4,958 research outputs found
Dietary manipulation of broiler breeder growth through the feeding of conjugated linoleic acid
Flight test of a resident backup software system
A new fault-tolerant system software concept employing the primary digital computers as host for the backup software portion has been implemented and flight tested in the F-8 digital fly-by-wire airplane. The system was implemented in such a way that essentially no transients occurred in transferring from primary to backup software. This was accomplished without a significant increase in the complexity of the backup software. The primary digital system was frame synchronized, which provided several advantages in implementing the resident backup software system. Since the time of the flight tests, two other flight vehicle programs have made a commitment to incorporate resident backup software similar in nature to the system described in this paper
Scaling graphs of heart rate time series in athletes demonstrate the VLF, LF and HF regions
Scaling analysis of heart rate time series has emerged as an useful tool for
assessment of autonomic cardiac control. We investigate the heart rate time
series of ten athletes (five males and five females), by applying detrended
fluctuation analysis (DFA). High resolution ECGs are recorded under
standardized resting conditions over 30 minutes and subsequently heart rate
time series are extracted and artefacts filtered. We find three distinct
regions of scale-invariance, which correspond to the well-known VLF, LF, and HF
bands in the power spectra of heart rate variability. The scaling exponents
alpha are alphaHF: 1.15 [0.96-1.22], alphaLF: 0.68 [0.57-0.84], alphaVLF:
0.83[0.82-0.99]; p<10^-5). In conclusion, DFA scaling exponents of heart rate
time series should be fitted to the VLF, LF, and HF ranges, respectively
A Project Based Approach to Statistics and Data Science
In an increasingly data-driven world, facility with statistics is more
important than ever for our students. At institutions without a statistician,
it often falls to the mathematics faculty to teach statistics courses. This
paper presents a model that a mathematician asked to teach statistics can
follow. This model entails connecting with faculty from numerous departments on
campus to develop a list of topics, building a repository of real-world
datasets from these faculty, and creating projects where students interface
with these datasets to write lab reports aimed at consumers of statistics in
other disciplines. The end result is students who are well prepared for
interdisciplinary research, who are accustomed to coping with the
idiosyncrasies of real data, and who have sharpened their technical writing and
speaking skills
The Janus face of diversity in Australian sport
In this essay, Janus is used as a metaphor for examining the nature of cultural diversity in Australian sport. It does so by firstly presenting a historical context for sport in Australia and the relative lack of cultural diversity found in sport. Within a country dominated by the running codes of football and cricket, the position of soccer in Australia was somewhat unique as it became a bastion for many non-Anglo migrant groups. However, in the 1980s and 1990s soccer's lack of organizational success at the state and national level was negatively ascribed to the tensions between the ethnically affiliated clubs, the same clubs that were ironically the stalwarts driving the growing popularity of the sport. We examine the initiatives used to restructure the game in Australia to make football more appealing to mainstream (i.e. non-ethnically aligned) spectators. The contemporary situation is explored through secondary documentation and the results of a survey of 3,056 spectators undertaken during the first season of the new A-League are presented. The essay concludes with a discussion about the relative success of the restructure in terms of changing the face of Australian soccer. © 2009 Taylor & Francis
The energy benefits of the pantograph wing mechanism in flapping flight:Case study of a gull
Bird wings generally contain a 4-bar pantograph mechanism in the forearm that enables the wrist joint to be actuated from the elbow joint thus reducing the number of wing muscles and hence reducing the wing inertia and inertial drag. In this paper we develop a theoretical model of inertial power for flapping flight to estimate the advantage of the 4-bar pantograph mechanism by comparing the inertial power required for the case where wrist muscles are present in the forearm with the case where wrist muscles are not present in the forearm. It is difficult to predict how wrist muscles would look when there is no pantograph mechanism. Therefore a lower bound and upper bound case are defined. The lower bound case involves redistributing the elbow muscles with no increase in wing mass. The upper bound case involves replicating the biceps-triceps muscles near the wrist joint. At minimum power speed the model estimates that the 4-bar pantograph mechanism reduces the inertial power for the gull from between 6.1%–12.3% and reduces the overall power by 0.6%–1.2%. When account is taken of the tight margins involved in the design of a flying vehicle, the energy savings produced by the pantograph mechanism are significant. A ring-billed gull was chosen for the case study and an adult specimen was obtained to gather morphometric data. Lessons for the design of flapping micro air vehicles are discussed. </jats:p
The Abelian Manna model on two fractal lattices
We analyze the avalanche size distribution of the Abelian Manna model on two
different fractal lattices with the same dimension d_g=ln(3)/ln(2), with the
aim to probe for scaling behavior and to study the systematic dependence of the
critical exponents on the dimension and structure of the lattices. We show that
the scaling law D(2-tau)=d_w generalizes the corresponding scaling law on
regular lattices, in particular hypercubes, where d_w=2. Furthermore, we
observe that the lattice dimension d_g, the fractal dimension of the random
walk on the lattice d_w, and the critical exponent D, form a plane in 3D
parameter space, i.e. they obey the linear relationship D=0.632(3) d_g +
0.98(1) d_w - 0.49(3).Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, 3 tables, submitted to PRE as a Brief Repor
On the nature of long range electronic coupling in a medium: Distance and orientational dependence for chromophores in molecular aggregates
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