576 results on '"Department of the Army (US)"'
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2. Regulatory update: Department of the Army, US Army Aberdeen Test Center, License Amendment No. 44, Mail Control No. 639117
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United States. Nuclear Regulatory Commission -- Laws, regulations and rules ,Nuclear energy -- Laws, regulations and rules ,Independent regulatory commissions -- Laws, regulations and rules ,Government regulation ,News, opinion and commentary ,Atomic Energy Act of 1954 - Abstract
Washington: The United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission has issued the following document: U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION MATERIALS LICENSE NRC FORM 374 PAGE 1 OF 6 Amendment No. 44 PAGES Pursuant [...]
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- 2024
3. Regulatory update: Department of the Army, US Army Aberdeen Test Center, License Renewal and Acceptance of Financial Assurance, Mail Control No. 639117
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United States. Nuclear Regulatory Commission ,Independent regulatory commissions ,News, opinion and commentary - Abstract
Washington: The United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission has issued the following document: UNITED STATES NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION REGION I 475 ALLENDALE ROAD - SUITE 102 KING OF PRUSSIA, PA 19406-1415 [...]
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- 2024
4. Regulatory update: United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission has submitted (NRC ) SUB-348 634552 Department of the Army, US Army Combat Capabilities Development Command Armaments Center (CCDC AC) (Decommissioning Action)
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United States. Nuclear Regulatory Commission ,Independent regulatory commissions ,News, opinion and commentary - Abstract
Washington: United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission has issued the following document: Item ID: Accession Number: ML23047A363 Estimated Page Count: Availability: Publicly Available Author Name: AuthorAffiliation: Addressee Name: Addressee Affiliation: Docket [...]
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- 2023
5. Regulatory update: United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission has submitted ( NRC) 19-12056-02 634243 Department of the Army US Army Research Laboratory
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United States. Nuclear Regulatory Commission ,Independent regulatory commissions ,News, opinion and commentary - Abstract
Washington: United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission has issued the following document: Item ID: Accession Number: ML23023A109 Estimated Page Count: Availability: Publicly Available Author Name: AuthorAffiliation: Addressee Name: Addressee Affiliation: Docket [...]
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- 2023
6. Regulatory update: United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission has submitted (Ragland R C ) Department of the Army, US AMRIID, NRC Form 591M Part 1, Inspection Report No. 03031743|2022001
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United States. Nuclear Regulatory Commission -- Inspection ,Independent regulatory commissions ,News, opinion and commentary - Abstract
Washington: United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission has issued the following document: Item ID: Accession Number: ML22287A099 Estimated Page Count: 1 Availability: Publicly Available Author Name: Ragland R C AuthorAffiliation: NRC/RGN-I [...]
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- 2023
7. Regulatory update: United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission has submitted (NRC|RGN-I ) Department of the Army US Army Research Institute of Environmental Medicine (USARIEM); NRC Form 532 Acknowledgement of Receipt, Mail Control No. 633222
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United States. Nuclear Regulatory Commission ,Independent regulatory commissions ,Research institutes ,News, opinion and commentary - Abstract
Washington: United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission has issued the following document: Item ID: Accession Number: ML22291A049 Estimated Page Count: 1 Availability: Publicly Available Author Name: AuthorAffiliation: NRC/RGN-I Addressee Name: Cohen [...]
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- 2023
8. Regulatory update: United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission has submitted ( NRC) 19-10306-01 633827 Department of the Army US Army Combat Capabilities Development Command, Chemical Biological Center
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United States. Nuclear Regulatory Commission ,Independent regulatory commissions ,News, opinion and commentary - Abstract
Washington: United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission has issued the following document: Item ID: Accession Number: ML22349A036 Estimated Page Count: Availability: Publicly Available Author Name: AuthorAffiliation: Addressee Name: Addressee Affiliation: Docket [...]
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- 2023
9. Regulatory update: United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission has submitted (Ullrich E ) Department of the Army, US Army Aviation and Missile Command, Request for Additional Information dated April 6, 2023
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United States. Nuclear Regulatory Commission ,Rockets (Ordnance) ,Independent regulatory commissions ,Guided missiles ,Aeronautics ,News, opinion and commentary - Abstract
Washington: United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission has issued the following document: Item ID: Accession Number: ML23096A180 Estimated Page Count: Availability: Publicly Available Author Name: Ullrich E AuthorAffiliation: NRC/RGN-I/DNMS/CRDB NRC/RGN-I/DRSS Addressee [...]
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- 2023
10. Regulatory update: United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission has submitted (Jones C ) Department of the Army, US Army Research Laboratory response email dated March 9, 2023
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United States. Nuclear Regulatory Commission ,Independent regulatory commissions ,News, opinion and commentary - Abstract
Washington: United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission has issued the following document: Item ID: Accession Number: ML23074A031 Estimated Page Count: Availability: Publicly Available Author Name: Jones C AuthorAffiliation: US Dept of [...]
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- 2023
11. Regulatory update: United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission has submitted ( NRC|RGN-I|DRSS) Department of the Army, US Army Combat Capabilities Development Command Armaments Center (CCDC AC); NRC Form 532 Acknowledgement of Receipt, Mail Control No. 634552
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United States. Nuclear Regulatory Commission ,Independent regulatory commissions ,News, opinion and commentary - Abstract
Washington: United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission has issued the following document: Item ID: Accession Number: ML23047A406 Estimated Page Count: 1 Availability: Publicly Available Author Name: AuthorAffiliation: NRC/RGN-I/DRSS Addressee Name: Hedderich [...]
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- 2023
12. Regulatory update: United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission has submitted ( NRC|RGN-I ) Department of the Army, US Army Combat Capabilities Development Command, Chemical Biological Center; NRC Form 532 Acknowledgement of Receipt, Mail Control No. 633827
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United States. Nuclear Regulatory Commission ,Independent regulatory commissions ,News, opinion and commentary - Abstract
Washington: United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission has issued the following document: Item ID: Accession Number: ML22349A041 Estimated Page Count: 1 Availability: Publicly Available Author Name: AuthorAffiliation: NRC/RGN-I Addressee Name: Moore [...]
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- 2022
13. Regulatory update: United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission has submitted ( Ullrich E) Department of the Army, US Army Public Health Center, Acceptance of Financial Assurance Submission, Mail Control No. 630345, 630346, and 630347
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United States. Nuclear Regulatory Commission ,Independent regulatory commissions ,Public health ,News, opinion and commentary - Abstract
Washington: United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission has issued the following document: UNITED STATES NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION REGION I 475 ALLENDALE ROAD - SUITE 102 KING OF PRUSSIA, PA 19406-1415 May [...]
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- 2022
14. Regulatory update: United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission has submitted (Ullrich E ) Department of the Army, US Army 20th CBRNE Command, License Amendment No. 13, Mail Control No. 631610
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United States. Nuclear Regulatory Commission ,Independent regulatory commissions ,News, opinion and commentary - Abstract
Washington: United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission has issued the following document: Item ID: Accession Number: ML22269A442 Estimated Page Count: 6 Availability: Publicly Available Author Name: Ullrich E AuthorAffiliation: NRC/RGN-I Addressee [...]
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- 2022
15. Regulatory update: United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission has submitted (Ullrich E ) Department of the Army, US Army 20th CBRNE Command, License Amendment, Mail Control No. 631610
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United States. Nuclear Regulatory Commission ,Independent regulatory commissions ,News, opinion and commentary - Abstract
Washington: United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission has issued the following document: Item ID: Accession Number: ML22269A440 Estimated Page Count: 3 Availability: Publicly Available Author Name: Ullrich E AuthorAffiliation: NRC/RGN-I/DNMS/CRDB Addressee [...]
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- 2022
16. Regulatory update: United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission has submitted (NRC|RGN-I ) Department of the Army, US Army Communications-Electronics Command; NRC Form 532 Acknowledgement of Receipt, Mail Control Nos. 631976 and 631977
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United States. Nuclear Regulatory Commission ,Independent regulatory commissions ,News, opinion and commentary - Abstract
Washington: United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission has issued the following document: Item ID: Accession Number: ML22213A199 Estimated Page Count: 1 Availability: Publicly Available Author Name: AuthorAffiliation: NRC/RGN-I Addressee Name: Addressee [...]
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- 2022
17. Annual (2023) taxonomic update of RNA-directed RNA polymerase-encoding negative-sense RNA viruses (realm Riboviria: kingdom Orthornavirae: phylum Negarnaviricota)
- Author
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National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (US), Antiviral Countermeasures Development Center (US), Department of Agriculture (US), Department of the Army (US), Department of Health and Human Services (US), US Department of Homeland Security, Federal Government of the United States, Kuhn, Jens H. [0000-0002-7800-6045], Abe, Junya [0000-0003-3627-7071], Adkins, Scott [0000-0003-0095-8414], Alkhovsky, Sergey V. [0000-0001-6913-5841], Avsic-Zupanc, Tatjana [0000-0001-6243-0688], Ayllón, María A. [0000-0001-7893-6106], Bahl, Justin [0000-0001-7572-4300], Balkema-Buschmann, A. [0000-0001-7613-9592], Ballinger, Matthew J. [0000-0001-7453-8725], Bejerman, Nicolas [0000-0002-7851-3506], Biedenkopf, Nadine [0000-0002-6061-8019], Blair, Carol D.[0000-0002-2803-0354], Blasdell, Kim R.[0000-0003-2121-0376], Bradfute, Steven B.[0000-0002-1985-751X], Briese, Thomas [0000-0002-4819-8963], Buchholz, Ursula J. [0000-0002-2329-3198], Buchmeier, Michael J.[0000-0002-2387-9287], Bukreyev, Alexander [0000-0002-0342-4824], Burt, Felicity [0000-0002-7238-7799], Büttner, Carmen [0000-0002-2086-2594], Calisher, Charles H. [0000-0003-0213-294X], Cao, Mengji [0000-0003-0396-262X], Casas, Inmaculada [0000-0003-1840-1198], Chandran, Kartik [0000-0003-0232-7077], Charrel, Rémi N.[0000-0002-7675-8251], Chaturvedi, Krishna Kumar [0000-0002-6529-5466], Crane, Anya [0000-0002-2060-2469], De Swart, Rik L.[0000-0003-3599-8969], Debat, Humberto [0000-0003-3056-3739], Dheilly, Nolwenn M.[0000-0002-3675-5013], Di Paola, Nicholas [0000-0002-9694-3913], Di Serio, Francesco [0000-0003-2822-704X], Dietzgen, Ralf G.[0000-0002-7772-2250], Digiaro, Michele [0009-0006-3089-3606], Drexler, J. Felix [0000-0002-3509-0232], Duprex, W. Paul [0000-0003-1716-6376], Elbeaino, Toufic [0000-0003-2211-7907], Ergünay, Koray [0000-0001-5422-1982], Feng, Guozhong [0000-0002-9489-9322], Fooks, Anthony R.[0000-0002-3243-6154], Formenty, Pierre B.H.[0000-0002-9482-5411], Freitas-Astúa, Juliana [0000-0002-0506-6880], Gago-Zachert, Selma [0000-0002-1084-2119], García, María Laura [0000-0001-6468-6943], Garrison, Aura R.[0000-0003-3034-6400], Gaskin, Thomas R. [0000-0002-5644-4431], Gouy de Bellocq, Joelle [0000-0001-5831-6284], Griffiths, Anthony [0000-0001-5435-8364], Groschup, M. H.[0000-0003-0215-185X], Günther, Stephan [0000-0002-6562-0230], Hayashi, Kazusa [0009-0002-9395-0066], Hepojoki, Jussi [0000-0001-5699-214X], Higgins, Colleen M. [0000-0001-9016-2940], Horie, Masayuki [0000-0003-4682-7698], Hughes, Holly R.[0000-0003-1380-8263], Hyndman, Timothy [0000-0002-7047-5023], Jiāng, Dàohóng [0000-0002-3862-7461], Jonson, Gilda B.[0000-0003-0097-8634], Junglen, Sandra [0000-0002-3799-6011], Klempa, B.[0000-0002-6931-1224], Klingström, Jonas [0000-0001-9076-1441], Kondō, Hideki [0000-0001-9220-5350], Koonin, Eugene V. [0000-0003-3943-8299], Krupovic, Mart [0000-0001-5486-0098], Kurath, Gael [0000-0003-3294-560X], Laenen, Lies [0000-0001-9118-8608], Li, Jianrong [0000-0002-7130-1084], Lukashevich, Igor S.[0000-0001-6523-5116], MacDiarmid, Robin M.[0000-0002-7057-2018], Maes, Piet [0000-0002-4571-5232], Marklewitz, Marco [0000-0003-1828-8770], Marshall, Sergio H.[0000-0003-0438-8252], Marzano, Shin-Yi L. [0000-0003-0548-3761], Mühlberger, Elke [0000-0003-3547-9376], Nabeshima, Tomoyuki [0000-0002-6570-096X], Naidu, Rayapati [0000-0002-7273-5116], Natsuaki, Tomohide [0000-0003-1823-7308], Navarro, José A. [0000-0002-0536-6074], Neriya, Yutaro [0000-0002-1385-0050], Netesov, Sergey V. [0000-0002-7786-2464], Neumann, Gabriele [0000-0001-7054-1775], Nowotny, N. [0000-0002-3548-571X], Ochoa-Corona, Francisco M. [0000-0002-4112-8209], Pallás, Vicente [0000-0003-4954-989X], Papa, Anna [0000-0002-6643-3322], Paraskevopoulou, Sofia [0000-0003-2608-2596], Parrish, Colin R. [0000-0002-1836-6655], Pauvolid-Corrêa, Alex [0000-0002-6924-157X], Pawęska, Janusz T. [0000-0001-8776-7519], Pérez, Daniel R. [0000-0002-6569-5689], Pfaff, Florian [0000-0003-0178-6183], Plemper, Richard K. [0000-0003-2034-2107], Postler, Thomas S. [0000-0002-3558-9084], Rabbidge, Lee O. [0009-0001-7962-4881], Radoshitzky, Sheli R. [0000-0001-8976-8056], Ramos-González, Pedro L. [0000-0002-9640-6587], Rehanek, Marius [0000-0002-5710-5060], Resende, Renato O. [0000-0003-3852-1576], Romanowski, Víctor [0000-0001-6378-7929], Rubbenstroth, Dennis [0000-0002-8209-6274], Rubino, Luisa [0000-0002-2073-2415], Runstadler, Jonathan A. [0000-0002-6747-7765], Sabanadzovic, Sead [0000-0002-2995-2633], Salvato, Maria S. [0000-0002-3357-5391], Sasaya, Takahide [0000-0002-5020-9377], Schwemmle, Martin [0000-0002-2972-6855], Shi, Mang [0000-0002-6154-4437], Shimomoto, Yoshifumi [0000-0002-0796-7068], Kavi Sidharthan, Venkidusamy [0000-0003-1561-549X], Sironi, Manuela [0000-0002-2267-5266], Smither, Sophie [0000-0002-7835-3581], Spann, Kirsten [0000-0003-0567-8382], Spengler, Jessica R. [0000-0002-5383-0513], Stenglein, Mark D. [0000-0002-0993-813X], Takada, Ayato [0000-0003-2464-6642], Takeyama, Sawana [0009-0000-3771-5999], Tesh, Robert B. [0000-0002-9226-397X], Thornburg, Natalie J. [0000-0003-3523-3616], Tischler, Nicole D. [0000-0002-4578-4780], Tomitaka, Yasuhiro [0000-0002-6914-4016], Tomonaga, Keizō [0000-0003-0405-7103], Tordo, Noël [0000-0001-5873-059X], Tu, Changchun [0000-0002-8134-7502], Turina, Massimo [0000-0002-9659-9470], Tzanetakis, Ioannis E. [0000-0002-5970-1763], Vaira, Anna Maria [0000-0003-2526-4419], Van den Hoogen, Bernadette [0000-0003-1996-8559], Vanmechelen, Bert [0000-0002-8350-4356], Verbeek, Martin [0000-0002-8973-3803], Von Bargen, Susanne [0000-0001-8321-1572], Wada, Jiro [0000-0001-9846-0846], Wahl, Victoria [0000-0002-6588-4308], Walker, Peter J. [0000-0003-1851-642X], Waltzek, Thomas B. [0000-0001-6383-5978], Whitfield, Anna E. [0000-0002-3538-015X], Wolf, Yuri I. [0000-0002-0247-8708], Xylogianni, Evanthia [0009-0001-8768-0939], Yanagisawa, Hironobu [0000-0002-6729-466X], Ye, Gongyin [0000-0003-4937-8867], Yuan, Zhiming [0000-0002-3234-9616], Zerbini, F. Murilo [0000-0001-8617-0200], Okland, Arnfinn Lodden [0000-0003-3062-4386], Kuhn, Jens H., Abe, Junya, Adkins, Scott, Alkhovsky, Sergey V., Avsic-Zupanc, Tatjana, Ayllón, María A., Bahl, Justin, Balkema-Buschmann, A., Ballinger, Matthew J., Kumar Baranwal, Virendra, Beer, Martin, Bejerman, Nicolas, Bergeron, Éric, Biedenkopf, Nadine, Blair, Carol D., Blasdell, Kim R., Blouin, Arnaud G., Bradfute, Steven B., Briese, Thomas, Brown, Paul A., Buchholz, Ursula J., Buchmeier, Michael J., Bukreyev, Alexander, Burt, Felicity, Büttner, Carmen, Calisher, Charles H., Cao, Mengji, Casas, Inmaculada, Chandran, Kartik, Charrel, Rémi N., Chaturvedi, Krishna Kumar, Chooi, Kar Mun, Crane, Anya, Dal Bó, Elena, de la Torre, J. C., de Souza, William Marciel, De Swart, Rik L., Debat, Humberto, Dheilly, Nolwenn M., Di Paola, Nicholas, Di Serio, Francesco, Dietzgen, Ralf G., Digiaro, Michele, Drexler, J. Felix, Duprex, W. Paul, Dürrwald, Ralf, Easton, Andrew J., Elbeaino, Toufic, Ergünay, Koray, Feng, Guozhong, Firth, Andrew E., Fooks, Anthony R., Formenty, Pierre B.H., Freitas-Astúa, Juliana, Gago-Zachert, Selma, García, María Laura, García-Sastre, Adolfo, Garrison, Aura R., Gaskin, Thomas R., Gong, Wenjie, Gonzalez, Jean-Paul J., Gouy de Bellocq, Joelle, Griffiths, Anthony, Groschup, M. H., Günther, Ines, Günther, Stephan, Hammond, John, Hasegawa, Yusuke, Hayashi, Kazusa, Hepojoki, Jussi, Higgins, Colleen M., Hongo, Seiji, Horie, Masayuki, Hughes, Holly R., Hume, Adam J., Hyndman, Timothy, Ikeda, Kenichi, Jiāng, Dàohóng, Jonson, Gilda B., Junglen, Sandra, Klempa, B., Klingström, Jonas, Kondō, Hideki, Koonin, Eugene V., Krupovic, Mart, Kubota, Kenji, Kurath, Gael, Laenen, Lies, Lambert, Amy J., Li, Jianrong, Li, Jun-Min, Liu, Ran, Lukashevich, Igor S., MacDiarmid, Robin M, Maes, Piet, Marklewitz, Marco, Marshall, Sergio H., Marzano, Shin-Yi L., McCauley, John W., Mirazimi, Ali, Mühlberger, Elke, Nabeshima, Tomoyuki, Naidu, Rayapati, Natsuaki, Tomohide, Navarro, Beatriz, Navarro, José A., Neriya, Yutaro, Netesov, Sergey V., Neumann, Gabriele, Nowotny, N., Nunes, Márcio R.T., Ochoa-Corona, Francisco M., Okada, Tomoyuki, Palacios, Gustavo, Pallás, Vicente, Papa, Anna, Paraskevopoulou, Sofia, Parrish, Colin R., Pauvolid-Corrêa, Alex, Pawęska, Janusz T., Pérez, Daniel R., Pfaff, Florian, Plemper, Richard K., Postler, Thomas S., Rabbidge, Lee O., Radoshitzky, Sheli R., Ramos-González, Pedro L., Rehanek, Marius, Resende, Renato O., Reyes, Carina A., Rodrigues, Thaís C.S., Romanowski, Víctor, Rubbenstroth, Dennis, Rubino, Luisa, Runstadler, Jonathan A., Sabanadzovic, Sead, Sadiq, Sabrina, Salvato, Maria S., Sasaya, Takahide, Schwemmle, Martin, Sharpe, Stephen R., Shi, Mang, Shimomoto, Yoshifumi, Kavi Sidharthan, Venkidusamy, Sironi, Manuela, Smither, Sophie, Song, Jin-Won, Spann, Kirsten, Spengler, Jessica R., Stenglein, Mark D., Takada, Ayato, Takeyama, Sawana, Tatara, Akio, Tesh, Robert B., Thornburg, Natalie J., Tian, Xin, Tischler, Nicole D., Tomitaka, Yasuhiro, Tomonaga, Keizō, Tordo, Noël, Tu, Changchun, Turina, Massimo, Tzanetakis, Ioannis E., Vaira, Anna Maria, Van den Hoogen, Bernadette, Vanmechelen, Bert, Vasilakis, Nikos, Verbeek, Martin, Von Bargen, Susanne, Wada, Jiro, Wahl, Victoria, Walker, Peter J., Waltzek, Thomas B., Whitfield, Anna E., Wolf, Yuri I., Xia, Han, Xylogianni, Evanthia, Yanagisawa, Hironobu, Yano, Kazutaka, Ye, Gongyin, Yuan, Zhiming, Zerbini, F. Murilo, Zhang, Guilin, Zhang, Song, Zhang, Yong-Zhen, Zhao, Lu, Okland, Arnfinn Lodden, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (US), Antiviral Countermeasures Development Center (US), Department of Agriculture (US), Department of the Army (US), Department of Health and Human Services (US), US Department of Homeland Security, Federal Government of the United States, Kuhn, Jens H. [0000-0002-7800-6045], Abe, Junya [0000-0003-3627-7071], Adkins, Scott [0000-0003-0095-8414], Alkhovsky, Sergey V. [0000-0001-6913-5841], Avsic-Zupanc, Tatjana [0000-0001-6243-0688], Ayllón, María A. [0000-0001-7893-6106], Bahl, Justin [0000-0001-7572-4300], Balkema-Buschmann, A. [0000-0001-7613-9592], Ballinger, Matthew J. [0000-0001-7453-8725], Bejerman, Nicolas [0000-0002-7851-3506], Biedenkopf, Nadine [0000-0002-6061-8019], Blair, Carol D.[0000-0002-2803-0354], Blasdell, Kim R.[0000-0003-2121-0376], Bradfute, Steven B.[0000-0002-1985-751X], Briese, Thomas [0000-0002-4819-8963], Buchholz, Ursula J. [0000-0002-2329-3198], Buchmeier, Michael J.[0000-0002-2387-9287], Bukreyev, Alexander [0000-0002-0342-4824], Burt, Felicity [0000-0002-7238-7799], Büttner, Carmen [0000-0002-2086-2594], Calisher, Charles H. [0000-0003-0213-294X], Cao, Mengji [0000-0003-0396-262X], Casas, Inmaculada [0000-0003-1840-1198], Chandran, Kartik [0000-0003-0232-7077], Charrel, Rémi N.[0000-0002-7675-8251], Chaturvedi, Krishna Kumar [0000-0002-6529-5466], Crane, Anya [0000-0002-2060-2469], De Swart, Rik L.[0000-0003-3599-8969], Debat, Humberto [0000-0003-3056-3739], Dheilly, Nolwenn M.[0000-0002-3675-5013], Di Paola, Nicholas [0000-0002-9694-3913], Di Serio, Francesco [0000-0003-2822-704X], Dietzgen, Ralf G.[0000-0002-7772-2250], Digiaro, Michele [0009-0006-3089-3606], Drexler, J. Felix [0000-0002-3509-0232], Duprex, W. Paul [0000-0003-1716-6376], Elbeaino, Toufic [0000-0003-2211-7907], Ergünay, Koray [0000-0001-5422-1982], Feng, Guozhong [0000-0002-9489-9322], Fooks, Anthony R.[0000-0002-3243-6154], Formenty, Pierre B.H.[0000-0002-9482-5411], Freitas-Astúa, Juliana [0000-0002-0506-6880], Gago-Zachert, Selma [0000-0002-1084-2119], García, María Laura [0000-0001-6468-6943], Garrison, Aura R.[0000-0003-3034-6400], Gaskin, Thomas R. [0000-0002-5644-4431], Gouy de Bellocq, Joelle [0000-0001-5831-6284], Griffiths, Anthony [0000-0001-5435-8364], Groschup, M. H.[0000-0003-0215-185X], Günther, Stephan [0000-0002-6562-0230], Hayashi, Kazusa [0009-0002-9395-0066], Hepojoki, Jussi [0000-0001-5699-214X], Higgins, Colleen M. [0000-0001-9016-2940], Horie, Masayuki [0000-0003-4682-7698], Hughes, Holly R.[0000-0003-1380-8263], Hyndman, Timothy [0000-0002-7047-5023], Jiāng, Dàohóng [0000-0002-3862-7461], Jonson, Gilda B.[0000-0003-0097-8634], Junglen, Sandra [0000-0002-3799-6011], Klempa, B.[0000-0002-6931-1224], Klingström, Jonas [0000-0001-9076-1441], Kondō, Hideki [0000-0001-9220-5350], Koonin, Eugene V. [0000-0003-3943-8299], Krupovic, Mart [0000-0001-5486-0098], Kurath, Gael [0000-0003-3294-560X], Laenen, Lies [0000-0001-9118-8608], Li, Jianrong [0000-0002-7130-1084], Lukashevich, Igor S.[0000-0001-6523-5116], MacDiarmid, Robin M.[0000-0002-7057-2018], Maes, Piet [0000-0002-4571-5232], Marklewitz, Marco [0000-0003-1828-8770], Marshall, Sergio H.[0000-0003-0438-8252], Marzano, Shin-Yi L. [0000-0003-0548-3761], Mühlberger, Elke [0000-0003-3547-9376], Nabeshima, Tomoyuki [0000-0002-6570-096X], Naidu, Rayapati [0000-0002-7273-5116], Natsuaki, Tomohide [0000-0003-1823-7308], Navarro, José A. [0000-0002-0536-6074], Neriya, Yutaro [0000-0002-1385-0050], Netesov, Sergey V. [0000-0002-7786-2464], Neumann, Gabriele [0000-0001-7054-1775], Nowotny, N. [0000-0002-3548-571X], Ochoa-Corona, Francisco M. [0000-0002-4112-8209], Pallás, Vicente [0000-0003-4954-989X], Papa, Anna [0000-0002-6643-3322], Paraskevopoulou, Sofia [0000-0003-2608-2596], Parrish, Colin R. [0000-0002-1836-6655], Pauvolid-Corrêa, Alex [0000-0002-6924-157X], Pawęska, Janusz T. [0000-0001-8776-7519], Pérez, Daniel R. [0000-0002-6569-5689], Pfaff, Florian [0000-0003-0178-6183], Plemper, Richard K. [0000-0003-2034-2107], Postler, Thomas S. [0000-0002-3558-9084], Rabbidge, Lee O. [0009-0001-7962-4881], Radoshitzky, Sheli R. [0000-0001-8976-8056], Ramos-González, Pedro L. [0000-0002-9640-6587], Rehanek, Marius [0000-0002-5710-5060], Resende, Renato O. [0000-0003-3852-1576], Romanowski, Víctor [0000-0001-6378-7929], Rubbenstroth, Dennis [0000-0002-8209-6274], Rubino, Luisa [0000-0002-2073-2415], Runstadler, Jonathan A. [0000-0002-6747-7765], Sabanadzovic, Sead [0000-0002-2995-2633], Salvato, Maria S. [0000-0002-3357-5391], Sasaya, Takahide [0000-0002-5020-9377], Schwemmle, Martin [0000-0002-2972-6855], Shi, Mang [0000-0002-6154-4437], Shimomoto, Yoshifumi [0000-0002-0796-7068], Kavi Sidharthan, Venkidusamy [0000-0003-1561-549X], Sironi, Manuela [0000-0002-2267-5266], Smither, Sophie [0000-0002-7835-3581], Spann, Kirsten [0000-0003-0567-8382], Spengler, Jessica R. [0000-0002-5383-0513], Stenglein, Mark D. [0000-0002-0993-813X], Takada, Ayato [0000-0003-2464-6642], Takeyama, Sawana [0009-0000-3771-5999], Tesh, Robert B. [0000-0002-9226-397X], Thornburg, Natalie J. [0000-0003-3523-3616], Tischler, Nicole D. [0000-0002-4578-4780], Tomitaka, Yasuhiro [0000-0002-6914-4016], Tomonaga, Keizō [0000-0003-0405-7103], Tordo, Noël [0000-0001-5873-059X], Tu, Changchun [0000-0002-8134-7502], Turina, Massimo [0000-0002-9659-9470], Tzanetakis, Ioannis E. [0000-0002-5970-1763], Vaira, Anna Maria [0000-0003-2526-4419], Van den Hoogen, Bernadette [0000-0003-1996-8559], Vanmechelen, Bert [0000-0002-8350-4356], Verbeek, Martin [0000-0002-8973-3803], Von Bargen, Susanne [0000-0001-8321-1572], Wada, Jiro [0000-0001-9846-0846], Wahl, Victoria [0000-0002-6588-4308], Walker, Peter J. [0000-0003-1851-642X], Waltzek, Thomas B. [0000-0001-6383-5978], Whitfield, Anna E. [0000-0002-3538-015X], Wolf, Yuri I. [0000-0002-0247-8708], Xylogianni, Evanthia [0009-0001-8768-0939], Yanagisawa, Hironobu [0000-0002-6729-466X], Ye, Gongyin [0000-0003-4937-8867], Yuan, Zhiming [0000-0002-3234-9616], Zerbini, F. Murilo [0000-0001-8617-0200], Okland, Arnfinn Lodden [0000-0003-3062-4386], Kuhn, Jens H., Abe, Junya, Adkins, Scott, Alkhovsky, Sergey V., Avsic-Zupanc, Tatjana, Ayllón, María A., Bahl, Justin, Balkema-Buschmann, A., Ballinger, Matthew J., Kumar Baranwal, Virendra, Beer, Martin, Bejerman, Nicolas, Bergeron, Éric, Biedenkopf, Nadine, Blair, Carol D., Blasdell, Kim R., Blouin, Arnaud G., Bradfute, Steven B., Briese, Thomas, Brown, Paul A., Buchholz, Ursula J., Buchmeier, Michael J., Bukreyev, Alexander, Burt, Felicity, Büttner, Carmen, Calisher, Charles H., Cao, Mengji, Casas, Inmaculada, Chandran, Kartik, Charrel, Rémi N., Chaturvedi, Krishna Kumar, Chooi, Kar Mun, Crane, Anya, Dal Bó, Elena, de la Torre, J. C., de Souza, William Marciel, De Swart, Rik L., Debat, Humberto, Dheilly, Nolwenn M., Di Paola, Nicholas, Di Serio, Francesco, Dietzgen, Ralf G., Digiaro, Michele, Drexler, J. Felix, Duprex, W. Paul, Dürrwald, Ralf, Easton, Andrew J., Elbeaino, Toufic, Ergünay, Koray, Feng, Guozhong, Firth, Andrew E., Fooks, Anthony R., Formenty, Pierre B.H., Freitas-Astúa, Juliana, Gago-Zachert, Selma, García, María Laura, García-Sastre, Adolfo, Garrison, Aura R., Gaskin, Thomas R., Gong, Wenjie, Gonzalez, Jean-Paul J., Gouy de Bellocq, Joelle, Griffiths, Anthony, Groschup, M. H., Günther, Ines, Günther, Stephan, Hammond, John, Hasegawa, Yusuke, Hayashi, Kazusa, Hepojoki, Jussi, Higgins, Colleen M., Hongo, Seiji, Horie, Masayuki, Hughes, Holly R., Hume, Adam J., Hyndman, Timothy, Ikeda, Kenichi, Jiāng, Dàohóng, Jonson, Gilda B., Junglen, Sandra, Klempa, B., Klingström, Jonas, Kondō, Hideki, Koonin, Eugene V., Krupovic, Mart, Kubota, Kenji, Kurath, Gael, Laenen, Lies, Lambert, Amy J., Li, Jianrong, Li, Jun-Min, Liu, Ran, Lukashevich, Igor S., MacDiarmid, Robin M, Maes, Piet, Marklewitz, Marco, Marshall, Sergio H., Marzano, Shin-Yi L., McCauley, John W., Mirazimi, Ali, Mühlberger, Elke, Nabeshima, Tomoyuki, Naidu, Rayapati, Natsuaki, Tomohide, Navarro, Beatriz, Navarro, José A., Neriya, Yutaro, Netesov, Sergey V., Neumann, Gabriele, Nowotny, N., Nunes, Márcio R.T., Ochoa-Corona, Francisco M., Okada, Tomoyuki, Palacios, Gustavo, Pallás, Vicente, Papa, Anna, Paraskevopoulou, Sofia, Parrish, Colin R., Pauvolid-Corrêa, Alex, Pawęska, Janusz T., Pérez, Daniel R., Pfaff, Florian, Plemper, Richard K., Postler, Thomas S., Rabbidge, Lee O., Radoshitzky, Sheli R., Ramos-González, Pedro L., Rehanek, Marius, Resende, Renato O., Reyes, Carina A., Rodrigues, Thaís C.S., Romanowski, Víctor, Rubbenstroth, Dennis, Rubino, Luisa, Runstadler, Jonathan A., Sabanadzovic, Sead, Sadiq, Sabrina, Salvato, Maria S., Sasaya, Takahide, Schwemmle, Martin, Sharpe, Stephen R., Shi, Mang, Shimomoto, Yoshifumi, Kavi Sidharthan, Venkidusamy, Sironi, Manuela, Smither, Sophie, Song, Jin-Won, Spann, Kirsten, Spengler, Jessica R., Stenglein, Mark D., Takada, Ayato, Takeyama, Sawana, Tatara, Akio, Tesh, Robert B., Thornburg, Natalie J., Tian, Xin, Tischler, Nicole D., Tomitaka, Yasuhiro, Tomonaga, Keizō, Tordo, Noël, Tu, Changchun, Turina, Massimo, Tzanetakis, Ioannis E., Vaira, Anna Maria, Van den Hoogen, Bernadette, Vanmechelen, Bert, Vasilakis, Nikos, Verbeek, Martin, Von Bargen, Susanne, Wada, Jiro, Wahl, Victoria, Walker, Peter J., Waltzek, Thomas B., Whitfield, Anna E., Wolf, Yuri I., Xia, Han, Xylogianni, Evanthia, Yanagisawa, Hironobu, Yano, Kazutaka, Ye, Gongyin, Yuan, Zhiming, Zerbini, F. Murilo, Zhang, Guilin, Zhang, Song, Zhang, Yong-Zhen, Zhao, Lu, and Okland, Arnfinn Lodden
- Abstract
In April 2023, following the annual International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses (ICTV) ratification vote on newly proposed taxa, the phylum Negarnaviricota was amended and emended. The phylum was expanded by one new family, 14 new genera, and 140 new species. Two genera and 538 species were renamed. One species was moved, and four were abolished. This article presents the updated taxonomy of Negarnaviricota as now accepted by the ICTV.
- Published
- 2023
18. Hierarchical organization of urban mobility and its connection with city livability
- Author
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Govern de les Illes Balears, European Commission, Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España), University of Rochester, Department of the Army (US), Bassolas, Aleix, Barbosa, Hugo, Dickinson, Brian, Dotiwalla, Xerxes, Eastham, Paul, Gallotti, Riccardo, Ghoshal, Gourab, Gipson, Bryant, Hazarie, Surendra A., Kautz, Henry, Kucuktunc, Onur, Lieber, Allison, Sadilek, Adam, Ramasco, José J., Govern de les Illes Balears, European Commission, Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España), University of Rochester, Department of the Army (US), Bassolas, Aleix, Barbosa, Hugo, Dickinson, Brian, Dotiwalla, Xerxes, Eastham, Paul, Gallotti, Riccardo, Ghoshal, Gourab, Gipson, Bryant, Hazarie, Surendra A., Kautz, Henry, Kucuktunc, Onur, Lieber, Allison, Sadilek, Adam, and Ramasco, José J.
- Abstract
The recent trend of rapid urbanization makes it imperative to understand urban character-istics such as infrastructure, population distribution, jobs, and services that play a key role inurban livability and sustainability. A healthy debate exists on what constitutes optimalstructure regarding livability in cities, interpolating, for instance, between mono- and poly-centric organization. Here anonymous and aggregatedflows generated from three hundredmillion users, opted-in to Location History, are used to extract global Intra-urban trips. Wedevelop a metric that allows us to classify cities and to establish a connection betweenmobility organization and key urban indicators. We demonstrate that cities with stronghierarchical mobility structure display an extensive use of public transport, higher levels ofwalkability, lower pollutant emissions per capita and better health indicators. Our frameworkoutperforms previous metrics, is highly scalable and can be deployed with little cost, even inareas without resources for traditional data collection.
- Published
- 2019
19. Explore with caution: mapping the evolution of scientific interest in physics
- Author
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US Army Research Laboratory, Department of the Army (US), Banco Santander, Gobierno de Aragón, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), European Commission, Aleta, Alberto, Meloni, Sandro, Perra, Nicola, Moreno, Yamir, US Army Research Laboratory, Department of the Army (US), Banco Santander, Gobierno de Aragón, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), European Commission, Aleta, Alberto, Meloni, Sandro, Perra, Nicola, and Moreno, Yamir
- Abstract
In the book The Essential Tension (1979) Thomas Kuhn described the conflict between tradition and innovation in scientific research—i.e., the desire to explore new promising areas, counterposed to the need to capitalize on the work done in the past. While it is probable that along their careers many scientists felt this tension, only few works have tried to quantify it. Here, we address this question by analyzing a large-scale dataset, containing all the papers published by the American Physical Society (APS) in 26 years, which allows for a better understanding of scientists’ careers evolution in Physics. We employ the Physics and Astronomy Classification Scheme (PACS) present in each paper to map the scientific interests of 103,246 authors and their evolution along the years. Our results indeed confirm the existence of the “essential tension” with scientists balancing between exploring the boundaries of their area and exploiting previous work. In particular, we found that although the majority of physicists change the topics of their research, they stay within the same broader area thus exploring with caution new scientific endeavors. Furthermore, we quantify the flows of authors moving between different subfields and pinpoint which areas are more likely to attract or donate researchers to the other ones. Overall, our results depict a very distinctive portrait of the evolution of research interests in Physics and can help in designing specific policies for the future.
- Published
- 2019
20. Influence of coastal upwelling and river discharge on the phytoplankton community composition in the northwestern Gulf of Mexico
- Author
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European Commission, Department of the Army (US), Anglès, Silvia, Jordi, Antoni, Henrichs, Darren W., Campbell, Lisa, European Commission, Department of the Army (US), Anglès, Silvia, Jordi, Antoni, Henrichs, Darren W., and Campbell, Lisa
- Abstract
The regional circulation in the northwestern Gulf of Mexico during late spring-summer is modulated by upwelling-favorable winds that can cause coastal upwelling in the western region and by freshwater inputs from the Mississippi-Atchafalaya Rivers. Spatial variability and temporal dynamics of phytoplankton community composition were examined during two upwelling-favorable periods using data obtained with an Imaging FlowCytobot (IFCB) from two cruises on the Texas-Louisiana shelf in June 2013 and 2014 and from the Texas Observatory for Algal Succession Time series (TOAST) at Port Aransas (Texas). Phytoplankton spatial distributions were determined by the influence of upwelling and river discharged waters. In the 2013 cruise, upwelling was detected in a large portion of the western region and the phytoplankton assemblages were dominated by diatoms, mostly chain-forming taxa. As revealed by the TOAST time series, the upwelling onset caused a dramatic increase in diatom carbon biomass. In the areas not affected by upwelling, variation in the river plume distribution that resulted from the circulation and the different discharge magnitudes for each year influenced the spatial distributions of the phytoplankton community composition. Dinoflagellates and other flagellated taxa were notably dominant during the 2013 cruise, whereas both diatoms and flagellated groups dominated the assemblages during the 2014 cruise. High stratification promoted by freshwater input, notably higher during 2013 than 2014, likely favored the dominance of flagellated groups in 2013. This study provides evidence of the influence of coastal upwelling in the phytoplankton community of the northwestern Gulf of Mexico and contributes to the knowledge of the drivers of community composition in this high-productivity area.
- Published
- 2019
21. Human mobility: Models and applications
- Author
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Department of the Army (US), Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (UK), Ministerio de Economía, Industria y Competitividad (España), European Commission, Barbosa, Hugo, Barthelemy, Marc, Ghoshal, Gourab, James, Charlotte R., Lenormand, Maxime, Louail, Thomas, Menezes, Ronaldo, Ramasco, José J., Simini, Filippo, Tomasini, Marcello, Department of the Army (US), Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (UK), Ministerio de Economía, Industria y Competitividad (España), European Commission, Barbosa, Hugo, Barthelemy, Marc, Ghoshal, Gourab, James, Charlotte R., Lenormand, Maxime, Louail, Thomas, Menezes, Ronaldo, Ramasco, José J., Simini, Filippo, and Tomasini, Marcello
- Abstract
Recent years have witnessed an explosion of extensive geolocated datasets related to human movement, enabling scientists to quantitatively study individual and collective mobility patterns, and to generate models that can capture and reproduce the spatiotemporal structures and regularities in human trajectories. The study of human mobility is especially important for applications such as estimating migratory flows, traffic forecasting, urban planning, and epidemic modeling. In this survey, we review the approaches developed to reproduce various mobility patterns, with the main focus on recent developments. This review can be used both as an introduction to the fundamental modeling principles of human mobility, and as a collection of technical methods applicable to specific mobility-related problems. The review organizes the subject by differentiating between individual and population mobility and also between short-range and long-range mobility. Throughout the text the description of the theory is intertwined with real-world applications.
- Published
- 2018
22. Emergent chirality in the electric polarization texture of titanate superlattices
- Author
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Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (España), National Science Foundation (US), Department of the Army (US), Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, Fonds National de la Recherche Luxembourg, Department of Energy (US), Shafer, Padraic, García-Fernández, Pablo, Aguado-Puente, Pablo, Damodaran, Anoop R., Yadav, Ajay K., Nelson, Christopher T., Hsu, Shang-Li, Wojdeł, Jacek C., Íñiguez, Jorge, Martin, Lane W., Arenholz, Elke, Junquera, Javier, Ramesh, Ramamoorthy, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (España), National Science Foundation (US), Department of the Army (US), Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, Fonds National de la Recherche Luxembourg, Department of Energy (US), Shafer, Padraic, García-Fernández, Pablo, Aguado-Puente, Pablo, Damodaran, Anoop R., Yadav, Ajay K., Nelson, Christopher T., Hsu, Shang-Li, Wojdeł, Jacek C., Íñiguez, Jorge, Martin, Lane W., Arenholz, Elke, Junquera, Javier, and Ramesh, Ramamoorthy
- Abstract
Chirality is a geometrical property by which an object is not super-imposable onto its mirror image, thereby imparting a handedness. Chirality determines many important properties in nature—from the strength of the weak interactions according to the electroweak theory in particle physics to the binding of enzymes with naturally occurring amino acids or sugars, reactions that are fundamental for life. In condensed matter physics, the prediction of topologically protected magnetic skyrmions and related spin textures in chiral magnets has stimulated significant research. If the magnetic dipoles were replaced by their electrical counterparts, then electrically controllable chiral devices could be designed. Complex oxide BaTiO/SrTiO nanocomposites and PbTiO/SrTiO superlattices are perfect candidates, since “polar vortices,” in which a continuous rotation of ferroelectric polarization spontaneously forms, have been recently discovered. Using resonant soft X-ray diffraction, we report the observation of a strong circular dichroism from the interaction between circularly polarized light and the chiral electric polarization texture that emerges in PbTiO/SrTiO superlattices. This hallmark of chirality is explained by a helical rotation of electric polarization that second-principles simulations predict to reside within complex 3D polarization textures comprising ordered topological line defects. The handedness of the texture can be topologically characterized by the sign of the helicity number of the chiral line defects. This coupling between the optical and novel polar properties could be exploited to encode chiral signatures into photon or electron beams for information processing.
- Published
- 2018
23. Predicting the conductance of strongly correlated molecules: the Kondo effect in perchlorotriphenylmethyl/Au junctions
- Author
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European Commission, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), German Research Foundation, Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development (Serbia), Fondo Nacional de Desarrollo Científico y Tecnológico (Chile), National Natural Science Foundation of China, Ministry of Science and Technology of the People's Republic of China, Department of the Army (US), Appelt, W. H., Droghetti, Andrea, Chioncel, L., Radonjić, M. M., Muñoz, E., Kirchner, S., Vollhardt, D., Rungger, Ivan, European Commission, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), German Research Foundation, Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development (Serbia), Fondo Nacional de Desarrollo Científico y Tecnológico (Chile), National Natural Science Foundation of China, Ministry of Science and Technology of the People's Republic of China, Department of the Army (US), Appelt, W. H., Droghetti, Andrea, Chioncel, L., Radonjić, M. M., Muñoz, E., Kirchner, S., Vollhardt, D., and Rungger, Ivan
- Abstract
Stable organic radicals integrated into molecular junctions represent a practical realization of the single-orbital Anderson impurity model. Motivated by recent experiments for perchlorotriphenylmethyl (PTM) molecules contacted to gold electrodes, we develop a method that combines density functional theory (DFT), quantum transport theory, numerical renormalization group (NRG) calculations and renormalized super-perturbation theory (rSPT) to compute both equilibrium and non-equilibrium properties of strongly correlated nanoscale systems at low temperatures effectively from first principles. We determine the possible atomic structures of the interfaces between the molecule and the electrodes, which allow us to estimate the Kondo temperature and the characteristic transport properties, which compare well with experiments. By using the non-equilibrium rSPT results we assess the range of validity of equilibrium DFT + NRG-based transmission calculations for the evaluation of the finite voltage conductance. The results demonstrate that our method can provide qualitative insights into the properties of molecular junctions when the molecule-metal contacts are amorphous or generally ill-defined, and that it can further give a fully quantitative description when the experimental contact structures are well characterized.
- Published
- 2018
24. A synthetic route for crystals of woven structures, uniform nanocrystals, and thin films of imine covalent organic frameworks
- Author
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BASF, Department of Energy (US), Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics, ShanghaiTech University, Department of the Army (US), Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), King Abdulaziz City for Science and Technology, Zhao, Yingbo, Guo, Lei, Gándara Barragán, Felipe, Ma, Yanhang, Liu, Zheng, Zhu, Chenhui., Lyu, Hao, Trickett, Christopher A., Kapustin, Eugene A., Terasaki, Osamu, Yaghi, Omar M., BASF, Department of Energy (US), Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics, ShanghaiTech University, Department of the Army (US), Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), King Abdulaziz City for Science and Technology, Zhao, Yingbo, Guo, Lei, Gándara Barragán, Felipe, Ma, Yanhang, Liu, Zheng, Zhu, Chenhui., Lyu, Hao, Trickett, Christopher A., Kapustin, Eugene A., Terasaki, Osamu, and Yaghi, Omar M.
- Abstract
Developing synthetic methodology to crystallize extended covalent structures has been an important pursuit of reticular chemistry. Here, we report a homogeneous synthetic route for imine covalent organic frameworks (COFs) where crystallites emerge from clear solutions without forming amorphous polyimine precipitates. The key feature of this route is the utilization of tert-butyloxycarbonyl group protected amine building blocks, which are deprotected in situ and gradually nucleate the crystalline framework. We demonstrate the utility of this approach by crystallizing a woven covalent organic framework (COF-112), in which covalent organic threads are interlaced to form a three-dimensional woven framework. The homogeneous imine COF synthesis also enabled the control of nucleation and crystal growth leading to uniform nanocrystals, through microwave-Assisted reactions, and facile preparation of oriented thin films.
- Published
- 2017
25. Millimeter wave radiation-induced magnetoresistance oscillations in the high quality GaAs/AlGaAs 2D electron system under bichromatic excitation
- Author
-
European Commission, Department of Energy (US), Department of the Army (US), Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Gunawardana, B., Liu, H. C., Samaraweera, R. L., Heimbeck, M. S., Everitt, H. O., Iñarrea, Jesús, Reichl, C., Wegscheider, W., Mani, R. G., European Commission, Department of Energy (US), Department of the Army (US), Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Gunawardana, B., Liu, H. C., Samaraweera, R. L., Heimbeck, M. S., Everitt, H. O., Iñarrea, Jesús, Reichl, C., Wegscheider, W., and Mani, R. G.
- Abstract
Millimeter wave radiation-induced magnetoresistance oscillations are examined in the GaAs/AlGaAs 2D electron system under bichromatic excitation in order to study the evolution of the oscillatory diagonal magnetoresistance, Rxx as the millimeter wave intensity is changed systematically for various frequency combinations. The results indicate that at low magnetic fields, the lower frequency millimeter wave excitation sets the observed Rxx response, as the higher frequency millimeter wave component determines the Rxx response at higher magnetic fields. The observations are qualitatively explained in terms of the order of the involved transitions. The results are also modeled using the radiation-driven electron orbit theory.
- Published
- 2017
26. Phase coexistence and electric-field control of toroidal order in oxide superlattices
- Author
-
Fonds National de la Recherche Luxembourg, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Swiss National Science Foundation, National Science Foundation (US), Department of the Army (US), Department of Energy (US), Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, Damodaran, Anoop R., Clarkson, J. D., Hong, Z., Liu, Hanyu, Yadav, Ajay K., Nelson, Christopher T., Hsu, Shang-Li, McCarter, M. R., Park, K. D., Kravtsov, V., Farhan, A., Dong, Yongqi, Cai, Z., Zhou, H., Aguado-Puente, Pablo, García-Fernández, Pablo, Íñiguez, Jorge, Junquera, Javier, Scholl, A., Raschke, M. B., Chen, L. Q., Fong, D. D., Ramesh, Ramamoorthy, Martin, Lane W., Fonds National de la Recherche Luxembourg, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Swiss National Science Foundation, National Science Foundation (US), Department of the Army (US), Department of Energy (US), Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, Damodaran, Anoop R., Clarkson, J. D., Hong, Z., Liu, Hanyu, Yadav, Ajay K., Nelson, Christopher T., Hsu, Shang-Li, McCarter, M. R., Park, K. D., Kravtsov, V., Farhan, A., Dong, Yongqi, Cai, Z., Zhou, H., Aguado-Puente, Pablo, García-Fernández, Pablo, Íñiguez, Jorge, Junquera, Javier, Scholl, A., Raschke, M. B., Chen, L. Q., Fong, D. D., Ramesh, Ramamoorthy, and Martin, Lane W.
- Abstract
Systems that exhibit phase competition, order parameter coexistence, and emergent order parameter topologies constitute a major part of modern condensed-matter physics. Here, by applying a range of characterization techniques, and simulations, we observe that in PbTiO>3/SrTiO>3 superlattices all of these effects can be found. By exploring superlattice period-, temperature- and field-dependent evolution of these structures, we observe several new features. First, it is possible to engineer phase coexistence mediated by a first-order phase transition between an emergent, low-temperature vortex phase with electric toroidal order and a high-temperature ferroelectric a>1/a>2 phase. At room temperature, the coexisting vortex and ferroelectric phases form a mesoscale, fibre-textured hierarchical superstructure. The vortex phase possesses an axial polarization, set by the net polarization of the surrounding ferroelectric domains, such that it possesses a multi-order-parameter state and belongs to a class of gyrotropic electrotoroidal compounds. Finally, application of electric fields to this mixed-phase system permits interconversion between the vortex and the ferroelectric phases concomitant with order-of-magnitude changes in piezoelectric and nonlinear optical responses. Our findings suggest new cross-coupled functionalities.
- Published
- 2017
27. Equivalence between spin Hamiltonians and boson sampling
- Author
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Comunidad de Madrid, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Department of the Army (US), Air Force Office of Scientific Research (US), Peropadre, Borja, Aspuru-Guzik, Alán, García-Ripoll, Juan José, Comunidad de Madrid, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Department of the Army (US), Air Force Office of Scientific Research (US), Peropadre, Borja, Aspuru-Guzik, Alán, and García-Ripoll, Juan José
- Abstract
Aaronson and Arkhipov showed that predicting or reproducing the measurement statistics of a general linear optics circuit with a single Fock-state input is a classically hard problem. Here we show that this problem, known as boson sampling, is as hard as simulating the short time evolution of a large but simple spin model with long-range XY interactions. The conditions for this equivalence are the same for efficient boson sampling, namely, having a small number of photons (excitations) as compared to the number of modes (spins). This mapping allows efficient implementations of boson sampling in small quantum computers and simulators and sheds light on the complexity of time evolution with critical spin models.
- Published
- 2017
28. A rigorous detection of interstellar CH3NCO: An important missing species in astrochemical networks
- Author
-
Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), European Research Council, Junta de Castilla y León, National Science Centre (Poland), Centre National D'Etudes Spatiales (France), National Aeronautics and Space Administration (US), National Science Foundation (US), Department of the Army (US), Cernicharo, José, Kisiel, Z., Tercero, Belén, Kolesniková, L., Medvedev, I. R., López, A., Fortman, S., Winnewisser, M., Lucia, F. C., Alonso, J. L., Guillemin, Jean-Claude, Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), European Research Council, Junta de Castilla y León, National Science Centre (Poland), Centre National D'Etudes Spatiales (France), National Aeronautics and Space Administration (US), National Science Foundation (US), Department of the Army (US), Cernicharo, José, Kisiel, Z., Tercero, Belén, Kolesniková, L., Medvedev, I. R., López, A., Fortman, S., Winnewisser, M., Lucia, F. C., Alonso, J. L., and Guillemin, Jean-Claude
- Abstract
The recent analysis of the composition of the frozen surface of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko has revealed a significant number of complex organic molecules. Methyl isocyanate (CHNCO) is one of the more abundant species detected on the comet surface. In this work we report extensive characterization of its rotational spectrum resulting in a list of 1269 confidently assigned laboratory lines and its detection in space towards the Orion clouds where 399 lines of the molecule have been unambiguously identified. We find that the limited mm-wave laboratory data reported prior to our work require some revision. The abundance of CHNCO in Orion is only a factor of ten below those of HNCO and CHCN. Unlike the molecular abundances in the coma of comets, which correlate with those of warm molecular clouds, molecular abundances in the gas phase in Orion are only weakly correlated with those measured on the comet surface. We also compare our abundances with those derived recently for this molecule towards Sgr B2 (Halfen et al. 2015, ApJ, 812, L5). A more accurate abundance of CHNCO is provided for this cloud based on our extensive laboratory work.
- Published
- 2016
29. Strain-induced nonsymmorphic symmetry breaking and removal of Dirac semimetallic nodal line in an orthoperovskite iridate
- Author
-
University of Tennessee, Department of Energy (US), Austrian Science Fund, Czech Science Foundation, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), European Synchrotron Radiation Facility, Department of the Army (US), Jian, Liu, Frontera, Carlos, Ramesh, Ramamoorthy, University of Tennessee, Department of Energy (US), Austrian Science Fund, Czech Science Foundation, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), European Synchrotron Radiation Facility, Department of the Army (US), Jian, Liu, Frontera, Carlos, and Ramesh, Ramamoorthy
- Abstract
By using a combination of heteroepitaxial growth, structure refinement based on synchrotron x-ray diffraction, and first-principles calculations, we show that the symmetry-protected Dirac line nodes in the topological semimetallic perovskite SrIrO3 can be lifted simply by applying epitaxial constraints. In particular, the Dirac gap opens without breaking the Pbnm mirror symmetry. In virtue of a symmetry-breaking analysis, we demonstrate that the original symmetry protection is related to the n-glide operation, which can be selectively broken by different heteroepitaxial structures. This symmetry protection renders the nodal line a nonsymmorphic Dirac semimetallic state. The results highlight the vital role of crystal symmetry in spin-orbit-coupled correlated oxides and provide a foundation for experimental realization of topological insulators in iridate-based heterostructures.
- Published
- 2016
30. Brief report: Influence of mandatory contraceptive education emphasizing long-acting reversible methods on continuation rates among military recruits
- Author
-
Roberts, Christina M., Smalley, Joshua M., Adelman, William P., Weir, Larissa F., and Hisle-Gorman, Elisabeth
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Subject: Request for approval of the City of Boston, MA coastal storm risk management study review plan
- Author
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United States. Army. Corps of Engineers. New England District; United States. Army. Corps of Engineers. North Atlantic Division and United States. Army. Corps of Engineers. New England District; United States. Army. Corps of Engineers. North Atlantic Division
- Abstract
DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY U.S. ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS, NORTH ATLANTIC DIVISION FORT HAMILTON MILITARY COMMUNITY 302 JOHN WARREN AVENUE BROOKLYN, NY 11252-6700 CENAD-PD-P (1105-2-10c) 30 Jan 2023 MEMORANDUM FOR Commander, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, New England District, 696 Virginia Road Concord, MA 01742-2751 SUBJECT: Request for Approval of the City of Boston, MA Coastal Storm Risk Management Feasibility Study Review Plan 1. Reference Memorandum, CENAE-PD dated 30 December 2022, subject as above. 2. The Coastal Storm Risk Management Planning Center of Expertise of the North Atlantic Division (NAD) is the lead office to execute the referenced Review Plan. The Review Plan includes Independent External Peer Review. 3. The enclosed Review Plan is approved for execution and is subject to change as study circumstances require, consistent with study development under the Project Delivery Business Process. Subsequent revisions to this Review Plan or its execution require new written approval from NAD. 4. The point of contact is Mr. Larry Cocchieri, NAD Planning Program Manager at 347370-4571 or Lawrence.J.Cocchieri@usace.army.mil. KOENIG.REINHAR Digitally signed by KOENIG.REINHARD.WOLFRAM. D.WOLFRAM.1162 1162741418 Date: 2023.01.30 15:25:30 -05'00' 741418 Encl REINHARD W. KOENIG, PE, SES Programs Director North Atlantic Division DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY US ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS NEW ENGLAND DISTRICT 696 VIRGINIA ROAD CONCORD MA 01742-2751 CENAE-PD 30 December 2022 MEMORANDUM FOR Commander, USACE North Atlantic Division, (CENAD-PD-X Larry Cocchieri), 301 John Warren Avenue, Fort Hamilton Community, Brooklyn, New York 11252 SUBJECT: Submission of the Review Plan for the City of Boston Coastal Storm Risk Management (CRRM) Feasibility Study (P2 No. 497351) for Approval. 1. References: ER 1165-2-217, Review Policy for Civil Works, 1 May 2021. 2. Background: The New England District developed the enclosed Review Plan dated December 2022 for the City of Boston CSRM Feasibility S
- Published
- 2023
32. A comprehensive approach to assess current and future vulnerabilities in the Columbia River Reservoir System under climate change
- Author
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Harrell, Jane; Frans, Chris; Aoki, Reyn; Chang, Jason; Mickelson, Kristian; Warner, Michael; Giovando, Jeremy J.; Duffy, Keith; Heisman, Evan, United States. Army. Corps of Engineers. Seattle District; United States. Army. Corps of Engineers. Portland District; United States. Army. Corps of Engineers. Walla Walla District; United States. Army. Corps of Engineers. Northwestern Division, Harrell, Jane; Frans, Chris; Aoki, Reyn; Chang, Jason; Mickelson, Kristian; Warner, Michael; Giovando, Jeremy J.; Duffy, Keith; Heisman, Evan, and United States. Army. Corps of Engineers. Seattle District; United States. Army. Corps of Engineers. Portland District; United States. Army. Corps of Engineers. Walla Walla District; United States. Army. Corps of Engineers. Northwestern Division
- Abstract
A Comprehensive Approach to Assess Current and Future Vulnerabilities in the Columbia River Reservoir System Under Climate Change October, 2023 Department of the Army US Army Corps of Engineers Seattle, Portland, and Walla Walla Districts, Northwestern Division Authors and Contributors: Jane Harrell, Chris Frans1, Reyn Aoki, Jason Chang, Kristian Mickelson2, Michael Warner, US Army Corps of Engineers, Seattle District Jeremy Giovando, US Army Corps of Engineers, Cold Regions Research and Engineering Laboratory Keith Duffy, US Army Corps of Engineers, Portland District Evan Heisman3, US Army Corps of Engineers, Walla Walla District 1Now at US Bureau of Reclamation, Research and Development Office 2Now at US Army Corps of Engineers, Northwestern Division 3Now at US Army Corps of Engineers, Hydrologic Engineering Center Page | i Table of Contents 2.1 RMJOC-II Meteorological and Hydrological Ensemble ............................................................................................ 2-5 2.2 Current Conditions Reservoir Modeling .................................................................................................................. 2-6 2.3 Willamette River Inflow .......................................................................................................................................... 2-7 2.4 Data and Model Development for 149-year continuous simulation ...................................................................... 2-8 2.4.1 Water Supply Forecasts .............................................................................................................................. 2-9 2.4.2 Derived Forecasts: Average Monthly Inflow Volumes ............................................................................. 2-11 2.4.3 Grand Coulee Variable Draft Limits .......................................................................................................... 2-12 3.1 Defining Vulnerabilities .......................................
- Published
- 2023
33. Do Worn-In Tactical Boots Affect Lower-Extremity Biomechanics During Walking and Running?
- Author
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Thorsen, Tanner A., Donahue, Paul T., Peel, Shelby A., Legg, Lindsey G., and Piland, Scott G.
- Subjects
GROUND reaction forces (Biomechanics) ,WILCOXON signed-rank test ,ATHLETIC shoes ,RUNNING shoes ,BIOMECHANICS ,ANKLE ,KNEE - Abstract
Background: Much of the research conducted on tactical-style boots has evaluated the biomechanical effect of boots in brand-new condition; however, the extent to which changes due to wear influence lower-extremity biomechanics remains uninvestigated. The purpose of this study was to compare lower-extremity biomechanics with worn-in boots and running shoes during both walking and running. Methods: Lower-extremity biomechanical parameters were evaluated during walking and running in 12 individuals with previous tactical experience. Participants were asked to complete one 5 min bout of walking and running at a self-selected pace in both self-selected athletic shoes and their own worn-in standard-issue tactical boots while lower-extremity spatiotemporal, joint kinematic, kinetic, and ground reaction force data were collected. Differences between conditions were evaluated using the Wilcoxon signed-rank test. Results: Spatiotemporal measures of gait, as well as ankle and hip kinematics, were different between shoes and boots during walking. During running, no spatiotemporal differences existed. However, significant differences were found for the ankle, knee, and hip kinematics between shoe and boot conditions during both walking and running. Conclusions: The worn-in boots in our sample performed similarly to running shoes during both walking and running tasks. Though there were several biomechanical differences between boots and shoes during both tasks, small mean differences suggest that these differences may not be large enough to create substantive or relevant changes in performance. This information could aid in developing future tactical boot design strategies to help aid in lower-extremity injury as well as allowing for optimal performance when wearing boots. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Modelling Suitable Layout for a Small Island Harbour: A Case Study of Ruhnu in the Gulf of Riga, Eastern Baltic Sea.
- Author
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Männikus, R., Wang, W. W., Eelsalu, M., Najafzadeh, F., Bihs, H., and Soomere, T.
- Subjects
STORM surges ,WATER levels ,DESIGN protection ,TIME series analysis ,BREAKWATERS - Abstract
We explore the complexity of various drivers and local constraints from the viewpoint of developing a feasible re-design of a small harbour that is affected by ultra-refraction of storm waves. Waves propagating towards the Port of Ruhnu on a small island in the central part of the Gulf of Riga are systematically redirected by underwater features so that saturated waves in virtually all storms propagate almost exactly into the harbour entrance. A new design of the port entrance and associated set of breakwaters is largely steered by the location of the port and options for the fairway into the port. The re-design of the breakwaters and possible relocation of the entrance considers the specific features of the local wind, wave, and water level climate, including period-depending refraction of storm waves. We present systematic analysis of these aspects using recorded and modelled wind and water level time series. Wave properties are reconstructed using the WAVE module (SWAN) of the Delft3D suite forced with ERA5 and local wind information. Phase-resolving modelling of waves (REEF3D software) reveals the presence of a bi-modal wave field in the interior of the port and provides alternatives for the design of effective protection options that suppress single wave components. On many occasions, greatly simplified models and local one-point wind properties provide even better match with recorded wave properties than sophisticated models and global data sets. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Subject: Arkansas River Corridor, Tulsa County, Oklahoma feasibility study - request for exclusion from type I Independent External Peer Review (IEPR)
- Author
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Hill, David C., United States. Army. Corps of Engineers. Southwestern Division, Hill, David C., and United States. Army. Corps of Engineers. Southwestern Division
- Abstract
REPLY TO ATTENTION OF DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY US ARMY ENGINEER DIVISION, SOUTHWESTERN 1100 COMMERCE STREET, SUITE 831 DALLAS TX 75242-1317 2 5 JAM 2.ll\1 CESWD-PDP MEMORANDUM FOR Headquarters USACE (CECW-SWD/Ms. Katie Williams), 441 G. Street, NW, Washington, DC 20314-1000 SUBJECT: Arkansas River Con-idor, Tulsa County, Oklahoma Feasibility Study- Request for Exclusion from Type I Independent External Peer Review (IEPR). 1. References: a. Engineering Circular (EC) 1165-2-214, Civil Works Review Policy, 15 December 2012; b. Planning Bulletin, CECW-P, 4 Mar 2016, Civil Works Review c. Reference memorandum, CESWT-PP-C, 15 Dec 2016, subject: Request for Exclusion from Type I Independent External Peer Review (IEPR) for Arkansas River Con-idor Feasibility Study, Tulsa County, Oklahoma. 2. The enclosed memorandum (reference l.c.) provides a draft review plan (RP) for the subject feasibility study documenting a deliberate, risk-info1med decision to request exclusion from Type I IEPR. I have reviewed this risk assessment and concur that the risk factors to human life and controversy are low for the proposed study. The project cost is estimated to be less than $200 million and the proposed study does not present a high risk of developing decisions or recommendations for implementation that may lead to non-performance of the project, pmiicularly in the areas of public safety, the environment, and social justice. I suppmi the recommendation of the Tulsa District Commander for exclusion from IEPR. 3. The National Ecosystem Restoration Planning Center of Expertise has reviewed the draft RP and concurs with the decision to request exclusion from IEPR. 4. Please submit this request to the Director of Civil Works as required by EC-1165-2-214. 5. The SWD point of contact for this action is Ms. Lauren Kruse, CESWD-PDP, at 469-487-7045. Encl CF: SWT-PP-C //'~/: #'W? DAVID C. HILL Brigadier General, USA Commanding CESWD-PDP DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY US ARMY ENGINEER DIVISION, SOUTHWESTERN 1
- Published
- 2017
36. Physiological, Perceptual, and Biomechanical Responses to Load Carriage While Walking at Military-Relevant Speeds and Loads—Are There Differences between Males and Females?
- Author
-
Vickery-Howe, Danielle M., Dascombe, Ben J., Drain, Jace R., Clarke, Anthea C., Hoolihan, Brooke, Carstairs, Greg L., Reddy, Anjana J., and Middleton, Kane J.
- Subjects
GAIT in humans ,WALKING ,MILITARY service ,ERGONOMICS ,MILITARY personnel - Abstract
This study aimed to investigate the physiological, perceptual, and biomechanical differences between male and female soldiers across several military-relevant load and walking speed combinations. Eleven female and twelve male soldiers completed twelve 12 min walking trials at varying speeds (3.5 km·h
−1 , 5.5 km·h−1 , 6.5 km·h−1 ) and with varying external loads (7.2 kg, 23.2 kg, 35.2 kg). Physiological (indirect calorimetry, heart rate), perceptual (perceived exertion), and biomechanical (spatiotemporal, kinematic, kinetic) outcomes were measured throughout each trial. Females had a lower aerobic capacity and lower body strength than males, which resulted in them working at a greater exercise intensity (%VO2peak and heart rate) but with a lower oxygen pulse. Females demonstrated higher breathing frequency and perceived exertion with specific loads. At selected loads and speeds, frontal and sagittal pelvis, hip, and knee motions and forces were greater for females. Females consistently displayed greater relative stride length and step width. In conclusion, this study demonstrates the importance of tailored interventions, periodisation, and nutritional strategies for female military personnel, given their higher relative work rate and increased injury risk during load carriage tasks. Understanding these differences is crucial for preparing female soldiers for the physical demands of military service. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Subject: Review plan approval for the Bridgeport and Black Rock Harbors, CT, Dredged Material Management Plan (DMMP) (P2 no. 107600)
- Author
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United States. Army. Corps of Engineers. New England District; United States. Army. Corps of Engineers. North Atlantic Division and United States. Army. Corps of Engineers. New England District; United States. Army. Corps of Engineers. North Atlantic Division
- Abstract
DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY U.S. ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS, NORTH ATLANTIC DIVISION FORT HAMILTON MILITARY COMMUNITY 302 GENERAL LEE AVENUE BROOKLYN NY 11252-6700 CENAD-PD-P (1200A-1105-2-10c) 2: ~ SEP 2021 MEMORANDUM FOR Commander, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, New England District, 696 Virginia Road Concord, MA 01742-2751 SUBJECT: Review Plan Approval for the Bridgeport and Black Rock Harbors, CT, Dredged Material Management Plan (DMMP) (P2 No. 107600) 1. References: a. Memorandum, CENAE-PD dated 12 August 2021, Submission of the Review Plan for the Bridgeport and Black Rock Harbors, CT, Dredged Material Management Plan (DMMP) (P2 No. 107600) for Approval. b. Memorandum, CESAM-PD-D dated 24 May 2021, Review Plan (RP) Endorsement, Bridgeport and Black Rock Harbors, Connecticut, Dredged Material Management Plan (DMMP) and Environmental Assessment (EA). 2. The Deep Draft Navigation Planning Center of Expertise of the South Atlantic Division is the lead office to execute the referenced Review Plan. The Review Plan does not include Independent External Peer Review, as it is not required. 3. The enclosed Review Plan is approved for execution and is subject to change as study circumstances require, consistent with study development under the Project Delivery Business Process. Subsequent revisions to this Review Plan or its execution require new written approval from the NAO Commander. 4. The point of contact is Mr. Larry Cocchieri, NAO Planning Program Manager, 347370-4571, Lawrence.J.Cocchieri@usace.army.mil. Encl THOMAS J. TICKNER Brigadier General, USA Commanding DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY US ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS NEW ENGLAND DISTRICT 696 VIRGINIA ROAD CONCORD MA 01742-2751 CENAE-PD 12 August 2021 MEMORANDUM FOR Commander, USACE North Atlantic Division, (CENAD-PD-X Larry Cocchieri), 301 General Lee Avenue, Fort Hamilton Military Community, Brooklyn, New York 11252 SUBJECT: Submission of the Review Plan for the Bridgeport and Black Rock Harbors, CT, Dredged Material Management
- Published
- 2021
38. Development of a novel storm surge inundation model framework for efficient prediction.
- Author
-
Gao, Xuanxuan, Li, Shuiqing, Mo, Dongxue, Liu, Yahao, and Hu, Po
- Subjects
EMERGENCY management ,SHALLOW-water equations ,COASTS ,CELLULAR automata ,HYDRODYNAMICS ,STORM surges - Abstract
Storm surge is a natural process that causes flood disasters in coastal zones and results in massive casualties and property losses. Therefore, storm surge inundation is of major concern in formulating appropriate strategies for disaster prevention and mitigation. However, traditional storm surge hydrodynamic models have large limits with respect to computational efficiency and stability in practical applications. In this study, a novel storm surge inundation model was developed based on a wetting and drying algorithm established from a simplified shallow-water momentum equation. The wetting and drying algorithm was applied to a rectangular grid that iterates through a cellular automata algorithm to improve computational efficiency. The model, referred to as the Hydrodynamical Cellular Automata Flood Model (HCA-FM), was evaluated by comparing the simulations to regional field observations and to a widely used hydrodynamic numerical model. The comparisons demonstrated that HCA-FM can reproduce the observed inundation distributions and predict results that are consistent with the numerical simulation in terms of the inundation extent and submerged depth with much improved computational efficiency (predicting inundation within a few minutes) and high stability. The results reflect significant advancement of HCA-FM toward efficient predictions of storm surge inundation and applications at large spatial scales. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Characterizing military medical evacuation dispatching and delivery policies via a self-exciting spatio-temporal Hawkes process model.
- Author
-
Frial, Virbon B., Jenkins, Phillip R., and Robbins, Matthew J.
- Subjects
CIVILIAN evacuation ,SPATIOTEMPORAL processes ,BATTLE casualties ,HEALTH facilities ,WAR - Abstract
The military medical evacuation (MEDEVAC) system is the primary method to evacuate time-sensitive combat casualties from the battlefield to appropriately staffed and equipped medical treatment facilities (MTFs). The intent of this paper is to analyze how MTF capability and capacity impact MEDEVAC system performance. We develop a self-exciting spatio-temporal Hawkes process model as well as a notional, synthetically generated MEDEVAC scenario of the post-Bosnian War to evaluate and compare eight distinct MEDEVAC dispatching and delivery policies within a high-intensity combat environment. The results garnered from this paper highlight the substantial impact MTFs have on MEDEVAC systems and should be considered in future research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Dynamic evaluation of tiered geogrid mechanically stabilized earth (MSE) walls using shake table test.
- Author
-
Yazdandoust, Majid, Jamnani, Amirhossein Rasouli, and Sabermahani, Mohsen
- Subjects
REINFORCED soils ,SHAKING table tests ,PARTICLE image velocimetry - Abstract
Shaking table tests were performed on reduced-scale models of integrated and two-tiered mechanically stabilized earth walls (TMSEWs) to evaluate the effect of a tiered configuration on the dynamic behavior of geogrid-reinforced soil walls. The results of particle image velocimetry and instrumentation indicate that preventing the development of a slip surface in the lower half of the wall, improving the seismic stability by increasing the failure threshold acceleration, mitigating acceleration amplification and decreasing the reinforcement load were the main advantages of a tiered configuration. It was found that the use of an insufficient offset distance in TMSEWs not only eliminated the advantage of the tiered configuration for reducing wall deformations, but also increased the lateral displacement at the wall crest. In this regard, 0.22H was identified as the minimum offset distance required when constructing MSE walls in a tiered configuration. Moreover, comparison of integrated and tiered MSE walls showed that the effect of a tiered configuration on reducing the force of the reinforcements in the lower tier was approximately 2.2 times that for the upper tier reinforcements. It was also found that Mononobe-Okabe method can be used to find the upper bound for estimating the load of reinforcements in TMSEWs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. A work group report on ultrafine particles (American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology): Why ambient ultrafine and engineered nanoparticles should receive special attention for possible adverse health outcomes in human subjects
- Author
-
Li, Ning, Georas, Steve, Alexis, Neil, Fritz, Patricia, Xia, Tian, Williams, Marc A., Horner, Elliott, and Nel, Andre
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Synchronous telehealth for outpatient allergy consultations: A 2-year regional experience
- Author
-
Waibel, Kirk H.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Subject: Request for approval of the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway Bridge replacement at Deep Creek, VA post authorization change report review plan
- Author
-
United States. Army. Corps of Engineers. Norfolk District; United States. Army. Corps of Engineers. North Atlantic Division and United States. Army. Corps of Engineers. Norfolk District; United States. Army. Corps of Engineers. North Atlantic Division
- Abstract
DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY U.S. ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS, NORTH ATLANTIC DIVISION FORT HAMILTON MILITARY COMMUNITY 302 GENERAL LEE AVENUE BROOKLYN NY 11252-6700 1 CENAD-PD-P 2 4 JUL 2020 MEMORANDUM FOR Commander, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Norfolk District, Fort Norfolk 803 Front Street, Norfolk, VA 23510-1011 SUBJECT: Request for Approval of the Atlantic lntracoastal Waterway Bridge Replacement at Deep Creek, VA Post Authorization Change Report Review Plan 1. References: a. Memorandum, CENAO-EX, dated 4 June 2020, Deep Creek Plan Transmittal Memo. b. Memorandum, CELRH-PCXIN-NC, dated 7 May 2020, Deep Creek PACR RP PCXIN-RED Endorsement 20202May. 2. The Inland Navigation Planning Center of Expertise of the Great Lakes and Ohio River Division (LRD) is the lead office to execute the referenced Review Plan. The Review Plan does not include Independent External Peer Review, as it is not required. 3. The enclosed Review Plan is approved for execution and is subject to change as study circumstances require, consistent with study development under the Project Management Business Process. Subsequent revisions to this Review Plan or its execution require new written approval from the North Atlantic Division (NAO) Commander. 4. The point of contact is Mr. Larry Cocchieri, NAO Planning Program Manager at 347- 370-4571 or Lawrence.J.Cocchieri@usace.army.mil. ~ Encl THOMAS J. TICKNER Brigadier General, USA Commanding 2 DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY US ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS NORFOLK DISTRICT FORT NORFOLK 803 FRONT STREET NORFOLK VA 23510-1011 GENAO-EX 04 June 2020 MEMORANDUM FOR Planning Division (ATTN: CENAD-PP/Mr. Cocchieri), U.S. Army Engineer Division, North Atlantic, 302 General Lee Avenue, Brooklyn, New York 1252- 6700 SUBJECT: Deep Creek Bridge Replacement at Chesapeake, VA Post Authorization Change Report - Submission of Review Plan 1. Enclosed for review and approval is the Review Plan for the subject study. 2. Please contact Jennifer Shunfenthal, Planning Team Lead, or Walt Tri
- Published
- 2020
44. Estimating Stage-Frequency Curves for Engineering Design in Small Ungauged Arctic Watersheds.
- Author
-
Engel, Chandler, Wagner, Anna, Giovando, Jeremy, Ho, David, Morriss, Blaine, and Deeb, Elias
- Subjects
SNOWMELT ,RUNOFF models ,ENGINEERING design ,SNOW accumulation ,MONTE Carlo method ,WATERSHEDS - Abstract
The design of hydraulic structures in the Arctic is complicated by shallow relief, which cause unique runoff processes that promote snow-damming and refreeze of runoff. We discuss the challenges encountered in modeling snowmelt runoff into two coastal freshwater lagoons in Utqiaġvik, Alaska. Stage-frequency curves with quantified uncertainty were required to design two new discharge gates that would allow snowmelt runoff flows through a proposed coastal revetment. To estimate runoff hydrographs arriving at the lagoons, we modeled snowpack accumulation and ablation using SnowModel which in turn was used to force a physically-based hydraulic runoff model (HEC-RAS). Our results demonstrate the successful development of stage-frequency curves by incorporating a Monte Carlo simulation approach that quantifies the variability in runoff timing and volume. Our process highlights the complexities of Arctic hydrology by incorporating significant delays in runoff onset due to localized snow accumulation and melting processes. This methodology not only addresses the uncertainty in snow-damming and refreeze processes which affect the arrival time of snowmelt inflow peaks, but is also adaptable for application in other challenging environments where secondary runoff processes are predominant. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Serologic Response to the Epstein-Barr Virus Peptidome and the Risk for Multiple Sclerosis.
- Author
-
Cortese, Marianna, Leng, Yumei, Bjornevik, Kjetil, Mitchell, Moriah, Healy, Brian C., Mina, Michael J., Mancuso, James D., Niebuhr, David W., Munger, Kassandra L., Elledge, Stephen J., and Ascherio, Alberto
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Reintegration of cyber veterans: challenges and strategies for post-war transition.
- Author
-
Virtanen, Toni, Lassfolk, Christina, Davydiuk, Andrii, and Noorma, Mart
- Subjects
REINTEGRATION of veterans ,CONSCIOUSNESS raising ,VETERANS ,INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) ,SOCIAL impact ,WAR - Abstract
Battles in the cyber domain often lack visibility compared to the physical domain, which can lead to insufficient appreciation of its actors' achievements by the general public and society. Nonetheless, it has become a crucial area of modern warfare in which cyber professionals defend the nation's critical infrastructure, support other military operations and achieve military objectives that could not be attained in other domains. Although cyber combatants might not have as high a risk of injury or death as those on the front lines, they still can face traumatic events and suffer from the same types of issues after the war as any other veteran. Earlier studies on war veterans have shown they have elevated risks of mental health issues, substance use, social problems and financial difficulties which might push some individuals towards a path of crime. The cyber domain is also not limited by time or place, which has given rise to cyber volunteerism in which skilled individuals around the globe decide to assist their own country or friendly nations. This publication aims to identify the challenges cyber veterans might face when transitioning back to civilian life and develop appropriate strategies to facilitate their reintegration. It also raises the awareness of the hundreds of thousands of volunteers who can develop similar problems after the war. Without proper awareness, support and dialogue, some of these individuals can also drift towards harmful social implications such as cybercrime. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Selection and Scaling Approaches of Earthquake Time-Series for Structural Engineering Applications: A State-of-the-Art Review.
- Author
-
Caicedo, Daniel, Karimzadeh, Shaghayegh, Bernardo, Vasco, and Lourenço, Paulo B.
- Abstract
Selection and scaling of ground motion records have been recognised as one of the major sources of bias and uncertainty in the seismic assessment of civil engineering structures. This review paper provides a comprehensive description from a critical point of view of the scaling and selection approaches of earthquake motions for structural engineering applications, emphasising works conducted in the last decade. The outline of content within this review is organised as follows: (1) Earlier works (research done before 2010); (2) Code-based selection and spectral matching; (3) Probabilistic assessment based on intensity measures; and (4) Use of simulated signals as an alternative to ground motion selection and scaling. The aim of this paper is to provide a wide understanding of current research on the scaling and selection of earthquake motions for structural engineering applications; therefore, it may serve as a suitable reference in forthcoming investigations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Are good patient and embryo characteristics protective against the negative effect of elevated progesterone level on the day of oocyte maturation?
- Author
-
Hill, Micah J., Royster, Greene Donald, IV, Healy, Mae Wu, Richter, Kevin S., Levy, Gary, DeCherney, Alan H., Levens, Eric D., Suthar, Geeta, Widra, Eric, and Levy, Michael J.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Human Performance and Injury Prevention in Cold Weather Environments.
- Author
-
Bubnis MA and Hulsopple C
- Subjects
- Athletes, Humans, Risk Assessment, Cold Temperature, Exercise
- Abstract
Abstract: This article serves as a primer for those practitioners who serve as subject matter experts in cold weather medicine, whether it be medical planning for an outdoor event, making the determination "it is too cold to exercise," or investigating why an athlete is struggling to compete in a frigid environment. Cold weather exercise physiology is reviewed, and medical conditions that may impact performance at cold temperatures are briefly examined. Guidelines for cold weather risk assessment, injury prevention, and performance optimization also are discussed., (Copyright © 2022 by the American College of Sports Medicine.)
- Published
- 2022
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- View/download PDF
50. Subject: Review plan approval for the Rhode Island coastline general investigation study
- Author
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United States. Army. Corps of Engineers. New England District; United States. Army. Corps of Engineers. North Atlantic Division and United States. Army. Corps of Engineers. New England District; United States. Army. Corps of Engineers. North Atlantic Division
- Abstract
DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS, NORTH ATLANTIC DIVISION FORT HAMIL TON MILITARY COMMUNITY 302 GENERAL LEE AVENUE BROOKLYN, NY 11252-6700 2 July 2019 CENAD-PD-PP MEMORANDUM FOR Commander, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, New England District, 696 Virginia Road Concord, MA 01742-2751 SUBJECT: Review Plan Approval for the Rhode Island Coastline General Investigation Study 1. Reference CENAE-ZC memorandum dated 31 May 2019, subject as above. 2. The Coastal Storm Risk Management Planning Center of Expertise of the North Atlantic Division is the lead office to execute the referenced Review Plan. The Review Plan does not include Independent External Peer Review, as it is not required for this study. 3. The enclosed Review Plan is approved for execution and is subject to change as study circumstances require, consistent with study development under the Project Management Business Process. Subsequent revisions to this Review Plan or its execution require new written approval from the NAO Commander. 4. The point of contact is Mr. Larry Cocchieri, NAO Planning Program Manager, 347370-4571, Lawrence.J.Cocchieri@usace.army.mil. /,-~ Encl Y L. Ml HORN eneral, USA manding DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY US ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS NEW ENGLAND DISTRICT 696 VIRGINIA ROAD CONCORD MA 01742-2751 CENAE-ZC 31 May 2019 MEMORANDUM FOR Commar:ider, North Atlantic Division (CENAD-PD-CID-P/Mr. Christopher Ricciardi), U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Fort Hamilton Military Community, 301 General Lee Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 11252-8400 SUBJECT: Request for NAO approval of Rhode Island Coastline General Investigation Review Plan 1. Request review and approval of the attached Review Plan for the Rhode Island Coastal Storm Risk Management Feasibility Study. This study is authorized by the resolution adopted by the Senate Public Works Committee dated 12 September 1969, and resolution adopted by the Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works dated August 2, 1995. The study authorizes the investigation
- Published
- 2019
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