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- Creator:
- Heath, Jeffrey
- Description:
- these and other recordings are data for a reference grammar of Kelenga that, when completed, will be archived in the collection "Bozo languages of Mali (documents)" in Deep Blue Documents. For contents see the "notes" file inside the work. A few of the Kelenga texts are being transcribed, others will be left for others to transcribe or listen to as they wish.
- Keyword:
- Bozo and Kelenga
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Heath, Jeffrey
- Description:
- recordings made in Barato village. Referred to as "text 2021-02" and "text 2021-03." Text 2021-03 is transcribed and annotated at the end of the reference grammar (see link to Deep Blue Documents). Text 2021-02 covers a subset of the same content and has not been transcribed as of late 2022. See also "notes" file inside the work.
- Keyword:
- Bozo, Jenaama, Sorogaama
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Heath, Jeffrey
- Description:
- A subset of the Kelenga recordings are being transcribed and will serve as data for the Kelenga reference grammar which, when finished, will be included in the collection "Bozo languages of Mali (documents)" in Deep Blue Documents (see link).
- Keyword:
- Bozo and Kelenga
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Heath, Jeffrey
- Description:
- recording in mp3 format. The reference grammar (see link to Deep Blue Documents) presents transcription and analysis as "text 2021-01."
- Keyword:
- Bozo, Jenaama, Sorogaama
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Minallah, Samar and Steiner, Allison L.
- Description:
- Data format: netcdf4 , Time series duration: 2016-06-01 to 2020-10-31, Temporal resolution: Daily, and Spatial resolution: The model output was regridded to a 0.05 degree rectilinear (lat/lon) grid using the conservative remapping method ("cdo remapcon" tool).
- Keyword:
- Land surface hydrology, Great Lakes, Land surface model, NOAH-MP, WRF-Hydro, and Hydrologic modeling
- Citation to related publication:
- Minallah, S. (2022). A Study on the Atmospheric, Cryospheric, and Hydrologic Processes Governing the Evolution of Regional Hydroclimates (Doctoral dissertation, University of Michigan Ann Arbor). https://dx.doi.org/10.7302/6223
- Discipline:
- Science and Engineering
-
- Creator:
- University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology and CTEES
- Description:
- Reconstructed CT slices for tooth, occlusal part of sectioned tooth of Physeter (University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology catalog number UMMP_R_102) as a series of TIFF images. Raw projections are not included in this dataset. The reconstructed slice data from the scan are offered here as a series of unsigned 16-bit integer TIFF images. The upper left corner of the first image (*_0000.tif) is the XYZ origin.
- Keyword:
- Sclerochronology, CT, Physeteridae, UMMP, University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology, Ford-Mitchell Collection, Holocene, and CTEES
- Citation to related publication:
- University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology, CTEES. CT Data of UMMP R 102, Physeter tooth (apical part of sectioned tooth) [Data set], University of Michigan - Deep Blue Data. https://doi.org/10.7302/msdh-gc24
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Zhang, Yingxiao MI and Steiner, Allison MI
- Description:
- In the dataset, "_T" means temperature effects only, without "_T" means temperature and precipitation effects are both considered, "_co2" means CO2 effects are considered on the based of temperature and precipitation effects.
- Keyword:
- pollen emission, climate change, and public health
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Brady P. Strabel
- Description:
- The contained data comprises what was collected during the characterization of the quad-magnetometer as described in 'Quad-Mag Board for CubeSat Applications'. There are approximately 38 hours of data that compromise a stability test, 10 hours of noise floor testing data, and 10 minutes of sensitivity testing data. Each data file has three-axis measurements from four individual magnetometers over the specified time period at a 65 Hz sampling rate.
- Keyword:
- Magnetometer, COTS, and CubeSat
- Citation to related publication:
- Strabel, B. P., Regoli, L. H., Moldwin, M. B., Ojeda, L. V., Shi, Y., Thoma, J. D., Narrett, I. S., Bronner, B., and Pellioni, M.: Quad-Mag board for CubeSat applications, Geosci. Instrum. Method. Data Syst., 11, 375–388, https://doi.org/10.5194/gi-11-375-2022, 2022.
- Discipline:
- Engineering
-
- Creator:
- University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology and CTEES
- Description:
- Reconstructed CT slices for tooth-apical of Physeter (University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology catalog number UMMP_R_102) as a series of TIFF images. Raw projections are not included in this dataset. The reconstructed slice data from the scan are offered here as a series of unsigned 16-bit integer TIFF images. The upper left corner of the first image (*_0000.tif) is the XYZ origin.
- Keyword:
- Sclerochronology, CT, Physeteridae, UMMP, University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology, Ford-Mitchell Collection, Holocene, and CTEES
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Swiger, Brian M, Liemohn, Liemohn W, Ganushkina, Natalia Y, and Dubyagin, Stepan V
- Description:
- The data included are those that were used in the creation of a model described in the manuscript titled "Predictions of Electron Flux in the near-Earth Plasma Sheet from Solar Wind Driving" by Swiger et al., 2022, published in the Space Weather Journal. doi: pending, TBD and The manuscript describes the development and assessment of a model that predicts electron flux (from 83 eV to 93 keV energies) in a region of Earth's magnetosphere called the plasma sheet. The model uses inputs of solar wind parameters including, but not limited, to solar wind speed and the interplanetary magnetic field.
- Keyword:
- magnetosphere plasma, machine learning, neural network, space weather forecasting, electrons in space, Earth's plasma sheet, and solar wind driving of magnetosphere
- Citation to related publication:
- Swiger, B. M., Liemohn, M. W., Ganushkina, N. Y., & Dubyagin, S. V. (2022). Energetic electron flux predictions in the near-Earth plasma sheet from solar wind driving. Space Weather, 20, e2022SW003150. https://doi.org/10.1029/2022SW003150
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- McCuen, Brett A.
- Description:
- The data were used to study the high-frequency geomagnetic disturbances within the magnetic field data. Included in this repository are the python scripts that perform an identification and classification of high-frequency signals within the magnetometer data that is downloaded from the databases listed in the Methodology section. All analysis and plots were created using subsequent Python libraries. The machine learning study implemented libraries from the sci-kit learn software. All of the specific methodology can be accessed in the readme.txt script.
- Keyword:
- geomagnetic field, high frequency, space weather, transient-large-amplitude, TLA, high frequency dB/dt, and dB/dt search algorithm
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Murray, Kendra E, Niemi, Nathan A, and Clark, Marin C
- Description:
- These data were produced in the scope of research into understanding the application of zircon (U-Th)/He thermochronometric data derived from rocks with complex radiation damage distributions to the extraction of long-term (>1 Gyr) thermal histories of the Earth's upper crust. The samples used in this study were collected from the Front Range in Colorado, USA. The low-temperature (apatite and zircon (U-Th)/He) thermochronometric ages presented in this data set are sensitive to near-surface temperatures (~80C and 180C, respectively) and record the progressive exhumation of the rock mass from which the samples were collected towards the Earth's surface. These thermochronometric ages, and the differences between them, provide insight into the deep-time (~1000 Ma - 100 Ma) thermal history of the Colorado Front Range.
- Keyword:
- apatite, zircon, helium, (U-Th)/He, (U-Th-Sm)/He, thermochronometry, thermochronology, low-temperature, Colorado, Boulder, geology, Colorado Mineral Belt, and Front Range
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Larson, Joanna G, Hamar, Leslie, Whitcher, Courtney, Farrugia, Nicholas, and Schwarz, Eva
- Description:
- These are the data required to implement the authentic research experience (ARE) that we created and describe in our paper "The Batrachian Barf Bowl: An authentic research experience using ecological data from frog diets." We created an open-source “bowl game” competition that challenges students to identify, measure, and compare diet items across vouchered frog specimens.
- Keyword:
- Frog, Diet, Ecology, Science Education, Authentic Research Experience (ARE), Biodiversity, Herpetology, Museum Collections, Remote Learning, and Undergraduate
- Citation to related publication:
- Larson, J. G., Crowell, H. L., Walsh, L. L., & Davis Rabosky, A. R. (2022). The Batrachian Barf Bowl: An authentic research experience using ecological data from frog diets. Ecology and Evolution, 12, e9095. https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.9095 and The above article is also available in Deep Blue Documents at https://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/174122
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Bougher, S. W. and Parkinson, C. D.
- Description:
- Understanding the state and composition of an exoplanetary atmosphere depends upon several parameters such as heating, cooling, mixing and reactions between constituent chemical species. Only a few types of atmospheric species can be detected remotely spectroscopically and only if their abundance is large enough to be detectable. In this initial study, we model the atmosphere of a Venus-like planet orbiting the M-type star GJ 436 to determine the global neutral temperature structure, winds, and energy balance as the radial distance of the planet from the star decreases.
- Keyword:
- Venus-like exoplanet, upper atmospheres , and heat balances
- Citation to related publication:
- C. D. Parkinson, S. W. Bougher, F. P. Mills, R. Hu, G. Gronoff, J. Li, A. Brecht, D. Adams, and Y. L. Yung. Venus as an Exoplanet: I. An Initial Exploration of the 3-D Energy Balance for a CO2 Exoplanetary Atmosphere Around an M-Dwarf Star, J. Geophysical Research, X, (2022). doi:....
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Valeriy Tenishev
- Description:
- Here we present an investigation of the variability of Venus' extended oxygen corona. For that, we employ a combination of a fluid model VTGCM for simulating Venus' ionosphere and thermosphere and kinetic model AMPS. We have found excellent agreement of the model results with PVO observations of the corona when the modeling is done assuming the solar maximum conditions, which corresponds to the solar conditions during the observations. We also found that the oxygen density strongly depends on the solar conditions and varies by order of magnitude over a solar cycle. That explains why the extended oxygen corona was observed only at the solar maximum. The result presented in this paper will be used in a later study of the planet's interaction with the ambient solar wind, where the corona model defines the mass loading coefficient.
- Keyword:
- Venus, VTGCM, AMPS, and Venus extended corona
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Liu, Meichen
- Description:
- The raw seismic records are downloaded from Incorporated Research Institutions for Seismology. The facilities of IRIS Data Services, and specifically the IRIS Data Management Center, were used for access to waveforms, related metadata, and/or derived products used in this study. The synthetic seismograms are generated by SPECMFEM3D_Globe software which was downloaded from the Computational Infrastructure for Geodynamics ( https://geodynamics.org/).
- Keyword:
- Composition and structure of the mantle, Phase transitions, North America, Body waves, and Computational seismology
- Discipline:
- Science
-
Dynamical Heating in the Martian Thermosphere: Temperatures, Winds and Thermal Balances using M-GITM
- Creator:
- Bougher, S. W. and Pilinski, M. D.
- Description:
- The NASA MAVEN (Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution) spacecraft, which is currently in orbit around Mars, has been taking systematic measurements of the densities and deriving temperatures in the upper atmosphere of Mars (between about 140 to 240 km above the surface) since late 2014. Wind measurement campaigns have also been conducted once per month for 5-10 orbits since 2016. These densities, temperatures and winds change with time (e.g. solar cycle, season, local time) and location, and sometimes fluctuate quickly. Global dust storm events are also known to significantly impact these density, temperature and wind fields in the Mars thermosphere. For the current project, in-situ measured winds and corresponding argon density derived temperatures are combined to trace the circulation patterns and investigate their convergence and divergence locations and impacts throughout the Mars thermosphere. M-GITM computed thermal balance terms are subsequently extracted to investigate the processes required to maintain the temperature distribution around the planet. For this work, Mars Year #33 (MY33) Neutral Gas and Ion Mass Spectrometer (NGIMS) measurements have been obtained by the MAVEN team for this purpose (see these representative works: (Bougher et al., 2017; Stone et al., 2018; Benna et al., 2019). These temperature and wind fields are compared to simulations from a computer model of the Mars atmosphere called M-GITM (Mars Global Ionosphere-Thermosphere Model), developed at U. of Michigan. Since the global circulation plays a role in the structure, variability, and evolution of the atmosphere, understanding the processes that drive the winds in the upper atmosphere of Mars also provides the needed context for understanding temperature distributions and underlying thermal balances throughout the atmosphere. Three dimensional M-GITM simulations for three of the four Mars cardinal seasons (Ls = 0, 90, 270) for MY33 were conducted for detailed comparisons with NGIMS temperature and wind distributions (Pilinski et al. 2022). Corresponding M-GITM datacubes used to extract these temperatures (plus winds) along the trajectory of each orbit path between 140 and 240 km, are provided in this Deep Blue Data archive. A single README file is included that details the contents of each datacube file. In addition, this general README file summarizes the inputs and outputs of each M-GITM simulation interval used for this study. Finally, a basic version of the M-GITM code can be found on Github at https:/github.com/dpawlows/MGITM.
- Keyword:
- MAVEN, Mars thermosphere, global dynamics, and heat balances owing to winds
- Citation to related publication:
- Pilinski, M. D., K. J. Roeten, S. W. Bougher and M. Benna, Dynamical Heating in the Martian Thermosphere, Journal Geophysical Res., XXX, (forthcoming - 2022). doi: .....
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Song, Siliang and Zhang, Jianzhi
- Description:
- Fitness landscapes map genotypes to their corresponding fitness under given environments and allow explaining and predicting evolutionary trajectories. Of particular interest is the landscape ruggedness or the unevenness of the landscape, because it impacts many aspects of evolution such as the likelihood that a population is trapped in a local fitness peak. Although the ruggedness has been inferred from a number of empirically mapped fitness landscapes, it is unclear to what extent this inference is affected by fitness estimation error, which is inevitable in the experimental determination of fitness landscapes. Here we address this question by simulating fitness landscapes under various theoretical models, with or without fitness estimation error. We find that all eight examined measures of landscape ruggedness are overestimated due to imprecise fitness quantification, but different measures are affected to different degrees. We devise a method to use replicate fitness measures to correct this bias and show that our method performs well under realistic conditions. We conclude that previously reported fitness landscape ruggedness is likely upward biased owing to the negligence of fitness estimation error and advise that future fitness landscape mapping should include at least three biological replicates to permit an unbiased inference of the ruggedness.
- Keyword:
- adaptation, estimation error, evolution, NK model, Rough Mount Fuji model, and polynomial model
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Lester, Corey A, Al Kontar, Raed, and Chen, Qiyuan
- Description:
- The dataset contains images of pills inside a medication bottle from a top down view. The dataset was used to build an image classification model for predicting the national drug code (NDC) of the medication seen in the image. There are 13,955 images of 20 distinct NDC. The image data were used to create a machine learning algorithm which could predict the NDC.
- Keyword:
- Medication, Pills, and Image
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Townsend, Kirk F., Clark, Marin K., and Niemi, Nathan A.
- Description:
- These datasets support the findings of Townsend et al. (in review) investigating the timing of faulting relative to changes in the orientation of the North American-Pacific plate boundary. Coeval with development of an oblique plate boundary segment (i.e. the “Big Bend” of the San Andreas fault), active shortening is inferred to have initiated at ~5 Ma in the Western Transverse Ranges (WTR). However, new low-temperature thermochronometric transects yield Miocene to Pleistocene apatite (U-Th-Sm)/He cooling ages and partially reset zircon (U-Th)/He ages. Inverse thermal modelling indicate that reverse faulting initiated as early as 10 Ma, several million years prior to our current understanding of the timing of the Big Bend. New and existing thermochronometry data delineate the WTR as the locus of rapid post-Miocene exhumation, and demonstrate that similar exhumation is not present in the broader region surrounding the Big Bend. We posit that reverse faulting is localized in the WTR because of a weak underlying lithosphere and predates the more recent geometric anomaly of the restraining bend in the transform margin.
- Keyword:
- Reverse faults, Fault initiation, Fault propagation, Low-temperature thermochronometry, Western Transverse Ranges, and San Andreas Fault
- Citation to related publication:
- Townsend, K. F., Clark, M. K., & Niemi, N. A., in review, Reverse faulting within a continental plate boundary transform system. Tectonics
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Goodrich, Jaclyn M., Tang, Lu, Rodríguez-Carmona, Yanelli, Meijer, J L., Perng, Wei, Watkins, Deborah J., Meeker, John D. , Mercado-García, Adriana, Cantoral, Alejandra, Song, Peter X. , Téllez-Rojo, Martha M. , and Peterson, Karen E.
- Description:
- Phthalates are chemicals found in many products that humans are exposed to. Prenatal exposure to phthalates has been associated with adverse outcomes that are detected in childhood, adolescence, and even adulthood. In this study, we sought to identify subtle biological changes in the metabolome of children that were exposed to phthalates during gestation. We hypothesized that prenatal phthalate exposures would alter metabolic pathways related to adiposity and cardiometabolic health. The article is under review (citation to be added when paper is published). The data included here encompass all exposure, demographic, and untargeted metabolomics data needed for the analysis described in the manuscript.
- Keyword:
- Phthalates , Prenatal, and Metabolomics
- Citation to related publication:
- Goodrich J.M., Tang L.,Rodríguez-Carmona Y., Meijer J.L, Perng W., Watkins D.J., Meeker J.D., Mercado-García A., Cantoral A., Song P.X., Téllez-Rojo M.M., Peterson K.E. Trimester-specific phthalate exposures in pregnancy are associated with circulating metabolites in children. PLoS One. (Under revision – forthcoming.)
- Discipline:
- Other and Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Esquivel, Amanda
- Description:
- The survey questions were organized in the following categories: - demographics: age, gender identity, race, ethnicity, and country of birth - education: degree type and date earned, STEM area - employment field, employer information, title, job duties - measures of productivity including research, grant, patents and site/workplace/lab access - work/life balance: responsibilities and duties Questions regarding productivity and work/life balance queried pre and post COVID experiences. Many questions solicited optional comments and the relevant ones are presented as a table.
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology and CTEES
- Description:
- Reconstructed CT slices for postcrania (cervical vertebrae, L+R humerus, R scapula, R coracoid, L femur) of Stylemys nebrascensis (University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology catalog number UMMP VP 9318) as a series of TIFF images. Raw projections are not included in this dataset. The reconstructed slice data from the scan are offered here as a series of unsigned 16-bit integer TIFF images. The upper left corner of the first image (*_0000.tif) is the XYZ origin.
- Keyword:
- Paleontology, Fossil, CT, Testudinidae, UMMP, University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology, Oligocene, CTEES, and c38728f5-6f38-d862-7bcf-9745e69db222
- Citation to related publication:
- University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology, CTEES. (2022). CT Data of UMMP VP 9318, Stylemys nebrascensis skull [Data set], University of Michigan - Deep Blue Data. https://doi.org/10.7302/74pd-kb09
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology and CTEES
- Description:
- Reconstructed CT slices for HOLOTYPE jaw frag. of Trilophosaurus buettneri (University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology catalog number UMMP_VP_2338) as a series of TIFF images. Raw projections are not included in this dataset. The reconstructed slice data from the scan are offered here as a series of unsigned 16-bit integer TIFF images. The upper left corner of the first image (*_0000.tif) is the XYZ origin.
- Keyword:
- Paleontology, Fossil, CT, Trilophosauridae, UMMP, University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology, L. Triassic, CTEES, and 80ea727c-798c-5382-2ae7-eff7f13b66af
- Citation to related publication:
- Case, E.C. (1928) Indications of a Cotylosaur and of a New Form of Fish from the Triassic Beds of Texas, with Remarks on the Shinarump Conglomerate. Contributions from the Museum of Paleontology, University of Michigan Vol. 3(1):1-14. https://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/48181
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Saylor, Kate M
- Description:
- The dataset includes all citations considered for inclusion in the literature review. Abstracts and keywords have been removed from the citation file. The citation file was exported in an .RIS format and can be imported with any citation manger such as EndNote, Zotero, Mendeley, RefWorks, etc. The literature search strategies are included for reproducibility and transparency purposes.
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Malhotra, Garima and Ridley, Aaron
- Description:
- This research aims to understand the influence of lower thermospheric atomic oxygen ([O]) and dynamics on the thermospheric Semi Annual Oscillation (SAO). [O] number densities between 95-100 km from WACCM-X are much closer to the observations from SABER instrument on TIMED satellite as compared to those from MSIS. We compare the phase and amplitude of SAO from different simulations with empirical models and observational datasets, and explore different mechanisms that can improve the SAO in IT models.
- Keyword:
- Semi Annual Oscillation, SAO, T-I SAO, Thermospheric Dynamics, Thermospheric Semi Annual Oscillation, WACCM-X coupling with GITM, Global Ionosphere Thermosphere Model, WACCM-X, Whole Atmosphere Model, Vertical coupling, Meridional Circulation, Annual Oscillation, Thermospheric Intra-Annual Variations, and Semiannual Oscillation
- Citation to related publication:
- Malhotra, G., Ridley, A., Jones, M., (2021) Impacts of Lower Thermospheric Atomic Oxygen and Dynamics on Thermospheric Semiannual Oscillation using GITM and WACCM-X, Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Zongyu Li, Yuni K. Dewaraja, and Jeffrey A. Fessler
- Description:
- Current methods for patient-specific voxel-level dosimetry in radionuclide therapy suffer from a trade-off between accuracy and computational efficiency. Monte Carlo (MC) radiation transport algorithms are considered the gold standard for voxel-level dosimetry but can be computationally expensive, whereas faster dose voxel kernel (DVK) convolution can be sub-optimal in the presence of tissue heterogeneities. Furthermore, the accuracies of both these methods are limited by the spatial resolution of the reconstructed emission image. To overcome these limitations, this paper considers a single deep convolutional neural network (CNN) with residual learning (named DblurDoseNet) that learns to produce dose-rate maps while compensating for the limited resolution of SPECT images. We took the novel approach of constructing a convolutional neural network with residual learning to handle the accuracy-efficiency tradeoff while compensating for the limited resolution of SPECT images. We then test our CNN on clinically relevant phantoms and patients undergoing Lu-177 DOTATATE therapy in our clinic. Our network demonstrated superior results than Monte Carlo, the current gold standard for voxel dosimetry, but only takes a fraction of time. Thus, the DblurDoseNet has the potential for real-time patient-specific dosimetry in clinical treatment planning due to its demonstrated improvement in accuracy, resolution, noise and speed over the DVK/MC approaches. Matlab is needed to access the phantoms and Python (with Numpy package installed) is needed to access the DVKs.
- Keyword:
- Deep learning, Voxel-level dosimetry, Lu-177 therapy, SPECT resolution effects
- Citation to related publication:
- "DblurDoseNet: A Deep Residual Learning Network for Voxel Radionuclide Dosimetry Compensating for SPECT Imaging Resolution" by Zongyu Li, Jeffrey A. Fessler, Justin K. Mikell, Scott J. Wilderman and Yuni K. Dewaraja. Accepted by Medical Physics, 2021. DOI: 10.1002/mp.15397
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Bhaumik, Deesha
- Description:
- This cross-sectional analysis included 584 participants in the Center for Oral Health Research in Appalachia cohort 1 (COHRA1). We sequenced the V4 region of the 16S rRNA of supragingival plaque from 185 caries-active and 565 caries-free teeth using the Illumina MiSeq platform. Sequences were filtered using the R DADA2 package and assigned taxonomy using the Human Oral Microbiome Database ( http://www.homd.org/).
- Keyword:
- Amplicon Sequence Variant
- Citation to related publication:
- In press
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Modey, Christine A., Cheatle, Joseph, and Giaimo, Genie N.
- Description:
- Data includes information regarding session notes from sixty-three institutions, including blank session note forms, data sets of completed session notes, and survey data about how sessions notes are conceived of, and used, in writing centers.
- Keyword:
- session note, client report form, tutor notes, writing center, writing, and tutor
- Citation to related publication:
- Christine Modey, Genie Giaimo, and Joseph Cheatle. “Session Notes: Preliminary Results from a Cross-Institutional Survey.” Praxis: A Writing Center Journal 18.3 (2021): 52-75. https://issuu.com/titospanks/docs/18.3_summer_2021_full_issue_2._pdf
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Bougher, S. W. (University of Michigan) and Brecht, A. S. (NASA Ames Research Center)
- Description:
- This work examines the planetary wave-induced variability within the upper mesosphere/lower thermosphere of Venus by utilizing the Venus Thermospheric General Circulation Model (VTGCM). Rossby and Kelvin wave perturbations are driven by variations in the geopotential height of the VTGCM lower boundary (~70 km). A suite of simulations was conducted to examine the impact of the individual and combined waves propagating from two different lower boundary conditions (uniform and varying). The Kelvin wave is the more dominant wave which produces the most variability, as was shown in Hoshino et al., 2012. The combination of the Kelvin and Rossby waves provides a maximum temperature amplitude of 13 K at 92 km and maximum zonal wind amplitude of 23 m/s at 102 km. The combined waves overall are able to propagate up to 125 km. Most of the variation within the temperature, winds, and composition occurs between 70 km and 110 km. The varying lower boundary increases the magnitude of the wave deposition but weakly changes the propagation altitude. The thermal variation due to the planetary waves does not reproduce most observed variations. The simulated O2 IR nightglow emission is sensitive to the waves with respect to intensity and local time, but lacks latitudinal variation. The integrated intensity ranges from 1.2 MR to 1.65 MR and the local time ranges from 0.33 local time to 23.6 local time. Overall, planetary waves do affect the atmospheric structure, but there are still observed large variations that planetary waves alone cannot explain (i.e. thermal structure).
- Keyword:
- Venus, planetary waves, upper mesophere, lower thermosphere, and O2 nightglow
- Citation to related publication:
- Brecht, A. S., Bougher, S. W., Shields, D., & Liu, H.-L. (2021). Planetary-scale wave impacts on the Venusian upper mesosphere and lower thermosphere. Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets, 126, e2020JE006587. https://doi.org/10.1029/2020JE006587
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Curlis, JD, Renney, TJ, Davis Rabosky, AR, and Moore, TY
- Description:
- Efficient comparisons of biological color patterns are critical for understanding the mechanisms by which organisms evolve in ecosystems, including sexual selection, predator-prey interactions, and thermoregulation. However, elongate or spiral-shaped organisms do not conform to the standard orientation and photographic techniques required for automated analysis. Currently, large-scale color analysis of elongate animals requires time-consuming manual landmarking, which reduces their representation in coloration research despite their ecological importance. We present Batch-Mask: an automated and customizable workflow to facilitate the analysis of large photographic data sets of non-standard biological subjects. First, we present a user guide to run an open-source region-based convolutional neural network with fine-tuned weights for identifying and isolating a biological subject from a background (masking). Then, we demonstrate how to combine masking with existing manual visual analysis tools into a single streamlined, automated workflow for comparing color patterns across images. Batch-Mask was 60x faster than manual landmarking, produced masks that correctly identified 96% of all snake pixels, and produced pattern energy results that were not significantly different from the manually landmarked data set. The fine-tuned weights for the masking neural network, user guide, and automated workflow substantially decrease the amount of time and attention required to quantitatively analyze non-standard biological subjects. By using these tools, biologists will be able to compare color, pattern, and shape differences in large data sets that include significant morphological variation in elongate body forms. This advance will be especially valuable for comparative analyses of natural history collections, and through automation can greatly expand the scale of space, time, or taxonomic breadth across which color variation can be quantitatively examined.
- Keyword:
- convolutional neural network, photography, sensory ecology, color evolution, vision, and image segmentation
- Citation to related publication:
- Curlis, Renney, Davis Rabosky, Moore (submitted) Batch-Mask: An automated Mask R-CNN workflow to isolate non-standard biological specimens for color pattern analysis.
- Discipline:
- Engineering and Science
-
Profiles of near-surface rock mass strength across gradients in erosion, burial, and time [Data set]
- Creator:
- Townsend, Kirk F, Clark, Marin K, and Zekkos, Dimitrios
- Description:
- These datasets support the findings of Townsend et al. (2020). In this article, we project profiles of rock mass shear strength into the shallow subsurface (~30 m depth) using the Hoek and Brown criterion with Geological Strength Index (GSI) observations of outcrop structure and surface conditions, and Schmidt hammer rebound values of intact (unfractured) rock hardness. We compare these projected rock mass shear strength profiles to shear-wave velocity profiles collected using shallow geophysical arrays. We evaluate our methods in the Western Transverse Ranges of southern California, which exhibit strong gradients in the depth of latest-Mesozoic through Cenozoic sedimentary rocks exposed at the surface today, and in erosion rates quantified from catchment-average cosmogenic radionuclide concentrations and low-temperature apatite and zircon (U-Th)/He thermochronometry. We find that stratigraphic age and burial depth exerts the strongest apparent control on rock strength and S-wave velocities, likely due to diagenetic changes associated with burial. For rocks of the same age and inferred burial history, we observe that shear strength and S-wave velocities are positively correlated with erosion rate. We suggest that increasing erosion rates cause decreased residence time of rock masses within the critical zone, resulting in less weathered rocks.
- Keyword:
- rock strength, seismic, and erosion rate
- Citation to related publication:
- Townsend, K. F., Clark, M. K., & Zekkos, D. (2021). Profiles of Near-Surface Rock Mass Strength Across Gradients in Burial, Erosion, and Time. Journal of Geophysical Research: Earth Surface, 126(4), e2020JF005694. https://doi.org/10.1029/2020JF005694
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Lee, Dahee, Panicker, Veena, and Landis-Lewis, Zach
- Description:
- We use the term “performance summary display” (PSD) to mean a kind of visualization that relates performance levels to other types of information. In the context of healthcare organizations, PSDs are intended to be communicated to a healthcare professional, team, or organization. and Displays were identified, classified, and elements counted and coded. The performance summary display ontology provides a set of descriptions of components of displays that have been used to annotate performance feedback visualizations.
- Keyword:
- Performance
- Citation to related publication:
- Lee, D., Panicker, V., Gross, C., Zhang, J., & Landis-Lewis, Z. (2020). What was visualized? A method for describing content of performance summary displays in feedback interventions. BMC medical research methodology, 20(1), 90. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12874-020-00951-x
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences and Science
-
- Creator:
- Umaña, María Natalia and Arellano, Gabriel
- Description:
- The objective of this study was to examine the existence of congruent tree growth responses to different extreme climatic events –hurricanes and drought–affecting tropical wet forests.
- Keyword:
- Dendrometers , El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO), Hurricane Maria, Puerto Rico, and Tropical Forests
- Citation to related publication:
- Umaña, M.N.and Arellano G. In press. Legacy effects of drought on tree growth responses to hurricanes. Ecography. https://doi.org/10.1111/ecog.05803
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Tye, Alexander R, Niemi, Nathan A, Safarov, Rafig T, Kadirov, Fakhraddin A, Babayev, Gulam R
- Description:
- Apatite fission track thermochronometry data were collected from the Eastern Greater Caucasus orogen, Azerbaijan. Thermochronometry data constrain the history of exhumation and deformation of rocks within the orogen, which is an active accretionary prism. Thermochronometry data record the timing of cooling of a rock sample beneath a given closure temperature. Given an assumed or inferred geothermal gradient, thermochronometric ages can be used to infer exhumation rates and make interpretations about rates of deformation in orogens. The apatite fission track data presented here are analyzed in concert with apatite (U-Th)/He and zircon (U-Th)/He ages reported in Tye et al., in prep., to characterize the exhumation history of the Eastern Greater Caucasus.
- Keyword:
- thermochronometry, apatite fission track, Caucasus
- Citation to related publication:
- Tye, A. R., Niemi, N. A., Safarov, R. T., Kadirov, F. A., & Babayev, G. R. (2021). Sedimentary response to a collision orogeny recorded in detrital zircon provenance of Greater Caucasus foreland basin sediments. Basin Research, 33(2), 933–967. https://doi.org/10.1111/bre.12499
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Moore, Talia Y, Villacis Nunez, C Nathaly, Ray, Andrew P, and Cooper, Kimberly L
- Description:
- Hind limbs can undergo dramatic changes in loading conditions during the transition from quadrupedal to bipedal locomotion. For example, the most early diverging bipedal jerboas (Rodentia: Dipodidae) are some of the smallest mammals in the world, with body masses that range 2-4 grams. The larger jerboa species exhibit developmental and evolutionary fusion of the central three metatarsals into a single cannon bone. We hypothesize that body size reduction and metatarsal fusion are mechanisms to maintain the safety factor of the hind limb bones despite the higher ground reaction forces associated with bipedal locomotion. Using finite element analysis to model collisions between the substrate and the metatarsals, we found that body size reduction was insufficient to reduce bone stress on unfused metatarsals, based on the scaled dynamics of larger jerboas, and that fused bones developed lower stresses than unfused bones when all metatarsals are scaled to the same size and loading conditions. Based on these results, we conclude that fusion reinforces larger jerboa metatarsals against high ground reaction forces. Because smaller jerboas with unfused metatarsals develop higher peak stresses in response to loading conditions scaled from larger jerboas, we hypothesize that smaller jerboas use alternative dynamics of bipedal locomotion that reduces the impact of collisions between the foot and substrate.
- Keyword:
- finite element, functional morphology, bipedal, jerboa, metatarsus, and bone fusion
- Citation to related publication:
- Villacis Nunez, Ray, Cooper, Moore (submitted). Body size reduction and metatarsal fusion were distinct mechanisms to resist bending as jerboas (Dipodidae) transitioned from quadrupedal to bipedal.
- Discipline:
- Science and Engineering
-
- Creator:
- University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology and CTEES
- Description:
- Reconstructed CT slices for a right cuboid of Cantius mckennai (University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology catalog number UMMP VP 81823), as a series of TIFF images. Raw projections are not included in this dataset.
- Keyword:
- Paleontology, Fossil, CT, Primates, Notharctidae, UMMP, University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology, Eocene, and CTEES
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Zalmout, Iyad S, Sanders, William J, MacLatchy, Laura M, Gunnell, Gregg F, Al-Mufarreh, Yahya A, Ali, Mohammad A, Nasser, Abdul-Azziz H, Al-Masari, Abdu M, Al-Sobhi, Salih A, Nadhra, Ayman O, Matari, Adel H, Wilson, Jeffrey A, and Gingerich, Philip D
- Description:
- Reconstructed CT slices for the partial cranium of the holotype specimen of Saadanius hijazensis in DICOM format. Data supporting the publication: New Oligocene primate from Saudi Arabia and the divergence of apes and Old World monkeys, https://doi.org/10.1038/nature09094 Raw projections are not included in this dataset.
- Keyword:
- Paleontology, Fossil, Saudi Arabia, CT, Primate, Oligocene, Hominoidea, Cercopithecoidea, University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology, and UMMP
- Citation to related publication:
- Zalmout, I., Sanders, W., MacLatchy, L. et al. New Oligocene primate from Saudi Arabia and the divergence of apes and Old World monkeys. Nature 466, 360–364 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1038/nature09094, A cast of this specimen is held by the University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology (UMMP) under catalog number 14200., and 3D surface model viewable on UMORF site : https://umorf.ummp.lsa.umich.edu/wp/specimen-data/?Model_ID=1408
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- LaBarre, Jennifer L., Peterson, Karen E., Kachman, Maureen T., Perng, Wei., Tang, Lu., Hao, Wei., Zhou, Ling., Karnovsky, Alla., Cantoral, Alejandra., Téllez-Rojo, Martha María., Song, Peter XK., and Burant, Charles F.
- Description:
- Participants were enrolled in the Early Life Exposure in Mexico to ENvironmental Toxicants (ELEMENT) project which was started in 1994 and consists of three sequentially-enrolled birth cohorts from Mexico City Maternity Hospitals (20). A subset of these children, age 8-14 years, were contacted through their primary caregiver to provide urine samples, serum samples, anthropometry and complete an interview-based questionnaire (n=250). Subjects for this analysis have baseline and follow data on anthropometry, metabolic biomarkers and adequate serum volume for metabolomics analyses (n=206).
- Citation to related publication:
- LaBarre, J. L., Peterson, K. E., Kachman, M. T., Perng, W., Tang, L., Hao, W., Zhou, L., Karnovsky, A., Cantoral, A., Téllez-Rojo, M. M., Song, P. X. K., & Burant, C. F. (2020). Mitochondrial Nutrient Utilization Underlying the Association Between Metabolites and Insulin Resistance in Adolescents. The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, 105(7), 2442–2455. https://doi.org/10.1210/clinem/dgaa260
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Robert Buckley, Grace O'Brien, and Zoe Zhou
- Description:
- The purpose of the research is to better understand and approximate the Thurston Set. This project was computational in nature and Python was used to collect our data. The data set contains encoded itineraries that can be used to compute values that are elements of the Thurston Set. A visual approximation of the Thurston Set can be found here ( https://arxiv.org/abs/1402.2008), on the first page Thurston’s own paper. The data can also be used to study the distribution of superattracting beta values within the interval (1, 2] and to explore an analogous Mandelbrot-Julia Correspondence. This research was conducted through the Lab of Geometry at Michigan under the advisement of Harrison Bray during the Fall semester of 2019. , The Python 3.x scripts in this deposit are the exact versions used to created the *.txt files that are in the zip archive. As the project continues, any expansion to the work, such as further analysis or visualization scripts, will be posted to the project's GitHub https://github.com/Tent-Maps-Team/Thurston-Set. Also, a user can reproduce our results and generate bigger datasets on machines with large amounts of memory. , and The data consists of zipper folders representing tent map itinerary orbit lengths. These orbit files can be used to create visualizations, create and explore conjectures such as refining proposed bounds on the Thurston Set and supporting an analogous Mandelbrot-Julia Correspondence. Within these zipped folders are .txt files in CSV format with the naming structure of xx_y of admissible itineraries up to the length indicated by the folder name where xx is the length of the encoded itineraries included. The txt's have a single column and each line(row) is an array representing an encoding of an itinerary. Some of the txt's have been split into multiple parts (whenever there are more than 200 MB of itinerary data) and these txt's have been numbered using the y after the underscore. As we exclude the degenerate tent map (where β = 1), we cannot have orbit length 1 or 2 and this is why the orbits start with length 3 (i.e. start with 3.zip).
- Keyword:
- Math, mathematics, tent maps, thurston, milnor, Milnor-Thurston, supperattracting, entropy, orbit, and itineraries
- Citation to related publication:
- Buckley R, O’Brien G, Zhou Z (2021). On Itineraries of Tent Maps. Forthcoming.
- Discipline:
- Other
-
- Creator:
- MacEachern, Mark, Vitous, C Ann, Dinh, Duyhoang, Jafri, Sara, Bennett, Olivia, and Suwanabol, Pasithorn
- Description:
- The intent of the project was to identify all relevant studies and data related to the topic. There are searches for the following databases: Ovid MEDLINE, Elsevier Embase, Clarivate Web of Science, and EBSCOhost CINAHL. The searches yielded 1168 citations after duplicates were removed in Endnote X8.
- Keyword:
- Health Sciences, Systematic Review, Surgeons, Well-being, and Literature Searches
- Citation to related publication:
- Vitous, C. Ann MA, MPH*; Dinh, Duyhoang Q. BS†; Jafri, Sara M. BS‡; Bennett, Olivia M. BS†; MacEachern, Mark MLIS§; Suwanabol, Pasithorn A. MD, MS* Optimizing Surgeon Well-Being, Annals of Surgery Open: March 2021 - Volume 2 - Issue 1 - p e029 doi: 10.1097/AS9.0000000000000029
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
Prescribed Burn Single-Particle Mass Spectra, University of Michigan Biological Station October 2017
- Creator:
- Pratt, Kerri
- Description:
- This dataset corresponds to 5,500 single-particle, dual-polarity mass spectra of biomass burning particles measured from a mobile laboratory during the 2017 prescribed burn at the University of Michigan Biological Station near Pellston, Michigan. Size-resolved chemical composition of individual particles, primarily ranging from 0.15 - 0.60 μm in vacuum aerodynamic diameter, was measured using an aerosol time-of-flight mass spectrometer (ATOFMS).
- Keyword:
- aerosol chemistry
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology and CTEES
- Description:
- Reconstructed CT slices for a right navicular of Cantius mckennai (University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology catalog number UMMP VP 81831), as a series of TIFF images. Raw projections are not included in this dataset.
- Keyword:
- Paleontology, Fossil, CT, Primates, Notharctidae, UMMP, University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology, Eocene, and CTEES
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Troesch, Armin, W. and Kang, C.-G.
- Description:
- This scaled acceleration time series has been used in the graduate class, NA540, as an example of hydrodynamic impact. For a more detailed description of the tests, please see: Troesch, A.W. and Kang, C.-G., "Hydrodynamic Impact Loads on Three Dimensional Bodies," Proceedings of the 16th Symposium on Naval Hydrodynamics, Berkeley, July 1986, National Academy Press, Washington, D.C., 1987, pp. 537-558.
- Keyword:
- hydrodynamic impact
- Citation to related publication:
- Troesch, A.W. and Kang, C.-G., "Hydrodynamic Impact Loads on Three Dimensional Bodies," Proceedings of the 16th Symposium on Naval Hydrodynamics, Berkeley, July 1986, National Academy Press, Washington, D.C., 1987, pp. 537-558. This item is not available online due to copyright restrictions, but the text can be searched using Hathi Trust: https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015040312475
- Discipline:
- Engineering and Science
-
- Creator:
- Liemohn, Michael W and Wooden, Paige
- Description:
- Journals sometimes focus the attention of the research community by having a special collection, sometimes an entire special issue, devoted to a single topic. A reasonable question to ask is whether the extra effort of organizing, promoting, and maintaining the special collection is worthwhile. The paper that this data set accompanies examines paper impact in the Journal of Geophysical Research Space Physics, separating the special collection papers from the non-special-collection submissions. The conclusion is that special collections are worth the extra work.
- Keyword:
- journal special collections, bibliometrics, citations, and downloads
- Citation to related publication:
- Liemohn, M. W., & Wooden, P. (2019). Editorial: Impact of special collections in JGR Space Physics. Journal of Geophysical Research Space Physics. https://doi.org/10.1002/essoar.10501036.2
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Lee, Joyce Y, Knauer, Heather A, Lee, Shawna J, MacEachern, Mark P, and Garfield, Craig F
- Description:
- The dataset includes all citations considered for inclusion in the systematic review. The citations are accessible in Endnote (enlx), as well as through the primary citation export files from each database. The literature search strategies are included for reproducibility and transparency purposes. See the published methods for more information.
- Keyword:
- Systematic Review, Fathers, Education, and Perinatal
- Citation to related publication:
- Lee JY, Knauer HA, Lee SJ, MacEachern MP, Garfield CF. (2018). Father-inclusive perinatal parent education programs: A systematic review. Pediatrics, 142(1). PMID: 29903835. and https://doi.org/10.1542/peds.2018-0437
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology and CTEES
- Description:
- Reconstructed CT slices for a right medial cuneiform (entocuneiform) of Cantius mckennai (University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology catalog number UMMP VP 81820), as a series of TIFF images. Raw projections are not included in this dataset.
- Keyword:
- Paleontology, Fossil, CT, Primates, Notharctidae, UMMP, University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology, Eocene, and CTEES
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology and CTEES
- Description:
- Reconstructed CT slices for vertebrae of Phenacolemur (University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology catalog number UMMP VP 94723) as a series of TIFF images. Raw projections are not included in this dataset. The reconstructed slice data from the scan are offered here as a series of unsigned 16-bit integer TIFF images. The upper left corner of the first image (*_0000.tif) is the XYZ origin.
- Keyword:
- Paleontology, Fossil, CT, Paromomyidae, UMMP, University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology, Eocene, CTEES, and 31cf6e4a-86dd-9452-49f4-c5ce0d946613
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Shi, Xuetao, Elvati, Paolo, and Violi, Angela
- Description:
- Non-thermal plasma systems offer unique opportunities in the fields of bio-imaging, drug delivery, photovoltaics, microelectronics manufacturing. Such interests are largely inspired by the fact that hot plasma electrons coexist with neutral species and ions close to room-temperature under non-thermal plasma conditions. Modeling of these systems requires a deep understanding of the atomistic processes underlying the rich chemistry of the various radicals and ions with the nascent nanoparticle surface. A key parameter for determining the contribution of a certain radical/ion species to the nanoparticle surface growth, called sticking coefficient, is computed as a weighted sum from the simulated sticking outcomes with different collision velocities drawn from a Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution at certain temperatures. In this work, the collisions of SiHx (x=1-4) fragments and silicon cluster (Si4, Si2H6, and Si29H36) surfaces, responsible for the sticking coefficients, are simulated by molecular dynamics (MD) with a reactive force field. The dependence of sticking coefficients on temperature, H coverage of both silane fragments and cluster surfaces, and the size of the cluster, are systematically examined. And the mechanism underlying the sticking events, specifically the conversion of physical aggregation to chemisorption is investigated to better understand the complex interplay between factors influencing the surface growth. The detailed and multi-parameter model of sticking coefficients, accompanied by the mechanism study of physisorption to chemisorption conversion, provides a more accurate and robust approximation of surface growth rate using sticking coefficients, and a deeper understanding of surface growth processes, for the wider non-thermal plasma simulation community.
- Keyword:
- Sticking coefficients, Silanes, Molecular Dynamics, Non-equilibrium, and Aggregation mechanisms
- Citation to related publication:
- Shi, X., Elvati, P., Violi, A. (2021). On the growth of Si nanoparticles in non-thermal plasma: physisorption to chemisorption conversion. J. Phys. D. Submitted.
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Sergio E. Vidal-Luengo
- Description:
- This database contains spacecraft and ground-based magnetic field observations made to study the propagation of the preliminary impulse triggered by interplanetary shocks with different inclinations in the XZ plane.
- Keyword:
- Cluster, Dynamic pressure pulse, THEMIS, SuperMag, Magnetosphere, MMS, and Intermagnet
- Citation to related publication:
- (to be submitted) Vidal-Luengo, S. E., Moldwin, M. B. (2021). Shock Inclination Effects in Preliminary Impulse Propagation Observed by Ground-Based Magnetometers and the Heliophysics System Observatory
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Huang, Cheng MI
- Description:
- A 2D planar representation of a generic laboratory-scale combustor is established to assess the capabilities of ROMs for representing realistic combustion flowfields. The purpose of this dataset is to provide a testbed to build reduced model for relevant challenging reacting flow problems using different methods. The dataset was generated under the Air Force Center of Excellence on Multi-Fidelity Modeling of Rocket Combustion Dynamics and the goal of the center is to advance the state-of-the-art in Reduced Order Models (ROMs) and enable efficient prediction of instabilities in liquid fueled rocket combustion systems., Detailed documentation of how the data is generated can be found in: https://afcoe.engin.umich.edu/benchmark-data. Instrument and/or Software specifications: - recommendation: Matlab and Tecplot. , 1. Data_150000to159999.tar: the unsteady flow field data from time step 150000 to 159999 (time increment, dt, between each time step is 1E-7 sec). 2. Data_160000to169999.tar: the unsteady flow field data from time step 160000 to 169999 (time increment, dt, between each time step is 1E-7 sec). , 3. Data_170000to179999.tar: the unsteady flow field data from time step 170000 to 179999 (time increment, dt, between each time step is 1E-7 sec). 4. Data_180000to189999.tar: the unsteady flow field data from time step 180000 to 189999 (time increment, dt, between each time step is 1E-7 sec)., 5. Data_190000to199999.tar: the unsteady flow field data from time step 190000 to 199999 (time increment, dt, between each time step is 1E-7 sec). 6. Data_200000to209999.tar: the unsteady flow field data from time step 200000 to 209999 (time increment, dt, between each time step is 1E-7 sec). , 7. Data_210000to219999.tar: the unsteady flow field data from time step 210000 to 219999 (time increment, dt, between each time step is 1E-7 sec). 8. Data_220000to229999.tar: the unsteady flow field data from time step 220000 to 229999 (time increment, dt, between each time step is 1E-7 sec). , and 9. grid.dat: the topology of the CFD mesh used to generate this data (can be directly loaded in Tecplot). 10. the file "sample_code.zip" contains the sample Matlab scripts to load and output the .dat files to help the researchers to get started. To run the script, the software Matlab is required and the researchers can simply run sampleIO.m script in Matlab to test the code.
- Citation to related publication:
- McQuarrie, S., Huang, C., and Willcox, K., Data-driven reduced-order models via regularised Operator Inference for a single-injector combustion process, Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand, 2021. (code available: https://github.com/Willcox-Research-Group/ROM-OpInf-Combustion-2D)., McQuarrie, S. A., Huang, C., & Willcox, K. E. (2021). Data-driven reduced-order models via regularised Operator Inference for a single-injector combustion process. Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand, 51(2), 194–211. https://doi.org/10.1080/03036758.2020.1863237 , Swischuk, R., Kramer, B., Huang, C., & Willcox, K. (2020). Learning Physics-Based Reduced-Order Models for a Single-Injector Combustion Process. AIAA Journal, 58(6), 2658–2672. https://doi.org/10.2514/1.J058943, Huang, C., Duraisamy, K., & Merkle, C. L. (2019). Investigations and Improvement of Robustness of Reduced-Order Models of Reacting Flow. AIAA Journal, 57(12), 5377–5389. https://doi.org/10.2514/1.J058392 , and Harvazinski, M. E., Huang, C., Sankaran, V., Feldman, T. W., Anderson, W. E., Merkle, C. L., & Talley, D. G. (2015). Coupling between hydrodynamics, acoustics, and heat release in a self-excited unstable combustor. Physics of Fluids, 27(4), 045102. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4916673
- Discipline:
- Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Harper Diane M
- Description:
- Patients included in this study were all males with no prior HIV diagnosis between 18 and 45 years who had at least one primary care encounter between March 2016 and March 2019. We chose 2016 as the index year because the question of the sexual partners’ gender became coded data elements with the clinic contact. Eligible patients were grouped based on reported sexual partners at the most recent disclosure. Individuals who reported having a male sexual partner or both a male and female partner were included in the MSM group. The non-MSM group included individuals who reported only a female partner or no partner. Patients who did not answer the question were excluded from the study. The study proposal was submitted to the Institutional Review Boards of the University of Michigan Medical School and was exempted from ongoing IRB review (HUM00155091). Individual consent was waived for this study.
- Keyword:
- HIV, MSM, and annual screening
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology and CTEES
- Description:
- Reconstructed CT slices for vertebrae of Hyopsodus (University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology catalog number UMMP_VP_102495) as a series of TIFF images. Raw projections are not included in this dataset. The reconstructed slice data from the scan are offered here as a series of unsigned 16-bit integer TIFF images. The upper left corner of the first image (*_0000.tif) is the XYZ origin.
- Keyword:
- Paleontology, Fossil, CT, Hyopsodontidae, UMMP, University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology, Eocene, CTEES, and 01ee73fb-6b53-fe52-3a01-2857be88a65e
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Liu, Meichen
- Description:
- We intend to figure out the difference of stress drops, which is a characteristic source parameter, between shallow and deep-focus earthquakes. Significant stress drop difference may shed light on the difference of physical mechanisms of shallow and deep-focus earthquakes, which has been a elusive question. We select from deep-focus earthquakes (> 400 km) in 2000-2018 and obtain their stress drops using P and S waves. We find that stress drops of deep-focus earthquakes are about one order of magnitude higher than that of shallow earthquakes, indicating about one order of magnitude higher shear strength of shallow faults than faults in the mantle. The wide range of stress drops further suggests coexistence of phase transformation and shear-induced melting mechanisms of deep-focus earthquakes.
- Citation to related publication:
- Liu, M., Huang, Y., & Ritsema, J. (2020, March 4). Stress drop variation of deep-focus earthquakes based on empirical Green's function [preprint]. Submitted to Geophysical Research Letters. https://doi.org/10.31223/osf.io/8jx6p and Liu, M., Huang, Y., & Ritsema, J. (2020). Stress Drop Variation of Deep-Focus Earthquakes Based on Empirical Green’s Functions. Geophysical Research Letters, 47(9), e2019GL086055. https://doi.org/10.1029/2019GL086055
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Pasquinelli, Rennie, Hu, Xiaosu, Tessier, Anne-Michelle, Kovelman, Ioulia, Zwolan, Terry A., Karas, Zachary E., and Wagley, Neelima
- Description:
- This data is from a project examining prosodic processing in children and adults using functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) neuroimaging. fNIRS data is optical data collected using a cap with an array of source and detector fibers that emit and detect infrared light, respectively. We used fNIRS neuroimaging to explore prosodic processing, rhyme judgement, and the "oddball" paradigm in children, adults, and a small sample of children with cochlear implants. Matlab scripts, including Ted Huppert's Nirs Toolbox, were used to process the neuroimaging data. The children also took a battery of behavioral assessments (OWLS, Digit Span, PPVT, CTOPP).
- Keyword:
- Prosodic Processing, fNIRS neuroimaging, Development, Cochlear Implants, and Rhyming
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- van Velden, Grace and Reddy, Raghav
- Description:
- A household survey was developed to capture household perceptions and behaviors around drinking water use. It consisted of several modules: key informant and household demographics, household assets and consumption, water use behaviors in the dry season, water use behaviors during the rest of the year, and water supply maintenance and repair. Intervention and safe water device surveys were also developed; the household and intervention surveys were administered via Qualtrics. and This record consists of several survey instruments, exported where appropriate from Qualtrics into PDF and .qsf.
- Keyword:
- Bangladesh, arsenic, sustainability, survey
- Discipline:
- Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Carlson, Zachary
- Description:
- Data repository for supplemental data for manuscript. Article and data set are currently under review by publisher. Email for more information.
- Citation to related publication:
- Carlson, Z., Hafner, H., Mulcahy, M., Bullock, K., Zhu, A., Bridges, D., Bernal-Mizrachi, E., & Gregg, B. (2020). Lactational metformin exposure programs offspring white adipose tissue glucose homeostasis and resilience to metabolic stress in a sex-dependent manner. American Journal of Physiology-Endocrinology and Metabolism, 318(5), E600–E612. https://doi.org/10.1152/ajpendo.00473.2019
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Burger, Laura L , Wagenmaker, Elizabeth R., Phumsatitpong, Chayarndorn , Olson, David P., and Moenter, Suzanne M.
- Description:
- Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is the most common form of infertility in women. The causes of PCOS are not yet understood and both genetics and early-life exposure have been considered as candidates. With regard to the latter, circulating androgens are elevated in mid-late gestation in women with PCOS, potentially exposing offspring to elevated androgens in utero; daughters of women with PCOS are at increased risk for developing this disorder. Consistent with these clinical observations, prenatal androgenization (PNA) of several species recapitulates many phenotypes observed in PCOS. There is increasing evidence that symptoms associated with PCOS, including elevated luteinizing hormone (LH) (and presumably gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH)) pulse frequency emerge during the pubertal transition. We utilized translating ribosomal affinity purification coupled with RNA sequencing to examine GnRH neuron mRNAs from prepubertal (3wk) and adult female control and PNA mice. Prominent in GnRH neurons were transcripts associated with protein synthesis and cellular energetics, in particular oxidative phosphorylation. The GnRH neuron transcript profile was affected more by the transition from prepuberty to adulthood than by PNA treatment, however PNA did change the developmental trajectory of GnRH neurons. This included families of transcripts related to both protein synthesis and oxidative phosphorylation, which were more prevalent in adults than in prepubertal mice but were blunted in PNA adults. These findings suggest that prenatal androgen exposure can program alterations in the translatome of GnRH neurons, providing a mechanism independent of changes in the genetic code for altered expression. These are Microsoft Excel Files
- Keyword:
- GnRH Neuron TRAP Seq
- Citation to related publication:
- Unprocessed RNASeq data is available at Gene Expression Omnibus ( https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/gds) accession GSE155314.
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Smith, Joeseph P., Gronewold, Andrew D., Read, Laura, Crooks, James L., School for Environment and Sustainability, University of Michigan, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Michigan, and Cooperative Institute for Great Lakes Research
- Description:
- Using the statistical programming package R ( https://cran.r-project.org/), and JAGS (Just Another Gibbs Sampler, http://mcmc-jags.sourceforge.net/), we processed multiple estimates of the Laurentian Great Lakes water balance components -- over-lake precipitation, evaporation, lateral tributary runoff, connecting channel flows, and diversions -- feeding them into prior distributions (using data from 1950 through 1979), and likelihood functions. The Bayesian Network is coded in the BUGS language. Water balance computations assume that monthly change in storage for a given lake is the difference between beginning of month water levels surrounding each month. For example, the change in storage for June 2015 is the difference between the beginning of month water level for July 2015 and that for June 2015., More details on the model can be found in the following summary report for the International Watersheds Initiative of the International Joint Commission, where the model was used to generate a new water balance historical record from 1950 through 2015: https://www.glerl.noaa.gov/pubs/fulltext/2018/20180021.pdf. Large Lake Statistical Water Balance Model (L2SWBM): https://www.glerl.noaa.gov/data/WaterBalanceModel/, and This data set has a shorter timespan to accommodate a prior which uses data not used in the likelihood functions.
- Keyword:
- Water, Balance, Great Lakes, Laurentian, Machine, Learning, Lakes, Bayesian, and Network
- Citation to related publication:
- Smith, J., Gronewald, A. et al. Summary Report: Development of the Large Lake Statistical Water Balance Model for Constructing a New Historical Record of the Great Lakes Water Balance. Submitted to: The International Watersheds Initiative of the International Joint Commission. Accessible at https://www.glerl.noaa.gov/pubs/fulltext/2018/20180021.pdf, Large Lake Statistical Water Balance Model (L2SWBM). https://www.glerl.noaa.gov/data/WaterBalanceModel/, and Gronewold, A.D., Smith, J.P., Read, L. and Crooks, J.L., 2020. Reconciling the water balance of large lake systems. Advances in Water Resources, p.103505.
- Discipline:
- Science and Engineering
-
- Creator:
- University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology and CTEES
- Description:
- Reconstructed CT slices for a series of vertebrae from the second lumbar through first sacral of Sifrhippus grangeri (University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology catalog number UMMP VP 115547) as a series of TIFF images. Raw projections are not included in this dataset. The reconstructed slice data from the scan are offered here as a series of unsigned 16-bit integer TIFF images. The upper left corner of the first image (*_0000.tif) is the XYZ origin. In some publications this species is referred to as Hyracotherium grangeri.
- Keyword:
- Paleontology, Fossil, CT, Equidae, UMMP, University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology, Eocene, CTEES, and ef48281d-2984-86f2-2bee-052b26cf8da9
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- MacEachern, Mark P, Marti, Kyriaki C, Mylonas, Anastassios I, and Gruppen, Larry
- Description:
- The dataset includes most citations considered for inclusion in the scoping review. The citations are accessible in the Endnote (enlx) file, as well as the primary citation export files from each database. The literature search strategies are included for reproducibility and transparency purposes. See the methods of the article for more information.
- Keyword:
- Dental Education, Dentistry, Education, Humanities, and Scoping Review
- Citation to related publication:
- Marti KC, Mylonas AI, MacEachern M, Gruppen L. (2019). Humanities in predoctoral dental education: A scoping review. Journal of Dental Education, 83(10), 1174-1198. DOI: 10.21815/JDE.019.126, http://www.jdentaled.org/content/83/10/1174.long, and https://doi.org/10.21815/JDE.019.126
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Valeriy Tenishev
- Description:
- This data represents examples of some applications of AMPS and illustrates the potential of the code for modeling various physical phenomena.
- Keyword:
- Monte Carlo, DSMC
- Citation to related publication:
- Tenishev, V., Shou, Y., Borovikov, D., Lee, Y., Fougere, N., Michael, A., & Combi, M. R. (2021). Application of the Monte Carlo Method in Modeling Dusty Gas, Dust in Plasma, and Energetic Ions in Planetary, Magnetospheric, and Heliospheric Environments. Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics, 126(2), e2020JA028242. https://doi.org/10.1029/2020JA028242
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Gradwohl, Kelsey M.
- Description:
- The data set includes one file: Dermatology Clerkship Chalk Talks Raw Dataset which is the raw data collected from the surveys. This raw data was then coded and scored with the following analysis. Objective knowledge questions were asked for each chalk talk which was scored by authors. A knowledge assessment score was calculated by adding the total number of points accumulated by the student, dividing it by the total number of points possible, and summarizing the score as a percentage. Pre- and post-talk knowledge assessment scores were compared for each chalk talk and for the entire curriculum using 2-tailed paired sample t-tests with statistical significance if p<0.05., Before and after each talk, students were asked how confident they felt differentiating conditions within each disease group. For the erythroderma and immunobullous talks, students were also asked how confident they felt working up the conditions. Answer choices were on a Likert scale ranging from 1 (not at all confident) to 5 (extremely confident). Pre- and post-chalk talk scores were summarized as means with standard deviations and compared using 2-tailed paired sample t-tests with statistical significance if p<0.05. , After each talk, students were asked about its efficacy in terms of enhancing their understanding of the diseases, providing a framework or approach to work-up, and facilitating interaction between student and teacher. Answer choices were on a Likert scale ranging from 1 (not at all effective) to 5 (extremely effective), and summarized as means with standard deviations. Students were asked for written feedback regarding what they liked about the talk and suggestions for improvement. Qualitative data were sorted into categories and scored by two independent raters (cohen's kappa =0.8)., and In the response Likert scale, "Not at all"=1, "Not so (much)"=2, "Somewhat"=3, "Very"=4, and "Extremely"=5.
- Keyword:
- Chalk talk, Dermatology clerkship, Dermatology education, Virtual learning, and Online learning
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Mukhopadhyay, Agnit, Daniel T Welling, Michael W Liemohn, Aaron J Ridley, Shibaji Chakrabarty, and Brian J Anderson
- Description:
- An updated auroral conductance module is built for global models, using nonlinear regression & empirical adjustments to span extreme events., Expanded dataset raises the ceiling of conductance values, impacting the ionospheric potential dB/dt & dB predictions during extreme events., and Application of the expanded model with empirical adjustments refines the conductance pattern, and improves dB/dt predictions significantly.
- Keyword:
- Space Weather Forecasting, Extreme Weather, Ionosphere, Magnetosphere, MI Coupling, Ionospheric Conductance, Auroral Conductance, Aurora, SWMF, SWPC, Nonlinear Regression, and dB/dt
- Citation to related publication:
- Mukhopadhyay, A., Welling, D. T., Liemohn, M. W., Ridley, A. J., Chakraborty, S., & Anderson, B. J. (2020). Conductance Model for Extreme Events: Impact of Auroral Conductance on Space Weather Forecasts. Space Weather, 18(11), e2020SW002551. https://doi.org/10.1029/2020SW002551
- Discipline:
- Engineering and Science
-
- Creator:
- R. Paul Acosta
- Description:
- In this study, the state-of-the-art isotope-enable global climate model (iCESM1.2) simulations of the middle Miocene and the early Eocene and Cenomanian were used to comprehensively investigate the climate forcing of paleogeography, Andean paleoelevation, global pCO2, and vegetation on the South American continent.
- Keyword:
- South America , Hydroclimate, Water isotope system, and Global climate modeling
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Umaña, María Natalia, Zambrano, Jenny, Weemstra, Monique, and Allen, Dave
- Description:
- The objective of this research was to improve our understanding of tree growth from underlying variation in leaf and root functional traits. This knowledge ultimately enhances our knowledge of the above- and belowground processes that are involved in structuring forest communities. To this end, we determine which, how and to what degree (combinations of) leaf and root traits influence growth rates across ten temperate tree species along a soil carbon (C) and N gradient growing at the Big Woods plot at the E.S. George Reserve, Pickney, MI. This plot is part of the Smithsonian Institution's Forest Global Earth Observatory (ForestGEO) global network of forest research sites. https://forestgeo.si.edu/ and This dataset contains data on the leaf and root traits of several individuals from tree species, as well as on the soil properties at the Big Woods plots at the E.S. George Reserve, Pickney, MI. Data were collected in June 2019, and used to explain and predict the growth rates of the trees at Big Woods. [Growth data were obtained from Allen et al., 2019, https://doi.org/10.7302/wx55-kt18]. Each file contains data on leaf traits, root traits, and soil properties. Trait data are presented per individual tree for each of the 10 study species. Soil data are represented per soil sample, with four soil samples collected per subplot throughout the Big Woods plot (see legend, and publication for explanation). Descriptions and units per variable/column are provided in the legend tab in each file.
- Keyword:
- ecology, forests, Michigan, ForestGEO, Big Woods, Roots, Leaves, Tree growth, and Forest soils
- Citation to related publication:
- M. Weemstra, J. Zambrano, D. Allen, MN Umaña. (In press) Tree growth increases through opposing above- and belowground resource strategies. Journal of Ecology. https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2745.13729
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Nunley, Hayden, Nagashima, Mikiko, Martin, Kamirah, Lorenzo Gonzalez, Alcides, Suzuki, Sachihiro C., Norton, Declan A., Wong, Rachel O. L., Raymond, Pamela A., and Lubensky, David K.
- Description:
- This dataset contains images of UV cone nuclei near the retinal margin in live fish. These UV cones express a transgenic fluorescent reporter (that is nuclear-localized and photoconvertible). The most important images in this dataset are: Zoomed-out (1X magnification) images immediately after photoconversion Zoomed-out (1X magnification) images two to four days after photoconversion In the images immediately after photoconversion, we check if the row orientation rotates by more than a certain amount (10 degrees, 12 degrees, 14 degrees, etc.) at the retinal margin. If so, we call the region coinciding with this domain rotation an existing grain boundary. We, then, check where new Y-junctions are incorporated (by the time of later imaging) to see if they are preferentially incorporated near existing grain boundaries.
- Keyword:
- zebrafish cone mosaic, topological defects, tissue patterning, grain boundaries, and photoconversion
- Citation to related publication:
- Nunley, H., Nagashima, M., Martin, K., Gonzalez, A. L., Suzuki, S. C., Norton, D. A., Wong, R. O. L., Raymond, P. A., & Lubensky, D. K. (2020). Defect patterns on the curved surface of fish retinae suggest a mechanism of cone mosaic formation. PLOS Computational Biology, 16(12), e1008437. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1008437 and Hayden Nunley, Mikiko Nagashima, Kamirah Martin, Alcides Lorenzo Gonzalez, Sachihiro C. Suzuki, Declan Norton, Rachel O. L. Wong, Pamela A. Raymond, David K. Lubensky. Defect patterns on the curved surface of fish retinae suggest mechanism of cone mosaic formation. bioRxiv 806679; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/806679
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Zhou, Hongyang
- Description:
- The largest moon in the solar system, Ganymede, is the only moon known to possess a strong intrinsic magnetic field and a corresponding magnetosphere. Using the latest version of Space Weather Modeling Framework (SWMF), we study the upstream plasma interactions and dynamics in this sub-Alfvenic system. Results from the Hall MHD and the coupled MHD with embedded Particle-in-Cell (MHD-EPIC) models are compared. We find that under steady upstream conditions, magnetopause reconnection occurs in a non-steady manner. Flux ropes of Ganymede's radius in length form on the magnetopause at a rate about 2/minute and create spatiotemporal variations in plasma and field properties. Upon reaching proper grid resolutions, the MHD-EPIC model can resolve both electron and ion kinetics at the magnetopause and show localized non-gyrotropic behavior inside the diffusion region. The estimated global reconnection rate from the models is about 80 kV with 60% efficiency, and there is weak evidence of about 1 minute periodicity in the temporal variations due to the dynamic reconnection process.
- Keyword:
- MHD, PIC, Ganymede, and magnetosphere
- Citation to related publication:
- Zhou, H., Tóth, G., Jia, X., & Chen, Y. (2020). Reconnection-Driven Dynamics at Ganymede’s Upstream Magnetosphere: 3-D Global Hall MHD and MHD-EPIC Simulations. Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics, 125(8), e2020JA028162. https://doi.org/10.1029/2020JA028162
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Lamb, Abigail M.
- Description:
- This Work contains Supplemental File S3-1, Supplemental File S3-2, Supplemental Table S4-1, Supplemental Table S4-2, and Supplemental Table S4-3 from the dissertation entitled "Genetic Determinants of the Development and Evolution of Drosophila Pigmentation" by Abigail M. Lamb. Supplemental File S3-1 is entitled "Raw data measuring CHC abundance" and contains the measurements of cuticular hydrocarbons used for analysis in Chapter 3 of the dissertation. These data are meant to be read into the R code contained in Supplemental File S3-2, "R code used for analyzing CHC data" to reproduce the results reported in Chapter 3 of the dissertation. Supplemental Tables S4-1, S4-2, and S4-3 contain original phenotyping data, notes, and summary data from the miRNA overexpression and competitive inhibition experiments described in Chapter 4 of the dissertation.
- Citation to related publication:
- Lamb, A. M., Wang, Z., Simmer, P., Chung, H., & Wittkopp, P. J. (2020). Ebony Affects Pigmentation Divergence and Cuticular Hydrocarbons in Drosophila americana and D. novamexicana. Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution, 8. https://doi.org/10.3389/fevo.2020.00184
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- BIRDS Lab, U. Michigan
- Description:
- These data were produced in an attempt to characterize the turning and steering behaviors of 1-DoF multi-legged (hexpedal in this case) robots. Such turning behaviors require sliding contact points. All the data is provided in a single, large .csv.gz file (416256 rows); additional details and example code in the README
- Keyword:
- robot, multilegged, and steering
- Citation to related publication:
- BIRDS Lab, U. BigAnt v6 robot motion tracking data - RAW dataset [Data set], University of Michigan - Deep Blue Data. https://doi.org/10.7302/024q-kk06, Revzen, S., & Guckenheimer, J. (2008). Estimating the phase of synchronized oscillators. Phys. Rev. E, 78, 051907. http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.78.051907, and Dan Zhao and Shai Revzen 2020 Bioinspir. Biomim. 15 045001 https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-3190/ab84c0
- Discipline:
- Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Hinz, Isaac and Johnson, Jena
- Description:
- Laboratory experiments were conducted to compare iron precipitation under completely ferruginous conditions with solutions that contain a low amount of oxidized iron, which can be seen as a proxy for iron oxidation in the environment. and Some XRD files are from a copper source (Cu_XRD) and others are from a cobalt source (Co_XRD).
- Keyword:
- Iron silicates, Greenalite, and Archean
- Citation to related publication:
- Isaac L. Hinz, Christine Nims, Samantha Theuer, Alexis S. Templeton, Jena E. Johnson; Ferric iron triggers greenalite formation in simulated Archean seawater. Geology 2021; doi: https://doi.org/10.1130/G48495.1
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Nikolov, Denislav P, Srivastava, Siddhartha, Abeid, Bachir A, Scheven, Ulrich M, Arruda, Ellen M, Garikipati, Krishna, and Estrada, Jonathan B
- Description:
- Contemporary material characterisation techniques that leverage deformation fields and the weak form of the equilibrium equations face challenges in the numerical solution procedure of the inverse characterisation problem. As material models and descriptions differ, so too must the approaches for identifying parameters and their corresponding mechanisms. The widely-used Ogden material model can be comprised of a chosen number of terms of the same mathematical form, which presents challenges of parsimonious representation, interpretability, and stability. Robust techniques for system identification of any material model are important to assess and improve experimental design, in addition to their centrality to forward computations. Using fully 3D displacement fields acquired in silicone elastomers with our recently-developed magnetic resonance cartography (MR-u) technique on the order of ~20,000 points per sample, we leverage PDE-constrained optimisation as the basis of variational system identification of our material parameters. We incorporate the statistical F-test to maintain parsimony of representation. Using a new, local deformation decomposition locally into mixtures of biaxial and uniaxial tensile states, we evaluate experiments based on an analytical sensitivity metric, and discuss the implications for experimental design. This repository contains the acquired data and MRI processing code used in this work.
- Keyword:
- continuum mechanics, magnetic resonance, sensitivity, full-field deformations, physics inference, mechanics, mechanical engineering, and computational mechanics
- Citation to related publication:
- https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2204.03122
- Discipline:
- Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Crisp, Dakota N., Parent, Rachel, Nakatani, Mitsuyoshi, Murphy, Geoffrey G. , and Stacey, William C.
- Description:
- This data and scripts are meant to test and show that seizure onset dynamics can be modulated using anti-epileptic drugs. A zip file is included that contains all waveform data, MATLAB processing scripts, and metadata. The MATLAB scripts allow for visual review validation and objective feature analysis. The file includes various README files explaining the scripts and their relationships in greater detail.
- Keyword:
- Bifurcation, Epilepsy, Seizure, and Electrophysiology
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences, Engineering, and Science
-
An analysis of recorded and simulated SH wave reverberations in the upper mantle beneath the USArray
- Creator:
- Meichen Liu
- Description:
- We use waveform data from the USArray and spectral-element method synthetics for 3-D seismic models. The recorded waveform data are downloaded from Incorporated Research Institutions for Seismology (IRIS) which is open to everyone. The synthetic waveform data are generated by the SPECMFEM3D_Globe software that was downloaded from the Computational Infrastructure for Geodynamics ( https://geodynamics.org/). This dataset includes the scripts we use to automatically download data from IRIS, the selection of data, and the application of the CRP method. In doing this, we use the TauP toolkit which is free to download ( https://www.seis.sc.edu/taup/) to compute the travel time.
- Keyword:
- seismology
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Boyle, Kyle, University of Michigan Transportation Research Institute and Hu, Jingwen, University of Michigan Transportation Research Institute
- Description:
- This set of Madymo models were setup with a convertible seat and the HIII 3YO child ATD model. Both FMVSS 213 and captain chair were simulated with varied vehicle interior (sedan vs. minivan) and car seat installation methods (LATCH vs. 3pt belt). Although the models provided here only represent the frontal crash condition, simulations with a wide range of impact directions can be simulated.
- Keyword:
- Occupant protection, Child passenger safety, and Child seat model
- Discipline:
- Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Jeffrey Heath
- Description:
- fieldwork in Bonosso village, Côte d’Ivoire, chiefly 2016-19. See "readme" file for description of the materials.
- Keyword:
- Pere language
- Citation to related publication:
- Heath, Jeffrey, & Tioté, Brahima. (2019). A grammar of Pere (Bere, Mbre) of Côte d'Ivoire. Zenodo. http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3346581
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Liu, Meichen
- Description:
- The Brune source model is widely used in studies of complex earthquakes with multiple episodes of high moment release (i.e., multiple subevents). In this study, we investigate how corner frequency estimates of earthquakes with multiple subevents are biased if they are based on the Brune source model. By assuming complex sources as a sum of multiple Brune sources, we analyze 1,640 source time functions (STFs) of Mw 5.5-8.0 earthquakes in the SCARDEC catalog to estimate the corner frequencies, onset times, and seismic moments of subevents. We identify more subevents for strike-slip earthquakes than dip-slip earthquakes, and the number of resolvable subevents increases with magnitude. We find that earthquake corner frequency correlates best with the corner frequency of the subevent with the highest moment release (i.e., the largest subevent). This suggests that, when the Brune model is used, the estimated corner frequency and therefore the stress drop of a complex earthquake is determined primarily by the largest subevent rather than the total rupture area. and Our results imply that the stress variation of asperities, rather than the average stress change of the whole fault, contributes to the large variance of stress drop estimates.
- Citation to related publication:
- Meichen Liu, Yihe Huang, Jeroen Ritsema. 2021. Characterizing Multi-Subevent Earthquakes Using the Brune Source Model [Preprint]. https://essoar.org (2021) DOI: doi.org/10.1002/essoar.10507564.1
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Saylor, Kate M., Hicks, Patrice M., Kang, Linda, Stagg, Brian C., Newman-Casey, Paula-Anne, and Woodward, Maria A.
- Description:
- The search data supports a scoping literature review project on Loss to follow-up barriers in care for Cornea Ulcers and Glaucoma. The data included are the reproducible search strategies (txt file) and the exported results of all citations from all databases (txt, ris, and.nbib files). Both the original search files and updated search files have been included in the deposit.
- Keyword:
- Cornea, Glaucoma, Loss to follow, and ophthalmology
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Nunley, Hayden, Nagashima, Mikiko, Martin, Kamirah, Lorenzo Gonzalez, Alcides, Suzuki, Sachihiro C., Norton, Declan A., Wong, Rachel O. L., Raymond, Pamela A., and Lubensky, David K.
- Description:
- This dataset is composed of eight flat-mounted (dissected and fixed) retinae from juvenile and adult zebrafish. Rows of UV cones have been traced in each retina; additionally, we have identified locations of Y-junctions (row insertions). Also included is MATLAB code for calculating which Y-junctions belong to grain boundaries. Please see the readme file for a description of included codes and image files.
- Keyword:
- zebrafish cone mosaic, topological defects, tissue patterning, and grain boundaries
- Citation to related publication:
- Nunley, H., Nagashima, M., Martin, K., Gonzalez, A. L., Suzuki, S. C., Norton, D. A., Wong, R. O. L., Raymond, P. A., & Lubensky, D. K. (2020). Defect patterns on the curved surface of fish retinae suggest a mechanism of cone mosaic formation. PLOS Computational Biology, 16(12), e1008437. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1008437 and Hayden Nunley, Mikiko Nagashima, Kamirah Martin, Alcides Lorenzo Gonzalez, Sachihiro C. Suzuki, Declan Norton, Rachel O. L. Wong, Pamela A. Raymond, David K. Lubensky. Defect patterns on the curved surface of fish retinae suggest mechanism of cone mosaic formation. bioRxiv 806679; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/806679
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Lori, Jody r, Moyer, Cheryl A, Perosky, Joseph E, and University of Michigan, School of Nursing
- Description:
- This study used a convergent parallel mixed methods design that included qualitative data in the form of focus group discussions (FGDs), individual interviews, quantitative data retrieved from logbook reviews, and geo-location data collected through geographic information systems (GIS). Focus group discussions were conducted with community members, including chiefs, community leaders, women of reproductive age, traditional birth attendants (TBAs), women currently staying at a MWH, and male partners. Individual interviews were conducted with healthcare providers (midwives, registered nurses, and officers in charge) providing services at the rural primary healthcare facilities associated with a MWH. Logbook registries at rural health facilities with a MWH were reviewed to capture MWH usage. Additionally, each MWH was geo-located for purposes of geo-visualization.
- Keyword:
- Maternity Waiting Homes and Liberia
- Citation to related publication:
- James, K.H., Perosky, J.E., McLean, K. et al. Protocol for geolocating rural villages of women in Liberia utilizing a maternity waiting home. BMC Res Notes 12, 196 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13104-019-4224-1 and Coley, KM, Perosky, JE, Nyanplu, A, et al. Acceptability and feasibility of insect consumption among pregnant women in Liberia. Matern Child Nutr. 2020; 16:e12990. https://doi.org/10.1111/mcn.12990
- Discipline:
- International Studies
-
- Creator:
- Regoli, Leonardo H.
- Description:
- The research analyzed the response of nine PNI RM3100 magnetometers to radiation doses expected during a Europa lander mission. The radiation levels are drawn from the Europa Lander Science Definition Team report ( https://europa.nasa.gov/resources/58/europa-lander-study-2016-report). The sensors were tested up to a total ionization dose (TID) level of 500 kRad.
- Keyword:
- Magnetometer, Magneto-inductive, Europa, and Radiation
- Citation to related publication:
- Regoli, L. H., Moldwin, M. B., Raines, C., Nordheim, T. A., Miller, C. A., Carts, M., and Pozzi, S. A.: Radiation tolerance of the PNI RM3100 magnetometer for a Europa lander mission, Geosci. Instrum. Method. Data Syst., 9, 499–507, https://doi.org/10.5194/gi-9-499-2020, 2020.
- Discipline:
- Science and Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Saylor, Kate M., Sirihorachai, Rattima , and Manojlovich, Milisa
- Description:
- The search data supports a literature review project on counting interventions to reduce the incidence of retained surgical instruments. The data included in the dataset are the reproducible search strategies (txt file) and the exported results of all citations from all databases (txt, ris, and.nbib files). These searches and exported result files contain all citations originating from the database searches that were considered for inclusion.
- Keyword:
- literature search , retained surgical instruments, counting, and nursing
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Sean Sharp
- Description:
- Coastal wetlands intercept significant amounts of nitrogen (N) from watersheds, especially when surrounding land cover is dominated by agriculture and urban development. Through plant uptake, soil immobilization, and denitrification wetlands can remove excess N from flow through water sources and mitigate eutrophication of connected aquatic ecosystems. Excess N can also change plant community composition in wetlands, including communities threatened by invasive species. Understanding how variable hydrology and N loading impact wetland N removal and community composition can help attain desired management outcomes, including optimizing N removal and/or preventing invasion by non-natives. By using a dynamic, process-based ecosystem simulation model, we are able to simulate various levels of hydrology and N loading that would otherwise be difficult to manipulate. We investigate the effects of hydroperiod, hydrologic residence time, N loading, and the NH4+:NO3- ratio on both N removal and the invasion success of two non-native species (Typha x glauca or Phragmites australis) in temperate freshwater coastal wetlands using Mondrian, a process-based, wetland ecosystem simulation model. We found that when residence time increased, annual N removal increased up to 10-fold while longer hydroperiods also increased N removal, but only when residence time was >10 days and N loading was >30 g N m-2 y-1. N removal efficiency also increased with increasing residence time and hydroperiod, but was less affected by N loading. However, longer hydrologic residence time increased vulnerability of wetlands to invasion by both invasive plants at low to medium N loading rates where native communities are typically more resistant to invasion. This suggests a potential tradeoff between ecosystem services related to nitrogen removal and wetland invasibility. These results help elucidate complex interactions of community composition, N loading and hydrology on N removal, helping managers to prioritize N removal when N loading is high or controlling plant invasion in more vulnerable wetlands.
- Keyword:
- Mondrian, Simulation model, Coastal wetlands, Invasive species, and Ecosystem modeling
- Citation to related publication:
- Currie, W. S., Goldberg, D. E., Martina, J., Wildova, R., Farrer, E., & Elgersma, K. J. (2014). Emergence of nutrient-cycling feedbacks related to plant size and invasion success in a wetland community–ecosystem model. Ecological Modelling, 282, 69–82. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2014.01.010
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- BIRDS Lab, U. Michigan
- Description:
- These data were produced for ARO W911NF-14-1-0573 "Morphologically Modulated Dynamics" and ARO MURI W911NF-17-1-0306 "From Data-Driven Operator Theoretic Schemes to Prediction, Inference, and Control of Systems" to explore the trade-offs between various oscillator coupling models in modeling multilegged locomotion of Multipod robots with 6,8,10 and 12 legs. The data is stored in .csv.gz files, one file for each robot morphology. Details of how to run the processing code on the raw dataset to generate the processed files found here, as well as example code for loading the data found here, are in the README. This dataset is self contained and can be used on its own without running any of the provided code.
- Citation to related publication:
- Zhao, D. & Revzen, S. Multi-legged steering and slipping with low DoF hexapod robots Bioinspiration & biomimetics, 2020, 15, 045001 https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-3190/ab84c0, Zhao, D. Ph.D. Thesis "Locomotion of low-DOF multi-legged robots" University of Michigan 2021 https://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/handle/2027.42/169985, and BIRDS Lab Multipod robot motion tracking data - RAW data, doi:10.7302/m05a-0d90
- Discipline:
- Engineering and Science
-
- Creator:
- Agnit Mukhopadhyay
- Description:
- - A semi-physical global modeling approach is used to estimate diffuse & discrete sources of auroral precipitation during the Galaxy15 event. - Diffuse sources contribute 74% of the total auroral power. Discrete sources are strongly driven by activity and can contribute up to 61%. - Broadband precipitation contributes 31% of the auroral Pedersen conductance playing a significant role in ionospheric electrodynamics.
- Discipline:
- Science and Engineering
-
- Creator:
- MacEachern, M. P. , Woolen, S. A., Shankar, P. R., Gagnier, J. J., Singer, L., and Davenport, M. S.
- Description:
- The intent of the project to identify all relevant studies and data related to the topic. There are searches for the following databases: Ovid MEDLINE, Elsevier Embase, Clarivate Web of Science, and Wiley Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials. The searches yielded 2700 citations after duplicates were removed in Endnote X8.
- Keyword:
- Systematic review, Meta-analysis, Radiology, Gadolinium, Chronic kidney disease, and Literature searches
- Citation to related publication:
- Woolen, S. A., Shankar, P. R., Gagnier, J. J., MacEachern, M. P., Singer, L., & Davenport, M. S. (2020). Risk of Nephrogenic Systemic Fibrosis in Patients With Stage 4 or 5 Chronic Kidney Disease Receiving a Group II Gadolinium-Based Contrast Agent: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis. JAMA internal medicine, 180(2), 223–230. https://doi.org/10.1001/jamainternmed.2019.5284
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
Dataset: Models generated for the bioinformatic analysis of MPER/protein fusions binding to antibody
- Creator:
- Bylund, Tatsiana, Chuang, Gwo-Yu, Kwong, Peter, Lai, Yen-Ting, McIlwain, Benjamin, and Stockbridge, Randy B.
- Description:
- This project evaluated the binding of antibody fragments to membrane proteins fused to a short epitope sequence (“MPER”). This dataset includes atomic coordinates (.pdb files) for bioinformatic models of antibody fragment binding to an MPER epitope – membrane protein fusion.
- Keyword:
- MPER, cryo-EM fiducial, crystallography chaperone, and small membrane protein
- Citation to related publication:
- McIlwain, B. C., Erwin, A. L., Davis, A. R., Ben Koff, B., Chang, L., Bylund, T., Chuang, G.-Y., Kwong, P. D., Ohi, M. D., Lai, Y.-T., & Stockbridge, R. B. (2021). N-terminal Transmembrane-Helix Epitope Tag for X-ray Crystallography and Electron Microscopy of Small Membrane Proteins. Journal of Molecular Biology, 166909. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmb.2021.166909
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Malhotra, Garima and Ridley, Aaron
- Description:
- This research aims to understand the importance of lower thermospheric atomic oxygen on the upper thermosphere. O number densities between 95-100 km from WACCM-X are much closer to the observations from SABER instrument on TIMED satellite as compared to those from MSIS. We show in this study that the correction of the lower boundary atomic oxygen yields better agreement between GITM and GUVI O/N2 in the upper thermosphere .
- Keyword:
- Lower Thermosphere Atomic Oxygen, Thermospheric Dynamics, Thermospheric composition and mixing, Lower-Upper Thermosphere Vertical Coupling, GITM - WACCMX coupling, and Global Ionosphere Thermosphere Model
- Citation to related publication:
- Malhotra, G., Ridley, A. J., Marsh, D. R., Wu, C., Paxton, L. J., & Mlynczak, M. G. (2020). Impacts of Lower Thermospheric Atomic Oxygen on Thermospheric Dynamics and Composition Using the Global Ionosphere Thermosphere Model. Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics, e2020JA027877. https://doi.org/10.1029/2020JA027877
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Hemphill, Libby
- Description:
- Social media data offer a rich resource for researchers interested in public health, labor economics, politics, social behaviors, and other topics. However, scale and anonymity mean that researchers often cannot directly get permission from users to collect and analyze their social media data. This article applies the basic ethical principle of respect for persons to consider individuals’ perceptions of acceptable uses of data. We compare individuals' perceptions of acceptable uses of other types of sensitive data, such as health records and individual identifiers, with their perceptions of acceptable uses of social media data. Our survey of 1018 people shows that individuals think of their social media data as moderately sensitive and agree that it should be protected. Respondents are generally okay with researchers using their data in social research but prefer that researchers clearly articulate benefits and seek explicit consent before conducting research. We argue that researchers must ensure that their research provides social benefits worthy of individual risks and that they must address those risks throughout the research process.
- Keyword:
- social media, data ethics, and data reuse
- Discipline:
- Social Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Niemi, Nathan A. and Abbey, Alyssa L.
- Description:
- These data were produced in the scope of research into the timing, rate, and magnitude of extensional exhumation along the length of the Rio Grande Rift in Colorado and New Mexico. The low-temperature (apatite and zircon (U-Th)/He) thermochronometric ages presented in this data set are sensitive to near-surface temperatures (~80C and 180C, respectively) and record the progressive exhumation of the rock mass from which the samples were collected towards the Earth's surface. These thermochronometric ages, and the differences between them, provide insight into the absolute timing, exhumation rate and total magnitude of exhumation on the normal faults that bound the Rio Grande Rift. and The QTQt program mentioned (Version QTQt64R5.6.2a was used for the data presented in this deposit) is not openly available for download, but is described in the Gallagher 2012 publication referenced, and can be requested from its author. For more information on the request process and a user guide, see http://www.iearth.org.au/codes/QTQt/
- Keyword:
- thermochronology, helium dating, (U-Th)/He, Rio Grande Rift, New Mexico, Colorado, and extensional tectonics
- Citation to related publication:
- Abbey, A. L., & Niemi, N. A. (2020). Perspectives on Continental Rifting Processes From Spatiotemporal Patterns of Faulting and Magmatism in the Rio Grande Rift, USA. Tectonics, 39(1), e2019TC005635. https://doi.org/10.1029/2019TC005635
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Shane, Alexander
- Description:
- This data set was created with the purpose to study the electron pitch angle distributions on dayside closed crustal fields at Mars and to compare with theoretical predictions made by numerical modeling. Analyzing the plasma environment of the crustal fields was another point of study to determine if whistler waves can interact with high energy superthermal electrons.
- Keyword:
- Mars, superthermal electron, pitch angle distribution, and crustal magnetic field
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Attari, Ali
- Description:
- Please refer to the "README.txt" for more details., MATLAB R2018a (Mathworks, Natick, MA, USA) was used to process this data., and Excel (Microsoft Office) was used to store survey data on the comfort of both systems and also to provide absolute and relative intraobserver variablities for the DM device.
- Keyword:
- Digital Manometry
- Citation to related publication:
- Comparison of anorectal function measured using wearable digital manometry and a high resolution manometry system Attari A, Chey WD, Baker JR, Ashton-Miller JA (2020) Comparison of anorectal function measured using wearable digital manometry and a high resolution manometry system. PLOS ONE 15(9): e0228761. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0228761
- Discipline:
- Engineering, Science, and Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Saylor, Kate M., Arring, Noël M., Aduse-Poku, Livingstone, Jiagge, Evelyn, Walker, Eleanor, White-Perkins, Denise, Israel, Barbara, Hinebaugh, Analise, Harb, Rayya, DeWitt, Jillian, Molnar, Maxim, Wilson-Powers, Eliza, and Brush, Barbara L.
- Description:
- The search data supports a literature review project on Strategies to Increase Black Enrollment and Retention in Cancer Clinical Trials. This dataset includes the reproducible search strategies (txt file) and the exported results of all citations from all databases (txt, ris, and.nbib files). These searches and exported result files contain all citations originating from the database searches that were considered for inclusion.
- Keyword:
- African American, Cancer, Neoplasm, clinical trials, and Minority Recruitment
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- BIRDS Lab U. Michigan
- Description:
- This dataset contains the videos used for https://doi.org/10.7302/m05a-0d90 (the "raw" motion tracking dataset), and is intended to be unpacked into the same directory tree. The data were produced for ARO W911NF-14-1-0573 "Morphologically Modulated Dynamics" and ARO MURI W911NF-17-1-0306 "From Data-Driven Operator Theoretic Schemes to Prediction, Inference, and Control of Systems" to explore the trade-offs between various oscillator coupling models in modeling multilegged locomotion. The data were also used extensively in examining multi-contact slipping, in the studying the influence of number of legs on otherwise identical locomotion patterns, and in the use of geometric mechanics models for multilegged locomotion. Folder and file names encode the meta-data, with names following an informative naming convention documented in the README.
- Keyword:
- phase, multilegged, robot, and locomotion
- Citation to related publication:
- BIRDS Lab U. Michigan. BIRDS Lab Multipod robot motion tracking data - RAW dataset [Data set], University of Michigan - Deep Blue Data. https://doi.org/10.7302/m05a-0d90, Zhao, D. Ph.D. Thesis "Locomotion of low-DOF multi-legged robots" University of Michigan 2021 https://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/handle/2027.42/169985, and Zhao, D. & Revzen, S. Multi-legged steering and slipping with low DoF hexapod robots Bioinspiration & biomimetics, 2020, 15, 045001 https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-3190/ab84c0
- Discipline:
- Science and Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Tye, Alexander R, Niemi, Nathan A, Safarov, Rafig T, Kadirov, Fakhraddin A, Babayev, Gulam R
- Description:
- The Eastern Greater Caucasus is a mountain belt in western Asia that formed as an accretionary prism above an active subduction zone. Because of the bedrock exposure in the range, it offers a unique opportunity to research deformation processes in accretionary prisms, which are ubiquitous above the Earth's many subduction zones but are typically submarine and difficult to investigate. The data presented here result from field geologic mapping in several swaths roughly perpendicular to the mountain range that together span the entire range across strike. The data serve will serve as the basis for inference of the deep structural architecture of the range and characterization of the styles of deformation present in the range.
- Keyword:
- structural geology, Greater Caucasus, tectonics, geologic mapping, and accretionary prism
- Citation to related publication:
- Tye, A. R., Niemi, N. A., Safarov, R. T., Kadirov, F. A., & Babayev, G. R. (2021). Sedimentary response to a collision orogeny recorded in detrital zircon provenance of Greater Caucasus foreland basin sediments. Basin Research, 33(2), 933–967. https://doi.org/10.1111/bre.12499
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Allen, David N, Vandermeer, John, Dick, Christopher W, Perfecto, Ivette, and Burnham, Robyn J
- Description:
- These data are in the standard ForestGEO format. Each of the three censuses has its own text file. Within that file each row represents a stem measured in that census. Species information can be found in the species file. The personnel responsible for this work can be found in the personnel file. See the readme file for more information.
- Keyword:
- Forest ecology, Oak-hickory forest, Mesophication, and Invasive species
- Citation to related publication:
- Allen, D, CW Dick, RJ Burnham, I Perfecto, and J Vandermeer. The Michigan Big Woods research plot at the Edwin S. George Reserve, Pinckney, MI, USA. Occasional Papers of the Museum of Zoology. In review.
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Yadav, Rajeev, Widom, Julia R, Chauvier, Adrien, and Walter, Nils G
- Description:
- These data were generated to study the conformational dynamic of fluoride riboswitch as an isolated RNA and in presence of RNA polymerase at different transcript lengths.
- Keyword:
- Fluoride riboswitch, smFRET, and conformational dynamics
- Citation to related publication:
- Yadav, R., Widom, J.R., Chauvier, A. et al. An anionic ligand snap-locks a long-range interaction in a magnesium-folded riboswitch. Nat Commun 13, 207 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-27827-y
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Bougher, S. W. (CLaSP Department, University of Michigan)
- Description:
- The NASA MAVEN (Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution) spacecraft, which is currently in orbit around Mars, has been taking systematic measurements of the densities and deriving temperatures in the upper atmosphere of Mars between about 140 to 240 km above the surface since late 2014. Wind measurement campaigns are also conducted once per month for 5-10 orbits. These densities, temperatures and winds change with time (e.g. solar cycle, season, local time) and location, and sometimes fluctuate quickly. Global dust storm events are also known to significantly impact these density, temperature and wind fields in the Mars thermosphere. For the current project, the inert light species helium is used to trace the circulation patterns and constrain wind magnitudes throughout the Mars thermosphere. Presently, more than 6 years of Neutral Gas and Ion Mass Spectrometer (NGIMS) measurements of helium densities have been obtained by the MAVEN team (e.g. Elrod et al., 2017; 2021; Gupta et al., 2021). Measured helium distributions are compared to simulations from a computer model of the Mars atmosphere called M-GITM (Mars Global Ionosphere-Thermosphere Model), developed at U. of Michigan. Since the global circulation plays a role in the structure, variability, and evolution of the atmosphere, understanding the processes that drive the winds in the upper atmosphere of Mars also provides the needed context for understanding helium distributions and how the atmosphere behaves as a whole system. Three dimensional M-GITM simulations for the Mars four cardinal seasons (Ls = 0, 90, 180, 270, for Mars Year 33) were conducted for detailed comparisons with NGIMS helium and CO2 distributions (Gupta et al. 2021). The M-GITM datacubes used to extract these densities (plus winds) along the trajectory of each orbit path between 140 and 240 km, are provided in this Deep Blue Data archive. README files are also provided for each datacube, detailing the contents of each file. In addition, a general README file is provided that summarizes the inputs and outputs of the M-GITM code simulations for this study. Finally, a basic version of the M-GITM code can be found on Github at https:/github.com/dpawlows/MGITM.
- Keyword:
- Mars, MAVEN Spacecraft Mission, Mars Thermosphere, Helium Density Distributions, and Neutral Gas and Ion Mass Spectrometer (NGIMS)
- Citation to related publication:
- Gupta, N., N. V. Rao, S. W. Bougher, and M. K. Elrod, Latitudinal and Seasonal Asymmetries of the Helium Bulge in the Martian Upper Atmosphere J. Geophys. Res., 126, XXXX-XXXX. doi:10.1002/2021JEXXXXXX
- Discipline:
- Engineering and Science
-
- Creator:
- Vo, Thi and Glotzer, Sharon C.
- Description:
- The goal of this project is to develop a first principle driven approach for predicting the self-assembly behavior of entropically driven crystallization. We first developed a set of mean-field theoretical framework that captures the relevant energetic contributions to the assembly process and then evaluate relevant terms within our framework to determine the excess free energy of formation for each lattice (matlab/octave codes). We then validate theoretical predictions of relevant features like shape and bonding orbitals using standard MD simulations using HOOMD-Blue (simulation scripts). and This research was supported by the Office of the Undersecretary of Defense for Research and Engineering (OUSD(R&E)), Newton Award for Transformative Ideas during the COVID-19 Pandemic, Award number HQ00342010030.
- Keyword:
- Self-Assembly, Entropy, Thermodynamics, Simulations, and Theory
- Citation to related publication:
- Vo, T., & Glotzer, S. C. (2021). Microscopic Theory of Entropic Bonding for Colloidal Crystal Prediction. ArXiv:2107.02081 [Cond-Mat]. http://arxiv.org/abs/2107.02081
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Majeed, Tariq
- Description:
- We use our 1-D chemical diffusive model to quantify the physical processes necessary to interpret the day-side ionospheric measurements acquired with radio occultation techniques at the southern high-latitude region of Mars, where the crustal magnetic field is strong and near-vertical in orientation. To interpret the measured ionospheric structure at altitudes where plasma transport dominates, we find it is necessary to impose field-aligned vertical plasma drifts caused by the motion of neutral winds. The most interesting finding of this study is that both upward (between 110 m/s and 150 m/s) and downward (between -55 m/s and -120 m/s) drifts are required to maintain the topside Ne distribution comparable with the measured distribution. We also find that a fixed velocity boundary condition at the upper boundary with a sizeable upward ion velocity is needed to encounter any unexpected ion accumulation in the topside ionosphere to limit the Martian ion outflow. Given the complex nature of neutral dynamics and its relationship to plasma transport processes over magnetic anomalies, we consider that a simple model, such as we have developed, is still capable of yielding valuable insights relating to the neutral wind system at Mars.
- Keyword:
- Ionosphere of Mars
- Discipline:
- Science