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This supplement to McCance and Widdowson's The Composition of Foods
5th Edition, provides authoritative and evaluated new nutrient
composition data for over 280 popular meat-based products and
dishes. The coverage reflects the changes to meat-based food now
consumed in the UK, and new nutritional information is given for
bacon and ham, burgers and grillsteaks, meat pies and pastries,
sausages and pates, as well as manufactured ready-meals,
healthy-eating options and dishes prepared in the home. The
easy-to-read main tables provide composition data (per 100g of
food) for up to 40 nutrients, and supplementary tables provide
information on vitamin D fractions and individual fatty acids. The
appendices detail percentage weight loss on cooking and provide a
comprehensive food index. In addition, the book contains recipes
for approximately 100 dishes. Meat Products and Dishes updates and
greatly extends all existing data for this food group from McCance
and Widdowson's The Composition of Foods 5th Edition and is a
unique source of new information. This book will have many
applications: in planning individual diets and menus, calculating
recipes, teaching and research, as well as being of appeal to the
layperson with an interest in diet and nutrition.
Meat, Poultry and Game forms a major update to The Composition of
Foods 5th Edition, providing new and extensive nutritional
composition data for 429 foods in this significant food group. It
provides new information on both raw and cooked meats, including
lamb, pork, beef, veal, chicken, turkey, duck, grouse, goose,
pheasant, pigeon, hare, rabbit, venison, heart, kidney, liver,
oxtail, sweetbread and tongue. Easy-to-read tables provide
composition data (per 100g of food) for up to 62 nutrients. The
main tables list data for 42 nutrients, and supplementary tables
include individual fatty acids (expressed per 100g of total fatty
acids), retinol fractions, and vitamin D fractions for selected
foods. There are also details on cooking methods, weight losses on
cooking meats, a listing of taxonomic and alternative food names,
and a food index. Meat, Poultry and Game forms an essential,
authoritative and up-to-date source of new nutrient data. It is an
essential reference source for professionals and students of food
science and nutrition and will also be of interest to the layperson
with interests in diet and nutrition.
This supplement to McCance and Widdowson's The Composition of Foods
5th Edition provides the only authoritative, up-to-date and
extensive compilation of nutrient composition data for a wide range
of miscellaneous foods available in the UK. Miscellaneous Foods
provides data on up to 80 nutrients for 418 foods, over half of
which have not been reported before. The coverage includes fats,
oils, sugars, preserves, confectionery, savoury snacks, alcoholic
beverages, soft drinks, soups, sauces, pickles and baby foods. The
composition data are expressed in the main tables per 100g or 100ml
of food for 45 nutrients, which include proximates, individual
sugars, fibre, total fatty acids, cholesterol, inorganic
constituents, vitamins, and alcohol for the alcoholic drinks.
Supplementary tables provide data for vitamin E fractions,
individual fatty acids and % alcohol by volume for selected beers
and wines. The book also includes new recipes for a significant
number of soups, sauces and confectionery items, and a
comprehensive index.
This supplement to McCance and Widdowson's The Composition of Foods
5th Edition presents in-depth information on the nutrient content
of fish, crustacea, molluscs, fish products and fish dishes
available in the UK. All previously published data have been
updated and revised, and Fish and Fish Products now provides
composition values for 308 foods, over 200 of which have not been
covered before. The new nutrient composition information includes
extensive individual fatty acid data. The foods covered in Fish and
Fish Products take account of increasingly popular varieties now
eaten, such as fresh sardines, red mullet and monkfish; fish
prepared by different cooking methods including grilling and
steaming; fish eaten by ethnic communities; fish available from
fish and chip shops; and the wide variety of fish products now
available such as seafood cocktail and taramasalata. The data
provided covers both raw and cooked fish, and the main tables cover
42 nutrients per food. Included are inorganics and trace elements,
vitamins, total fatty acids and cholesterol. Supplementary tables
cover individual fatty acids per 100 grams of food, individual
sugars, vitamin E fractions, retinol fractions, taxonomic and
alternative names. Fish and Fish Products is the authoritative
reference source for nutritionists, dietitians and others
interested in the nutritional composition of this food group. It is
the only source of complete and up-to-date compositional data
appropriate to the UK, much of which has never been published
before. This supplement will also be of interest to those in other
countries whose diet includes fish.
Diatomic molecules are important to the physical sciences because they are the basic building blocks of large molecules. Many of the principles which underly our understanding of chemical bonds in molecules were first developed by studying diatomic systems. Starting from fundamental principles, this book develops a theory that analyzes the energy levels of diatomic molecules and summarizes the many experimental methods used to study the spectra of these molecules in the gaseous state.
The Helios Prototype vehicle was one of several remotely piloted
aircraft funded and developed by NASA under the Environmental
Research Aircraft and Sensor Technology (ERAST) project, and
managed by NASA's Dryden Flight Research Center (DFRC). This
vehicle was a proof-of-concept, propeller-driven, flying wing built
and operated by AeroVironment, Inc. The vehicle consisted of two
configurations. One configuration, designated HP01, was designed to
operate at extremely high altitudes using batteries and
high-efficiency solar cells spread across the upper surface of its
247-foot wingspan. On 13 August 2001, this aircraft configuration
reached an altitude of 96,863 feet, a world record for sustained
horizontal flight by a winged aircraft. The other configuration,
designated HP03, was designed for long-duration flight. The plan
was to use the solar cells to power the vehicle's electric motors
and subsystems during the day and to use a modified commercial
hydrogen-air fuel cell system for use during the night. The vehicle
was also equipped with batteries as a backup source of power. The
aircraft design used wing dihedral, engine power, elevator control
surfaces, and a stability augmentation and control system to
provide aerodynamic stability and control. On 26 June 2003, HP03-2
took off at 10:06am local time from the Navy's Pacific Missile
Range Facility (PMRF) located on the island of Kauai, Hawaii. The
aircraft was under the guidance of AeroVironment, Inc. (AV)
ground-based mission controllers. At that time the environmental
wind conditions appeared to be within an acceptable envelope, and
consisted of a wind shadow over and offshore from PMRF, bounded to
the north, south, and above by zones of wind shear and turbulence
separating this region from the ambient easterly trade-wind flow.
However, compared to previous solar-powered flights from PMRF,
HP03-2 was subject to longer exposure to the low-level turbulence
in the lee of Kauai due to the shallower climb out trajectory. The
vehicle's longer exposure to Kauai's lee side turbulence and lower
shear line penetration were superposed on what the Board now
recognizes as greater airplane sensitivity to turbulence and may
have been compounded by the apparent narrow corridor between the
shear lines noted by the chase helicopter observer. At 10:22am and
10:24am, the aircraft encountered turbulence and the wing dihedral
became much larger than normal and mild pitch oscillations began,
but quickly damped out. At about 30 minutes into the flight, the
aircraft encountered turbulence and morphed into an unexpected,
persistent, high dihedral configuration. As a result of the
persistent high dihedral, the aircraft became unstable in a very
divergent pitch mode in which the airspeed excursions from the
nominal flight speed about doubled every cycle of the oscillation.
The aircraft's design airspeed was subsequently exceeded and the
resulting high dynamic pressures caused the wing leading edge
secondary structure on the outer wing panels to fail and the solar
cells and skin on the upper surface of the wing to rip off. The
aircraft impacted the ocean within the confines of the PMRF test
range and was destroyed. The crash caused no other property damage
or any injuries to personnel on the ground. Most of the vehicle
structure was recovered except the hydrogen-air fuel cell pod and
two of the ten engines, which sank into the ocean. The root causes
of the mishap include: Lack of adequate analysis methods led to an
inaccurate risk assessment of the effects of configuration changes
leading to an inappropriate decision to fly an aircraft
configuration highly sensitive to disturbances, and Configuration
changes to the aircraft, driven by programmatic and technological
constraints, altered the aircraft from a spanloader to a highly
point-loaded mass distribution on the same structure significantly
reducing design robustness and margins of safety.
This book provides a straightforward introduction to the spectroscopy of diatomic molecules (molecules with two atoms). A general introduction to the subject is provided, followed by a chapter covering the essential quantum mechanical tools needed to understand spectroscopy. Later chapters describe the various branches of spectroscopy covered in the book - rotational, rotational-vibrational, Raman, and electronic.
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