2,129 research outputs found

    Three-dimensional structure of a low-Reynolds-number turbulent boundary layer

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    A low-Reynolds-number zero-pressure-gradient incompressible turbulent boundary layer was investigated using a volumetric imaging technique. The Reynolds number based on momentum thickness was 700. The flow was tagged with a passive scalar from two spanwise dye slots to distinguish between fluid motions originating in the inner and outer portions of the boundary layer. The resulting volumetric scalar field was interrogated using a laser sheet scanner developed for this study. Two- and three-dimensional time-dependent visualizations of a 50 volume time series are presented (equivalent to 17δ in length). In the outer portion of the boundary layer, scalar structures were observed to lie along lines in the (x, z)-plane, inclined to the streamwise (x-)direction in the range ±50°. The ejection of brightly dyed fluid packets from the near-wall region was observed to be spatially organized, and related to the passage of the large-scale scalar structures.Carl J Delo, Richard M Kelson and Alexander J Smit

    Proprioceptive perception of phase variability

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    Previous work has established that judgments of relative phase variability of 2 visually presented oscillators covary with mean relative phase. Ninety degrees is judged to be more variable than 0° or 180°, independently of the actual level of phase variability. Judged levels of variability also increase at 180°. This pattern of judgments matches the pattern of movement coordination results. Here, participants judged the phase variability of their own finger movements, which they generated by actively tracking a manipulandum moving at 0°, 90°, or 180°, and with 1 of 4 levels of Phase Variability. Judgments covaried as an inverted U-shaped function of mean relative phase. With an increase in frequency, 180° was judged more variable whereas 0° was not. Higher frequency also reduced discrimination of the levels of Phase Variability. This matching of the proprioceptive and visual results, and of both to movement results, supports the hypothesized role of online perception in the coupling of limb movements. Differences in the 2 cases are discussed as due primarily to the different sensitivities of the systems to the information

    Quantum noise induced entanglement and chaos in the dissipative quantum model of brain

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    We discuss some features of the dissipative quantum model of brain in the frame of the formalism of quantum dissipation. Such a formalism is based on the doubling of the system degrees of freedom. We show that the doubled modes account for the quantum noise in the fluctuating random force in the system-environment coupling. Remarkably, such a noise manifests itself through the coherent structure of the system ground state. The entanglement of the system modes with the doubled modes is shown to be permanent in the infinite volume limit. In such a limit the trajectories in the memory space are classical chaotic trajectories.Comment: 14 page

    The forces on a fish-inspired unsteady hydrofoil

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    The flow around an unsteady hydrofoil, undergoing simultaneous heaving and pitching motions which mimic the tail motions of carangiform fish (such as tuna), was investigated using simultaneous particle image velocimetry (PIV) and force measurement. These investigations were performed at Reynolds numbers, based on the foil chord length, in the range of 150

    A 331 WIMPy Dark Radiation Model

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    Recent observations suggest that the number of relativistic degrees of freedom in the early universe might exceed what is predicted in the standard cosmological model. If even a small, percent-level fraction of dark matter particles are produced relativistically, they could mimic the effect of an extra realistic species at matter-radiation equality while obeying BBN, CMB and Structure Formation bounds. We show that this scenario is quite naturally realized with a weak-scale dark matter particle and a high-scale ``mother'' particle within a well motivated 3-3-1 gauge model, which is particularly interesting for being consistent with electroweak precision measurements, with recent LHC results, and for offering a convincing explanation for the number of generations in the Standard Model.Comment: 10 pages,7 figures. Matches Published EPJC versio

    Quay voices in Glasgow museums : an oral history of Glasgow dock workers

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    Notes on oral history project commissioned by Glasgow museums about Glasgow dock workers

    Access to Justice: A Broader Perspective

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    Examining The Relationship Between Experiential Avoidance And Attentional Bias Using Eye-Tracking

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    Cognitive models of anxiety disorders propose that attentional biases serve as a key contributor to the development and maintenance of anxiety pathology, and a large body of research has accumulated demonstrating that anxious individuals exhibit consistent attentional biases for threat-relevant information. Recent research has also suggested that individuals with known cognitive vulnerabilities for anxiety disorders exhibit similar attentional biases for threat. Experiential avoidance (EA), or the unwillingness to experience uncomfortable cognitive, emotional, or sensory experiences, has been proposed to serve as a core vulnerability factor for emotional disorders in some recent models of psychopathology, and several lines of correlational and longitudinal research appears to support this assertion. Although preliminary research suggests that EA is characterized by biased processing, researchers have yet to examine the association between EA and attentional biases. Using eye tracking technology, the present study examined whether EA predicted attentional vigilance to, fixation on, and subsequent avoidance of negative-emotion and anxiety-related stimuli in 141 undergraduate students. Contrary to hypotheses, EA was not significantly related to any eye-tracking outcomes beyond a negative association with vigilance to neutral stimuli. Results are framed within the context of the anxiety attentional bias literature and directions for future research are discussed
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