1,278 research outputs found
To be or not to be intrusive? The solution of parametric and stochastic equations - the "plain vanilla" Galerkin case
In parametric equations - stochastic equations are a special case - one may
want to approximate the solution such that it is easy to evaluate its
dependence of the parameters. Interpolation in the parameters is an obvious
possibility, in this context often labeled as a collocation method. In the
frequent situation where one has a "solver" for the equation for a given
parameter value - this may be a software component or a program - it is evident
that this can independently solve for the parameter values to be interpolated.
Such uncoupled methods which allow the use of the original solver are classed
as "non-intrusive". By extension, all other methods which produce some kind of
coupled system are often - in our view prematurely - classed as "intrusive". We
show for simple Galerkin formulations of the parametric problem - which
generally produce coupled systems - how one may compute the approximation in a
non-intusive way
Chronology of a Fortified Mississippian Village in the Central Illinois River Valley
Geophysical survey and excavations from 2010–2016 at Lawrenz Gun Club (11CS4), a late pre-Columbian village located in the central Illinois River valley in Illinois, identified 10 mounds, a central plaza, and dozens of structures enclosed within a stout 10 hectare bastioned palisade. Nineteen radiocarbon (14C) measurements were taken from single entities of wood charcoal, short-lived plants, and animal bones. A site chronology has been constructed using a Bayesian approach that considers the stratigraphic contexts and feature formation processes. The village was host to hundreds of years of continuous human activity during the Mississippi Period. Mississippian activity at the site is estimated to have begun in cal AD 990–1165 (95% probability), ended in cal AD 1295–1450 (95% probability), and lasted 150–420 yr (95% probability) in the primary Bayesian model with similar results obtained in two alternative models. The palisade is estimated to have been constructed in cal AD 1150–1230 (95% probability) and was continuously repaired and rebuilt for 15–125 yr (95% probability), probably for 40–85 yr (68% probability). Comparison to other studies demonstrates that the bastioned palisade at Lawrenz was one of the earliest constructed in the midcontinental United States
BenchmarX
Bidirectional transformation (BX) is a very active area of research interest. There is not only a growing body of theory, but also a rich set of tools supporting BX. The problem now arises that there is no commonly agreed-upon suite of tests or benchmarks that shows either the conformance of tools to theory, or the performance of tools in particular BX scenarios. This paper sets out to improve the state of affairs in this respect, by proposing a template and a set of required criteria for benchmark descriptions, as well as guidelines for the artifacts that should be provided for each included test. As a proof of concept, the paper additionally provides a detailed description of one concrete benchmark.FCT - Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology) within project FATBIT with reference FCOMP-01-0124-FEDER-0205
Air-Fuel Ratio Control of Spark Ignition Engines With Unknown System Dynamics Estimator: Theory and Experiments
This brief addresses the emission reduction of spark ignition engines by proposing a new control to regulate the air-fuel ratio (AFR) around the ideal value. After revisiting the engine dynamics, the AFR regulation is represented as a tracking control of the injected fuel amount. This allows to take the fuel film dynamics into consideration and simplify the control design. The lumped unknown engine dynamics in the new formulation are online estimated by suggesting a new effective unknown system dynamics estimator. The estimated variable can be superimposed on a commercially configured, well-calibrated gain scheduling like proportional-integral-differential (PID) control to achieve a better AFR response. The salient feature of this proposed control scheme lies in its simplicity and the small number of required measurements, that is, only the air mass flow rate, the pressure and temperature in the intake manifold, and the measured AFR value are used. Practical experiments on a Tata Motors Limited two-cylinder gasoline engine are carried out under a realistic driving cycle. The comparative results show that the proposed control can achieve an improved AFR control response and reduced emissions
The Grizzly, November 10, 1989
Wismer Staff Pleads Innocence: Verdict? • Museum Safe and Sound • Dinner for Visitors • Letters: Get to the Point!; GDI Tired of Greek Rights at U.C.; Pro-Life Prof Speaks for Babies • U.C.\u27s Very Vibrant Voices • Opinion: Global Warming • Promoting Condom Sensehttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/grizzlynews/1246/thumbnail.jp
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