Times Larger (time + larger)

Distribution by Scientific Domains
Distribution within Life Sciences

Kinds of Times Larger

  • several time larger


  • Selected Abstracts


    Dispersion of Dust Acoustic Modes and Perturbations of Plasma Flux Balance

    CONTRIBUTIONS TO PLASMA PHYSICS, Issue 3 2007
    V. Tsytovich
    Abstract Previous considerations of dust acoustic waves is demonstrated to be inconsistent - the required equilibrium state for perturbations was not defined since balance of plasma fluxes was neglecting. The self-consistent treatment shows that plasma flux perturbations are accompanying any collective waves propagating in dusty plasmas and can play an important role in wave dispersion, wave damping and can create instabilities. This is illustrated by the derivation of dispersion relation for dust acoustic modes taking into account the plasma flux balances and plasma flux perturbations by waves. The result of this approach shows that the dust acoustic waves with linear dependence of wave frequency on the wave number exist only in restricted range of the wave numbers. Only for wave numbers larger than some critical wave number for low frequency modes the frequency can be have approximately a linear dependence on wave number and can be called as dust acoustic wave but the phase velocity of these waves is different from that which can be obtained neglecting the flux balance and depends on grain charge variations which are determined by the balance of fluxes. The presence of plasma fluxes previously neglected is the main typical feature of dusty plasmas. The dispersion relation in the range of small wave numbers is found to be mainly determined by the change of the plasma fluxes and is quite different from that of dust acoustic type, namely it is found to have the same form as the well known dispersion relation for the gravitational instability. This result proves in general way the existence of the collective grain attractions of negatively charged grains for for large distances between them and for any source of ionization. The attraction of grains found from dispersion relation of the dust acoustic branch coincides with that found previously for pair grain interactions using some models for the ionization source. For the existing experiments the effective Jeans length for such attraction is estimated to be about 8 , 10 times larger than the ion Debye length and the effective gravitational constant for the grain attraction is estimated to be several orders of magnitude larger than the usual gravitational constant. The grain attraction at large inter-grain distances described by the gravitationlike grain instability is considered as the simplest explanation for observed dust cloud clustering, formation of dust structures including the plasma crystals. (© 2007 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim) [source]


    Fossils provide better estimates of ancestral body size than do extant taxa in fishes

    ACTA ZOOLOGICA, Issue 2009
    James S. Albert
    Abstract The use of fossils in studies of character evolution is an active area of research. Characters from fossils have been viewed as less informative or more subjective than comparable information from extant taxa. However, fossils are often the only known representatives of many higher taxa, including some of the earliest forms, and have been important in determining character polarity and filling morphological gaps. Here we evaluate the influence of fossils on the interpretation of character evolution by comparing estimates of ancestral body size in fishes (non-tetrapod craniates) from two large and previously unpublished datasets; a palaeontological dataset representing all principal clades from throughout the Phanerozoic, and a macroecological dataset for all 515 families of living (Recent) fishes. Ancestral size was estimated from phylogenetically based (i.e. parsimony) optimization methods. Ancestral size estimates obtained from analysis of extant fish families are five to eight times larger than estimates using fossil members of the same higher taxa. These disparities arise from differential survival of large-bodied members of early branching lineages, and are not statistical or taphonomic artefacts. Estimates of ancestral size obtained from a limited but judicious selection of fossil fish taxa are more accurate than estimates from a complete dataset of extant fishes. [source]


    Proposal and evaluation of a gas engine and gas turbine hybrid cogeneration system in which cascaded heat is highly utilized

    ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING IN JAPAN, Issue 3 2009
    Pyong Sik Pak
    Abstract A high-efficiency cogeneration system (CGS) is proposed for utilizing high-temperature exhaust gas (HTEG) from a gas engine (GE). In the proposed system, for making use of heat energy of HTEG, H2O turbine (HTb) is incorporated and steam produced by utilizing HTEG is used as working fluid of HTb. HTb exhaust gas is also utilized for increasing power output and for satisfying heat demand in the proposed system. Both of the thermodynamic characteristics of the proposed system and a gas engine CGS (GE-CGS) constructed by using the original GE are estimated. Energy saving characteristics and CO2 reduction effects of the proposed CGS and the GE-CGS are also investigated. It was estimated that the net generated power of the proposed CGS has been increased 25.5% and net power generation efficiency 6.7%, compared with the original GE-CGS. It was also shown that the proposed CGS could save 27.0% of energy consumption and reduce 1137 t-CO2/y, 1.41 times larger than those of GE-CGS, when a case study was set and investigated. Improvements of performance by increasing turbine inlet temperature were also investigated. © 2008 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Electr Eng Jpn, 166(3): 37, 45, 2009; Published online in Wiley InterScience (www.interscience.wiley.com). DOI 10.1002/eej.20708 [source]


    On the reliability of a dental OSCE, using SEM: effect of different days

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF DENTAL EDUCATION, Issue 3 2008
    M. Schoonheim-Klein
    Abstract Aim:, The first aim was to study the reliability of a dental objective structured clinical examination (OSCE) administered over multiple days, and the second was to assess the number of test stations required for a sufficiently reliable decision in three score interpretation perspectives of a dental OSCE administered over multiple days. Materials and methods:, In four OSCE administrations, 463 students of the year 2005 and 2006 took the summative OSCE after a dental course in comprehensive dentistry. The OSCE had 16,18 5-min stations (scores 1,10), and was administered per OSCE on four different days of 1 week. ANOVA was used to test for examinee performance variation across days. Generalizability theory was used for reliability analyses. Reliability was studied from three interpretation perspectives: for relative (norm) decisions, for absolute (domain) and pass,fail (mastery) decisions. As an indicator of reproducibility of test scores in this dental OSCE, the standard error of measurement (SEM) was used. The benchmark of SEM was set at <0.51. This is corresponding to a 95% confidence interval (CI) of <1 on the original scoring scale that ranged from 1 to 10. Results:, The mean weighted total OSCE score was 7.14 on a 10-point scale. With the pass,fail score set at 6.2 for the four OSCE, 90% of the 463 students passed. There was no significant increase in scores over the different days the OSCE was administered. ,Wished' variance owing to students was 6.3%. Variance owing to interaction between student and stations and residual error was 66.3%, more than two times larger than variance owing to stations' difficulty (27.4%). The SEM norm was 0.42 with a CI of ±0.83 and the SEM domain was 0.50, with a CI of ±0.98. In order to make reliable relative decisions (SEM <0.51), the use of minimal 12 stations is necessary, and for reliable absolute and pass,fail decisions, the use of minimal 17 stations is necessary in this dental OSCE. Conclusions:, It appeared reliable, when testing large numbers of students, to administer the OSCE on different days. In order to make reliable decisions for this dental OSCE, minimum 17 stations are needed. Clearly, wide sampling of stations is at the heart of obtaining reliable scores in OSCE, also in dental education. [source]


    Amino acid 15N in long-term bare fallow soils: influence of annual N fertilizer and manure applications

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF SOIL SCIENCE, Issue 4 2008
    R. Bol
    Summary Long-term dynamics of amino acids (AAs), from a bare fallow soil experiment (established in 1928 at INRA-Versailles, France), were examined in unamended control (Con) plots and plots treated with ammonium sulphate (Amsul), ammonium nitrate (Amnit), sodium nitrate (Nanit) or with animal manure (Man). Topsoil (0,25 cm) from 1929, 1963 and 1997 was analysed for C, N and 15N content and distribution of 18 amino acids recovered after acid hydrolysis with 6 m HCl. With time, soil N, C and AA content were reduced in Con, Amsul, Amnit and Nanit, but increased in Man. However, the absolute N loss was 3,11 times larger in Man than Nanit, Amsul, Amnit and Con, due to the much higher N annual inputs applied to Man. From 1929 to 1997 in Con, Amsul, Amnit and Nanit the whole soil and non-hydrolysable-N pool ,15N increased associated with the loss of N (indicative of Rayleigh 15N/14N fractionation). No ,15N change from 1929 to 1997 was found in the hydrolysable AA-N (HAN) pool. Fertilizer N inputs aided stabilization of soil AA-N, as AA half-life in the mineral N fertilizer treatments increased from 34 years in 1963 to 50 years in 1997. The ,15N values of alanine and leucine reflected both source input and 15N/14N fractionation effects in soils. The ,15N increase of ornithine (,6,) was similar to the whole soil. The ,15N change of phenylalanine in Con (decrease of 7,) was related to its proportional loss since 1929, whereas for Amsul, Amnit, Nanit and Man it was associated with isotope effects caused by the fertilizer inputs. However, the soil ,15N value of most individual amino acids (IAAs) did not significantly change over nearly 70 years, even with mineral or organic N inputs. We conclude for these bare fallow systems that: (i) ,15N changes in the whole soil and non-hydrolysable AA pool were solely driven by microbial processes and not by the nature of fertilizer inputs, and (ii) without plant inputs, the ,15N of the HAN pool and (most) IAAs may reflect the influence of plant,soil interactions from the previous (arable cropping) rather than present (fallow) land use on these soil ,15N values. [source]


    A model describing the interactions between anaerobic microbiology and geochemistry in a soil amended with glucose and nitrate

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF SOIL SCIENCE, Issue 1 2004
    F. Dassonville
    Summary Under anaerobic conditions, microbes closely interact with geochemical reactions and can have an impact on the soil, the deep vadose zone, the underlying aquifer and the atmosphere. We have designed a model combining anaerobic microbial activities with geochemical reactions in the soil, and assessed it in batch experiments. The model describes the dynamics of six functional microbial communities, their decomposition after death, and the catabolism of carbohydrates through denitrification, dissimilatory NH4+ production, Fe(III) reduction, fermentation, acetogenesis, and SO42, reduction. It was combined with a model that thermodynamically describes acid,base, reduction,oxidation and complexation reactions in solution, and kinetic precipitation and dissolution. Batch incubations were done on a Calcic Cambisol, either without amendment, or after supplying (i) glucose or (ii) glucose and NO3,. Gases, mineral cations and anions, glucose, fatty acids and alcohols were measured during incubation. Net production of CO2 was similar for both glucose treatments, about 40 times larger than in the control. For the glucose treatments, the main microbial activities were fermentation, acetogenic transformation of ethanol, and oxidation of H2. When the soil was enriched with NO3,, no H2 was produced, and microbial activities were rapidly inhibited by NO2,. The model shows these trends as well as geochemical characteristics including pH and reduction,oxidation potential. [source]


    EFFECTIVE POPULATION SIZES AND TEMPORAL STABILITY OF GENETIC STRUCTURE IN RANA PIPIENS, THE NORTHERN LEOPARD FROG

    EVOLUTION, Issue 11 2004
    Eric A. Hoffman
    Abstract Although studies of population genetic structure are very common, whether genetic structure is stable over time has been assessed for very few taxa. The question of stability over time is particularly interesting for frogs because it is not clear to what extent frogs exist in dynamic metapopulations with frequent extinction and recolonization, or in stable patches at equilibrium between drift and gene flow. In this study we collected tissue samples from the same five populations of leopard frogs, Rana pipens, over a 22,30 year time interval (11,15 generations). Genetic structure among the populations was very stable, suggesting that these population were not undergoing frequent extinction and colonization. We also estimated the effective size of each population from the change in allele frequencies over time. There exist few estimates of effective size for frog populations, but the data available suggest that ranid frogs may have much larger ratios of effective size (Ne) to census size (Nc) that toads (bufonidae). Our results indicate that R. pipiens populations have effective sizes on the order of hundreds to at most a few thousand frogs, and Nee/Nc ratios in the range of 0.1,1.0. These estimates of Ne/Nc are consistent with those estimated for other Rana species. Finally, we compared the results of three temporal methods for estimating Ne. Moment and pseudolikelihood methods that assume a closed population gave the most similar point estimates, although the moment estimates were consistently two to four times larger. Wang and Whitlock's new method that jointly estimates Ne and the rate of immigration into a population (m) gave much smaller estimates of Ne and implausibly large estimates of m. This method requires knowing allele frequencies in the source of immigrants, but was thought to be insensitive to inexact estimates. In our case the method may have failed because we did not know the true source of immigrants for each population. The method may be more sensitive to choice of source frequencies than was previously appreciated, and so should be used with caution if the most likely source of immigrants cannot be identified clearly. [source]


    CONSTANCY OF THE G MATRIX IN ECOLOGICAL TIME

    EVOLUTION, Issue 6 2004
    Mats BjÖrklund
    Abstract The constancy of the genetic variance-covariance matrix (G matrix) across environments and populations has been discussed and tested empirically over the years but no consensus has so far been reached. In this paper, I present a model in which morphological traits develop hierarchically, and individuals differ in their resource allocation and acquisition patterns. If the variance in resource acquisition is many times larger than the variance in resource allocation then strong genetic correlations are expected, and with almost isometric relations among traits. As the variation in resource acquisition decreases below a certain threshold, the correlations decrease overall and the relations among traits become a function of the allocation patterns, and in particular reflecting the basal division of allocation. A strong bottleneck can break a pattern of strong genetic correlation, but this effect diminishes rapidly with increasing bottleneck size. This model helps to understand why some populations change their genetic correlations in different environments, whereas others do not, since the key factor is the relation between the variances in resource acquisition and allocation. If a change in environment does not lead to a change in this ratio, no change can be expected, whereas if the ratio is changed substantially then major changes can be expected. This model can also help to understand the constancy of morphological patterns within larger taxa as a function of constancy in resource acquisition patterns over time and environments. When this pattern breaks, for example on islands, larger changes can be expected. [source]


    PLASTICITY IN QUEEN NUMBER AND SOCIAL STRUCTURE IN THE INVASIVE ARGENTINE ANT (LINEPITHEMA HUMILE)

    EVOLUTION, Issue 10 2002
    Krista K. Ingram
    Abstract., In many polygynous social insect societies, ecological factors such as habitat saturation promote high queen numbers by increasing the cost of solitary breeding. If polygyny is associated with constrained environments, queen number in colonies of invasive social insects should increase as saturation of their new habitat increases. Here I describe the variation in queen number, nestmate relatedness, and nest size along a gradient of time since colonization in an invading population of Argentine ants (Linepithema humile) in Haleakala, Hawaii. Nest densities in this population increase with distance from the leading edge of the invasion, reaching a stable density plateau approximately 80 m from the edge (> 2 years after colonization). Although the number of queens per nest in Haleakala is generally lower than previously reported for Argentine ants, there is significant variation in queen number across this population. Both the observed and effective queen numbers increase across the density gradient, and nests in the center of the population contain queen numbers three to nine times higher than those on the edge of the invasion. The number of workers per nest is correlated with queen number, and nests in the center are six times larger than nests at the edge. Microsatellite analysis of relatedness among nestmates reveals that all nests in the Haleakala population are characterized by low relatedness and have evidence of multiple reproducing queens. Relatedness values are significantly lower in nests in the center of the population, indicating that the number of reproducing queens is greater in areas of high nest density. The variation in queen number and nestmate relatedness in this study is consistent with expectations based on changes in ecological constraints during the invasion of a new habitat, suggesting that the social structure of Argentine ant populations is strongly influenced by ecological factors. Flexibility in social structure may facilitate persistence in variable environments and may also confer significant advantages to a species when introduced into new areas. [source]


    Synthesis of High-Surface-Area Platinum Nanotubes Using a Viral Template

    ADVANCED FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS, Issue 8 2010
    . Górzny, Marcin
    Abstract A novel method for the synthesis of high-active-surface-area, platinum,tobacco mosaic virus (Pt,TMV) nanotubes is presented. A platinum salt is reduced to its metallic form on the external surface of a rod-shaped TMV by methanol, which serves as a solvent and reductant simultaneously. It was found that for the same Pt loading the Pt,TMV nanotubes had an electrochemically active surface area between 4 to 8 times larger than similarly sized Pt nanoparticles. A Pt,TMV catalyst displays greater stability in acidic conditions than those based on nanoparticles. When used as a catalyst for methanol oxidation, these Pt nanotubes display a 65% increase in catalytic mass activity compared to that based on Pt nanoparticles. [source]


    Undesirable side-effects of water hyacinth control in a shallow tropical reservoir

    FRESHWATER BIOLOGY, Issue 6 2007
    DENISE DE C. BICUDO
    Summary 1. Based on a comprehensive data set collected monthly during 8 years (1997,2004), we evaluated the effects of mechanical removal of Eichhornia crassipes on the limnological characteristics and algal biomass of a polymictic shallow tropical reservoir. 2. Interrupted time series analyses indicated that the limnological responses to macrophyte removal can be classified as an ,abrupt permanent impact' implying that the overall mean of the time-series shifted promptly after intervention. These analyses indicated a significant increase for pH, total phosphorus, total phytoplankton and cyanobacterial biomass, and a decrease in water transparency and CO2 concentrations in the surface water; also, the increase in water stability, increase of bottom soluble reactive phosphorus (SRP) and decrease in bottom oxygen levels. 3. Cyclic anoxic periods previously observed during springs and summers were replaced by a persistent period of anoxic conditions in the sediment overlying water. Anoxic conditions were suitable for SRP release from sediments. Heavy cyanobacterial blooms became more persistent, maximum biomass (4229 mm3 L,1) was 30 times larger, the blooms frequently reached 2 m and sometimes the bottom of the reservoir, contrasting to the preremoval period in which it reached at most 1 m deep. 4. The long-term P dynamics in the system, initially driven by allochthonous nutrient loadings were replaced by internal ecological processes. Water hyacinth removal markedly accelerated the process of eutrophication due to internal feedback mechanisms, leading to a switch to a more turbid state. Biological feedback mechanisms were driven by cyanobacterial blooms by enhancing water stability, oxygen anoxia at the bottom and by increasing suitable conditions for P internal loading. These data support the hypothesis of the role of cyanobacterial blooms as an important factor impairing water quality and driving the ecosystem towards a stable degraded state. 5. These findings have important implications for the restoration of shallow stratifying eutrophic lakes, as the alternative degraded state is most likely to occur when compared with their non-stratifying counterparts. Moreover, feedback mechanisms in tropical and subtropical shallow lakes seem to be stronger than in temperate ones, as stratification events are more likely to occur over the year, intensifying system resilience to restorative strategies. [source]


    Changes in abundance, composition and controls within the plankton of a fertilised arctic lake

    FRESHWATER BIOLOGY, Issue 2 2002
    Neil D. Bettez
    1. An oligotrophic arctic lake was fertilised with inorganic nitrogen and phosphorus as (NH4)2 NO3 and H3PO4 for five summers. The loading rate was 1.7,2.5 mmol N m,2 day,1 and 0.136,0.20 mmol P m,2 day,1 which is two to three times the annual loading of lakes in the area. The heterotrophic microzooplankton community was enumerated during the experiment as well as 1 year pre- and post-treatment. 2. The structure of the microplankton community changed from a nutrient limited system, dominated by oligotrich protozoans and small-particle feeding rotifers, to a system dominated by a succession of peritrich protozoans and predatory rotifers. These peritrich protozoans and predatory rotifers were not present prior to fertilisation and never constituted more than a small fraction of the biomass in other lakes at the research site. The average biomass of the rotifers and protozoans was more than seven and a half times larger by the end of fertilisation than it was initially. 3. Because of the increases in numbers of individuals in these new taxa, the structure of the microbial food web changed. When fertilisation stopped, most parameters returned to prefertilisation levels within 1 year. [source]


    GluR5,6,7 subunit immunoreactivity on apical pyramidal cell dendrites in hippocampus of schizophrenics and manic depressives

    HIPPOCAMPUS, Issue 5 2001
    Francine M. Benes
    Abstract Recent postmortem studies have suggested that changes in the regulation of kainate-sensitive glutamate receptors (kainate receptors) in the hippocampus may play a role in schizophrenia. To explore this possibility further, the distribution of immunoreactivity (IR) for the GluR5,6,7 subunits of the KR was assessed in a cohort consisting of 15 normal controls, 15 schizophrenics, and 9 manic depressives matched for age and postmortem interval (PMI). Cross sections of hippocampus showed abundant GluR5,6,7 -IR on apical dendrites of pyramidal neurons in the stratum radiatum and stratum moleculare. In normal controls, both the numerical and length density of IR dendrites were much higher in sector CA2 than in sectors CA3 or CA1. When data for the individual groups were separately examined, the schizophrenics showed a 30,35% reduction in the density of GluR5,6,7 -IR dendrites found in both stratum radiatum and stratum moleculare of sectors CA3 and CA2, as well as proximal and middle portions of CA1. In CA2, the magnitude of this decrease in schizophrenia was 2.5 times larger than that seen in any of the other sectors. For the manic depressive group, no significant differences were observed in any sectors or laminae examined. The potential confounding effects of either age, PMI, or neuroleptic exposure do not explain the reduced density of IR dendrites detected in the schizophrenic group. Taken together, the preferential reduction of GluR5,6,7 -IR observed on apical dendrites of pyramidal neurons is consistent with a functional downregulation of the kainate receptor in the hippocampus of schizophrenic brain. Hippocampus 2001;11:482,491. © 2001 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


    A Promising Approach to Enhanced Thermoelectric Properties Using Carbon Nanotube Networks

    ADVANCED MATERIALS, Issue 4 2010
    Chuizhou Meng
    Enhanced Seebeck coefficients and power factors , important for the conversion of heat to electrical energy , are obtained in polyaniline/carbon nanotube (PANI/CNT) composites in which PANI coats CNT networks (see figure). The values are several times larger than those of either of the individual components. This new approach has potential for synthesizing high-performance thermoelectric materials. [source]


    Transient storage and downstream solute transport in nested stream reaches affected by beaver dams

    HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES, Issue 17 2009
    Li Jin
    Abstract Transient storage constitutes a key element in the hydrologic cycle of watersheds. Both in-channel slow moving water (dead zones) and hyporheic zones can contribute to transient storage, which retains water and solutes, increases residence time and influences solute transport in streams. Beaver dams and other in-stream obstructions throughout low-order streams attenuate streamflow and provide dead zone storage in pools. In this article, we report the results of four tracer tests in nested stream reaches in Cherry Creek (Wyoming, USA) covering ,2·5 km of stream length to explore how the degree of beaver dam obstructions and their impoundments influence water transient storage and downstream solute transport in low-order streams in the Rocky Mountain region of the American West. Travel-time parameters for the tracer tests increased linearly with beaver dam number (N) and pond size (V). Linear regression of the travel time to the peak concentration (Tp), the leading (Tl) and tailing edge (Tt) of the dye cloud and the duration of the dye cloud (Td) versus N and V were all significant (R2 = 0·99). Slopes of the linear regressions of Tt versus N and V, were three times larger than those for Tl, suggesting that longer residence times may be caused, in part, by transient storage in the stream system. One-dimensional transport with inflow and storage (OTIS) modelled cross-sectional area of transient storage zone (As) and dispersion coefficients (D) increased linearly with N and V and reach length. Two transient storage metrics, Fmean and , also showed a general increase with N and V, although the relationship was not as strong. This suggests that in-channel dead zones associated with beaver dams provide opportunities for generating transient water storage. The linear relationship between dispersion coefficient and reach length suggests the dispersion process might be analogous to the hydrodynamic dispersion in groundwater settings. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    Influence of water absorption on high-frequency characteristics of insulation layers of printed circuit boards

    IEEJ TRANSACTIONS ON ELECTRICAL AND ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING, Issue 6 2007
    Kaori Fukunaga Member
    Abstract The influence of water absorption on complex permittivities of various insulating materials used for printed circuit boards was investigated in the frequency range of K-band (18,26 GHz). Experimental results revealed that the influence of water absorption on complex permittivity, the dielectric loss factor tan,, in particular, was considerably high. For example, the dielectric loss of polyimide film at 85°C, 85% RH became 10 times larger than that at room temperature and humidity. Since the complex permittivities, however, retained the initial values when the specimens are dried, the water in the specimen should exist freely at the internal interfaces of the materials. The increase of permittivity directly affects the performance of printed circuit boards at high frequencies, so that it is important to clarify the influence of water on dielectric properties of insulations. Copyright © 2007 Institute of Electrical Engineers of Japan. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Inc. [source]


    Empirical slip and viscosity model performance for microscale gas flow

    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR NUMERICAL METHODS IN FLUIDS, Issue 11 2005
    Matthew J. McNenly
    Abstract For the simple geometries of Couette and Poiseuille flows, the velocity profile maintains a similar shape from continuum to free molecular flow. Therefore, modifications to the fluid viscosity and slip boundary conditions can improve the continuum based Navier,Stokes solution in the non-continuum non-equilibrium regime. In this investigation, the optimal modifications are found by a linear least-squares fit of the Navier,Stokes solution to the non-equilibrium solution obtained using the direct simulation Monte Carlo (DSMC) method. Models are then constructed for the Knudsen number dependence of the viscosity correction and the slip model from a database of DSMC solutions for Couette and Poiseuille flows of argon and nitrogen gas, with Knudsen numbers ranging from 0.01 to 10. Finally, the accuracy of the models is measured for non-equilibrium cases both in and outside the DSMC database. Flows outside the database include: combined Couette and Poiseuille flow, partial wall accommodation, helium gas, and non-zero convective acceleration. The models reproduce the velocity profiles in the DSMC database within an L2 error norm of 3% for Couette flows and 7% for Poiseuille flows. However, the errors in the model predictions outside the database are up to five times larger. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    Error resilient data transport in sensor network applications: A generic perspective,

    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CIRCUIT THEORY AND APPLICATIONS, Issue 2 2009
    Rachit Agarwal
    Abstract The error recovery problem in wireless sensor networks is studied from a generic resource-constrained energy-optimization perspective. To characterize the features of error recovery schemes that suit the majority of applications, an energy model is developed and inferences are drawn based on a suitable performance metric. For applications that require error control coding, an efficient scheme is proposed based on an interesting observation related to shortened Reed,Solomon (RS) codes for packet reliability. It is shown that multiple instances (,) of RS codes defined on a smaller alphabet combined with interleaving results in smaller resource usage, while the performance exceeds the benefits of a shortened RS code defined over a larger alphabet. In particular, the proposed scheme can have an error correction capability of up to , times larger than that of the conventional RS scheme without changing the rate of the code with much lower power, timing and memory requirements. Implementation results show that such a scheme is 43% more power efficient compared with the RS scheme with the same code rate. Besides, such an approach results in 46% faster computations and 53% reduction in memory requirements. Copyright © 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    Pool boiling on a superhydrophilic surface

    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENERGY RESEARCH, Issue 2 2003
    Y. Takata
    Abstract Titanium Dioxide, TiO2, is a photocatalyst with a unique characteristic. A surface coated with TiO2 exhibits an extremely high affinity for water when exposed to UV light and the contact angle decreases nearly to zero. Inversely, the contact angle increases when the surface is shielded from UV. This superhydrophilic nature gives a self-cleaning effect to the coated surface and has already been applied to some construction materials, car coatings and so on. We applied this property to the enhancement of boiling heat transfer. An experiment involving the pool boiling of pure water has been performed to make clear the effect of high wettability on heat transfer characteristics. The heat transfer surface is a vertical copper cylinder of 17 mm in diameter and the measurement has been done at saturated temperature and in a steady state. Both TiO2 -coated and non-coated surfaces were used for comparison. In the case of the TiO2 -coated surface, it is exposed to UV light for a few hours before experiment and it is found that the maximum heat flux (CHF) is about two times larger than that of the uncoated surface. The temperature at minimum heat flux (MHF) for the superhydrophilic surface is higher by 100 K than that for the normal one. The superhydrophilic surface can be an ideal heat transfer surface. Copyright © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    Optimal choice of granularity in commonsense estimation: Why half-orders of magnitude?

    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF INTELLIGENT SYSTEMS, Issue 8 2006
    Jerry R. Hobbs
    It has been observed that when people make crude estimates, they feel comfortable choosing between alternatives that differ by a half-order of magnitude (e.g., were there 100, 300, or 1000 people in the crowd?) and less comfortable making a choice on a more detailed scale, with finer granules, or on a coarser scale (like 100 or 1000). In this article, we describe two models of choosing granularity in commonsense estimates, and we show that for both models, in the optimal granularity, the next estimate is three to four times larger than the previous one. Thus, these two optimization results explain the commonsense granularity. © 2006 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Int J Int Syst 21: 843,855, 2006. [source]


    Study of MANET routing protocols by GloMoSim simulator

    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF NETWORK MANAGEMENT, Issue 6 2005
    Ashwini K. Pandey
    This paper compares ad hoc on-demand distance vector (AODV), dynamic source routing (DSR) and wireless routing protocol (WRP) for MANETs to distance vector protocol to better understand the major characteristics of the three routing protocols, using a parallel discrete event-driven simulator, GloMoSim. MANET (mobile ad hoc network) is a multi-hop wireless network without a fixed infrastructure. Following are some of our key findings: (1) AODV is most sensitive to changes in traffic load in the messaging overhead for routing. The number of control packets generated by AODV became 36 times larger when the traffic load was increased. For distance vector, WRP and DSR, their increase was approximately 1.3 times, 1.1 times and 7.6 times, respectively. (2) Two advantages common in the three MANET routing protocols compared to classical distance vector protocol were identified to be scalability for node mobility in end-to-end delay and scalability for node density in messaging overhead. (3) WRP resulted in the shortest delay and highest packet delivery rate, implying that WRP will be the best for real-time applications in the four protocols compared. WRP demonstrated the best traffic scalability; control overhead will not increase much when traffic load increases. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    Hardened foliated fault gouge from the Nojima Fault zone at Hirabayashi: Evidence for earthquake lightning accompanying the 1995 Kobe earthquake?

    ISLAND ARC, Issue 3-4 2001
    Yuji Enomoto
    Abstract Two anomalous features were found in the Nojima Fault zone at Hirabayashi in Awaji Island, south-west Japan: (i) hard foliated gouge between weathered granitic fault breccia and weakly consolidated mudstone of the Osaka Group; and (ii) mudstone near the gouge showing anomalous magnetization behavior. Roots of herbaceous vegetation near the foliated gouge were extraordinarily charred. In order to understand the nature of the gouge, shallow drillings were made to a depth of 3,14 m across the fault zone. Various physicochemical measurements of the gouge at depths and charred roots of herbaceous vegetation were conducted. The main results were: (i) Using electron spin resonance (ESR) analysis, the carbon radical peak (g = 2.006) of the charred roots was found to be 25 times larger than that of the non-charred roots of the same vegetation taken near the fault, indicating that the charred roots were subjected to baking; (ii) the hard foliated gouge clearly showed a lamellar structure consisting alternately of gray and black layers; (iii) the black layers in most of the foliated gouge showed flow structures almost parallel to the fault, but the gray layers rarely showed flow patterns; (iv) natural remanent magnetization (NRM) of the foliated gouge was 430 times greater than that of the granitic fault breccia and approximately 70 times greater than that of the mudstone; (v) the NRM intensity of the mudstone near the fault was highest near the ground level and decreased as the depth increased, although the magnetic susceptibility of the mudstone was almost constant and independent of depth; (vi) the high-coe civity magnetization component vectors of both the mudstone and the foliated gouge in a Schmidt equal-area projection was quite different from that of the present direction of the Earth's field; and (vii) using a magnetic force microscope, intense magnetic force lines were found in the black parts of the foliated gouge. It is suggested that these anomalies were possibly caused by earthquake lightning that accompanied the 1995 Kobe earthquake. In a spark plasma sintering test, which was conducted to simulate the possibility of earthquake lightning-induced sintering of the gouge, weakly altered gouge was successfully sintered within 10 s. The hardness of sintered sample was comparable to that of the hard foliated gouge. [source]


    The role of prey size and abundance in the geographical distribution of spider sociality

    JOURNAL OF ANIMAL ECOLOGY, Issue 5 2007
    KIMBERLY S. POWERS
    Summary 1Social species in the spider genus Anelosimus predominate in lowland tropical rainforests, while congeneric subsocial species occur at higher elevations or higher latitudes. 2We conducted a comparative study to determine whether differences in total biomass, insect size or both have been responsible for this pattern. 3We found that larger average insect size, rather than greater overall biomass per se, is a key characteristic of lowland tropical habitats correlating with greater sociality. 4Social species occupied environments with insects several times larger than the spiders, while subsocial species nearing dispersal occupied environments with smaller insects in either high or low overall biomass. 5Similarly, in subsocial spider colonies, individuals lived communally at a time when they were younger and therefore smaller than the average insect landing on their webs. 6We thus suggest that the availability of large insects may be a critical factor restricting social species to their lowland tropical habitats. [source]


    High-resolution synchrotron radiation studies on natural and thermally annealed scleractinian coral biominerals

    JOURNAL OF APPLIED CRYSTALLOGRAPHY, Issue 1 2007
    J. Stolarski
    The structural phase transition from aragonite to calcite in biogenic samples extracted from the skeletons of selected scleractinian corals has been studied by synchrotron radiation diffraction. Biogenic aragonite samples were extracted en bloc without pulverization from two ecologically different scleractinian taxa: Desmophyllum (deep-water, solitary and azooxanthellate) and Favia (shallow-water, colonial, zooxanthellate). It was found that natural (not pulverized) samples contribute to narrow Bragg peaks with ,d/d values as low as 1 × 10,3, which allows the exploitation of the high resolution of synchrotron radiation diffraction. A precise determination of the lattice parameters of biogenic scleractinian coral aragonite shows the same type of changes of the a, b, c lattice parameter ratios as that reported for aragonite extracted from other invertebrates [Pokroy, Quintana, Caspi, Berner & Zolotoyabko (2004). Nat. Mater.3, 900,902]. It is believed that the crystal structure of biogenic samples is influenced by interactions with organic molecules that are initially present in the biomineralization hydrogel. The calcite phase obtained by annealing the coral samples has a considerably different unit-cell volume and lattice parameter ratio c/a as compared with reference geological calcite and annealed synthetic aragonite. The internal strain in the calcite structure obtained by thermal annealing of the biomineral samples is about two times larger than that found in the natural aragonite structure. This effect is observed despite slow heating and cooling of the sample. [source]


    Cationic disorder, microstructure and dielectric response of ferroelectric SBT ceramics

    JOURNAL OF APPLIED CRYSTALLOGRAPHY, Issue 3-2 2003
    Ch. Muller
    Polycrystalline samples of SrBi2Ta2O9 (acronym SBT) have been prepared by means of solid-state reaction either using a classical route or by mechano­chemical activation. For each compound, a structural analysis of the ferroelectric orthorhombic phase (space group A21am) has been performed from the fitting of neutron and/or X-ray powder diffraction data using the Rietveld method. A cationic disorder on Bi3+ and Sr2+ crystallographic sites has been revealed, the Sr atoms occupying the Bi sites and vice versa. From diffraction peak broadening analyses of high-resolution synchrotron X-ray diffraction data, it has been shown that the two grinding methods (manual or mechanical) induce local strains, the average apparent strain being three times larger for the mechanically ground sample. In order to link microstructure and ferroelectric properties, the dielectric constant has been measured as a function of the temperature. It appears that the position and the shape of the dielectric anomaly strongly depend upon the composition and the route used to elaborate the powders. More exactly, for the mechanically ground powder, the large apparent strain, probably correlated to the strong cation exchange revealed by the structural refinement, leads to a significantly enhanced dielectric response. [source]


    Comparative effects of deltamethrin and Neem kernel solution treatments on Diamondback moth and Cotesia plutellae (Hym., Braconidae) parasitoid populations in the Cotonou peri-urban area in Benin

    JOURNAL OF APPLIED ENTOMOLOGY, Issue 3-4 2000
    A. E. Goudegnon
    A comparison between deltamethrin and Neem kernel solution treatments on Plutella xylostella (L.) populations was made in the Cotonou peri-urban area. Diamondback moth populations were 10 times larger in deltamethrin plots, than in Neem plots after treatment. The number of marketable cabbages from Neem-treated plots was 1.5 times greater than the number from deltamethrin-treated plots. There was no apparent effect of either treatments on Cotesia plutellae (Kurdjumov) populations, the only parasitoid of the pest that was present in the area. [source]


    Spatial and temporal patterns in Lemniscomys striatus (Linnaeus 1758) as revealed by radio-tracking

    AFRICAN JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY, Issue 4 2001
    Anke Hoffmann
    Abstract Lemniscomys striatus was radio-tracked in the Imperata - Cymbopogon grassland of the Queen Elizabeth National Park in Uganda. Home range sizes calculated by Ranges V® using the minimum convex Polygon method (at 95%) in the postburnt grassland were on average 4.8 times larger than those before the fire. An inverse relation between home range size and population density was found. Lemniscomys striatus was diurnal with two activity peaks during daylight, but activity ended only after dusk. Résumé On a étudiéLemniscomys striatus par radio-tracking dans la prairie àImperata-Cymbopogon du Parc National Queen Elizabeth, en Ouganda. La taille des territoires calculées par Ranges V® en utilisant la méthode du polygone convexe minimum (à 95%) dans la prairie après les feux, était en moyenne 4,8 fois plus grande que celles d',avant les feux. On a découvert une relation inverse entre la taille du territoire et la densité de population. Lemniscomys striatus est diurne, avec deux pics d'activité pendant la journée, mais son activité ne cesse qu',après le crépuscule. [source]


    Modeling of velocity distribution among microchannels with triangle manifolds

    AICHE JOURNAL, Issue 8 2009
    Minqiang Pan
    Abstract A model of velocity distribution among microchannels with triangle manifolds is proposed. According to the flow behaviors analyzed by Fluent, the manifolds are divided into several approximate rectangular channels, and then an equivalent simplified resistance network model is developed to establish the relationships between the velocities and pressure drops in microchannels and approximate rectangular channels. The velocity distributions are calculated under two situations, respectively, considering and ignoring singular losses. The outcomes of the present study are compared with Fluent's simulated results to analyze the effects of singular losses on the velocity distributions. It indicates that the proposed model is suitable for the calculation of velocity distribution among microchannels with obtuse angled or right triangle manifolds under low Reynolds numbers. The premise of ignoring singular losses is that the frictional pressure drops are three times larger than the singular pressure drops in each flow loop. The manifold optimization results indicate that the velocity distribution among microchannels with right triangle manifolds is much more uniform than that of the corresponding one with obtuse angled manifolds. © 2009 American Institute of Chemical Engineers AIChE J, 55: 1969,1982, 2009 [source]


    Effects of matrix grain size on the kinetics of intergranular diffusion

    JOURNAL OF METAMORPHIC GEOLOGY, Issue 8 2004
    W. D. Carlson
    Abstract A linear relationship exists between the mean volume of garnet porphyroblasts and the squared inverse of mean matrix grain diameter for six samples of garnetiferous mica quartzite with identical thermal histories and similar mineralogy and modes. This relationship accords with theoretical predictions of the dependence of intergranular diffusive fluxes on the volume fraction of grain edges that function as diffusional pathways during porphyroblast growth. The impact of matrix grain size is large: compared to a rock with a 1-mm matrix, a rock with a 10- ,m matrix would experience rates of diffusion-controlled porphyroblast growth that are 10 000 times faster, and characteristic length scales for chemical equilibration that are 100 times larger. Precursor grain sizes may therefore exert a major influence on crystallization kinetics. If matrix coarsening occurs during prograde reaction, a decrease in the volume fraction of diffusional pathways will tend to counteract the exponential thermal increase in diffusive fluxes. The impact of such matrix grain growth, although difficult to assess without firm knowledge of coarsening rates in polymineralic aggregates, might be significant for matrices finer than c. 100 ,m at temperatures above c. 500,600 °C, but is likely negligible for coarser grain sizes and lower temperatures. [source]


    Diffusion-controlled growth of wollastonite rims between quartz and calcite: comparison between nature and experiment

    JOURNAL OF METAMORPHIC GEOLOGY, Issue 5 2002
    R. Milke
    Abstract Growth rates of wollastonite reaction rims between quartz and calcite were experimentally determined at 0.1 and 1 GPa and temperatures from 850 to 1200 °C. Rim growth follows a parabolic rate law indicating that this reaction is diffusion-controlled. From the rate constants, the D,,-values of the rate-limiting species were derived, i.e. the product of grain boundary diffusion coefficient D, and the effective grain boundary width, ,. In dry runs at 0.1 GPa, wollastonite grew exclusively on quartz surfaces. From volume considerations it is inferred that (D,CaO,)/(D,SiO2,),1.33, and that SiO2 diffusion controls rim growth. D,SiO2, increases from about 10,25 to 10,23 m3 s,1 as temperature increases from 850 to 1000 °C, yielding an apparent activation energy of 330±36 kJ mol,1. In runs at 1 GPa, performed in a piston-cylinder apparatus, there were always small amounts of water present. Here, wollastonite rims always overgrew calcite. Rims around calcite grains in quartz matrix are porous and their growth rates are controlled by a complex diffusion-advection mechanism. Rim growth on matrix calcite around quartz grains is controlled by grain boundary diffusion, but it is not clear whether CaO or SiO2 diffusion is rate-limiting. D,, increases from about 10,21 to 10,20 m3 s,1 as temperature increases from 1100 to 1200 °C. D,SiO2, or D,CaO, in rims on calcite is c. 10 times larger than D,SiO2, in dry rims at the same temperature. Growth structures of the experimentally produced rims are very similar to contact-metamorphic wollastonite rims between metachert bands and limestone in the Bufa del Diente aureole, Mexico, whereby noninfiltrated metacherts correspond to dry and brine-infiltrated metacherts to water-bearing experiments. However, the observed diffusivities were 4 to 5 orders of magnitude larger during contact-metamorphism as compared to our experimental results. [source]