements

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    Water column data of carbon and carbon relevant hydrographic and hydrochemical parameters from 188 previously non-publicly available cruises in the Arctic, Atlantic, and Southern Ocean have been retrieved and merged into a new database: CARINA (CARbon IN the Atlantic). The data have been subject to rigorous quality control (QC) in order to ensure highest possible quality and consistency. The data for most of the parameters included were examined in order to quantify systematic biases in the reported values, i.e. secondary quality control. Significant biases have been corrected for in the data products, i.e. the three merged files with measured, calculated and interpolated values for each of the three CARINA regions; the Arctic Mediterranean Seas (AMS), the Atlantic (ATL) and the Southern Ocean (SO). With the adjustments the CARINA database is consistent both internally as well as with GLODAP (Key et al., 2004) and is suitable for accurate assessments of, for example, oceanic carbon inventories and uptake rates and for model validation. The Arctic Mediterranean Seas include the Arctic Ocean and the Nordic Seas, and the quality control was carried out separately in these two areas. This contribution provides an overview of the CARINA data from the Nordic Seas and summarises the findings of the QC of the salinity data. One cruise had salinity data that were of questionable quality, and these have been removed from the data product. An evaluation of the consistency of the quality controlled salinity data suggests that they are consistent to at least ±0.005
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