13,605 research outputs found
Programma CARLSON per il calcolo dell'inerzia termica e dell'umidità del suolo, applicazioni ad immagini telerilevate
Il codice CARLSON permette di calcolare l'evoluzione, dei diversi parametri meteorologici (profili verticali della temperatura del suolo e dell'aria, dell'umidità atmosferica e della velocità del vento) sulla base di un modello sviluppato dal dr. Toby N. Carlson della Pennsylvania State University. Il bilancio termico viene eseguito sulla base di alcune proprietà del suolo (inerzia termica e umidità), anche in condizioni di copertura da vegetazione, che influenzano il trasporto del calore in esso. E' stato possibile instaurare un loop iterativo sulle proprietà fisiche del suolo; in tal modo si può costruire una 'look up table' tramite la quale correlare inerzia termica e contenuto di umidità al salto termico diurno della superficie del suol
Mobile Public Warning Experiment Dataset from Carlson et al. (2024)
Data collected from a Qualtrics panel (N = 481). Experimental design to test participants' response intentions after being exposed to a notional 360-character or 90-character complete mobile waring message (i.e., Wireless Emergency Alert). This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health, award #1DP2EB022360-01. For full description of methods, please see Carlson, E. J., Bean, H., Ratcliff, C., Pokharel, M., & Barbour, J. (2024). Do 360‐character Wireless Emergency Alert messages work better than 90‐character messages? Testing the risk communication consensus. Journal of Contingencies and Crisis Management, 32(2). https://doi.org/10.1111/1468-5973.1258
T. Thomas/E. Carlson Farm, Minnehaha County
35 mm negative, two-story house with some damage to the roof and siding, plants grow around the house foundation3 ring binder: N3 Page 3 N3 Black & White Roll #3 Minnehaha County Historic Sites Survey/ Phase 2 - 1996Minnehaha County Survey Surveyor: M. L. Dennis October 1996 5062 PX Kodak Roll #3 Frame 13 Site MH-RR-02 Name T. Thomas/E. Carlson Far
T. Thomas/E. Carlson Farm, Minnehaha County
35 mm negative, two-story white house with damage to siding, garage and car are in the background, plants grow around the house3 ring binder: N3 Page 3 N3 Black & White Roll #3 Minnehaha County Historic Sites Survey/ Phase 2 - 1996Minnehaha County Survey Surveyor: M. L. Dennis October 1996 5062 PX Kodak Roll #3 Frame 14 Site MH-RR-02 Name T. Thomas/E. Carlson Far
T. Thomas/E. Carlson Farm, Minnehaha County
35 mm negative, two-story white house with balcony on second level, damage to siding and one boarded-up window on lower level, second building next door3 ring binder: N3 Page 3 N3 Black & White Roll #3 Minnehaha County Historic Sites Survey/ Phase 2 - 1996Minnehaha County Survey Surveyor: M. L. Dennis October 1996 5062 PX Kodak Roll #3 Frame 15 Site MH-RR-02 Name T. Thomas/E. Carlson Far
T. Thomas/E. Carlson Farm, Minnehaha County
35 mm negative, two-story house with balcony on second level and a bay window on the first, the balcony shows signs of damage, other buildings are in the background3 ring binder: N3 Page 3 N3 Black & White Roll #3 Minnehaha County Historic Sites Survey/ Phase 2 - 1996Minnehaha County Survey Surveyor: M. L. Dennis October 1996 5062 PX Kodak Roll #3 Frame 12 Site MH-RR-02 Name T. Thomas/E. Carlson Far
Windmill at T. Thomas/E. Carlson Farm, Minnehaha County
35 mm negative, fences around a windmill, another building behind the windmill3 ring binder: N3 Page 3 N3 Black & White Roll #3 Minnehaha County Historic Sites Survey/ Phase 2 - 1996Minnehaha County Survey Surveyor: M. L. Dennis October 1996 5062 PX Kodak Roll #3 Frame 17 Site MH-RR-02 Name T. Thomas/E. Carlson Far
Isolation and characterization of two glycoproteins from the salivary glands of isoproterenol-treated hamsters
Isoproterenol induces several proline-rich phosphoproteins in the hamster parotid gland (Mehansho, H., Ann, D. K., Butler, L. G., Rogler, J. and Carlson, D. M. J. Biol. Chem. 262, 12344-12350). One of these phosphoproteins is also glycosylated and appears to be regulated in a dose-dependent manner. This phosphoglycoprotein (PGP89) has an apparent molecular weight of 89,000 on SDS-PAGE. Purification of PGP89 was greatly assisted by its solubility in 10% trichloroacetic acid which was followed by a combination of gel filtration and ion exchange chromatography. Sequence analysis showed that the amino-terminal of PGP89 is blocked. Clostripain digestion yielded one major glycopeptide which had the sequence H G N Q T Q P R P P R P D. This sequence of the glycopeptide of PGP89 is almost the same as that found for SGP158 (Mehansho, H., and Carlson, D. M. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258 6616-6620) D G N Q T Q P R P P H P. Antibodies made against deglycosylated rat SGP158 cross-react with both the native and deglycosylated hamster PGP89. Isoproterenol also induces proline-rich proteins in the submandibular glands of hamsters. One of these proteins is a glycoprotein (SGP180) with an apparent molecular weight on SDS-PAGE of 180,000. Unlike the other proline-rich proteins induced by isoproterenol there is a high basal level of SGP180. Isoproterenol results in at most a three-fold induction. Like the PRPs SGP180 is soluble in 10% trichloroacetic acid and contains low amount of aromatics and sulfur containing amino acids, but unlike the PRPs the proline content is low (16%). SGP180 which closely resembles mucin glycoproteins is high in hydroxy-amino acids, (threonine 50%) and contains 60% carbohydrate which is O-linked. The carbohydrate moiety is like that of ovine submaxillary gland mucin, N-acetylneuraminic acid linked to N-acetylgalactosamine. The presence of sialic acid makes the glycoprotein resistant to proteases, a factor that was exploited in its purification
Scalable designs and methods for heterogeneous electronic-photonic integrated circuitry
Submission published under a 24 month embargo labeled 'Closed Access', the embargo will last until 2019-05-01The student, John Carlson, accepted the attached license on 2017-04-25 at 16:53.The student, John Carlson, submitted this Thesis for approval on 2017-04-25 at 17:03.This Thesis was approved for publication on 2017-04-27 at 11:19.DSpace SAF Submission Ingestion Package generated from Vireo submission #11066 on 2017-08-10 at 14:32:39Made available in DSpace on 2017-08-10T19:52:24Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 2
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Previous issue date: 2017-04-27Embargo set by: Colleen Fallaw for item 102687
Lift date: 2019-08-10T21:25:30Z
Reason: Author requested closed access (OA after 2yrs) in Vireo ETD systemLimited Restriction Lifted for Item 102687 on 2019-08-11T09:15:17Z
Nuclear microsatellite markers for population genetic studies in sugar maple (Acer saccharum Marsh.)
A set of seven new nuclear microsatellite markers (nSSRs) was developedfor sugar maple (Acer saccharum Marsh.) using paired-end Illumina sequencing. Out of 96 primers screened in a panel of six unrelated individuals, seven markers amplified polymorphic products. The utility of these markers, in addition to six already published microsatellites, for genetic variation and gene flow studies was assessed. Out of the seven newly developed markers, three amplified multiple fragments and were interpreted as dominant (absence/presence) markers, while four markers amplified a maximum of two amplification products per sample. The six published microsatellites and three of the four newly developed markers showed regular segregation in an open-pollinated single tree progeny. Observed heterozygosity (Ho) and expected heterozygosity (He) in 48 individuals from one population ranged from 0.436 to 0.917 and from 0.726 to 0.894, respectively. Dominant markers revealed 64 variable positions and moderate genetic variation within the population (He = 0.102, Shannon’s I = 0.193). Paternity analyses in the program CERVUS at co-dominant markers showed effective dispersal of pollen in the sugar maple population both at 95% and 80% confidence levels. Dependent on the confidence level, the mean pollen dispersal distance within the population ranged from 33.25 m to 38.75 m and gene flow from utside the stand from 78% to 82%. The absence of fine-scale Spatial Genetic Structure (SGS) suggested effective dispersal of both seeds and pollen.</p
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