2,374 research outputs found
Modeling the evolution of natural cliffs subject to weathering. 2, Discrete element approach
The evolution of slopes subjected to weathering has been modeled by assuming Mohr-Coulomb behavior and by using a numerical approach based on the discrete element method (DEM). According to this method, soil and/or rock are represented by an assembly of bonded particles. Particle bonds are subject to progressive weakening, and so the material weathering and removal processes are modeled. Slope instability and material movement follow the decrease of material strength in space and time with the only assumption concerning the weathering distribution within the slope. First, the case of cliffs subject to strong erosion (weathering-limited conditions) and uniform weathering was studied to compare the results of the DEM approach with the limit analysis approach. Second, transport-limited slopes subject to nonuniform slope weathering were studied. Results have been compared with experimental data and other geomorphologic models from the literature (Fisher-Lehmann and BakkerâLe Heux). The flux of material from the slope is modeled assuming degradation both in space and time
Faculty Productivity in Supervising Doctoral Studentsâ Dissertations at Cornell University
Excerpt] Economists and academic administrators have long been concerned with issues of faculty productivity. For example, sets of studies have addressed whether faculty research productivity is related to faculty salaries, whether gender differences in faculty salaries remain after one controls for research productivity, and whether a negative association between faculty salary and seniority at an institution is due to universities having monopsony power or due to declining faculty research productivity with seniority.
To take another example, concern that the ending of mandatory retirement, which became effective for tenured faculty in January 1994, would lead to an aging nonproductive faculty has led other researchers to examine how faculty research and teaching productivity, the latter measured by undergraduate student evaluations, have varied over the life cycle. More recently, researchers studied whether declining research productivity is related to the acceptance of an offer for an early retirement incentive. Finally, other researchers have looked at how faculty research productivity varies across cohorts, finding that when a scientist enters the labor market has a substantial effect on his or her productivity over the life cycle and that more recently educated cohorts are not necessarily more productive than earlier cohorts. While some studies have looked at the implicit role that PhD student production has on the quality rankings of PhD programs, to our knowledge no studies have focused on how the distribution of PhD student supervisory responsibilities varies across faculty members at a university. Our study uses data on all PhDs produced during a 7-year period at Cornell University to illustrate how researchers can study whether the degree of inequality in PhD student supervision across faculty members within a broad field of study, varies across fields, as well as what the determinants are of differences in PhD student supervision responsibilities across individual faculty members within each broad field. Of particular concern to us, given the elimination of mandatory retirement, is how faculty membersâ productivity in the supervision of PhD students varies over their life cycles
Mesh sensitivity in discrete element simulation of flexible protection structures
The Discrete Element Method (DEM) has been employed in recent years to simulate flexible protection structures undergoing dynamic loading due to its inherent aptitude for dealing with inertial effects and large deformations. The individual structural elements are discretized with an arbitrary number of discrete elements, connected by spring-like remote interactions. In this work, we implement this approach using the parallel bond contact model and compare the numerical results at different discretization intervals with the analytical solutions of classical beam theory. Successively, we use the same model to simulate the punching test of a steel wire mesh and quantify the influence of a different number of elements on the macroscopic response
Video vehicle detection at signalised junctions: a simulation-based study
Many existing advanced methods of traffic signal control depend on information about
approaching traffic provided by inductive loop detectors at particular points in the road. But
analysis of images from CCTV cameras can in principle provide more comprehensive
information about traffic approaching and passing through junctions, and cameras may be
easier to install and maintain than loop detectors, and some systems based on video detection
have already been in use for some time.
Against this background, computer simulation has been used to explore the potential of
existing and immediately foreseeable capability in automatic on-line image analysis to extract
information relevant to signal control from images provided by cameras mounted in
acceptable positions at signal-controlled junctions. Some consequences of extracting relevant
information in different ways were investigated in the context of an existing detailed
simulation model of vehicular traffic moving through junctions under traffic-responsive signal
control, and the development of one basic and one advanced algorithm for traffic-responsive
control. The work was confined as a first step to operation of one very simple signalcontrolled
junction.
Two techniques for extraction of information from images were modelled - a more ambitious
technique based on distinguishing most of the individual vehicles visible to the camera, and a
more modest technique requiring only that the presence of vehicles in any part of the image
be distinguished from the background scene. In the latter case, statistical modelling was used
to estimate the number of vehicles corresponding to any single area of the image that
represents vehicles rather than background.
At the simple modelled junction, each technique of extraction enabled each of the algorithms
for traffic-responsive control of the signals to achieve average delays per vehicle appreciably
lower than those given by System D control, and possibly competitive with those that MOVA
would give, but comparison with MOVA was beyond the scope of the initial study.
These results of simulation indicate that image analysis of CCTV pictures should be able to
provide sufficient information in practice for traffic-responsive control that is competitive
with existing techniques. Ways in which the work could be taken further were discussed with
practitioners, but have not yet been progressed
Bistability and instability of dark-antidark solitons in the cubic-quintic nonlinear Schroedinger equation
We characterize the full family of soliton solutions sitting over a
background plane wave and ruled by the cubic-quintic nonlinear Schroedinger
equation in the regime where a quintic focusing term represents a saturation of
the cubic defocusing nonlinearity. We discuss existence and properties of
solitons in terms of catastrophe theory and fully characterize bistability and
instabilities of the dark-antidark pairs, revealing new mechanisms of decay of
antidark solitons.Comment: 8 pages, 10 figures, accepted in PR
Internationalisation of firm f: in-depth analysis of Luxembourg
Firm F is a Portuguese SME operating in the furniture industry manufacturing furniture through
in-house private collections, customer lines and custom projects. Using relevant literary
framework and analyses, a strategic analysis of the companyâs situation will be conducted. This
will enable the team to assess the health of the firm as well as its capabilities and weaknesses.
Furthermore, market and industry analysis will aim to point Firm F into a prosperous direction,
assessing the capacity for the firm to enter a market as well as the industrial factors.
In order to strategise the international expansion of Firm F, an analysis of five potential
countries was conducted, following this, a country selection process of five countries
(Netherlands, Sweden, Luxembourg, Singapore and China) was executed using an
amalgamation of variables and weights to identify the most suitable country to enter. This
resulted in a marketing plan succeeded by financial forecasts for the project to be viable in
every department.
The report also provides a comprehensive literature review on International Entry Mode
Selection and in-depth analysis of Luxembourg
Tracing a relativistic Milky Way within the RAMOD measurement protocol
Advancement in astronomical observations and technical instrumentation
implies taking into account the general relativistic effects due the
gravitational fields encountered by the light while propagating from the star
to the observer. Therefore, data exploitation for Gaia-like space astrometric
mission (ESA, launch 2013) requires a fully relativistic interpretation of the
inverse ray-tracing problem, namely the development of a highly accurate
astrometric models in accordance with the geometrical environment affecting
light propagation itself and the precepts of the theory of measurement. This
could open a new rendition of the stellar distances and proper motions, or even
an alternative detection perspective of many subtle relativistic effects
suffered by light while it is propagating and subsequently recorded in the
physical measurements.Comment: Proceeding for "Relativity and Gravitation, 100 Years after Einstein
in Prague" to be published by Edition Open Access, revised versio
Testing dark matter and geometry sustained circular velocities in the Milky Way with Gaia DR2
Flat rotation curves in disk galaxies represent the main evidence for large
amounts of surrounding dark matter. Despite of the difficulty in identifying
the dark matter contribution to the total mass density in our Galaxy, stellar
kinematics, as tracer of gravitational potential, is the most reliable
observable for gauging different matter components. This work tests the
flatness of the MW rotation curve with a simple general relativistic model
suitable to represent the geometry of a disk as a stationary axisymmetric dust
metric at a sufficiently large distance from a central body. Circular
velocities of unprecedented accuracy were derived from the Gaia DR2 data for a
carefully selected sample of disk stars. We then fit these velocities to both
the classical, i.e. including a dark matter halo, rotation curve model and a
relativistic analogue, as derived form the solution of Einstein's equation. The
GR-compliant MW rotational curve model results statistically indistinguishable
from its state-of-the-art DM analogue. This supports our ansatz that a
stationary and axisymmetric galaxy-scale metric could "fill the gap" in a
baryons-only Milky Way, suggestive of star orbits dragged along the background
geometry. We confirmed that geometry is a manifestation of gravity according to
the Einstein theory, in particular the weak gravitational effect due to the
off-diagonal term of the metric could mimic for a "DM-like" effect in the
observed flatness of the MW rotation curve. In the context of Local Cosmology,
our findings are suggestive of a Galaxy phase-space as the exterior
gravitational field of a Kerr-like source (inner rotating bulge) without the
need of extra-matter.Comment: Acknowledgments and references updated; 18 pages, 2 figures, improved
version after referee's comment
Rest frame optical properties of Lyman-alpha emitters from the HETDEX survey
HETDEX is a blind spectroscopic survey that is using use 78 fiber based integral field units to search for Lyman Alpha Emitting galaxies (LAEs) in the high redshift universe. HETDEX will discover about half a million LAEs to measure cosmological parameters of the young universe. An important ingredient to this is the precise quantification of the velocity offsets of the Lyα emission form their corresponding host systems. The latter can be measured from other optical emission lines.
Here we present the results from VLT/KMOS near-infrared spectroscopic follow-ups of 8 Lyman-alpha emitters (LAEs) at z = 2.1 - 2.5 in the COSMOS field discovered by HETDEX. Observations are performed in the HK band. For these eight LEAs we detect rest-frame optical nebular lines Hα, [OIII]λλ4960,5008, for three of them we detect HÎČ and for one [NII]λ6585. For non detected lines we measure a 1Ï upper limit. We derive LAEs physical properties, including the Lyα velocity offset, star formation rate (SFR), gas-phase metallicity. Seven LAEs show a velocity shifts of Lyα relative to the systemic redshift ranging between +126 and +367 km/s with an average of +281 km/s. By matching KMOS3D and HETDEX catalogs we measure velocity offsets for 2 more LAEs finding a mean velocity shift of +247 km/s. The velocity offsets we measure from these two independent samples are compatible to Song et al. (2014). The Lyα velocity offsets show a moderate correlation with the measured SFR. We show that Lyα radiative transfer effects influence the correlation function measurements at s < 10 Mpc/h
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