16,725 research outputs found

    Computer program performs rectangular fitting stress analysis

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    Computer program simulates specific bulkhead fittings by subjecting the desired geometry configuration to a membrane force, an external force, an external moment, an external tank pressure, or any combination of the above. This program generates a general model of bulkhead fittings for the Saturn booster

    Dynamic Robust Transmission Expansion Planning

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    Recent breakthroughs in Transmission Network Expansion Planning (TNEP) have demonstrated that the use of robust optimization, as opposed to stochastic programming methods, renders the expansion planning problem considering uncertainties computationally tractable for real systems. However, there is still a yet unresolved and challenging problem as regards the resolution of the dynamic TNEP problem (DTNEP), which considers the year-by-year representation of uncertainties and investment decisions in an integrated way. This problem has been considered to be a highly complex and computationally intractable problem, and most research related to this topic focuses on very small case studies or used heuristic methods and has lead most studies about TNEP in the technical literature to take a wide spectrum of simplifying assumptions. In this paper an adaptive robust transmission network expansion planning formulation is proposed for keeping the full dynamic complexity of the problem. The method overcomes the problem size limitations and computational intractability associated with dynamic TNEP for realistic cases. Numerical results from an illustrative example and the IEEE 118-bus system are presented and discussed, demonstrating the benefits of this dynamic TNEP approach with respect to classical methods.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures. This article has been accepted for publication in a future issue of this journal, but has not been fully edited. Content may change prior to final publication. Citation information: DOI 10.1109/TPWRS.2016.2629266, IEEE Transactions on Power Systems 201

    Filtered derivative with p-value method for multiple change-points detection

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    This paper deals with off-line detection of change points for time series of independent observations, when the number of change points is unknown. We propose a sequential analysis like method with linear time and memory complexity. Our method is based at first step, on Filtered Derivative method which detects the right change points but also false ones. We improve Filtered Derivative method by adding a second step in which we compute the p-values associated to each potential change points. Then we eliminate as false alarms the points which have p-value smaller than a given critical level. Next, our method is compared with the Penalized Least Square Criterion procedure on simulated data sets. Eventually, we apply Filtered Derivative with p-Value method to segmentation of heartbeat time series

    Off-line detection of multiple change points with the Filtered Derivative with p-Value method

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    This paper deals with off-line detection of change points for time series of independent observations, when the number of change points is unknown. We propose a sequential analysis like method with linear time and memory complexity. Our method is based at first step, on Filtered Derivative method which detects the right change points but also false ones. We improve Filtered Derivative method by adding a second step in which we compute the p-values associated to each potential change points. Then we eliminate as false alarms the points which have p-value smaller than a given critical level. Next, our method is compared with the Penalized Least Square Criterion procedure on simulated data sets. Eventually, we apply Filtered Derivative with p-Value method to segmentation of heartbeat time series, and detection of change points in the average daily volume of financial time series

    Fast change point analysis on the Hurst index of piecewise fractional Brownian motion

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    In this presentation, we introduce a new method for change point analysis on the Hurst index for a piecewise fractional Brownian motion. We first set the model and the statistical problem. The proposed method is a transposition of the FDpV (Filtered Derivative with p-value) method introduced for the detection of change points on the mean in Bertrand et al. (2011) to the case of changes on the Hurst index. The underlying statistics of the FDpV technology is a new statistic estimator for Hurst index, so-called Increment Bernoulli Statistic (IBS). Both FDpV and IBS are methods with linear time and memory complexity, with respect to the size of the series. Thus the resulting method for change point analysis on Hurst index reaches also a linear complexity

    Cubic Dresselhaus Spin-Orbit Coupling in 2D Electron Quantum Dots

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    We study effects of the oft-neglected cubic Dresselhaus spin-orbit coupling (i.e., p3\propto p^3) in GaAs/AlGaAs quantum dots. Using a semiclassical billiard model, we estimate the magnitude of the spin-orbit induced avoided crossings in a closed quantum dot in a Zeeman field. Using these results, together with previous analyses based on random matrix theory, we calculate corresponding effects on the conductance through an open quantum dot. Combining our results with an experiment on conductance through an 8 um^2 quantum dot [D M Zumbuhl et al., Phys. Rev. B 72, 081305 (2005)] suggests that 1) the GaAs Dresselhaus coupling constant, γ\gamma, is approximately 9 eVA^3, significantly less than the commonly cited value of 27.5 eVA^3 and 2) the majority of the spin-flip component of spin-orbit coupling can come from the cubic Dresselhaus term.Comment: 4 pages plus supplementary tabl

    Differential cross sections at forward angles for hydrogen and helium particles from 62 MeV protons incident on Ni-60

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    Tabulated differential cross sections are presented for the production, at angles of 15, 20, 25, and 40 deg, of proton, deuteron, triton, helium-3, and alpha particles from Ni-60 bombarded by 62-MeV protons. Continuum cross sections are listed in about 1-MeV bins for energies above lower cutoffs which range from 4 to 15 MeV for the different types of exit particles. Only the integral cross section is known for a considerable energy range within each spectrum. The proton, deuteron, and alpha particle cross sections are the same in the continuum range region above the evaporation peak as those cross sections previously observed for Fe-54 and Fe-56, but the corresponding yield of tritons is higher from Ni-60 and Fe-56 than from Fe-54

    Detection of Change--Points in the Spectral Density. With Applications to ECG Data

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    We propose a new method for estimating the change-points of heart rate in the orthosympathetic and parasympathetic bands, based on the wavelet transform in the complex domain and the study of the change-points in the moments of the modulus of these wavelet transforms. We observe change-points in the distribution for both bands.Comment: proceeding of the workshop 'Fouille de donn\'ees temporelles et analyse de flux de donn\'ees' EGC'2009, january 27, Strasbourg, Franc

    Isolation of bis(copper) key intermediates in Cu-catalyzed azide-alkyne "click reaction".

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    The copper-catalyzed 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition of an azide to a terminal alkyne (CuAAC) is one of the most popular chemical transformations, with applications ranging from material to life sciences. However, despite many mechanistic studies, direct observation of key components of the catalytic cycle is still missing. Initially, mononuclear species were thought to be the active catalysts, but later on, dinuclear complexes came to the front. We report the isolation of both a previously postulated π,σ-bis(copper) acetylide and a hitherto never-mentioned bis(metallated) triazole complex. We also demonstrate that although mono- and bis-copper complexes promote the CuAAC reaction, the dinuclear species are involved in the kinetically favored pathway

    Tabulated cross sections for hydrogen and helium particles produced by 61-MeV protons on Fe56

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    Tabulated cross sections for hydrogen and helium particles produced by 61 MeV on iron 5
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