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Maximum Intensity (maximum + intensity)
Terms modified by Maximum Intensity Selected AbstractsON THE OPPORTUNITY FOR SEXUAL SELECTION, THE BATEMAN GRADIENT AND THE MAXIMUM INTENSITY OF SEXUAL SELECTIONEVOLUTION, Issue 7 2009Adam G. Jones Bateman's classic paper on fly mating systems inspired quantitative study of sexual selection but also resulted in much debate and confusion. Here, I consider the meaning of Bateman's principles in the context of selection theory. Success in precopulatory sexual selection can be quantified as a "mating differential," which is the covariance between trait values and relative mating success. The mating differential is converted into a selection differential by the Bateman gradient, which is the least squares regression of relative reproductive success on relative mating success. Hence, a complete understanding of precopulatory sexual selection requires knowledge of two equally important aspects of mating patterns: the mating differential, which requires a focus on mechanisms generating covariance between trait values and mating success, and the Bateman gradient, which requires knowledge of the genetic mating system. An upper limit on the magnitude of the selection differential on any sexually selected trait is given by the product of the standard deviation in relative mating success and the Bateman gradient. This latter view of the maximum selection differential provides a clearer focus on the important aspects of precopulatory sexual selection than other methods and therefore should be an important part of future studies of sexual selection. [source] HYDROLOGY AND GEOMORPHIC EFFECTS OF A HIGH-MAGNITUDE FLOOD IN AN ALPINE RIVERGEOGRAFISKA ANNALER SERIES A: PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY, Issue 1 2007DAVID MORCHE ABSTRACT. The catchment of the River Partnach, a torrent situated in a glacial valley in the Northern Calcareous Alps of Bavaria/Germany, was affected by a high-magnitude flood on 22/23 August 2005 with a peak discharge of more than 16 m3s -1 at the spring and about 50 m3s -1 at the catchment outlet. This flood was caused by a long period of intense rainfall with a maximum intensity of 230 mm per day. During this event, a landslide dam, which previously held a small lake, failed. The flood wave originating from the dam breach transported a large volume of sediment (more than 50 000 m3) derived from bank erosion and the massive undercutting of a talus cone. This caused a fundamental transformation of the downstream channel system including the redistribution of large woody debris and channel switching. Using terrestrial survey and aerial photography, erosional and depositional consequences of the event were mapped, pre- and post-event surfaces were compared and the sediment budget of the event calculated for ten consecutive channel reaches downstream of the former lake. According to the calculations more than 100 000 tonnes of sediment were eroded, 75% of which was redeposited within the channel and the proximal floodplain. A previous large flood which occurred a few weeks prior to the August 2005 event had a significant effect on controlling the impact of this event. [source] Mixed convection in a horizontal square duct with local inner heatingHEAT TRANSFER - ASIAN RESEARCH (FORMERLY HEAT TRANSFER-JAPANESE RESEARCH), Issue 3 2005Koichi Ichimiya Abstract Numerical analyses were performed for the effect of local inner heating on the mixing flow in a horizontal square duct. Three-dimensional governing equations were solved for Re = 100,Pr = 0.72, and six kinds of inner heating sizes in a duct, with insulated walls or uniform temperature walls. Local inner heating induced the local buoyancy force and produced four recirculating flows across a section in a thermally insulated duct. In a horizontal square duct with uniform wall temperature, the interaction of the buoyancy-induced flows by temperature difference between the fluid and the local inner heating, and between the fluid and the walls reduced the maximum intensity of the secondary flow. Two recirculating flows were generated in a downward region. Heat transfer was locally enhanced or depressed corresponding to the flow situation. © 2005 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Heat Trans Asian Res, 34(3): 160,170, 2005; Published online in Wiley InterScience (www.interscience.wiley.com). DOI 10.1002/htj.20056 [source] The preparation of ZnGa2O4 doped with Mn-Mg and Tm for green and blue phosphorsIEEJ TRANSACTIONS ON ELECTRICAL AND ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING, Issue 1 2006Binod Kumar Singh Non-member Abstract Phosphor powders of zinc gallate (ZnGa2O4) with Mg and Mn for green and Tm-Mg for blue luminescence were prepared by solid state reaction method for their improved luminescent properties. Green-luminescence emitting ZnMnGa2O4 reached maximum intensity at Mn = 0.005 mol% and further improvement was achieved by the addition of Mg2+. Tm-Mg based zinc gallate phosphor exhibited a strong blue emission, centered at ,420 nm with the maximum intensity achieved for 0.003 mol% of Mg and 0.015 mol% of Tm. This study established the possibilities of controlling the luminescent characteristics of zinc gallate by adding various elements. © 2006 Institute of Electrical Engineers of Japan. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Inc. [source] Davydov's solitons in a homogeneous nucleotide chainINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF QUANTUM CHEMISTRY, Issue 1 2010Victor D. Lakhno Abstract Charge transfer in homogeneous nucleotide chains is modeled on the basis of Holstein Hamiltonian. The path length of Davydov solitons in these chains is being studied. It is shown that in a dispersionless case, when the soliton velocity V is small, the path length grows exponentially as V decreases. In this case, the state of a moving soliton is quasisteady. In the presence of dispersion determined by the dependence ,2 = , + V,2, the path length in the region 0 < V < V0 is equal to infinity. In this case, the phonon environment follows the charge motion. In the region V > V0, the soliton motion is accompanied by emission of phonons which leads to a finite path length of a soliton. The latter tends to infinity as V , V0 + 0 and V , ,. The presence of dissipation leads to a finite soliton path length. An equilibrium velocity of soliton in an external electric field is calculated. It is shown that there is a maximum intensity of an electric field at which a steady motion of a soliton is possible. The soliton mobility is calculated for the stable or ohmic brunch. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Int J Quantum Chem, 2010 [source] Modelling of diffraction from fibre texture gradients in thin polycrystalline filmsJOURNAL OF APPLIED CRYSTALLOGRAPHY, Issue 4 2007M. Birkholz Crystallographic textures in thin polycrystalline films typically exhibit a rotational symmetry, i.e. they occur as a fibre texture with the texture pole being orientated in the direction of the substrate normal. As a further characteristic of thin-film textures, it was often observed that the degree of preferred orientation increases with increasing thickness. It is shown in this work how a fibre texture gradient may be modelled in kinematical X-ray diffraction and which effects it has on the intensity mapping of the IHKL reflection, when the HKL pole is the fibre axis. A general expression for IHKL is derived for a depth-dependent fibre texture that is based on the finite Laplace transform of the texture distribution. The concept is outlined for the cosn, function to model the tilt-angle dependence of intensity, with the parameter n denoting the degree of texture. It is found that the measured intensity distribution sensitively depends on the ratio of texture gradient over X-ray attenuation coefficient. For particular cases, it is found that the maximum intensity may occur for non-zero tilt angles and thus arise at a different tilt angle from the pole of the fibre texture. [source] Inferential non-centred principal curve analysis of time-intensity curves in sensory analysis: the methodology and its application to beer astringency evaluationJOURNAL OF CHEMOMETRICS, Issue 5-6 2007Nancy François Abstract Improving technologies and better understanding of sensory phenomena have lead sensory analysts to develop statistical methods to assess sensations that endure over time (e.g. the bitterness or astringency of a beer) dynamically. The data produced by this type of experiment is classically a time-intensity (TI) curve, and their analysis remains an active research topic. The classical approach, widely used in this context, starts by extracting some significant parameters from the initial curves (maximum intensity, area under the curve (AUC), etc.). Descriptive data analysis or statistical modelling is then applied to get information from these summary parameters. This paper presents a different method, called inferential non-centred principal curve analysis (INCPCA), for the analysis of TI curves. It combines multivariate analysis (to visualise the curves in a space of smaller dimensions) with statistical modelling (aimed at enhancing the significance of factor effects). Non-centred principal curves (NCPCs) are first extracted from the curves matrix. They decompose the TI curves into different interpretable components. Score plots are used to represent the projection of the initial curves in the space of the first principal curves and allow factors and judge effects to be visualised. Mixed modelling is then applied to test the significance of these effects using PCA scores as model responses. The classical and INCPCA methods are illustrated on a TI experiment exploring the relation between beer astringency and three factors of interest: pH, O2 content and aging. Eight beers arranged in a 23 factorial design were tested in triplicate by eight trained judges. Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Did the Indo-Asian summer monsoon decrease during the Holocene following insolation?,JOURNAL OF QUATERNARY SCIENCE, Issue 7 2010Manish Tiwari Abstract A few studies from the western Arabian Sea indicate that the Indian summer (or southwest) monsoon (ISM), after attaining its maximum intensity at ca. 9,ka, declined during the Holocene, as did insolation. In contrast, earlier and later observations from both the eastern and the western Arabian Sea do not support this inference. Analysis of multiple proxies of productivity in a new sediment core from the western Arabian Sea fails to confirm the earlier, single-proxy (e.g. abundance of Globigerina bulloides) based, inference of the Holocene weakening of ISM, following insolation. The reason for the observed decreasing trend in foraminiferal abundance , the basis for the earlier inference , could be the favouring of silicate rather than carbonate productivity by the increased ISM wind strength. Although ISM exhibits several multi-millennial scale fluctuations, there is no evidence from several multi-proxy data to conclude that it declined during the Holocene; this is consistent with the phase lag analysis of longer time series of monsoon proxies. Thus, on sub-Milankovitch timescales, ISM did not follow insolation, highlighting the importance of internal feedbacks. A comparison with East Asian summer monsoon (EASM) records suggests that both ISM and EASM varied in unison, implying common forcing factors on such longer timescales. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] SERS study of hydrogen peroxide electroreduction on a Pb-modified Au electrodeJOURNAL OF RAMAN SPECTROSCOPY, Issue 6-7 2005Xiao Li Abstract The mechanism of the electroreduction of H2O2 on a Pb-modified Au surface was examined by surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy. The measurements show the presence of lead peroxide, PbOOH+, with the maximum intensity at potential just positive of underpotentially deposited Pb, and bimetallic dihydroxide, AuPb(OH)2, at potential just positive of that where peroxide is reduced and Pb islands maximally formed on the surface. All the modes for these two species decay rapidly and even disappear as the reduction current flows. Both species are absent in solutions not containing either Pb2+ or H2O2. The edge of Pb islands on the Au surface is thus shown to be the active site for this catalysis process. These results further underscore the important role of MOH species in the peroxide electroreduction reaction. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] MULTIPLE TIME-INTENSITY ANALYSIS AND ACCEPTANCE OF RASPBERRY-FLAVORED GELATINJOURNAL OF SENSORY STUDIES, Issue 5 2009ALESSANDRA B. PALAZZO ABSTRACT Face to face with the scenario of current human nutrition, there is an ever-growing preoccupation with the provision of healthy and rapidly prepared diets, gelatin being an important product, taking into consideration its properties, such as muscular regeneration and bone strengthening. The objective of this work is to evaluate different brands of raspberry-flavored gelatin, both traditional and diet, by multiple time-intensity analysis for sweet, acid and raspberry flavor, as well as an acceptance test with 120 consumers. The statistical analysis included variance analysis, Tukey tests and Internal Preference Map. The results showed that there was no significant difference between all the samples to the time in which the maximum intensity of sweetness and acidity occurs. The results indicated a greater acceptance of the traditional samples, which were preferred by the majority (85% regarding intention to purchase). The aspartame/acessulfame-potassium edulcorants were those that recorded behavior most distant from sucrose, compared with sodium saccharine and sodium cyclamate edulcorants. PRACTICAL APPLICATIONS The time-intensity analysis is important to provide how the flavor behavior is for the consumers during the food ingestion and is used in order to obtain the temporal profile of an attribute in a certain product. This analysis is different from the conventional descriptive analysis because it allows the verification of changes in the perception of a product's attribute over time. The sensory results showed in this study should be useful to researchers and product developers who are working with different edulcorants in food, especially in gelatin products. Observing both multiple time-intensity curves and affective data at the same time, it is possible to determine which intensity and duration of sensory characteristics have influenced the consumer's preference. [source] GUSTATORY REACTION TIME AND TIME INTENSITY MEASUREMENTS OF TREHALOSE AND SUCROSE SOLUTIONS AND THEIR MIXTURESJOURNAL OF SENSORY STUDIES, Issue 2 2009MARA VIRGINIA GALMARINI ABSTRACT Dynamic sweetness perception of commercial food grade trehalose, sucrose solutions and their mixtures were studied for a wide range of concentrations. For gustatory reaction time (GRT), concentrations ranged from 2.3 to 13.8% for sucrose and up to 23.0% for trehalose. For time intensity (T-I) sucrose or trehalose solutions (concentration range 2.3,36.8%) and their combinations (23.0 and 36.8% total solids) were analyzed. Trehalose had bigger GRT along the studied range. Both sugars presented similar values for persistence and times of plateau and to maximum intensity, while a significant difference was observed in intensity and GRT at equal concentrations. Trehalose had longer persistence than sucrose in equi -sweet solutions. Overall sweetness profile of some sucrose solutions (i.e., 29.9% sucrose solution and 0.6 sucrose/trehalose ratio mixture at 36.8% total solids) were perceived as similar to mixtures of sucrose/trehalose or single trehalose solutions, which suggests the possibility of sugar replacement without completely modifying sweetness perception. PRACTICAL APPLICATIONS It has been suggested that trehalose may be a potential substitute for sucrose and other sugars used in food formulation because, although its chemical structure is very similar to that of sucrose, it is more stable at low pH and high temperatures. It is not involved in caramelization and does not participate in Maillard reaction with amino acids/proteins. In order to fully establish the potential of trehalose as a functional replacement of sucrose we have determined the sweetness dynamic profile (gustatory reaction time and time-intensity curves) of trehalose solutions and sucrose/trehalose solutions; this aspect is needed for adequately replacing (partially or totally) sucrose in food systems. [source] Porphyrin distribution after topical aminolevulinic acid in a novel porcine model of sebaceous skin,,LASERS IN SURGERY AND MEDICINE, Issue 2 2009Fernanda H. Sakamoto MD Abstract Background and Objective Aminolevulinic acid photodynamic therapy (ALA-PDT) depends on drug metabolism into porphyrins. Clinically, ALA-PDT has been used with a wide range of protocols for treating both epidermal and dermal targets, despite limited understanding of porphyrin biodistribution over time. We studied porphyrin accumulation after topical application of ALA in vivo, and also describe the porcine ear as a new animal model to study adnexal glands. Study Design/Materials and Methods The microanatomy of anterior ear skin of swine was measured. Topical 20% ALA in water/ethanol was applied under occlusion. Biopsies taken after 5, 10, 15, and then every 15 minutes for a total of 3 hours were examined by fluorescence microscopy of frozen sections to assess accumulation and distribution of porphyrins. Results Porphyrin fluorescence of digital photomicrograph images was not visually apparent until 30,45 minutes after application, although quantitative pixel analysis showed a statistically significant increase in epidermal fluorescence only 15 minutes after ALA application. From 30 to 120 minutes, epidermis, hair follicles (HF), and sebaceous glands (SG) became progressively more fluorescent. Eccrine gland fluorescence began to be detected after 30 minutes; SG showed fluorescence starting at 45,75 minutes. Fluorescence in all sites reached maximum intensity from 75 to 180 minutes of incubation. There was a trend for HF and SG to express stronger fluorescence compared with epidermis and eccrine glands. Conclusion Anterior pig ear skin is microanatomically similar to human sebaceous skin. The time-dependent accumulation of porphyrins in pilosebaceous units and eccrine glands in this model suggests other routes of uptake of topical ALA in addition to the trans-epidermal route. Apparently, time interval between ALA application and light exposure could be optimized for different uses of ALA-PDT. Lasers Surg. Med. 41:154,160, 2009. © 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Correlation between the occurrence of 1H-MRS lipid signal, necrosis and lipid droplets during C6 rat glioma developmentNMR IN BIOMEDICINE, Issue 4 2003Sonja Zoula Abstract The aim of this study was to investigate the possible correlation between the 1H MRS mobile lipid signal, necrosis and lipid droplets in C6 rat glioma. First, the occurrence of necrosis and lipid droplets was determined during tumor development, by a histological analysis performed on 34 rats. Neither necrosis nor lipid droplets were observed before 18 days post-implantation. At later stages of development, both necrosis and lipid droplets were apparent, the lipid droplets being mainly located within the necrotic areas. Using a second group of eight rats, a temporal correlation was evidenced between mobile lipid signal detected by in vivo single-voxel one- (136,ms echo time) and two-dimensional J -resolved 1H MR spectroscopy, and the presence of necrosis and lipid droplets on the histological sections obtained from the brains of the same rats. Finally, spatial distribution of the mobile lipid signal was analyzed by chemical-shift imaging performed on a third group of eight animals, at the end of the tumor growth. The spectroscopic image corresponding to the resonance of mobile lipids had its maximum intensity in the center of the tumor where necrotic regions were observed on the histological sections. These necrotic areas contained large amounts of lipid droplets. All these results suggest that mobile lipids detected in vivo by 1H MRS (136,ms echo time) in C6 rat brain glioma arise mainly from lipid droplets located in necrosis. Copyright © 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Preparation of extruded melt-mixed polypropylene/montmorillonite nanocomposites with inline monitoringPOLYMER ENGINEERING & SCIENCE, Issue 3 2010Marcelo K. Bertolino This article advances the use of an inline optical detector to monitor the disaggregation of the montmorillonite (MMT) clay tactoids during the preparation of polypropylene (PP)/MMT nanocomposites via polymer melt compounding. During the exfoliation of the tactoids their size are reduced below the minimum particle size to produce light extinction and so, the signal of the inline detector reduces as the nanosize composite is formed. The measurement is done at the transient state with the MMT clay added as a pulse with constant weight into the PP extrusion melt flow and followed by the optical detector. The data comes out as the common residence time distribution curves having its maximum intensity related to the tactoids average particle size, keeping all other variables constants. The light extinction was measured for composites with different clays (Cloisite® 15A, 30B, Na+, and Sintered 20A) using the same PP grafted with maleic anhydride compatibilizer. The dissaglomeration/exfoliation efficiency increases as: ,,Sintered 20A'' < ,,Na+ clay'' < ,,organo-modified clay'' < ,,organo-modified clay + compatibilizer''. The best result is obtained using Cloisite® 15A and Cloisite® 20A following the expected reduction of the particle size obtained during a nanocomposite melt processing. POLYM. ENG. SCI., 2010. © 2009 Society of Plastics Engineers [source] Molecular mass ranges of coal tar pitch fractions by mass spectrometry and size-exclusion chromatographyRAPID COMMUNICATIONS IN MASS SPECTROMETRY, Issue 13 2009F. Karaca A coal tar pitch was fractionated by solvent solubility into heptane-solubles, heptane-insoluble/toluene-solubles (asphaltenes), and toluene-insolubles (preasphaltenes). The aim of the work was to compare the mass ranges of the different fractions by several different techniques. Thermogravimetric analysis, size-exclusion chromatography (SEC) and UV-fluorescence spectroscopy showed distinct differences between the three fractions in terms of volatility, molecular size ranges and the aromatic chromophore sizes present. The mass spectrometric methods used were gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS), pyrolysis/GC/MS, electrospray ionization Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry (ESI-FTICRMS) and laser desorption time-of-flight mass spectrometry (LD-TOFMS). The first three techniques gave good mass spectra only for the heptane-soluble fraction. Only LDMS gave signals from the toluene-insolubles, indicating that the molecules were too involatile for GC and too complex to pyrolyze into small molecules during pyrolysis/GC/MS. ESI-FTICRMS gave no signal for toluene-insolubles probably because the fraction was insoluble in the methanol or acetonitrile, water and formic acid mixture used as solvent to the ESI source. LDMS was able to generate ions from each of the fractions. Fractionation of complex samples is necessary to separate smaller molecules to allow the use of higher laser fluences for the larger molecules and suppress the formation of ionized molecular clusters. The upper mass limit of the pitch was determined as between 5000 and 10,000,u. The pitch asphaltenes showed a peak of maximum intensity in the LDMS spectra at around m/z 400, in broad agreement with the estimate from SEC. The mass ranges of the toluene-insoluble fraction found by LDMS and SEC (400,10,000,u with maximum intensity around 2000,u by LDMS and 100,9320,u with maximum intensity around 740,u by SEC) are higher than those for the asphaltene fraction (200,4000,u with maximum intensity around 400,u by LDMS and 100,2680,u with maximum intensity around 286,u by SEC) and greater than values considered appropriate for petroleum asphaltenes (300,1200,u with maximum intensity near 700,u). Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Tropical-cyclone intensification and predictability in three dimensionsTHE QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL METEOROLOGICAL SOCIETY, Issue 632 2008Nguyen Van Sang Abstract We present numerical-model experiments to investigate the dynamics of tropical-cyclone amplification and its predictability in three dimensions. For the prototype amplification problem beginning with a weak-tropical-storm-strength vortex, the emergent flow becomes highly asymmetric and dominated by deep convective vortex structures, even though the problem as posed is essentially axisymmetric. The asymmetries that develop are highly sensitive to the boundary-layer moisture distribution. When a small random moisture perturbation is added in the boundary layer at the initial time, the pattern of evolution of the flow asymmetries is changed dramatically, and a non-negligible spread in the local and azimuthally-averaged intensity results. We conclude, first, that the flow on the convective scales exhibits a degree of randomness, and only those asymmetric features that survive in an ensemble average of many realizations can be regarded as robust; and secondly, that there is an intrinsic uncertainty in the prediction of maximum intensity using either maximum-wind or minimum-surface-pressure metrics. There are clear implications for the possibility of deterministic forecasts of the mesoscale structure of tropical cyclones, which may have a major impact on the intensity and on rapid intensity changes. Some other aspects of vortex structure are addressed also, including vortex-size parameters, and sensitivity to the inclusion of different physical processes or higher spatial resolution. We investigate also the analogous problem on a ,-plane, a prototype problem for tropical-cyclone motion. A new perspective on the putative role of the wind--evaporation feedback process for tropical-cyclone intensification is offered also. The results provide new insight into the fluid dynamics of the intensification process in three dimensions, and at the same time suggest limitations of deterministic prediction for the mesoscale structure. Larger-scale characteristics, such as the radius of gale-force winds and ,-gyres, are found to be less variable than their mesoscale counterparts. Copyright © 2008 Royal Meteorological Society [source] Synthesis and properties of novel ,,, alternating polymers with triphenylamine and organosilicon unitsAPPLIED ORGANOMETALLIC CHEMISTRY, Issue 12 2001Koichi Sakamaki Abstract We have synthesized novel ,,, conjugated polymers with N,N -bis(p -ethynylphenyl)- N -(p -tolyl)amine as the ,-unit. The electroluminescent devices, with a double-layer system composed of Alq and the present polymers as the emitting-electron-transporting and hole-transporting layers respectively, emit green electroluminescence with a maximum intensity of 760 cd m,2. Copyright © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. 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