6,159 research outputs found
Water and erosion damage to coastal structures: South Carolina Coast, Hurricane Hugo, 1989
Hurricane Hugo hit U.S. Mainland on September 21, 1989
just north of Charleston, South Carolina. It was billed
as the most costly hurricane on record. The loss on the
mainland alone exceeded 7 billion dollars, more than
15,000 homes were destroyed and the loss of lives
exceeded forty.
This article documents one aspect of the multi-destructions
caused by the hurricane - the water and
erosion damage on water front or near water front
properties. A general damage survey was given first,
followed by assessment on the performance of various
engineered and non-engineering structures, on the major
factors contributing to failures. Conclusions were then
drawn with recommendations for future improvement. (26pp.
Effects of seawalls on the adjacent beach
This study was carried out to examine the effects of seawalls on the adjacent
beach by three dimensional model test. The results obtained from model test were
analyzed in terms of volumetric changes and shoreline and hydrographic change to
quantify the effects of seawalls.
The experiments were carried out in the wave basin of Coastal and Oceanographic
Engineering department, University of Florida. A model seawall was installed
on the test beach (19mxl4m) which was initially molded into equilibrium
shapes. During the test, hydrographic surveys were conducted at regular time intervals.
The main variable in the experiment is the wave angle. Cases both with
and without seawall were tested. (141pp.
On Two-Pair Two-Way Relay Channel with an Intermittently Available Relay
When multiple users share the same resource for physical layer cooperation
such as relay terminals in their vicinities, this shared resource may not be
always available for every user, and it is critical for transmitting terminals
to know whether other users have access to that common resource in order to
better utilize it. Failing to learn this critical piece of information may
cause severe issues in the design of such cooperative systems. In this paper,
we address this problem by investigating a two-pair two-way relay channel with
an intermittently available relay. In the model, each pair of users need to
exchange their messages within their own pair via the shared relay. The shared
relay, however, is only intermittently available for the users to access. The
accessing activities of different pairs of users are governed by independent
Bernoulli random processes. Our main contribution is the characterization of
the capacity region to within a bounded gap in a symmetric setting, for both
delayed and instantaneous state information at transmitters. An interesting
observation is that the bottleneck for information flow is the quality of state
information (delayed or instantaneous) available at the relay, not those at the
end users. To the best of our knowledge, our work is the first result regarding
how the shared intermittent relay should cooperate with multiple pairs of users
in such a two-way cooperative network.Comment: extended version of ISIT 2015 pape
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