2,306 research outputs found
Aerospace systems pyrotechnic shock data /ground test and flight/. Volume 6 - Pyrotechnic shock design guidelines manual, revision A Final report, Jun. 1968 - Mar. 1970
Design of structures and equipment to reduce shock loads induced by pyrotechnics and explosive devices - Vol.
Aerospace systems pyrotechnic shock data /ground test and flight/. Volume 4 - Lockheed data and analyses Final report, Jun. 1968 - Mar. 1970
Compilation of shock loads on spacecraft structures produced by actuation of pyrotechnics and explosive devices - Vol.
Oral Apolipoprotein A-I Mimetic D-4F Lowers HDL-Inflammatory Index in High-Risk Patients: A First-in-Human Multiple-Dose, Randomized Controlled Trial.
A single dose of the apolipoprotein (apo)A-I mimetic peptide D-4F rendered high-density lipoprotein (HDL) less inflammatory, motivating the first multiple-dose study. We aimed to assess safety/tolerability, pharmacokinetics, and pharmacodynamics of daily, orally administered D-4F. High-risk coronary heart disease (CHD) subjects added double-blinded placebo or D-4F to statin for 13 days, randomly assigned 1:3 to ascending cohorts of 100, 300, then 500 mg (n = 62; 46 men/16 women). D-4F was safe and well-tolerated. Mean ± SD plasma D-4F area under the curve (AUC, 0-8h) was 6.9 ± 5.7 ng/mL*h (100 mg), 22.7 ± 19.6 ng/mL*h (300 mg), and 104.0 ± 60.9 ng/mL*h (500 mg) among men, higher among women. Whereas placebo dropped HDL inflammatory index (HII) 28% 8 h postdose (range, 1.25-0.86), 300-500 mg D-4F effectively halved HII: 1.35-0.57 and 1.22-0.63, respectively (P \u3c 0.03 vs. placebo). Oral D-4F peptide dose predicted HII suppression, whereas plasma D-4F exposure was dissociated, suggesting plasma penetration is unnecessary. In conclusion, oral D-4F dosing rendered HDL less inflammatory, affirming oral D-4F as a potential therapy to improve HDL function
Mn valence instability in La2/3Ca1/3MnO3 thin films
A Mn valence instability on La2/3Ca1/3MnO3 thin films, grown on LaAlO3
(001)substrates is observed by x-ray absorption spectroscopy at the Mn L-edge
and O K-edge. As-grown samples, in situ annealed at 800 C in oxygen, exhibit a
Curie temperature well below that of the bulk material. Upon air exposure a
reduction of the saturation magnetization, MS, of the films is detected.
Simultaneously a Mn2+ spectral signature develops, in addition to the expected
Mn3+ and Mn4+ contributions, which increases with time. The similarity of the
spectral results obtained by total electron yield and fluorescence yield
spectroscopy indicates that the location of the Mn valence anomalies is not
confined to a narrow surface region of the film, but can extend throughout the
whole thickness of the sample. High temperature annealing at 1000 C in air,
immediately after growth, improves the magnetic and transport properties of
such films towards the bulk values and the Mn2+ signature in the spectra does
not appear. The Mn valence is then stable even to prolonged air exposure. We
propose a mechanism for the Mn2+ ions formation and discuss the importance of
these observations with respect to previous findings and production of thin
films devices.Comment: Double space, 21 pages, 6 figure
Properties of continuous Fourier extension of the discrete cosine transform and its multidimensional generalization
A versatile method is described for the practical computation of the discrete
Fourier transforms (DFT) of a continuous function given by its values
at the points of a uniform grid generated by conjugacy classes
of elements of finite adjoint order in the fundamental region of
compact semisimple Lie groups. The present implementation of the method is for
the groups SU(2), when is reduced to a one-dimensional segment, and for
in multidimensional cases. This simplest case
turns out to result in a transform known as discrete cosine transform (DCT),
which is often considered to be simply a specific type of the standard DFT.
Here we show that the DCT is very different from the standard DFT when the
properties of the continuous extensions of these two discrete transforms from
the discrete grid points to all points are
considered. (A) Unlike the continuous extension of the DFT, the continuous
extension of (the inverse) DCT, called CEDCT, closely approximates
between the grid points . (B) For increasing , the derivative of CEDCT
converges to the derivative of . And (C), for CEDCT the principle of
locality is valid. Finally, we use the continuous extension of 2-dimensional
DCT to illustrate its potential for interpolation, as well as for the data
compression of 2D images.Comment: submitted to JMP on April 3, 2003; still waiting for the referee's
Repor
Exact Solution Methods for the -item Quadratic Knapsack Problem
The purpose of this paper is to solve the 0-1 -item quadratic knapsack
problem , a problem of maximizing a quadratic function subject to two
linear constraints. We propose an exact method based on semidefinite
optimization. The semidefinite relaxation used in our approach includes simple
rank one constraints, which can be handled efficiently by interior point
methods. Furthermore, we strengthen the relaxation by polyhedral constraints
and obtain approximate solutions to this semidefinite problem by applying a
bundle method. We review other exact solution methods and compare all these
approaches by experimenting with instances of various sizes and densities.Comment: 12 page
Generic 3D Representation via Pose Estimation and Matching
Though a large body of computer vision research has investigated developing
generic semantic representations, efforts towards developing a similar
representation for 3D has been limited. In this paper, we learn a generic 3D
representation through solving a set of foundational proxy 3D tasks:
object-centric camera pose estimation and wide baseline feature matching. Our
method is based upon the premise that by providing supervision over a set of
carefully selected foundational tasks, generalization to novel tasks and
abstraction capabilities can be achieved. We empirically show that the internal
representation of a multi-task ConvNet trained to solve the above core problems
generalizes to novel 3D tasks (e.g., scene layout estimation, object pose
estimation, surface normal estimation) without the need for fine-tuning and
shows traits of abstraction abilities (e.g., cross-modality pose estimation).
In the context of the core supervised tasks, we demonstrate our representation
achieves state-of-the-art wide baseline feature matching results without
requiring apriori rectification (unlike SIFT and the majority of learned
features). We also show 6DOF camera pose estimation given a pair local image
patches. The accuracy of both supervised tasks come comparable to humans.
Finally, we contribute a large-scale dataset composed of object-centric street
view scenes along with point correspondences and camera pose information, and
conclude with a discussion on the learned representation and open research
questions.Comment: Published in ECCV16. See the project website
http://3drepresentation.stanford.edu/ and dataset website
https://github.com/amir32002/3D_Street_Vie
Explicit Lie-Poisson integration and the Euler equations
We give a wide class of Lie-Poisson systems for which explicit, Lie-Poisson
integrators, preserving all Casimirs, can be constructed. The integrators are
extremely simple. Examples are the rigid body, a moment truncation, and a new,
fast algorithm for the sine-bracket truncation of the 2D Euler equations.Comment: 7 pages, compile with AMSTEX; 2 figures available from autho
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