977 research outputs found
The effect of tip shields on a horizontal tail surface
A series of experiments made in the wind tunnel of the Daniel Guggenheim School of Aeronautics, New York University, on the effect of tip shields on a horizontal tail surface are described and discussed. It was found that some aerodynamic gain can be obtained by the use of tip shields though it is considered doubtful whether their use would be practical
Sensitive imaging of electromagnetic fields with paramagnetic polar molecules
We propose a method for sensitive parallel detection of low-frequency
electromagnetic fields based on the fine structure interactions in paramagnetic
polar molecules. Compared to the recently implemented scheme employing
ultracold Rb atoms [B{\"o}hi \textit{et al.}, Appl. Phys. Lett.
\textbf{97}, 051101 (2010)], the technique based on molecules offers a 100-fold
higher sensitivity, the possibility to measure both the electric and magnetic
field components, and a probe of a wide range of frequencies from the dc limit
to the THz regime
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Associated reading skills in children with a history of Specific Language Impairment (SLI)
A large cohort of 200 eleven-year-old children with Specific Language Impairment (SLI) were assessed on basic reading accuracy and on reading comprehension as well as language tasks. Reading skills were examined descriptively and in relation to early language and literacy factors. Using stepwise regression analyses in which age and nonverbal IQ were controlled for, it was found that a single word reading measure taken at 7 years was unsurprisingly a strong predictor of the two different types of reading ability. However, even with this measure included, a receptive syntax task (TROG) entered when reading accuracy score was the DV. Furthermore, a test of expressive syntax/narrative and a receptive syntax task completed at 7 years entered into the model for word reading accuracy. When early reading accuracy was excluded from the analyses, early phonological skills also entered as a predictor of both reading accuracy and comprehension at 11 years. The group of children with a history of SLI were then divided into those with no literacy difficulties at 11 and those with some persisting literacy impairment. Using stepwise logistic regression, and again controlling for IQ and age, 7 years receptive syntax score (but not tests of phonology, expressive vocabulary or expressive syntax/narrative) entered as a positive predictor of membership of the ‘no literacy problems’ group regardless of whether early reading accuracy was controlled for in step one. The findings are discussed in relation to the overlap of SLI and dyslexia and the long term sequelae of language impairment
A novel concept for the manufacture of individual sapphire-metallic hip joint endoprostheses.
At the present time, artificial joints made with metallic, ceramic, metal-polymeric or ceramicpolymeric
friction pairs substituting for the natural biomechanic articulations "head of the hip
joint-acetabulum" are widely used for endoprosthetic operations on hip joints. Experience
gained in the course of more than 2000 operations has shown that along with the
advantageous properties of modern endoprosthetic constructions made of metal, ceramics
and polymers, they have certain drawbacks. Among them are insufficient biological inertness
and susceptibility to excessive wear of the friction pair components. In addition, as a result of
wear of the hinge friction pair, toxic and oncologically dangerous products of degradation
accumulate in the different organs and tissues. This in turn results in severe complications and
demands correspondingly complicated corrective intervention, often leading to worse
disability than that which the original operation was designed to cure. The aim of the study
reported here was the development and clinical validation of a highly effective and long-lived
hip joint endoprosthesis with a sapphire head whose wear capacity is superior to all others.
The endoprosthesis consists of a metallic pedicle, a dismountable articulation (metallic necklayer
of supramolecular polyethylene-sapphire head) and an acetabular cup. The endoprostheses
with the sapphire head proved themselves positively in clinical trials and are
considered to be highly promising for future applications
Diffusional Relaxation in Random Sequential Deposition
The effect of diffusional relaxation on the random sequential deposition
process is studied in the limit of fast deposition. Expression for the coverage
as a function of time are analytically derived for both the short-time and
long-time regimes. These results are tested and compared with numerical
simulations.Comment: 9 pages + 2 figure
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Narrative skills in adolescents with a history of SLI in relation to non-verbal IQ scores
There is a debate about whether the language of children with primary language disorders and normal cognitive levels is qualitatively different from those with language impairments who have low or borderline non-verbal IQ (NVIQ). As children reach adolescence, this distinction may be even harder to ascertain, especially in naturalistic settings. Narrative may provide a useful, ecologically valid way in which to assess the language ability of adolescents with specific language impairment (SLI) who have intact or lowered NVIQ and to determine whether there is any discernable difference in every day language. Nineteen adolescents with a history of SLI completed two narrative tasks: a story telling condition and a conversational condition. Just under half the group (n = 8) had non-verbal IQs of 85. The remaining 11 had NVIQs in the normal range or above. Four areas of narrative (productivity, syntax, cohesion and performance) were assessed. There were no differences between the groups on standardized tests of language. However, the group with low NVIQ were poorer on most aspects of narrative, suggesting that cognitive level is important, even when language is the primary disorder. The groups showed similar patterns of differences between story telling and conversational narrative. It was concluded that adolescents with a history of SLI and poor cognitive levels have poorer narrative skills than those with normal range NVIQ even though these may not be detected by standardized assessment. Their difficulties present as qualitatively similar to those with normal range NVIQ and narratives appear impoverished rather than inaccurate
Investigations of excitation energy transfer and intramolecular interactions in a nitrogen corded distrylbenzene dendrimer system.
The photophysics of an amino-styrylbenzene dendrimer (A-DSB) system is probed by time-resolved and steady state luminescence spectroscopy. For two different generations of this dendrimer, steady state absorption, emission, and photoluminescence excitation spectra are reported and show that the efficiency of energy transfer from the dendrons to the core is very close to 100%. Ultrafast time-resolved fluorescence measurements at a range of excitation and detection wavelengths suggest rapid (and hence efficient) energy transfer from the dendron to the core. Ultrafast fluorescence anisotropy decay for different dendrimer generations is described in order to probe the energy migration processes. A femtosecond time-scale fluorescence depolarization was observed with the zero and second generation dendrimers. Energy transfer process from the dendrons to the core can be described by a Förster mechanism (hopping dynamics) while the interbranch interaction in A-DSB core was found to be very strong indicating the crossover to exciton dynamics
Kinetics and Jamming Coverage in a Random Sequential Adsorption of Polymer Chains
Using a highly efficient Monte Carlo algorithm, we are able to study the
growth of coverage in a random sequential adsorption (RSA) of self-avoiding
walk (SAW) chains for up to 10^{12} time steps on a square lattice. For the
first time, the true jamming coverage (theta_J) is found to decay with the
chain length (N) with a power-law theta_J propto N^{-0.1}. The growth of the
coverage to its jamming limit can be described by a power-law, theta(t) approx
theta_J -c/t^y with an effective exponent y which depends on the chain length,
i.e., y = 0.50 for N=4 to y = 0.07 for N=30 with y -> 0 in the asymptotic limit
N -> infinity.Comment: RevTeX, 5 pages inclduing figure
On the fluctuations of jamming coverage upon random sequential adsorption on homogeneous and heterogeneous media
The fluctuations of the jamming coverage upon Random Sequential Adsorption
(RSA) are studied using both analytical and numerical techniques. Our main
result shows that these fluctuations (characterized by )
decay with the lattice size according to the power-law . The exponent depends on the dimensionality of
the substrate and the fractal dimension of the set where the RSA process
actually takes place () according to .This
theoretical result is confirmed by means of extensive numerical simulations
applied to the RSA of dimers on homogeneous and stochastic fractal substrates.
Furthermore, our predictions are in excellent agreement with different previous
numerical results.
It is also shown that, studying correlated stochastic processes, one can
define various fluctuating quantities designed to capture either the underlying
physics of individual processes or that of the whole system. So, subtle
differences in the definitions may lead to dramatically different physical
interpretations of the results. Here, this statement is demonstrated for the
case of RSA of dimers on binary alloys.Comment: 20 pages, 8 figure
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