1,500 research outputs found
Model-following control for an oblique-wing aircraft
A variable-skew oblique wing offers a substantial aerodynamic performance advantage for aircraft missions that require both high efficiency in subsonic flight and supersonic dash or cruise. The most obvious characteristic of the oblique-wing concept is the asymmetry associated with wing-skew angle which results in significant aerodynamic and inertial cross-coupling between the aircraft longitudinal and lateral-directional axes. A technique for synthesizing a decoupling controller while providing the desired stability augmentation. The proposed synthesis procedure uses the cncept of explicit model following. Linear quadratic optimization techniques are used to design the linear feedback system. The effectiveness of the control laws developed in achieving the desired decoupling is illustrated for a given flight condition by application to linearized equations of motion, and also to the nonlinear equations of six degrees of freedom of motion with nonlinear aerodynamic data
Tipificación en Gutierrezia (Asteraceae, Astereae)
During the course of the revision of the South American species of Gutierrezia, we have detected names that require typification. After the analysis of the protologues and the herbarium specimens, we designated eight lectotypes and one neotype for nine names of the Gutierrezia genus and we assigned the category of holotype to one specimen. A detailed discussion is provided for each case.Durante el transcurso de la revisión de las especies sudamericanas de Gutierrezia, hemos podido hallar nombres que requieren tipificación. Luego del análisis de los protologos y especímenes de herbario, hemos designado ocho lectótipos y un neótipo para nueve nombres del género Gutierrezia. Además, se asignó la categoría de hólotipo a un especimen. Se provee una discusión detallada para cada nombre
Model of the meniscus of an ionic liquid ion source.
A simple model of the transfer of charge and ion evaporation in the meniscus of an ionic-liquid ion source working in the purely ionic regime is proposed on the basis of order-of-magnitude estimates which show that, in this regime, _i_ the flow in the meniscus is dominated by the viscosity of the liquid and is affected very little by the mass flux accompanying ion evaporation, and _ii_ the effect of the space charge around the evaporating surface is negligible and the evaporation current is controlled by the finite electrical conductivity of the liquid. The model predicts that a stationary meniscus of a very polar liquid undergoing ion evaporation is nearly hydrostatic and can exist only below a certain value of the applied electric field, at which the meniscus attains its maximum elongation but stays smooth. The electric current vs applied electric field characteristic displays a frozen regime of negligible ion evaporation at low fields and a conduction-controlled regime at higher fields, with a sharp transition between the two regimes owing to the high sensitivity of the ion evaporation rate to the electric field. A simplified treatment of the flow in the capillary or liquid layer through which liquid is delivered to the meniscus shows that the size of the meniscus decreases and the maximum attainable current increases when the feeding pressure is decreased, and that appropriate combinations of feeding pressure and pressure drop may lead to high maximum currents
Field-Dependent Tilt and Birefringence of Electroclinic Liquid Crystals: Theory and Experiment
An unresolved issue in the theory of liquid crystals is the molecular basis
of the electroclinic effect in the smectic-A phase. Recent x-ray scattering
experiments suggest that, in a class of siloxane-containing liquid crystals, an
electric field changes a state of disordered molecular tilt in random
directions into a state of ordered tilt in one direction. To investigate this
issue, we measure the optical tilt and birefringence of these liquid crystals
as functions of field and temperature, and we develop a theory for the
distribution of molecular orientations under a field. Comparison of theory and
experiment confirms that these materials have a disordered distribution of
molecular tilt directions that is aligned by an electric field, giving a large
electroclinic effect. It also shows that the net dipole moment of a correlated
volume of molecules, a key parameter in the theory, scales as a power law near
the smectic-A--smectic-C transition.Comment: 18 pages, including 9 postscript figures, uses REVTeX 3.0 and
epsf.st
Higher-Derivative Boson Field Theories and Constrained Second-Order Theories
As an alternative to the covariant Ostrogradski method, we show that
higher-derivative relativistic Lagrangian field theories can be reduced to
second differential-order by writing them directly as covariant two-derivative
theories involving Lagrange multipliers and new fields. Despite the intrinsic
non-covariance of the Dirac's procedure used to deal with the constraints, the
explicit Lorentz invariance is recovered at the end. We develop this new
setting on the grounds of a simple scalar model and then its applications to
generalized electrodynamics and higher-derivative gravity are worked out. For a
wide class of field theories this method is better suited than Ostrogradski's
for a generalization to 2n-derivative theoriesComment: 31 pages, Plain Te
Gauge Fixing in Higher Derivative Gravity
Linearized four-derivative gravity with a general gauge fixing term is
considered. By a Legendre transform and a suitable diagonalization procedure it
is cast into a second-order equivalent form where the nature of the physical
degrees of freedom, the gauge ghosts, the Weyl ghosts, and the intriguing
"third ghosts", characteristic to higher-derivative theories, is made explicit.
The symmetries of the theory and the structure of the compensating
Faddeev-Popov ghost sector exhibit non-trivial peculiarities.Comment: 21 pages, LaTe
Mental Health and COVID-19 in University Students: Findings from a Qualitative, Comparative Study in Italy and the UK
Introduction: COVID-19 restrictions introduced several changes in university academic and social experience. Self-isolation and online teaching have amplified students’ mental health vulnerability. Thus, we aimed to explore feelings and perspectives about the impact of the pandemic on mental health, comparing students from Italy and the UK.
Methods: Data were collected from the qualitative portion of “the CAMPUS study”, longitudinally assessing mental health of students at the University of Milano-Bicocca (Italy) and the University of Surrey (UK). We conducted in-depth interviews and thematically analysed the transcripts.
Results: The explanatory model was developed from four themes identified across 33 interviews: anxiety exacerbated by COVID-19; putative mechanisms leading to poor mental health; the most vulnerable subgroups; and coping strategies. Generalised and social anxiety resulted from COVID-19 restrictions by being associated with loneliness, excessive time online, unhealthy management of time and space and poor communication with the university. Freshers, international students, and people on the extremes of the introversion/extroversion spectrum, were identified as vulnerable, while effective coping strategies included taking advantage of free time, connection with family and mental health support. The impact of COVID-19 was mostly related to academic issues by students from Italy, whereas to the drastic loss of social connectedness by the UK sample.
Conclusions: Mental health support for students has an essential role, and measures that encourage communication and social connectedness are likely to be beneficial
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