7,296 research outputs found
Formulation of consumables management models: Test plan for the mission planning processor working model
The test plan and test procedures to be used in the verification and validation of the software being implemented in the mission planning processor working model program are documented. The mission planning processor is a user oriented tool for consumables management and is part of the total consumables subsystem management concept. An overview of the working model is presented. Execution of the test plan will comprehensively exercise the working model software. An overview of the test plan, including a testing schedule, is presented along with the test plan for the unit, module, and system levels. The criteria used to validate the working model results for each consumables subsystem is discussed
Formulation of consumables management models. Development approach for the mission planning processor working model
The mission planning processor is a user oriented tool for consumables management and is part of the total consumables subsystem management concept. The approach to be used in developing a working model of the mission planning processor is documented. The approach includes top-down design, structured programming techniques, and application of NASA approved software development standards. This development approach: (1) promotes cost effective software development, (2) enhances the quality and reliability of the working model, (3) encourages the sharing of the working model through a standard approach, and (4) promotes portability of the working model to other computer systems
To ‘Make This Port Union All Over’: Longshore Militancy in Portland, 1911-1913
n 1853 the Grand Trunk Railroad connected Portland to Montreal and to the grain trade of the Canadian interior. Some three decades later, the city\u27s predominantly Irish longshoremen formed a Benevolent Society and, in an ongoing search for job security in this volatile trade they voted, just before World War I, to affiliate with the International Longshoremen’s Association, hoping “to make this port Union all over. Michael Connolly\u27s article explores the decisions and actions that led up to this important event in Maine\u27s labor history. Dr. Connolly is the grandson of a charter member of the Society. He is Associate Professor of History and Director of the Honors at Saint Joseph\u27s College in Standish, Maine. His Ph.D. dissertation, from Boston College (1988), explored the history of the Portland Irish longshoremen, which is also the focus of his most recent publications
Locked and Unlocked Chains of Planar Shapes
We extend linkage unfolding results from the well-studied case of polygonal
linkages to the more general case of linkages of polygons. More precisely, we
consider chains of nonoverlapping rigid planar shapes (Jordan regions) that are
hinged together sequentially at rotatable joints. Our goal is to characterize
the families of planar shapes that admit locked chains, where some
configurations cannot be reached by continuous reconfiguration without
self-intersection, and which families of planar shapes guarantee universal
foldability, where every chain is guaranteed to have a connected configuration
space. Previously, only obtuse triangles were known to admit locked shapes, and
only line segments were known to guarantee universal foldability. We show that
a surprisingly general family of planar shapes, called slender adornments,
guarantees universal foldability: roughly, the distance from each edge along
the path along the boundary of the slender adornment to each hinge should be
monotone. In contrast, we show that isosceles triangles with any desired apex
angle less than 90 degrees admit locked chains, which is precisely the
threshold beyond which the inward-normal property no longer holds.Comment: 23 pages, 25 figures, Latex; full journal version with all proof
details. (Fixed crash-induced bugs in the abstract.
On insurance and health risks
Health risk can be defined as the likelihood of a negative health consequence occurring
due to a specific event, disease or condition. Its consequences can be strongly
detrimental to individuals and society and managing health risks is a central concern for individuals and governments
There Is Always One You Can\u27t Forget
https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/mmb-vp/6419/thumbnail.jp
Oral History Interview of Edward Hartmann (SOH-013)
Edward G. Hartmann, former director of libraries and professor of history, reflects on his thirty-year career at Suffolk University. The interview covers his experiences at Suffolk; his teaching career and methods; his thoughts on the university’s presidents and administrations; and his work as an ethnic historian. He concludes with his thoughts on the progress of Suffolk and his hope for continued high educational standards at the university.https://dc.suffolk.edu/soh/1008/thumbnail.jp
Hypoconstrained Jammed Packings of Nonspherical Hard Particles: Ellipses and Ellipsoids
Continuing on recent computational and experimental work on jammed packings
of hard ellipsoids [Donev et al., Science, vol. 303, 990-993] we consider
jamming in packings of smooth strictly convex nonspherical hard particles. We
explain why the isocounting conjecture, which states that for large disordered
jammed packings the average contact number per particle is twice the number of
degrees of freedom per particle (\bar{Z}=2d_{f}), does not apply to
nonspherical particles. We develop first- and second-order conditions for
jamming, and demonstrate that packings of nonspherical particles can be jammed
even though they are hypoconstrained (\bar{Z}<2d_{f}). We apply an algorithm
using these conditions to computer-generated hypoconstrained ellipsoid and
ellipse packings and demonstrate that our algorithm does produce jammed
packings, even close to the sphere point. We also consider packings that are
nearly jammed and draw connections to packings of deformable (but stiff)
particles. Finally, we consider the jamming conditions for nearly spherical
particles and explain quantitatively the behavior we observe in the vicinity of
the sphere point.Comment: 33 pages, third revisio
Off-equilibrium corrections to energy and conserved charge densities in the relativistic fluid in heavy-ion collisions
Dissipative processes in relativistic fluids are known to be important in the
analyses of the hot QCD matter created in high-energy heavy-ion collisions. In
this work, I consider dissipative corrections to energy and conserved charge
densities, which are conventionally assumed to be vanishing but could be
finite. Causal dissipative hydrodynamics is formulated in the presence of those
dissipative currents. The relation between hydrodynamic stability and transport
coefficients is discussed. I then study their phenomenological consequences on
the observables of heavy-ion collisions in numerical simulations. It is shown
that particle spectra and elliptic flow can be visibly modified.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures; title changed, references added, conclusions
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