4,064 research outputs found
Design of a magnetostrictive (MS) actuator
Several advanced technologies are introduced in automotive applications. Higher energy density and dynamic performance are demanding new and cost effective actuator structures. Magnetostriction (MS), change in shape of materials under the influence of an external magnetic field, is one of these advanced technologies. Good understanding of specific design constrains is required to define and optimized a magnetostrictive actuator. This paper presents parametrical analysis with magnetic simulation of a magnetostrictive actuator. Proposed actuator has been designed, and the performance has been evaluated on experimental rig. Strain, elongation of the shaft, of 1000ppm at 10Amp and a blocked force over 4500N has been achieved with shaft of 8mm diameter, made of Terfenol-D. Furthermore, the effect of pre-stress of the Terfenol-D shaft has been evaluated experimentally. The study shows that excellent features can be obtained by magnetostrictive materials for many advanced applications
Neonatal growth of Steller sea lion (Eumetopias jubatus) pups in Alaska
The growth rate of Steller sea lion (Eumetopias jubatus) pups was studied in southeast Alaska, the Gulf of Alaska, and the Aleutian Islands during the first six weeks after birth. The Steller sea lion population is currently stable in southeast Alaska but is declining in the Aleutian Islands and parts of the Gulf of Alaska. Male pups (22.6 kg [±2.21 SD]) were significantly heavier than female pups (19.6 kg [±1.80 SD]) at 1−5 days of age, but there were no significant differences among rookeries. Male and female pups grew (in mass, standard length, and axillary girth) at the same rate. Body mass and standard length increased at a faster rate for pups in the Aleutian Islands and the western Gulf of Alaska (0.45−0.48 kg/day and 0.47−0.53 cm/day, respectively) than in southeast Alaska (0.23 kg/day and 0.20 cm/day). Additionally, axillary girth increased at a faster rate for pups in the Aleutian Islands (0.59 cm/ day) than for pups in southeast Alaska v(0.25 cm/day). Our results indicate a greater maternal investment in male pups during gestation, but not during early lactation. Although differences in pup growth rate occurred among rookeries, there was no evidence that female sea lions and their pups were nutritionally stressed in the area of population declin
Guiding Leadership in the Development and Management of Organizational Culture A Case Study of an Organizational Culture Change Effort
This study analyzes an organization undergoing a cultural change effort. This study utilizes topical literature to review current theory and definitions of organizational culture, mechanisms and considerations for cultural change and the relationship of culture and leadership. Surveys, leader interviews and observation methodologies were employed to obtain feedback, assess the change effort and role of leadership. Specifically, this study sought to answer the following research question: Is organizational culture change occurring within the support teams of the subject organization and what are the implications for leadership? The outcome of this study is an assessment of the culture change effort, recommendations and insights for the organizational leaders
Think Different: Applying the Old Macintosh Mantra to the Computability of the SUSY Auxiliary Field Problem
Starting with valise supermultiplets obtained from 0-branes plus field
redefinitions, valise adinkra networks, and the "Garden Algebra," we discuss an
architecture for algorithms that (starting from on-shell theories and, through
a well-defined computation procedure), search for off-shell completions. We
show in one dimension how to directly attack the notorious "off-shell auxiliary
field" problem of supersymmetry with algorithms in the adinkra network-world
formulation.Comment: 28 pages, 1 figur
The asymptotic equivalence of fixed heat flux and fixed temperature thermal boundary conditions for rapidly rotating convection
The influence of fixed temperature and fixed heat flux thermal boundary
conditions on rapidly rotating convection in the plane layer geometry is
investigated for the case of stress-free mechanical boundary conditions. It is
shown that whereas the leading order system satisfies fixed temperature
boundary conditions implicitly, a double boundary layer structure is necessary
to satisfy the fixed heat flux thermal boundary conditions. The boundary layers
consist of a classical Ekman layer adjacent to the solid boundaries that adjust
viscous stresses to zero, and a layer in thermal wind balance just outside the
Ekman layers adjusts the temperature such that the fixed heat flux thermal
boundary conditions are satisfied. The influence of these boundary layers on
the interior geostrophically balanced convection is shown to be asymptotically
weak, however. Upon defining a simple rescaling of the thermal variables, the
leading order reduced system of governing equations are therefore equivalent
for both boundary conditions. These results imply that any horizontal thermal
variation along the boundaries that varies on the scale of the convection has
no leading order influence on the interior convection
Impact of Diet and Quality Grade on Shelf Life of Beef Steaks
Steers were fed a diet containing dry rolled corn, steam flaked corn, dry rolled corn with 30% dried distillers grains, or steam flaked corn with 30% dried distillers grains. Strip loins from upper 2/3 Choice and Select- grade carcasses were obtained to evaluate the effects of diet and quality grade on shelf life characteristics. Strip loins were aged for 2, 9, 16, or 23 days. Results suggest that steaks from cattle fed steam flaked corn (with or without dried distillers grains) and from cattle fed dried distillers grains (regardless of corn type) had higher levels of many unsaturated fatty acids, more discoloration, and greater lipid oxidation compared to the dry rolled corn treatments or the no dried distillers grains treatments, respectively. Feeding of dry rolled corn or diets without dried distillers grains maintained red color better during retail display. Choice- grade steaks had significantly higher levels of unsaturated fatty acids like 18:2 and total polyunsaturated fatty acids than Select- grade steaks but did not diff er in color stability or oxidation. These data indicate the longest shelf life will occur when cattle are fed diets containing dry rolled corn (versus steam flaked corn) or without dried distillers grains (versus with dried distillers grains) and that both steam flaked corn and distillers grains have a negative impact on shelf life. Quality grade did not affect color stability
A nonlinear model for rotationally constrained convection with Ekman pumping
It is a well established result of linear theory that the influence of
differing mechanical boundary conditions, i.e., stress-free or no-slip, on the
primary instability in rotating convection becomes asymptotically small in the
limit of rapid rotation. This is accounted for by the diminishing impact of the
viscous stresses exerted within Ekman boundary layers and the associated
vertical momentum transport by Ekman pumping. By contrast, in the nonlinear
regime recent experiments and supporting simulations are now providing evidence
that the efficiency of heat transport remains strongly influenced by Ekman
pumping in the rapidly rotating limit. In this paper, a reduced model is
developed for the case of low Rossby number convection in a plane layer
geometry with no-slip upper and lower boundaries held at fixed temperatures. A
complete description of the dynamics requires the existence of three distinct
regions within the fluid layer: a geostrophically balanced interior where fluid
motions are predominately aligned with the axis of rotation, Ekman boundary
layers immediately adjacent to the bounding plates, and thermal wind layers
driven by Ekman pumping in between. The reduced model uses a classical Ekman
pumping parameterization to alleviate the need for spatially resolving the
Ekman boundary layers. Results are presented for both linear stability theory
and a special class of nonlinear solutions described by a single horizontal
spatial wavenumber. It is shown that Ekman pumping allows for significant
enhancement in the heat transport relative to that observed in simulations with
stress-free boundaries. Without the intermediate thermal wind layer the
nonlinear feedback from Ekman pumping would be able to generate a heat
transport that diverges to infinity. This layer arrests this blowup resulting
in finite heat transport at a significantly enhanced value.Comment: 38 pages, 14 figure
Spin orbit alignment for KELT-7b and HAT-P-56b via Doppler tomography with TRES
We present Doppler tomographic analyses for the spectroscopic transits of
KELT-7b and HAT-P-56b, two hot-Jupiters orbiting rapidly rotating F-dwarf host
stars. These include analyses of archival TRES observations for KELT-7b, and a
new TRES transit observation of HAT-P-56b. We report spin-orbit aligned
geometries for KELT-7b (2.7 +/- 0.6 deg) and HAT-P-56b (8 +/- 2 deg). The host
stars KELT-7 and HAT-P-56 are among some of the most rapidly rotating
planet-hosting stars known. We examine the tidal re-alignment model for the
evolution of the spin-orbit angle in the context of the spin rates of these
stars. We find no evidence that the rotation rates of KELT-7 and HAT-P-56 have
been modified by star-planet tidal interactions, suggesting that the spin-orbit
angle of systems around these hot stars may represent their primordial
configuration. In fact, KELT-7 and HAT-P-56 are two of three systems in
super-synchronous, spin-orbit aligned states, where the rotation periods of the
host stars are faster than the orbital periods of the planets.Comment: 9 pages, accepted for publication in MNRA
Deaths Due to Use of Lethal Force by Law Enforcement: Findings From the National Violent Death Reporting System, 17 U.S. States, 2009–2012
Introduction: Several high-profile cases in the U.S. have drawn public attention to the use of lethal force by law enforcement (LE), yet research on such fatalities is limited. Using data from a public health surveillance system, this study examined the characteristics and circumstances of these violent deaths to inform prevention.
Methods: All fatalities (N¼812) resulting from use of lethal force by on-duty LE from 2009 to 2012 in 17 U.S. states were examined using National Violent Death Reporting System data. Case narratives were coded for additional incident circumstances.
Results: Victims were majority white (52%) but disproportionately black (32%) with a fatality rate 2.8 times higher among blacks than whites. Most victims were reported to be armed (83%); however, black victims were more likely to be unarmed (14.8%) than white (9.4%) or Hispanic (5.8%) victims. Fatality rates among military veterans/active duty service members were 1.4 times greater than among their civilian counterparts. Four case subtypes were examined based on themes that emerged in incident narratives: about 22% of cases were mental health related; 18% were suspected “suicide by cop” incidents, with white victims more likely than black or Hispanic victims to die in these circumstances; 14% involved intimate partner violence; and about 6% were unintentional deaths due to LE action. Another 53% of cases were unclassified and did not fall into a coded subtype. Regression analyses identified victim and incident characteristics associated with each case subtype and unclassified cases.
Conclusions: Knowledge about circumstances of deaths due to the use of lethal force can inform the development of prevention strategies, improve risk assessment, and modify LE response to increase the safety of communities and officers and prevent fatalities associated with LE intervention
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