Metabolic Effects of Marked Sodium Restriction in Hypertensive Patients: III. Skin Electrolyte Losses (open access)

Metabolic Effects of Marked Sodium Restriction in Hypertensive Patients: III. Skin Electrolyte Losses

The increasing use of prolonged Na restriction in the treatment of cardiovascular diseases in particular, makes study of long-term Na balance pertinent. With diets which contain 2 to 7 mEq. Na per day, combined urine and stool losses average 1 to 5 mEq. Na per day. Therefore, over an extended period the loss of electrolyte through the skin assumes importance. It is well known that marked sweating may be associated with considerable loss of NaCl through the skin. However, except for Benedict's classical study of an individual who fasted for one month, few data have been found on total minimal skin losses after Na restriction. In the first study Na was restricted for three days; in the second for fourteen days. Although Benedict's data have relevance to any work on the physiological effects of dietary restriction, it is obvious that total elimination of Na from a diet would be both dangerous and impractical.
Date: unknown
Creator: Dahl, Lewis, K., M. D.; Stall, Bernard, G., III, M. D. & Cotzias, George, C., M. D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Studies with Radiophosphorus in Drosophila. V. Quantitative Studies on the Phosphorus Balance of Adult Female Flies Feeding Upon Yeast (open access)

Studies with Radiophosphorus in Drosophila. V. Quantitative Studies on the Phosphorus Balance of Adult Female Flies Feeding Upon Yeast

A study was made of the movement of the phosphorus of yeast ingested by adult female Drosophila melanogaster. It was found that seventy to eighty percent of the phosphorus in yeast is extracted during its passage along the gut. An average of 90% of the extractable phosphorus of the meal has passed through the gut to other tissues by the time the digestive tract has emptied. Incorporation of medium P into eggs is very rapid. Eggs laid by week old females contain over thirty times as much exogenous phosphorus as endogenous phosphorus. It is demonstrated that a Drosophila melanogaster female may ingest daily an amount of yeast equal to two times its body weight. During the day an amount of phosphorus equal to the amount of phosphorus in the ingested yeast is lost. Twenty percent of the phosphorus lost is non-absorbed phosphorus of the meal. Fourteen percent of the phosphorus lost is in eggs. Sixty-six percent of the phosphorus lost is in forms other than eggs (probably in secretions of the salivary glands, digestive tract and malpighian tubes. The relation between endogenous phosphorus remaining and time follows a two phase system where the slow phase has a half time longer …
Date: unknown
Creator: King, R. C. & Wilson, Louise, P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Studies of the Radiation Syndrome in Drosophila Melanogaster (open access)

Studies of the Radiation Syndrome in Drosophila Melanogaster

Irradiation with approximately 60,000r kills fasted adult Drosophila melanogaster within one day and is lethal to 60% of the non-fasted flies within two weeks. Males die sooner than females. However, males show little or no modification of phosphorus turnover and maintain their weights at control values. In contrast, the rate of growth of irradiated females is slowed down, but the flies eventually reach weights in excess of controls. Irradiated females have fast and slow phases of phosphorus turnover with lengthened half-times. The phase systems of fast and slow half time are affected to different degrees by irradiation. However, irradiation does not affect the amount of phosphorus lost by each phase or the total phosphorus content of either sex of flies. The biological half time for phosphorus is 0.9 days for normal females, 8.0 days for irradiated females and 1.8 days for normal or irradiated males. Irradiation does not have an immediate effect upon the efficiency of phosphorus extraction from yeast by the gut. It does have an immediate depressing effect upon food intake and a depressing effect six days after treatment upon the oxygen consumption of the flies.
Date: unknown
Creator: King, R. C. & Wilson, Louise, P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cytogenetic Analysis of a Spontaneous Pre-Meiotic Mutation in Maize (open access)

Cytogenetic Analysis of a Spontaneous Pre-Meiotic Mutation in Maize

The paucity of pre-meiotic mutations in maize has prompted a cytogenetic analysis of one which occurred at the R locus. Cytogenetic tests of a spontaneous pre-meiotic R --> r mutation indicate that it is an autonomous mutation for the R locus. No evidence was found for a factor, other than the R locus, as a causal agent for the mutation. The mutant behaves as a stable r allele. No evidence was found for chromosomal alteration, pollen or transmission sterility. Thus, within the limits of the tests made, it must be called a point mutation.
Date: unknown
Creator: Dollinger, E. J. & Singleton, W. R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Computation of Soil Moisture at Brookhaven National Laboratory (open access)

Computation of Soil Moisture at Brookhaven National Laboratory

The high incidence of drought conditions in recent years has caused considerable concern among agriculturalists in eastern Long Island. A convenient method of computing soil moisture on a daily basis has therefore been sought in order to provide a quantitative estimate of present and past conditions.
Date: unknown
Creator: Brown, Robert, M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Preparation of Radioactive Iron from Tissue for Assay of Activity (open access)

Preparation of Radioactive Iron from Tissue for Assay of Activity

Estimation of radioactive iron in tissues from animals given this material has commonly involved the following: The iron is separated from wet-ashed tissue as the sulfide or oxide, or from dry-ashed tissue as a complex with isopropyl ether or cupferron. The iron is converted to the oxalate or citrate and then electroplated on copper as preparation for estimation of radioactivity.
Date: unknown
Creator: Klein, J., Raymond & Bianchi, Paul
System: The UNT Digital Library
Procedure for Annealing Operation (open access)

Procedure for Annealing Operation

By heating the normally cool areas of graphite to temperatures of 200°C or higher, it is evident that a substantial portion of the energy stored will be released. The physical dimension change which is associated with the radiation damage of graphite has been noted to partially recover under laboratory conditions when this amount of stored energy is released. This latter phenomenon is of prime interest in this operation. If a dimension recovery is noted on the gross structure, a solution to certain formidable operating problems may have been achieved.
Date: 1953
Creator: Powell, R. W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Instrumentation and Control of the Brookhaven Nuclear Reactor (open access)

Instrumentation and Control of the Brookhaven Nuclear Reactor

Safe startup and operation of the nuclear reactor requires neutron sensing instruments to cover a range of about 10^9. This coverage is obtained by a counting rate meter, a period meter, and a high level power indicator. At normal operating levels, the reactor is regulated by the high level power controller and protected by the high level trips. Emergency shutdown of the reactor can be initiated by any one of the 54 different conditions. Since these safety circuits are almost 100% "fail safe", careful design, good maintenance, and cautious operation have been necessary to avoid accidental shutdowns. The period trips and high level trips are provided in triplicate for safety and are coincidence-connected in pairs to guard against accidental shutdown. The use of suppressed-zero circuits has proved helpful. The theory of coincidence-connected trips is briefly discussed.
Date: unknown
Creator: Binns, J. E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Determination of Exchange Rates in Three-Compartment Steady-State Closed Systems Through the Use of Tracers (open access)

The Determination of Exchange Rates in Three-Compartment Steady-State Closed Systems Through the Use of Tracers

Previous analyses of the behavior of tracers in three-compartment systems are incomplete, are scattered throughout the literature and are expressed in a confusing variety of notations. This article purports to unify the previous contributions and further to develop the application of the mathematical basis involved in the interpretation of experimental data, with emphasis on the relationship between the behavior of tracers and the exchange rates of their carriers in steady-state systems.
Date: unknown
Creator: Robertson, J. S.; Tosteson, D. C. & Gamble, J. L., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Modification of General Eletric SPG Goniometer for Single-Crystal Neutron Diffraction Measurements (open access)

Modification of General Eletric SPG Goniometer for Single-Crystal Neutron Diffraction Measurements

A miniaturized goniometer for single-crystal neutron diffraction has been described previously. The present note describes a second single-crystal instrument, which consists of a modification of the commercially-available General Electric "SPG" X-Ray Spectrogoniometer. The specimen holder, incident slit system and Geiger counter mount is removed from the SPG instrument. A divided circle is mounted on the specimen holder table, and this circle is rotatable by means of a worn-gear. The worn and gear are cut so that one revolution of the worn corresponds to a 1° rotation of the divided circle. Divisions on the worn rotation knob are marked to 0.01°. The worn can be disengaged, for rapid rotation of the divided circle.
Date: unknown
Creator: Pepinsky, R. & Frazer, B. C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
0-2 kv Flash Tube Supplies (open access)

0-2 kv Flash Tube Supplies

In order to perform the various experiments with a bubble chamber, a high intensity flash tube is used. This report briefly describes the power supplies designed and constructed to power these lamps.
Date: March 15, 1962
Creator: Miller, D. M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Paper for Glasgow Conference on Nuclear Physics: Cosmotron Production of Heavy Mesons (open access)

Paper for Glasgow Conference on Nuclear Physics: Cosmotron Production of Heavy Mesons

One might expect that the Cosmotron would offer certain advantages over cosmic rays for the study of heavy unstable particles; provided, of course, that it can produce them. In the first place, the conditions under which they are produced could be controlled to a considerably greater extent. In the second place, it might be possible to arrange conditions under which they would be observed more abundantly, an actual beam of heavy mesons being the ideal situation.
Date: July 1954
Creator: Thorndike, A. M.
System: The UNT Digital Library