635 results on '"Sears D"'
Search Results
2. Quality of inpatient pediatric case management for four leading causes of child mortality at six government-run Ugandan hospitals.
- Author
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Dorsey, Matthew, Sears, D, Mpimbaza, A, Kigozi, R, Sserwanga, A, Chang, MA, Kapella, BK, Yoon, S, Kamya, MR, Dorsey, G, and Ruel, T
- Abstract
A better understanding of case management practices is required to improve inpatient pediatric care in resource-limited settings. Here we utilize data from a unique health facility-based surveillance system at six Ugandan hospitals to evaluate the quality
- Published
- 2015
3. The Apollo 17 Regolith: Induced Thermoluminescence Evidence for Formation by a Single Event ∼100 Million Years Ago and Possibly the Presence of Tycho Material.
- Author
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Sehlke, A. and Sears, D. W. G.
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DRILL cores ,THERMOLUMINESCENCE ,CORE drilling ,PHOSPHATE minerals ,THERMOLUMINESCENCE dating ,REGOLITH ,TRACE elements - Abstract
We explored the geological history of the Taurus‐Littrow Valley at the Apollo 17 landing site through the induced thermoluminescence (TL) properties of regolith samples collected from the foothills of the Northern and Southern Massifs, from near the landing site, and from the deep drill core taken in proximity to the landing site. The samples were recently made available by NASA through the Apollo Next Generation Sample Analysis program in anticipation of the forthcoming Artemis missions. We found that the two samples from the foothills of the massifs exhibit induced TL values approximately four times higher than those of the valley samples. This observation is consistent with their elevated plagioclase content, indicating their predominantly highland material composition. Conversely, the valley samples display induced TL values characteristic of lunar mare material. The samples from the deep drill core demonstrate uniformly induced TL properties, despite originating from depths of up to 3 m. Notably, one of the samples from the lower section of the deep drill core presents anomalous‐induced TL readings. This anomaly coincides with elevated levels of low‐potassium KREEP along with reduced quantities of anorthositic gabbro and orange glass, and could be due to the traces of phosphate minerals. Alternatively, this observation raises the possibility that this sample contains Tycho impact material. The induced TL data is consistent with the regolith, extending to a depth of at least 3 m, having been deposited by a singular event approximately 100 million years ago. This timing aligns with the hypothesized formation of the Tycho crater. Plain Language Summary: We studied the geologic history of the Taurus‐Littrow Valley through the induced thermoluminescence (TL) properties of Apollo 17 regolith samples. Thermoluminescence refers to the light emission of a sample when it is heated. Our investigation focused on samples that were collected from the foothills of the Northern and Southern Massifs, from near the landing site, and from the deep drill core taken in proximity to the landing site. We found that samples from the foothills of the massifs induced TL levels four times higher than those from the valley floor. We attribute this difference to their differing plagioclase content, whereby the TL of foothill samples is comparable to highland material, and valley floor TL is comparable to mare material. The induced TL properties in the deep drill core are mostly uniform. However, one of the samples within the lower section of the deep drill core exhibited anomalous‐induced TL levels. This coincides with elevated levels of low‐potassium KREEP along with reduced quantities of anorthositic gabbro and orange glass, which could be due to traces of phosphate minerals. Alternatively, this sample may contain Tycho impact material. Our TL data suggest that the valley floor regolith was deposited by a single event approximately 100 million years ago, aligning with the hypothesized formation of the Tycho crater. Key Points: The samples from the deep drill core demonstrate uniformly induced TL propertiesThe TL anomaly in the lower section of the deep drill core coincides with elevated KREEP level. Alternatively, anomalies may represent Tycho materialTL data suggest deposition of valley regolith of at least upper 3 m during a single event, potentially 100 Mya during Tycho impact [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. Comparing in-person, blended and virtual training interventions; a real-world evaluation of HIV capacity building programs in 16 countries in sub-Saharan Africa
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Kiguli-Malwadde, E., primary, Forster, M., additional, Eliaz, A., additional, Celentano, J., additional, Chilembe, E., additional, Couper, I. D., additional, Dassah, E. T., additional, De Villiers, M. R., additional, Gachuno, O., additional, Haruzivishe, C., additional, Khanyola, J., additional, Martin, S., additional, Motlhatlhedi, K., additional, Mubuuke, R., additional, Mteta, K. A., additional, Moabi, P., additional, Rodrigues, A., additional, Sears, D., additional, Semitala, F., additional, von Zinkernagel, D., additional, Reid, M. J. A., additional, and Suleman, F., additional
- Published
- 2023
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5. Comparing in-person, blended and virtual training interventions; a real-world evaluation of HIV capacity building programs in 16 countries in sub-Saharan Africa
- Author
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Kiguli-Malwadde, E, primary, Forster, M, additional, Eliaz, A, additional, Celentano, J, additional, Chilembe, E, additional, Couper, ID, additional, Dassah, ET, additional, De Villiers, MR, additional, Gachuno, O, additional, Haruzivishe, C, additional, Khanyola, J, additional, Martin, S, additional, Motlhatlhedi, K, additional, Mubuuke, R, additional, Mteta, K A, additional, Moabi, P, additional, Rodrigues, A, additional, Sears, D, additional, Semitala, F, additional, von Zinkernagel, D, additional, Reid, Michael J. A., additional, and Suleman, F, additional
- Published
- 2023
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6. FINESSE (Field Investigations to Enable Solar System Science and Exploration): Overview of Science and Exploration Research to Enable Lunar and Planetary Exploration
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Heldmann, J. L, Lim, D. S. S, Colaprete, A. C, Sehlke, A, Elphic, R. C, and Sears, D
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Lunar And Planetary Science And Exploration - Abstract
The FINESSE (Field Investigations to Enable Solar System Science and Exploration) project is an Ames-led research program administered by NASA’s SSERVI (Solar System Exploration Research Virtual Institute). FINESSE is in its fifth and final year of operations and here we provide an overview of the science and exploration research conducted to date.
- Published
- 2019
7. Novel benchmark values for redo liver transplantation – does the outcome justify the effort?
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UCL - SSS/IREC/CHEX - Pôle de chirgurgie expérimentale et transplantation, UCL - (SLuc) Service de chirurgie et transplantation abdominale, UCL - SSS/IREC - Institut de recherche expérimentale et clinique, Abbassi, F, Gero, D, Muller, X, Bueno, A, Figiel, W, Robin, F, Laroche, S, Picard, B, Shankar, S, Ivanics, T, van Reeven, M, van Leeuwen, O B, Braun, H J, Monbaliu, D, Breton, A, Vachharajani, N, Bonaccorsi Riani, Eliano, Nowak, G, McMillan, R R, Abu-Gazala, S, Nair, A, Bruballa, R, Paterno, F, Weppler Sears, D, Pinna, A D, Guarrera, J V, de Santibañes, E, de Santibañes, M, Hernandez-Aleja, R, Olthoff, K, Ghobrial, R M, Ericzon, B-G, Ciccarelli, Olga, Chapman, W C, Mabrut, J-Y, Pirenne, J, Müllhaupt, B, Ascher, N L, Porte, R J, de Meier, V E, Polak, W G, Sapisochin, G, Attia, M, Weiss, E, Adam, R A, Cherqui, D, Boudjema, K, Zienewicz, K, Jassem, W, Puhan, M, Dutkowski, P, Clavien, P-A, UCL - SSS/IREC/CHEX - Pôle de chirgurgie expérimentale et transplantation, UCL - (SLuc) Service de chirurgie et transplantation abdominale, UCL - SSS/IREC - Institut de recherche expérimentale et clinique, Abbassi, F, Gero, D, Muller, X, Bueno, A, Figiel, W, Robin, F, Laroche, S, Picard, B, Shankar, S, Ivanics, T, van Reeven, M, van Leeuwen, O B, Braun, H J, Monbaliu, D, Breton, A, Vachharajani, N, Bonaccorsi Riani, Eliano, Nowak, G, McMillan, R R, Abu-Gazala, S, Nair, A, Bruballa, R, Paterno, F, Weppler Sears, D, Pinna, A D, Guarrera, J V, de Santibañes, E, de Santibañes, M, Hernandez-Aleja, R, Olthoff, K, Ghobrial, R M, Ericzon, B-G, Ciccarelli, Olga, Chapman, W C, Mabrut, J-Y, Pirenne, J, Müllhaupt, B, Ascher, N L, Porte, R J, de Meier, V E, Polak, W G, Sapisochin, G, Attia, M, Weiss, E, Adam, R A, Cherqui, D, Boudjema, K, Zienewicz, K, Jassem, W, Puhan, M, Dutkowski, P, and Clavien, P-A
- Published
- 2022
8. The Explored Asteroids: Science and Exploration in the Space Age
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Sears, D. W. G.
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- 2015
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9. Omega-3 fatty acids reduce obesity-induced tumor progression independent of GPR120 in a mouse model of postmenopausal breast cancer
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Chung, H, Lee, Y S, Mayoral, R, Oh, D Y, Siu, J T, Webster, N J, Sears, D D, Olefsky, J M, and Ellies, L G
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- 2015
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10. Novel benchmark values for redo liver transplantation – does the outcome justify the effort?
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Abbassi, F, primary, Gero, D, additional, Muller, X, additional, Bueno, A, additional, Figiel, W, additional, Robin, F, additional, Laroche, S, additional, Picard, B, additional, Shankar, S, additional, Ivanics, T, additional, van Reeven, M, additional, van Leeuwen, O B, additional, Braun, H J, additional, Monbaliu, D, additional, Breton, A, additional, Vachharajani, N, additional, Bonaccorsi Riani, E, additional, Nowak, G, additional, McMillan, R R, additional, Abu-Gazala, S, additional, Nair, A, additional, Bruballa, R, additional, Paterno, F, additional, Weppler Sears, D, additional, Pinna, A D, additional, Guarrera, J V, additional, de Santibañes, E, additional, de Santibañes, M, additional, Hernandez-Aleja, R, additional, Olthoff, K, additional, Ghobrial, R M, additional, Ericzon, B-G, additional, Ciccarelli, O, additional, Chapman, W C, additional, Mabrut, J-Y, additional, Pirenne, J, additional, Müllhaupt, B, additional, Ascher, N L, additional, Porte, R J, additional, de Meier, V E, additional, Polak, W G, additional, Sapisochin, G, additional, Attia, M, additional, Weiss, E, additional, Adam, R A, additional, Cherqui, D, additional, Boudjema, K, additional, Zienewicz, K, additional, Jassem, W, additional, Puhan, M, additional, Dutkowski, P, additional, and Clavien, P-A, additional
- Published
- 2022
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11. Mechanisms of Human Insulin Resistance and Thiazolidinedione-Mediated Insulin Sensitization
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Sears, D. D., Hsiao, G., Hsiao, A., Yu, J. G., Courtney, C. H., Ofrecio, J. M., Chapman, J., and Subramaniam, S.
- Published
- 2009
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12. Overview of NASA Finesse (Field Investigations to Enable Solar System Science and Exploration) Science and Exploration Project
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Heldmann, J. L, Lim, D.S.S, Hughes, S, Nawotniak, S. Kobs, Garry, B, Sears, D, Neish, C, Osinski, G. R, Hodges, K, Downs, M, Busto, J, Cohen, B, Caldwell, B, Jones, A. J. P, Johnson, S, Kobayashi, L, and Colaprete, A
- Subjects
Lunar And Planetary Science And Exploration - Abstract
NASA's FINESSE (Field Investigations to Enable Solar System Science and Exploration) project was selected as a research team by NASA's Solar System Exploration Research Virtual Institute (SSERVI). SSERVI is a joint Institute supported by NASA's Science Mission Directorate (SMD) and Human Exploration and Operations Mission Directorate (HEOMD). As such, FINESSE is focused on a science and exploration field-based research program to generate strategic knowledge in preparation for human and robotic exploration of other planetary bodies including our Moon, Mars moons Phobos and Deimos, and near-Earth asteroids. FINESSE embodies the philosophy that "science enables exploration and exploration enables science".
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- 2016
13. General Discussion after Session III
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Wetherill, G. W., Delsemme, A. H., Pillinger, C. T., Pellas, P., Wallis, M. K., Clayton, R. N., Jessberger, E., Wanke, H., Chang, S., Hutchison, R., Sears, D. W. G., Lipschutz, M. E., Wasson, J. T., McVittie, G. C., and Clayton, D.
- Published
- 1988
14. Analysis of Potentially Hazardous Asteroids
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Arnold, J. O, Burkhard, C. D, Dotson, J. L, Prabhu, D. K, Mathias, D. L, Aftosmis, M. J, Venkatapathy, Ethiraj, Morrison, D. D, Sears, D. W. G, and Berger, M. J
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Space Sciences (General) - Abstract
The National Aeronautics and Space Administration initiated a new project focused on Planetary Defense on October 1, 2014. The new project is funded by NASAs Near Earth Object Program (Lindley Johnson, Program Executive). This presentation describes the objectives, functions and plans of four tasks encompassed in the new project and their inter-relations. Additionally, this project provides for outreach to facilitate partnerships with other organizations to help meet the objectives of the planetary defense community. The four tasks are (1) Characterization of Near Earth Asteroids, (2) Physics-Based Modeling of Meteor Entry and Breakup (3) Surface Impact Modeling and (4) Physics-Based Impact Risk Assessment.
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- 2015
15. Overview of a New NASA Activity Focused on Planetary Defense
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Arnold, J. O, Burkhard, C. D, Aftosmis, M. J, dotson, J. L, Lee, T. J, Mathias, D. L, Prabhu, D. K, and Sears, D. W. G
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Lunar And Planetary Science And Exploration - Abstract
The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) has initiated a new Planetary Defense research activity, led by the NASA Ames Research Center. The objective of the effort is to provide tools for reliably assessing the impact damage that Potentially Hazardous Asteroids (PHAs) could inflict on the Earth. This research will support decisions regarding appropriate mitigation action in the event that an impact threat is discovered. The activity includes four interrelated tasks: PHA characterization, physics-based simulations of atmospheric entry breakup, simulations of surface damage due to airbursts, land impacts, or tsunamis, and an integrated assessment of the overall risks posed by potential PHA strikes. This paper outlines the objectives, research approaches, products, and interrelations of the activity's four tasks, and presents an overview of their current progress and preliminary results. Companion papers in this conference provide additional details of the work in the four task areas.
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- 2015
16. Asteroid Geophysics and Quantifying the Impact Hazard
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Sears, D, Wooden, D. H, and Korycanksy, D. G
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Space Sciences (General) ,Geophysics - Abstract
Probably the major challenge in understanding, quantifying, and mitigating the effects of an impact on Earth is understanding the nature of the impactor. Of the roughly 25 meteorite craters on the Earth that have associated meteorites, all but one was produced by an iron meteorite and only one was produced by a stony meteorite. Equally important, even meteorites of a given chemical class produce a wide variety of behavior in the atmosphere. This is because they show considerable diversity in their mechanical properties which have a profound influence on the behavior of meteorites during atmospheric passage. Some stony meteorites are weak and do not reach the surface or reach the surface as thousands of relatively harmless pieces. Some stony meteorites roll into a maximum drag configuration and are strong enough to remain intact so a large single object reaches the surface. Others have high concentrations of water that may facilitate disruption. However, while meteorite falls and meteorites provide invaluable information on the physical nature of the objects entering the atmosphere, there are many unknowns concerning size and scale that can only be determined by from the pre-atmospheric properties of the asteroids. Their internal structure, their thermal properties, their internal strength and composition, will all play a role in determining the behavior of the object as it passes through the atmosphere, whether it produces an airblast and at what height, and the nature of the impact and amount and distribution of ejecta.
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- 2015
17. hydrolases
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C.‐H. Wong, P.S. Sears, D. Garbe
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- 2020
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18. hydrolases
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Wong, P.S. Sears, D. Garbe, C.‐H., primary
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- 2020
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19. On expansions in eigenfunctions
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Sears, D. B.
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512.9 - Published
- 1949
20. Fluorescence, fluorescence-excitation and absorption spectra of trans-1-(2-anthryl)-2-phenylethene conformers
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Saltiel, J., Zhang, Y., Sears, D. F., and Choi, J. -O.
- Published
- 1995
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21. The Sariçiçek howardite fall in Turkey: Source crater of HED meteorites on Vesta and impact risk of Vestoids
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Unsalan, O., Jenniskens, P., Yin, Q. -Z., Kaygisiz, E., Albers, J., Clark, D. L., Granvik, M., Demirkol, I., Erdogan, I. Y., Bengu, A. S., Özel, M. E., Terzioglu, Z., Gi, N., Brown, P., Yalcinkaya, E., Temel, T., Prabhu, D. K., Robertson, D. K., Boslough, M., Ostrowski, D. R., Kimberley, J., Er, S., Rowland, D. J., Bryson, K. L., Altunayar-Unsalan, C., Ranguelov, B., Karamanov, A., Tatchev, D., Kocahan, Ö., Oshtrakh, M. I., Maksimova, A. A., Karabanalov, M. S., Verosub, K. L., Levin, E., Uysal, I., Hoffmann, V., Hiroi, T., Reddy, V., Ildiz, G. O., Bolukbasi, O., Zolensky, M. E., Hochleitner, R., Kaliwoda, M., Öngen, S., Fausto, R., Nogueira, B. A., Chukin, A. V., Karashanova, D., Semionkin, V. A., Yeşiltaş, M., Glotch, T., Yilmaz, A., Friedrich, J. M., Sanborn, M. E., Huyskens, M., Ziegler, K., Williams, C. D., Schönbächler, M., Bauer, K., Meier, M. M. M., Maden, C., Busemann, H., Welten, K. C., Caffee, M. W., Laubenstein, M., Zhou, Q., Li, Q. -L., Li, X. -H., Liu, Y., Tang, G. -Q., Sears, D. W. G., Mclain, H. L., Dworkin, J. P., Elsila, J. E., Glavin, D. P., Schmitt-Kopplin, P., Ruf, A., LE, Corre, L., Schmedemann, N., Unsalan, O., Jenniskens, P., Yin, Q. -Z., Kaygisiz, E., Albers, J., Clark, D. L., Granvik, M., Demirkol, I., Erdogan, I. Y., Bengu, A. S., Özel, M. E., Terzioglu, Z., Gi, N., Brown, P., Yalcinkaya, E., Temel, T., Prabhu, D. K., Robertson, D. K., Boslough, M., Ostrowski, D. R., Kimberley, J., Er, S., Rowland, D. J., Bryson, K. L., Altunayar-Unsalan, C., Ranguelov, B., Karamanov, A., Tatchev, D., Kocahan, Ö., Oshtrakh, M. I., Maksimova, A. A., Karabanalov, M. S., Verosub, K. L., Levin, E., Uysal, I., Hoffmann, V., Hiroi, T., Reddy, V., Ildiz, G. O., Bolukbasi, O., Zolensky, M. E., Hochleitner, R., Kaliwoda, M., Öngen, S., Fausto, R., Nogueira, B. A., Chukin, A. V., Karashanova, D., Semionkin, V. A., Yeşiltaş, M., Glotch, T., Yilmaz, A., Friedrich, J. M., Sanborn, M. E., Huyskens, M., Ziegler, K., Williams, C. D., Schönbächler, M., Bauer, K., Meier, M. M. M., Maden, C., Busemann, H., Welten, K. C., Caffee, M. W., Laubenstein, M., Zhou, Q., Li, Q. -L., Li, X. -H., Liu, Y., Tang, G. -Q., Sears, D. W. G., Mclain, H. L., Dworkin, J. P., Elsila, J. E., Glavin, D. P., Schmitt-Kopplin, P., Ruf, A., LE, Corre, L., and Schmedemann, N.
- Abstract
The Sariçiçek howardite meteorite shower consisting of 343 documented stones occurred on September 2, 2015 in Turkey and is the first documented howardite fall. Cosmogenic isotopes show that Sariçiçek experienced a complex cosmic-ray exposure history, exposed during ~12–14 Ma in a regolith near the surface of a parent asteroid, and that an ~1 m sized meteoroid was launched by an impact 22 ± 2 Ma ago to Earth (as did one-third of all HED meteorites). SIMS dating of zircon and baddeleyite yielded 4550.4 ± 2.5 Ma and 4553 ± 8.8 Ma crystallization ages for the basaltic magma clasts. The apatite U-Pb age of 4525 ± 17 Ma, K-Ar age of ~3.9 Ga, and the U,Th-He ages of 1.8 ± 0.7 and 2.6 ± 0.3 Ga are interpreted to represent thermal metamorphic and impact-related resetting ages, respectively. Petrographic; geochemical; and O-, Cr-, and Ti-isotopic studies confirm that Sariçiçek belongs to the normal clan of HED meteorites. Petrographic observations and analysis of organic material indicate a small portion of carbonaceous chondrite material in the Sariçiçek regolith and organic contamination of the meteorite after a few days on soil. Video observations of the fall show an atmospheric entry at 17.3 ± 0.8 km s −1 from NW; fragmentations at 37, 33, 31, and 27 km altitude; and provide a pre-atmospheric orbit that is the first dynamical link between the normal HED meteorite clan and the inner Main Belt. Spectral data indicate the similarity of Sariçiçek with the Vesta asteroid family (V-class) spectra, a group of asteroids stretching to delivery resonances, which includes (4) Vesta. Dynamical modeling of meteoroid delivery to Earth shows that the complete disruption of a ~1 km sized Vesta family asteroid or a ~10 km sized impact crater on Vesta is required to provide sufficient meteoroids ≤4 m in size to account for the influx of meteorites from this HED clan. The 16.7 km diameter Antionia impact crater on Vesta was formed on terrain of the same age as given by the 4 He retention a
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- 2019
22. The Breakup of a Meteroite Parent Body and the Delivery of Meteorites to Earth
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Benoit, Paul H. and Sears, D. W. G.
- Published
- 1992
23. Sample Collection from Small Airless Bodies: Examination of Temperature Constraints for the TGIP Sample Collector for the Hera Near-Earth Asteroid Sample Return Mission
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Franzen, M. A, Roe, L. A, Buffington, J. A, and Sears, D. W. G
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Lunar And Planetary Science And Exploration - Abstract
There have been a number of missions that have explored the solar system with cameras and other instruments but profound questions remain that can only be addressed through the analysis of returned samples. However, due to lack of appropriate technology, high cost, and high risk, sample return has only recently become a feasible part of robotic solar system exploration. One specific objective of the President s new vision is that robotic exploration of the solar system should enhance human exploration as it discovers and understands the the solar system, and searches for life and resources [1]. Missions to small bodies, asteroids and comets, will partially fill the huge technological void between missions to the Moon and missions to Mars. However, such missions must be low cost and inherently simple, so they can be applied routinely to many missions. Sample return from asteroids, comets, Mars, and Jupiter s moons will be an important and natural part of the human exploration of space effort. Here we describe the collector designed for the Hera Near-Earth Asteroid Sample Return Mission. We have built a small prototype for preliminary evaluation, but expect the final collector to gather approx.100 g of sample of dust grains to centimeter sized clasts on each application to the surface of the asteroid.
- Published
- 2005
24. Space Weathering: A Proposed Laboratory Approach to Explaining the Sulfur Depletion on Eros
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Franzen, M. A, Kracher, A, Sears, D. W. G, Cassidy, W, and Hapke, B
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Lunar And Planetary Science And Exploration - Abstract
Space weathering is the cumulative effect of physical and chemical changes that occur to substances exposed on the exterior of body void of an atmosphere [1], in this case the regolith on asteroid Eros. It is only recently that the scientific community has accepted the theory first developed in the mid- 1970s by Hapke and his colleagues of how space weathering occurs. The theory [1] asserts that optical and magnetic effects, first studied on moon rocks and lunar regolith, are caused by submicroscopic metallic iron (SMFe), smaller than the wavelength of light in vapor deposit coatings, on regolith grains, and in agglutinates. This vapor is generated by solar wind and micrometeorite impacts and does not require additional heating, melting, or a reducing environment to produce space weathering. One of the major finds of the first detailed reconnaissance of an asteroid by the NEAR Shoemaker mission was that the surface of Eros was essentially chondritic yet showed major depletions in sulfur [2, 3]. Here we propose space weathering sputtering experiments that may contribute to the explanation of sulfur depletion on asteroid Eros.
- Published
- 2005
25. Red cell osmotic fragility studies in hemoglobin C-β thalassemia: osmotically resistant microspherocytes
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SEARS, D. A., UDDEN, M. M., and JOHNSTON, M. D.
- Published
- 2003
26. Mouse macrophage β subunit (CD11b) cDNA for the CR3 complement receptor/Mac-1 antigen
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Zeger, Donna L., Osman, Narin, Hennings, Margaret, McKenzie, Ian F. C., Sears, D. W., and Hogarth, P. Mark
- Published
- 1990
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27. Evaporation Rates for Liquid Water and Ice Under Current Martian Conditions
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Sears, D. W. G, Moore, S. R, Meier, A, Chittenden, J, Kareev, M, and Farmer, C. B
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Lunar And Planetary Science And Exploration - Abstract
A number of studies have been concerned with the evaporation rates under martian conditions in order to place limits on the possible survival time of both liquid water and ice exposed on the surface of Mars. Such studies also aid in assessing the efficacy of an overlying layer of dust or loose regolith material in providing a barrier to free evaporation and thus prolong the lifetime of water in locations where its availability to putative living organisms would be significant. A better quantitative understanding of the effects of phase changes of water in the near surface environment would also aid the evaluation of the possible role of water in the formation of currently observed features, such as gullies in cliff walls and relatively short-term changes in the albedo of small surface areas ('dark stains'). Laboratory measurements aimed at refinement of our knowledge of these values are described here. The establishment of accurate values for evaporation rates and their dependence on the physical conditions of temperature, pressure and energy input, is an important benchmark for the further investigation of the efficacy of barriers to free evaporation in providing a prolonged period of survival of the water, particularly as a liquid.
- Published
- 2004
28. Microgravity Testing of a Surface Sampling System for Sample Return from Small Solar System Bodies
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Franzen, M. A, Preble, J, Schoenoff, M, Halona, K, Long, T. E, Park, T, and Sears, D. W. G
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Lunar And Planetary Science And Exploration - Abstract
The return of samples from solar system bodies is becoming an essential element of solar system exploration. The recent National Research Council Solar System Exploration Decadal Survey identified six sample return missions as high priority missions: South-Aitken Basin Sample Return, Comet Surface Sample Return, Comet Surface Sample Return-sample from selected surface sites, Asteroid Lander/Rover/Sample Return, Comet Nucleus Sample Return-cold samples from depth, and Mars Sample Return [1] and the NASA Roadmap also includes sample return missions [2] . Sample collection methods that have been flown on robotic spacecraft to date return subgram quantities, but many scientific issues (like bulk composition, particle size distributions, petrology, chronology) require tens to hundreds of grams of sample. Many complex sample collection devices have been proposed, however, small robotic missions require simplicity. We present here the results of experiments done with a simple but innovative collection system for sample return from small solar system bodies.
- Published
- 2004
29. Evaporation Rates of Brine on Mars
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Sears, D. W. G, Chittenden, J, Moore, S. R, Meier, A, Kareev, M, and Farmer, C. B
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Lunar And Planetary Science And Exploration - Abstract
While Mars is now largely a dry and barren place, recent data have indicated that water has flowed at specific locations within the last approx. 10(exp 6) y. This had led to a resurgence of interest in theoretical and experimental work aimed at understanding the behavior of water on Mars. There are several means whereby the stability of liquid water on Mars could be increased, one being the presence solutes that would depress the freezing point. Salt water on Earth is about 0.5M NaCl, but laboratory experiments suggest that martian salt water is quite different. We recently began a program of laboratory measurements of the stability of liquid water, ice and ice-dust mixtures under martian conditions and here report measurements of the evaporation rate of 0.25M brine.
- Published
- 2004
30. The Origin of Chondrites: Metal-Silicate Separation Experiments Under Microgravity Conditions, Experiment 2
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Moore, S. R, Franzen, M, Benoit, P. H, Sears, D. W. G, Holley, A, Myers, M, Godsey, R, and Czlapinski, J
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Lunar And Planetary Science And Exploration - Abstract
Chondrites are categorized into different groups by several properties, including the metal-to-silicate ratio. Various processes have been suggested to produce distinct metal/silicate ratios, some based on sorting in the early solar nebular and others occurring after accretion on the parent body. Huang et al. suggested that a weak gravitational field accompanied by degassing, could result in metal/silicate separation on parent bodies. We suggest that asteroids were volatile-rich, at least early in their histories. Spectroscopic evidence from asteroid surfaces indicates that one-third of all asteroids maybe rich in clays and hydrated minerals, similar to carbonaceous chondrites. Internal and/or external heating could have caused volatiles to evaporate and pass through a surface dust layer. Spacecraft images of asteroids show they have a thick regoliths. Housen, and Asphaug and Nolan proposed that even a 10 km diameter asteroid could potentially have a significant regolith. Grain size and grain density sorting could occur in the unconsolidated layer by the process known as fluidization. This process occurs when an upward stream of gas is passed through a bed of particles which are lifted against a gravitational force. Fluidization is commonly used commercially to sort particulates. This type of behavior is based upon the bed, as a whole, and differs from aerodynamic sorting. Two sets of reduced gravity experiments were conducted during parabolic flights aboard NASA's KC-135 aircraft. The first experiment employed 310 tubes of 2.5 cm diameter, containing mixtures of sand and metal grains. A gas source was used to fluidize the mixture at reduced gravity conditions and mixtures were analyzed after the flight. However, this experiment did not allow a description of the fluidization as a function of gravity. A second experiment was conducted on the KC-135 aircraft in the summer of 2001, consisting of two Plexiglas cylinders containing a metal/silicate mixture, and video cameras to record the experiment on tape. Here we summarize this experiment and discusses the implications for metalsilicate separation on asteroid bodies.
- Published
- 2003
31. Who are Psychology’s Subjects?
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Sears, D. O., primary
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
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32. The Orbital Distribution of Meteorites Based on High Temperature Thermoluminescence
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Benoit, P. H, Akridge, J. M. C, and Sears, D. W. G
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Lunar And Planetary Science And Exploration - Abstract
We use high temperature TL data to evaluate perihelia of Antarctic meteorites. Perihelion has been constant for the ordinary chondrites over the last 40,000-100,000 years. Additional information is contained in the original extended abstract.
- Published
- 2001
33. Near-Earth Asteroid Sample Return Missions
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Sears, D. W. G, Allen, C. C, Britt, D. T, Brownlee, D. E, Cheng, A, Chapman, C. R, Clark, B. C, Drake, B. G, Franchi, I. A, and Gorevan, S
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Lunar And Planetary Science And Exploration - Abstract
The rate of discovery of new Near Earth Asteroids (NEAs) and the success of D-S 1 and NEAR-Shoemaker, suggest that sample return from NEAs is now technically feasible. Here we present a summary of a recent workshop on the topic. Additional information is contained in the original extended abstract.
- Published
- 2001
34. Serum soluble transferrin receptor and the prediction of marrow aspirate iron results in a heterogeneous group of patients
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MEANS, R. T., Jr, ALLEN, J., SEARS, D. A., and SCHUSTER, S. J.
- Published
- 1999
35. Evaluating language models of tonal harmony
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Sears, D. R. W., Korzeniowski, F., and Gerhard Widmer
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FOS: Computer and information sciences ,Sound (cs.SD) ,Audio and Speech Processing (eess.AS) ,FOS: Electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Computer Science - Sound ,Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Audio and Speech Processing - Abstract
This study borrows and extends probabilistic language models from natural language processing to discover the syntactic properties of tonal harmony. Language models come in many shapes and sizes, but their central purpose is always the same: to predict the next event in a sequence of letters, words, notes, or chords. However, few studies employing such models have evaluated the most state-of-the-art architectures using a large-scale corpus of Western tonal music, instead preferring to use relatively small datasets containing chord annotations from contemporary genres like jazz, pop, and rock. Using symbolic representations of prominent instrumental genres from the common-practice period, this study applies a flexible, data-driven encoding scheme to (1) evaluate Finite Context (or n-gram) models and Recurrent Neural Networks (RNNs) in a chord prediction task; (2) compare predictive accuracy from the best-performing models for chord onsets from each of the selected datasets; and (3) explain differences between the two model architectures in a regression analysis. We find that Finite Context models using the Prediction by Partial Match (PPM) algorithm outperform RNNs, particularly for the piano datasets, with the regression model suggesting that RNNs struggle with particularly rare chord types., Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, 3 tables. To appear in Proceedings of the 19th International Society for Music Information Retrieval Conference (ISMIR), Paris, France
- Published
- 2018
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36. The Interpretation of Natural Thermoluminescence Data for Meteorites: Theoretical Basis and Practical Application
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Benoit, P. H and Sears, D. W. G
- Subjects
Lunar And Planetary Science And Exploration - Abstract
Natural thermoluminescence (TL) of ordinary chondrites reflects their irradiation and thermal history. We discuss the quantitative aspects of TL interpretation, with an emphasis on the terrestrial history of Antarctic meteorites and the orbital history of modern falls.
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- 2000
37. Thermoluminescence Sensitivity and Thermal History of Unequilibrated Ordinary Chondrites: Review and Update
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Benoit, P. H, Ninagawa, K, and Sears, D. W. G
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Lunar And Planetary Science And Exploration - Abstract
We report on the induced thermoluminescence (TL) data for 102 unequilibrated ordinary chondrites. We discuss these data in terms of pairing, weathering, and parent body thermal history. We identify ten possible meteorites of petrologic types 3.0-3.1.
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- 2000
38. The Orbits of Meteorites from Natural Thermoluminescence
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Benoit, P. H and Sears, D. W. G
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
The natural thermoluminescence (TL) of meteorites reflects their irradiation and thermal histories. Virtually all ordinary chondrites have been irradiated long enough to reach saturation natural TL levels, and thus natural TL levels in these meteorites are determined largely by thermal history. The primary heat source for most meteorites is the Sun, and thus natural TL levels are determined primarily by the closest approach to the Sun, i.e., perihelion. By converting natural TL levels to perihelia, using an assumed albedo typical of meteoroid bodies, it is found that most ordinary chondrites had perihelia of 0.85 to 1.0 AU prior to reaching Earth. This range is similar to that calculated from meteor and fireball observations. All common classes of ordinary chondrites exhibit similar perihelia distributions; however, H and LL chondrites that fell in the local morning differ in their natural TL distribution from those that fell in the local afternoon or evening. This is consistent with earlier suggestions that time of fall reflects orbital distribution. The data also suggest that the orbits of some of the H chondrites cluster and may have come from a debris 'stream' of meteoroids. If meteorites can exist in "orbital groups," significant changes in the types and number of meteorites reaching Earth could occur on the less than 10(exp 5)-year time scale.
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- 1997
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39. Meteorite Infall and Transport in Antarctica: An Analysis of Icefields as Accumulation Surfaces
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Benoit, P. H and Sears, D. W. G
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Over 10,000 meteorite fragments have been collected on only a dozen or so small icefields in Antarctica. The terrestrial history of these meteorites is important, both from the perspective of the effects of their ambient environment on the meteorites themselves, and on the information that can be derived in relation to ice flow and ice stability over periods of time up to 1 million years. We discuss the relative importance of meteorite infall, and ice and aeolian transport in creating meteorite accumulations and the importance of ice and aeolian transport and weathering in removing meteorites at various icefields in Antarctica. The present analysis is confined to equibrated ordinary chondrites. We use the natural thermoluminescence (TL) to to examine the effects of weathering. Natural TL is used in combination with size analysis to gauge the effects of aeolian transport. Some icefields, especially the Lewis Cliff Ice Tongue, are dominated by wind-transported fragments, while others, including the Far Western field at Allan Hills, have lost fragments. It appears that most Antarctic icefields preserve meteorite collections on time scales of a few tens of thousands of years.
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- 1997
40. Multiple sclerosis: Executive dysfunction, task switching and the role of attention.
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Clough, M, Foletta, P, Frohman, AN, Sears, D, Ternes, A, White, OB, Fielding, J, Clough, M, Foletta, P, Frohman, AN, Sears, D, Ternes, A, White, OB, and Fielding, J
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: It has been suggested that switching ability might not be affected in multiple sclerosis (MS) as previously thought; however, whether this is true under more 'real-world' conditions when asymmetry in task difficulty is present has not been ascertained. OBJECTIVE: The objective of this paper is to examine the impact of task difficulty asymmetry on task switching ability in MS. METHOD: An ocular motor (OM) paradigm that interleaves the simple task of looking towards a target (prosaccade, PS) with the cognitively more difficult task of looking away from a target (antisaccade, PS) was used. Two switching conditions: (1) PS switch cost, switching to a simple task from a difficult task (PS switch), relative to performing two simple tasks concurrently (PS repeat); (2) AS switch cost, switching to a difficult task from a simple task (AS switch) relative to performing two difficult tasks concurrently (AS repeat). Forty-five relapsing-remitting MS patients and 30 control individuals were compared. RESULTS: Controls and patients produced a similar magnitude PS switch cost, suggesting that task difficulty asymmetry does not detrimentally impact MS patients when transitioning from a more difficult task to a simpler task. However, MS patients alone found switching from the simpler PS trial to the more difficult AS trial easier (shorter latency and reduced error) than performing two AS trials consecutively (AS switch benefit). Further, MS patients performed significantly more errors than controls when required to repeat the same trial consecutively. CONCLUSION: MS patients appear to find the maintenance of task-relevant processes difficult not switching per se, with deficits exacerbated under increased attentional demands.
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- 2018
41. The Cooling History and Structure of the Ordinary Chondrite Parent Bodies
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Benoit, P. H and Sears, D. W. G
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Most major meteorite classes exhibit significant ranges of metamorphism. The effects of metamorphism have been extensively characterized, but the heat source(s) and the metamorphic environment are unknown. Proposed beat sources include Al-26, Fe-60, electromagnetic induction, and impact. It is typically assumed that metamorphism occurred in parent bodies of some sort, but it uncertain whether these bodies were highly structured ("onion skins") or were chaotic mixes of material ("rubble piles"). The lack of simple trends of metallographic cooling rates with petrologic type has been considered supportive of both concepts. In this study, we use induced thermoluminescence (TL) as an indicator of thermal history. The TL of ordinary chondrites is produced by sodic feldspar, and the induced TL peak temperature is related to its crystallographic order/disorder. Ordered feldspar has TL peak temperatures of approx. 120 C, and disordered feldspar has TL peak temperatures of approx. 220 C. While ordered feldspar can be easily disordered in the laboratory by heating above 650 C and is easily quenched in the disordered form, producing ordered feldspar requires cooling at geologic cooling rates. We have measured the induced TL properties of 101 equilibrated ordinary chondrites, including 49 H, 29 L, and 23 LL chondrites. For the H chondrites there is an apparent trend of decreasing induced TL peak temperature with increasing petrologic type. H4 chondrites exhibit a tight range of TL peak temperatures, 190 C - 200 C, while H6 chondrites exhibit TL peak temperatures between 180 C and 190 C. H5 chondrites cover the range between H4 and H6, and also extend up to 210 C. Similar results are obtained for LL chondfiles and most L6 chondrites have lower induced TL peak temperatures than L5 chondrites.
- Published
- 1996
42. The Weathering of Antarctic Meteorites: Climatic Controls on Weathering Rates and Implications for Meteorite Accumulation
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Benoit, P. H, Akridge, J. M. C, Sears, D. W. G, and Bland, P. A
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Weathering of meteorites includes a variety of chemical and mineralogical changes, including conversion of metal to iron oxides, or rust. Other changes include the devitrification of glass, especially in fusion crust. On a longer time scale, major minerals such as olivine, pyroxene, and feldspar are partially or wholly converted to various phyllosilicates. The degree of weathering of meteorite finds is often noted using a qualitative system based on visual inspection of hand specimens. Several quantitative weathering classification systems have been proposed or are currently under development. Wlotzka has proposed a classification system based on mineralogical changes observed in polished sections and Mossbauer properties of meteorite powders have also been used. In the current paper, we discuss induced thermoluminescence (TL) as an indicator of degree of weathering of individual meteorites. The quantitative measures of weathering, including induced TL, suffer from one major flaw, namely that their results only apply to small portions of the meteorite.
- Published
- 1995
43. Axtrell, a new CV3 chondrite find from Texas
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Simon, S. B, Grossman, L, Casanova, I, Symes, S, Benoit, P, Sears, D. W. G, and Wacker, J. F
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Lunar And Planetary Exploration - Abstract
We describe a previously unreported meteorite found in Axtell, Texas, in 1943. Based on the mineralogical composition and texture of its matrix and the sizes and abundance of chondrules, we classify it as a CV3 carbonaceous chondrite. The dominant opaque phase in the chondrules is magnetite, and that in refractory inclusions is Ni-rich metal (awaruite). Axtell, therefore, belongs to the oxidized subgroup of CV3 chondrites, although unlike Allende it escaped strong sulfidation. The meteorite bears a strong textural resemblance to Allende, and its chondrule population and matrix appear to be quite similar to those of Allende, but its refractory inclusions, thermoluminescence properties, and cosmogenic Co-60 abundances are not. Our data are consistent with a terrestrial age for Axtell of approximately 100 years and a metamorphic grade slightly lower than that of Allende.
- Published
- 1995
44. Metamorphism and aqueous alteration in low petrographic type ordinary chondrites
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Xie, T, Lipschutz, M. E, Sears, D. W. G, Guimon, R. K, Jie, Lu, Benoit, P. H, O'D. Alexander, C. M, Wright, Ian, Pillinger, C, Morse, A. D, and Hutchison, Robert
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
In order to investigate the relative importance of dry metamorphism and aqueous alteration in the history of chondruies, chondruies were hand-picked from the Semarkona (petrographic type 3.0), Bishunpur (3. 1), Chainpur (3.4), Dhajala (3.8) and Allegan (5) chondrites, and matrix samples were extracted from the first three ordinary chondrites. The thermoluminescence (TL) properties of all the samples were measured, and appropriate subsets of the samples were analyzed by electron-microprobe and radiochemical neutron activation and the water and H-isotopic composition determined. The TL data for chondrules from Semarkona and Bishunpur scatter widely showing no unambiguous trends, although group B1 chondrules tend to have lower sensitivities and lower peak temperatures compared with group A5 chondrules. It is argued that these data reflect the variety of processes accompanying chondrule formation. The chondrules show remarkably uniform contents of the highly labile elements, indicating mineralogical control on abundance and volatile loss from silicates and loss and recondensation of mobile chalcophiles and siderophiles in some cases. Very high D/H values (up to approx. 8000% SMOW) are observed in certain Semarkona chondrules, a confirmation of earlier work. With increasing petrographic type, mean TL sensitivities of the chondrules increase, the spread of values within an individual meteorite decreases, and peak temperatures and peak widths show trends indicating that the TL is mainly produced by feldspar and that dry, thermal metamorphism is the dominant secondary process experienced by the chondrules. The TL sensitivities of matrix samples also increase with petrographic type. Chainpur matrix samples show the same spread of peak temperatures and peak widths as Chainpur chondruies, indicating metamorphism-related changes in the feldspar are responsible for the TL of the matrix. The TL data for the Semarkona and Bishunpur matrix samples provide, at best, only weak evidence for aqueous alteration, but the matrix contains H with approximately terrestrial D/H values, even though it contains much water. Secondary processes (probably aqueous alteration) presumably lowered the D/H of the matrix and certain chondrules. While chondrule properties appear to be governed primarily by formation processes and subsequent metamorphism, the matrix of Semarkona has a more complex history involving aqueous alteration as a meteorite-wide process.
- Published
- 1995
45. The natural thermoluminescence of meteorites. 7: Ordinary chondrites from the Elephant Moraine region, Antarctica
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Benoit, P. H, Roth, J, Sears, H, and Sears, D. W. G
- Subjects
Lunar And Planetary Exploration - Abstract
We report natural and induced thermoluminescence (TL) measurements for meteorites from the Elephant Moraine region (76 deg 17 min S, 157 deg 20 min E) of Antarctica. We use our data to identify fragmented meteorites (i.e., 'pairings'); our dataset of 107 samples represents at most 73 separate meteorite falls. Pairing groups are generally confined to single icefields, or to adjacent icefields, but a small proportion cross widely separated icefields in the region, suggesting that the fields can be considered as a single unit. Meteorites from this region have high natural TL levels, which indicates that they have small terrestrial surface exposure ages (less than 12,500 years). There do not appear to be significant differences in natural TL levels (and hence surface exposure ages) between individual blue icefields in the region. The proportion of reheated meteorites from the Elephant Moraine region is similar to that of other Antarctic sites and modern falls, consistent with the uniformity of the meteoritic flux in this regard. An unusual subset of H-chondrites, with high induced TL peak temperatures, is absent among the data for meteorites collected in the Elephant Moraine region, which stresses their similarity to modern falls. We suggest that the Elephant Moraine region, which stresses their similarity to modern falls. We suggest that the Elephant Moraine icefields formed through shallow ablation of the ice. Unlike the Allan Hills sites to the south, lateral transport is probably less important relative to the infall of meteorites in concentrating meteorites on these icefields.
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Open-system behavior during chondrule formation
- Author
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Sears, D. W. G, Shaoxiong, H, and Benoit, P. H
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
The question of whether chondrules behaved as open systems during formation is crucial to our understanding of both chondrule and chondrite formation. The very large range of chondrule types is best summarized by the compositional classification scheme, wherein the primitive chondrule groups (i.e., those not produced by metamorphic processes) are A1, A2, A5, and B1. In the Semarkona (LL3.0) chondrite, 10.5%, 25.0%, 5.0%, and 56.9% (by number) of the chondrules are groups A1, A2, A5, and B1, respectively. We argue that groups A1 and A2 were produced by reduction and evaporation during chondrule formation of material originally resembling group B1 chondrules.
- Published
- 1994
47. Modeling Harmony With Skip-Grams
- Author
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Sears, D. R. W., Arzt, A., Frostel, H., Sonnleitner, R., and Gerhard Widmer
- Subjects
FOS: Computer and information sciences ,Sound (cs.SD) ,Information Retrieval (cs.IR) ,humanities ,Computer Science - Sound ,Computer Science - Information Retrieval - Abstract
String-based (or viewpoint) models of tonal harmony often struggle with data sparsity in pattern discovery and prediction tasks, particularly when modeling composite events like triads and seventh chords, since the number of distinct n-note combinations in polyphonic textures is potentially enormous. To address this problem, this study examines the efficacy of skip-grams in music research, an alternative viewpoint method developed in corpus linguistics and natural language processing that includes sub-sequences of n events (or n-grams) in a frequency distribution if their constituent members occur within a certain number of skips. Using a corpus consisting of four datasets of Western classical music in symbolic form, we found that including skip-grams reduces data sparsity in n-gram distributions by (1) minimizing the proportion of n-grams with negligible counts, and (2) increasing the coverage of contiguous n-grams in a test corpus. What is more, skip-grams significantly outperformed contiguous n-grams in discovering conventional closing progressions (called cadences)., 7 pages, 5 figures. To appear in Proceedings of the 18th International Society for Music Information Retrieval Conference (ISMIR), Suzhou, China
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Roosevelt County 075: A petrologic chemical and isotopic study of the most unequilibrated known H chondrite
- Author
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Mccoy, T. J, Keil, K, Ash, R. D, Morse, A. D, Pillinger, C. T, Wieler, R, Mayeda, T. K, Clayton, R. N, Benoit, P. H, and Sears, D. W. G
- Subjects
Lunar And Planetary Exploration - Abstract
Roosevelt County (RC) 075 was recovered in 1990 as a single 258-gram stone. Classification of this meteorite is complicated by its highly unequilibrated nature and its severe terrestrial weathering, but we favor H classification. This is supported by O isotopes and estimates of the original Fe, Ni metal content. The O isotopic composition is similar to that of a number of reduced ordinary chondrites (e.g., Cerro los Calvos, Willaroy), although RC 075 exhibits no evidence of reduced mineral compositions. Chondrule diameters are consistent with classification as an L chondrite, but large uncertainties in chondrule diameters of RC 075 and poorly constrained means of H, L and LL chondrites prevent use of this parameter for reliable classification. Other parameters are compromised by severe weathering (e.g., siderophile element abundances) or unsuitable for discrimination between unequilibrated H, L and LL chondrites (e.g., Co in kamacite delta C-13). Petrologic subtype 3.2 +/- 0.1 is suggested by the degree of olivine heterogeneity, the compositions of chondrule olivines, the thermoluminescence sensitivity, the abundances and types of chondrules mapped on cathodoluminescence mosaics, and the amount of presolar SiC. The meteorite is very weakly shocked (S2), with some chondrules essentially unshocked and, thus, is classified as an H3.2(S2) chondrite. Weathering is evident by a LREE enrichment due to clay contamination, reduced levels of many siderophile elements, the almost total loss of Fe, Ni metal and troilite, and the reduced concentrations of noble gases. Some components of the meteorite (e.g., type IA chondrules, SiC) appear to preserve their nebular states, with little modification from thermal metamorphism. We conclude that RC 075 is the most equilibrated H chondrite yet recovered and may provide additional insights into the origin of primitive materials in the solar nebula.
- Published
- 1993
49. A recent meteorite shower in Antarctica with an unusual orbital history
- Author
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Benoit, P. H and Sears, D. W. G
- Subjects
Lunar And Planetary Exploration - Abstract
The Antarctic meteorite collection has proved to be a source of many important discoveries, including a number of previously unknown or very rare meteorite types. A thermoluminescence (TL) survey of meteorite samples recovered by the 1988/89 European expedition and pre-1988 American expeditions to the Allan Hills Main blue ice field resulted in the discovery of 15 meteorites with very high TL levels (greater than 100 krad at 250 C in the glow curve). It is likely that these samples are fragments of a single meteoroid body which: (1) fell very recently and (2) experienced a decrease in orbital perihelia from greater than or equal to 1.1 AU to 1 AU within the last 10(exp 5) yr. Carbon-14 data for two of the samples confirm their young terrestrial age compared to most Antarctic meteorites. Studies of the cosmogenic isotopes in at least one non-Antarctic meteorite which also has very high natural TL, Jilin, indicate that the meteorite experienced a multi-stage irradiation history, the most recent stage being 0.4 Ma in duration following a major break-up of the object. These meteorites, and the few equivalent modern falls, are the only documented samples from bodies which were recently in Earth-approaching (Amor) orbits (i.e., with perihelion greater than 1.0 AU), as opposed to the Earth-crossing (Apollo) orbits which are the source of most other meteorites. Their rarity indicates that such rapid orbit changes are unusual for meteoroid bodies and may be the result of isolated, large break-up events.
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. The natural thermoluminescence of meteorites. VI - Carbon-14, thermoluminescence and the terrestrial ages of meteorites
- Author
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Benoit, P. H, Jull, A. J. T, Mckeever, S. W. S, and Sears, D. W. G
- Subjects
Lunar And Planetary Exploration - Abstract
A relationship is noted between the natural thermoluminescence (TL) levels and the C-14-derived terrestrial ages for meteorite finds from the U.S. Prairie States and Roosevelt County, NM; those in the Sahara are also in accord with calculated TL decay curves, for 'storage' temperatures equal to the approximate average annual temperatures at individual sites. This discussion is limited to the empirical correspondence between the two methodologies, and to theoretical decay curves for a single 'average' ordinary chondrite.
- Published
- 1993
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