13,425 research outputs found
Vehicle test report: South Coast technology electric conversion of a Volkswagen Rabbit
The South Coast Technology Volkswagen Rabbit, was tested at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory's (JPL) dynamometer facility and at JPL's Edwards Test Station (ETS). The tests were performed to characterize certain parameters of the South Coast Rabbit and to provide baseline data that will be used for the comparison of near term batteries that are to be incorporated into the vehicle. The vehicle tests were concentrated on the electrical drive system; i.e., the batteries, controller, and motor. The tests included coastdowns to characterize the road load, maximum effort acceleration, and range evaluation for both cyclic and constant speed conditions. A qualitative evaluation of the vehicle was made by comparing its constant speed range performance with those vehicles described in the document 'state of the Art assessment of Electric and Hybrid Vehicles'. The Rabbit performance was near to the best of the 1977 vehicles
Characterizing small-scale migration behavior of sequestered CO2 in a realistic geological fabric
For typical reservoir conditions, buoyancy and capillary forces grow dominant over viscous forces within a few hundred meters of the injection wells as the pressure gradient due to injection decreases, resulting in qualitatively different plume migration regimes. The migration regime depends on two factors: the capillary pressure of the leading edge of the plume and the range of
threshold entry pressures within the rock at the leading edge of the plume. A capillary channel regime arises when these two factors have the same magnitude. Flow patterns within this regime vary from finger-like structures with minimal rock contact to back-filling structures with compact volumes of saturation distributed between fingers. Reservoir heterogeneity is one of the
principal factors influencing CO2 migration pathway in the capillary channel regime. Here we characterize buoyancy-driven migration in a natural 2D geologic domain (1 m × 0.5 m peel from an alluvium) in which sedimentologic heterogeneity has been resolved at sub-millimeter (depositional) resolution. The relevant features of the heterogeneity are grain size distribution, which determines the mean and range of threshold pressures and correlation lengths of threshold pressures in horizontal and vertical directions. The relevant physics for this migration regime is invasion percolation, and simulations indicate that CO2 migrates through the peel in a few narrow pathways which cannot be captured by conventional coarse-grid simulations. The storage
efficiency of the capillary channel regime would be low and consequently CO2 would also migrate greater distances than expected from models or simulations that neglect the capillary channel flow regime.Bureau of Economic Geolog
LUMIS Interactive graphics operating instructions and system specifications
The LUMIS program has designed an integrated geographic information system to assist program managers and planning groups in metropolitan regions. Described is the system designed to interactively interrogate a data base, display graphically a portion of the region enclosed in the data base, and perform cross tabulations of variables within each city block, block group, or census tract. The system is designed to interface with U. S. Census DIME file technology, but can accept alternative districting conventions. The system is described on three levels: (1) introduction to the systems's concept and potential applications; (2) the method of operating the system on an interactive terminal; and (3) a detailed system specification for computer facility personnel
Passive fetal monitoring sensor
An ambulatory, passive sensor for use in a fetal monitoring system is discussed. The invention is comprised of a piezoelectric polymer film, combined with a metallic mounting plate fastened to a belt, and electrically connected to a signal processing unit by means of a shielded cable. The purpose of the sensor is to receive pressure pulses emitted by a fetus inside an expectant mother. Additionally, the monitor will filter out pressure pulses arising from other sources, such as the maternal heart
Rolling balls and Octonions
In this semi-expository paper we disclose hidden symmetries of a classical
nonholonomic kinematic model and try to explain geometric meaning of basic
invariants of vector distributions
Generalised -manifolds
We define new Riemannian structures on 7-manifolds by a differential form of
mixed degree which is the critical point of a (possibly constrained)
variational problem over a fixed cohomology class. The unconstrained critical
points generalise the notion of a manifold of holonomy , while the
constrained ones give rise to a new geometry without a classical counterpart.
We characterise these structures by the means of spinors and show the
integrability conditions to be equivalent to the supersymmetry equations on
spinors in supergravity theory of type IIA/B with bosonic background fields. In
particular, this geometry can be described by two linear metric connections
with skew torsion. Finally, we construct explicit examples by using the device
of T-duality.Comment: 27 pages. v2: references added. v3: wrong argument (Theorem 3.3) and
example (Section 4.1) removed, further examples added, notation simplified,
all comments appreciated. v4:computation of Ricci tensor corrected, various
minor changes, final version of the paper to appear in Comm. Math. Phy
Self-Duality in D <= 8-dimensional Euclidean Gravity
In the context of D-dimensional Euclidean gravity, we define the natural
generalisation to D-dimensions of the self-dual Yang-Mills equations, as
duality conditions on the curvature 2-form of a Riemannian manifold. Solutions
to these self-duality equations are provided by manifolds of SU(2), SU(3), G_2
and Spin(7) holonomy. The equations in eight dimensions are a master set for
those in lower dimensions. By considering gauge fields propagating on these
self-dual manifolds and embedding the spin connection in the gauge connection,
solutions to the D-dimensional equations for self-dual Yang-Mills fields are
found. We show that the Yang-Mills action on such manifolds is topologically
bounded from below, with the bound saturated precisely when the Yang-Mills
field is self-dual. These results have a natural interpretation in
supersymmetric string theory.Comment: 9 pages, Latex, factors in eqn. (6) corrected, acknowledgement and
reference added, typos fixe
Somatisation and anger are associated with symptom severity of posttraumatic stress disorder in severely traumatised refugees and asylum seekers
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