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Full-Text Articles in Aerospace Engineering
The Plastics Collection Reference Packet, Special Collections Research Center
The Plastics Collection Reference Packet, Special Collections Research Center
Special Collections
This reference packet is an informational tool to support further research into the history of plastics—whether interested in companies, individuals within the plastics industry's history, historical plastics materials, essays, and more. All content featured within this packet was previously published on the former plastics.syr.edu website as part of a Syracuse University Libraries and Special Collections Research Center (SCRC) partnership established in 2007 with the Plastics Pioneers Association (PPA)—an association of plastics industry professionals interested in preserving the plastics industry's past.
Wearable Sensing System For Noninvasive Monitoring Of Intracranial Biofluid Shifts In Aerospace Applications., Jacob L Griffith, Kim Cluff, Grant M Downes, Brandon Eckerman, Subash Bhandari, Benjamin E Loflin, Ryan Becker, Fayez Alruwaili, Noor Mohammed
Wearable Sensing System For Noninvasive Monitoring Of Intracranial Biofluid Shifts In Aerospace Applications., Jacob L Griffith, Kim Cluff, Grant M Downes, Brandon Eckerman, Subash Bhandari, Benjamin E Loflin, Ryan Becker, Fayez Alruwaili, Noor Mohammed
Henry M. Rowan College of Engineering Departmental Research
The alteration of the hydrostatic pressure gradient in the human body has been associated with changes in human physiology, including abnormal blood flow, syncope, and visual impairment. The focus of this study was to evaluate changes in the resonant frequency of a wearable electromagnetic resonant skin patch sensor during simulated physiological changes observed in aerospace applications. Simulated microgravity was induced in eight healthy human participants (n = 8), and the implementation of lower body negative pressure (LBNP) countermeasures was induced in four healthy human participants (n = 4). The average shift in resonant frequency was -13.76 ± 6.49 MHz for …