34,600 research outputs found
Absorption and rheological phenomena during foam application on textiles
A simple rheological model has been used to describe foam flow through moving textile assemblies. The validity of this model was tested, and the nature and the relative magnitude of deviations from the model evaluated for several different substrates. Neglecting foam degeneration during transport, the model was found to represent a valuable means of evaluating some rheological and geometrical deviations. The model can be used in a semi-quantitative way to describe absorbency during foam application. Liquid absorption experiments done off-line, absorption during foam application and some earlier results could be described using different theoretical approaches. Some rheological anomalies have been discussed
A fast ethanol assay to detect seed deterioration
The most common way to test seed quality is to use a simple and reliable but time- and space-consuming germination test. In this paper we present a fast and simple method to analyse cabbage seed deterioration by measuring ethanol production from partially imbibed seeds. The method uses a modified breath analyser and is simple compared to gas chromatographic or enzymatic procedures. A modified method using elevated temperatures (40°C instead of 20°C) shortened the assay time and improved its sensitivity. The analysis showed an inverse correlation between ethanol production and seed quality (e.g. the final percentages or speed of germination and the number of normal seedlings). The increase in ethanol production was observed when cabbage seeds were deteriorated by storage under ambient conditions or hot water treatments, both of which reduced the number of normal seedlings. Premature seeds produced more ethanol upon imbibition than mature seeds. Ethanol production occurred simultaneously with oxygen consumption, indicating that lack of oxygen is not the major trigger for ethanol production
Protein molecular weight computation from sedimentation velocity data
In ultracentrifugation, the concentration gradient of mono-disperse samples obtained by sedimentation velocity experiments is described by Gehatia's equation which holds several parameters including the sedimentation and diffusion constants. Once these two constants are known, the molecular weight follows from the Svedberg equation. A least squares method has been developed to derive the transport constants from the refractive index gradient curves. The method employs a mathematical model based on Gehatia's theory. A main feature of the model is the application of two sets of intermediate parameters via which the transport coefficients are much casier calculated than along a direct way. Furthermore some difficult to observe quantities cancel out. The square residues are minimised numerically. The potential errors introduced by this numerical minimalisation are shown to be unimportant compared to the unavoidable experimental errors
Foam generation in a rotor—stator mixer = Schaumerzeugung in einem rotor—stator mischer
The foaming process of an aqueous liquid system with surface active agents and thickeners in a rotor-stator mixer has been studied.\ud
\ud
The foaming capacity of a rotor—stator mixer may be represented by a so-called mixing characteristic. The foamabilities of several liquid systems have been measured as a function of the mixer geometry and the rotational speed.\ud
\ud
The hydrodynamics in a rotor-stator mixer is characterized by a Newton—Reynolds relationship. The mechanism of foaming and the dependence of several mixing parameters are different for the turbulent and laminar flow regions. The mixing process is evaluated in both regimes. In the transition region from turbulent to laminar the foaming is very poor in comparison with that in the turbulent and laminar flow regimes.\u
Rotational Doppler beaming in eclipsing binaries
In eclipsing binaries the stellar rotation of the two components will cause a
rotational Doppler beaming during eclipse ingress and egress when only part of
the eclipsed component is covered. For eclipsing binaries with fast spinning
components this photometric analogue of the well-known spectroscopic
Rossiter-McLaughlin effect can exceed the strength of the orbital effect.
Example light curves are shown for a detached double white dwarf binary, a
massive O-star binary and a transiting exoplanet case, similar to WASP-33b.
Inclusion of the rotational Doppler beaming in eclipsing systems is a
prerequisite for deriving the correct stellar parameters from fitting high
quality photometric light curves and can be used to determine stellar
obliquities as well as e.g. an independent measure of the rotational velocity
in those systems that may be expected to be fully synchronized.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, accepted by the Astrophysical Journal, Part
Robustness of animal production systems : concept and application to practical cases
A concept and method are developed and applied to improve robustness in animal production
- …
