9,572 research outputs found
Fatigue Life Improvement of Welded Girders with Ultrasonic Impact Treatment
The fatigue life of welded connections can be improved by a variety of postâweld treatment methods. One of the most effective methods is ultrasonic impact treatment (UIT). This technology may be applied during shop fabrication, but the greatest benefit comes from field retrofitting applications. Tensile cyclic stress ranges drive fatigue crack initiation and growth at the weld toe. This is made worse by tensile residual stresses at the weld toe that can reach the yield strength of the base metal resulting from differential cooling of the weld metal during fabrication. This concentration of tensile residual stress can have the effect of fully tensile cyclic stress ranges even in stress reversal zones of the bridge. UIT induces yieldâstrength level compressive residual stresses by cold forming the material at the weld toe. Prior research has demonstrated the effectiveness of 27 kHz UIT systems for improving the fatigue life of welded bridge girders (Fisher and Roy, 2003). The AASHTO LRFD Bridge Construction Specification Commentary C11.9.1 suggests, but does not explicitly require, the use of 27 kHz systems. The existing language can be interpreted as a prohibition on other UIT systems. This report explores the effectiveness of a 20 kHz UIT system applied to transverse stiffener and cover plate termination welds. In this study, fourteen fullâscale girders with welded attachments were subjected to constant amplitude fatigue loading. The test matrix considered variables of stress range and minimum stress. Testing has shown that the 20 kHz UIT system provided equivalent effect to the 27 kHz UIT system. The treatment of the transverse stiffener welds improved the performance from Category CâČ to at least Category B. The performance of the cover plate termination welds improved from Category EâČ to at least Category C. The results demonstrated 20 kHz UIT as a viable option for enhancing the fatigue performance of welded bridge girders. This finding will expand the alternatives available to bridge owners seeking solutions for extending the life of their aging steel bridge inventory
Correlation length scalings in fusion edge plasma turbulence computations
The effect of changes in plasma parameters, that are characteristic near or
at an L-H transition in fusion edge plasmas, on fluctuation correlation lengths
are analysed by means of drift-Alfven turbulence computations. Scalings by
density gradient length, collisionality, plasma beta, and by an imposed shear
flow are considered. It is found that strongly sheared flows lead to the
appearence of long-range correlations in electrostatic potential fluctuations
parallel and perpendicular to the magnetic field.Comment: Submitted to "Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion
Therapeutic and educational objectives in robot assisted play for children with autism
âThis material is presented to ensure timely dissemination of scholarly and technical work. Copyright and all rights therein are retained by authors or by other copyright holders. All persons copying this information are expected to adhere to the terms and constraints invoked by each author's copyright. In most cases, these works may not be reposted without the explicit permission of the copyright holder." âCopyright IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. However, permission to reprint/republish this material for advertising or promotional purposes or for creating new collective works for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or to reuse any copyrighted component of this work in other works must be obtained from the IEEE.â DOI: 10.1109/ROMAN.2009.5326251This article is a methodological paper that describes the therapeutic and educational objectives that were identified during the design process of a robot aimed at robot assisted play. The work described in this paper is part of the IROMEC project (Interactive Robotic Social Mediators as Companions) that recognizes the important role of play in child development and targets children who are prevented from or inhibited in playing. The project investigates the role of an interactive, autonomous robotic toy in therapy and education for children with special needs. This paper specifically addresses the therapeutic and educational objectives related to children with autism. In recent years, robots have already been used to teach basic social interaction skills to children with autism. The added value of the IROMEC robot is that play scenarios have been developed taking children's specific strengths and needs into consideration and covering a wide range of objectives in children's development areas (sensory, communicational and interaction, motor, cognitive and social and emotional). The paper describes children's developmental areas and illustrates how different experiences and interactions with the IROMEC robot are designed to target objectives in these areas.Final Published versio
What shapes a galaxy? - Unraveling the role of mass, environment and star formation in forming galactic structure
We investigate the dependence of galaxy structure on a variety of galactic
and environmental parameters for ~500,000 galaxies at z<0.2, taken from the
Sloan Digital Sky Survey data release 7 (SDSS-DR7). We utilise bulge-to-total
stellar mass ratio, (B/T)_*, as the primary indicator of galactic structure,
which circumvents issues of morphological dependence on waveband. We rank
galaxy and environmental parameters in terms of how predictive they are of
galaxy structure, using an artificial neural network approach. We find that
distance from the star forming main sequence (Delta_SFR), followed by stellar
mass (M_*), are the most closely connected parameters to (B/T)_*, and are
significantly more predictive of galaxy structure than global star formation
rate (SFR), or any environmental metric considered (for both central and
satellite galaxies). Additionally, we make a detailed comparison to the
Illustris hydrodynamical simulation and the LGalaxies semi-analytic model. In
both simulations, we find a significant lack of bulge-dominated galaxies at a
fixed stellar mass, compared to the SDSS. This result highlights a potentially
serious problem in contemporary models of galaxy evolution.Comment: Accepted to MNRAS. 31 pages, 15 figure
Designing hollow nano gold golf balls.
Hollow/porous nanoparticles, including nanocarriers, nanoshells, and mesoporous materials have applications in catalysis, photonics, biosensing, and delivery of theranostic agents. Using a hierarchical template synthesis scheme, we have synthesized a nanocarrier mimicking a golf ball, consisting of (i) solid silica core with a pitted gold surface and (ii) a hollow/porous gold shell without silica. The template consisted of 100 nm polystyrene beads attached to a larger silica core. Selective gold plating of the core followed by removal of the polystyrene beads produced a golf ball-like nanostructure with 100 nm pits. Dissolution of the silica core produced a hollow/porous golf ball-like nanostructure
Factors influencing the prevalence of animal cruelty during adolescence
Adolescentsâ interactions with animals are of increasing interest and their beneficial developmental outcomes are well known. However, negative interactions such as perpetrating cruelty toward animals during childhood and adolescence have been related with child abuse, domestic violence, and later interpersonal violence. Cruelty toward animals by adolescents has been reported predominately in criminal and clinical samples, and links have been made between animal cruelty and interpersonal violence. However, studies often lack a clear definition of animal cruelty and the animal involved. The present study addresses methodological shortcomings by providing a clear definition of the cruelty acts and the animals involved and the time frame within which cruelty acts have been taken place. Therefore, we investigated the prevalence of animal cruelty of 979 British adolescents (419 male, 497 female, Mage = 15.1 ± 1.57 years) by means of a survey questionnaire administered in school. Animal cruelty was investigated encompassing deliberate and nondeliberate cruelty acts, a clear definition of the target animals was included and a time frame was provided. Furthermore, acceptability of animal cruelty, engaging in antisocial behavior, and family affluence were investigated. Results show high reliabilities for the measures applied. Exploratory factor analysis reveals different types of animal cruelty. Gender differences were observed for deliberate and accidental cruelty acts, with boys reporting higher levels than girls. Younger adolescents reported higher accidental cruelty acts than older ones. Acceptance of animal cruelty played a significant role in predicting animal cruelty, together with antisocial behaviors and place of living. The present study shows for the first time the importance of distinguishing between different types of animal cruelty and defining the animals involved.PostprintPeer reviewe
Relationship Between Foveal Cone Specialization and Pit Morphology in Albinism
Purpose.Albinism is associated with disrupted foveal development, though intersubject variability is becoming appreciated. We sought to quantify this variability, and examine the relationship between foveal cone specialization and pit morphology in patients with a clinical diagnosis of albinism.
Methods. We recruited 32 subjects with a clinical diagnosis of albinism. DNA was obtained from 25 subjects, and known albinism genes were analyzed for mutations. Relative inner and outer segment (IS and OS) lengthening (fovea-to-perifovea ratio) was determined from manually segmented spectral domain-optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT) B-scans. Foveal pit morphology was quantified for eight subjects from macular SD-OCT volumes. Ten subjects underwent imaging with adaptive optics scanning light ophthalmoscopy (AOSLO), and cone density was measured.
Results. We found mutations in 22 of 25 subjects, including five novel mutations. All subjects lacked complete excavation of inner retinal layers at the fovea, though four subjects had foveal pits with normal diameter and/or volume. Peak cone density and OS lengthening were variable and overlapped with that observed in normal controls. A fifth hyper-reflective band was observed in the outer retina on SD-OCT in the majority of the subjects with albinism.
Conclusions. Foveal cone specialization and pit morphology vary greatly in albinism. Normal cone packing was observed in the absence of a foveal pit, suggesting a pit is not required for packing to occur. The degree to which retinal anatomy correlates with genotype or visual function remains unclear, and future examination of larger patient groups will provide important insight on this issue
Chandra X-rays from the redshift 7.54 quasar ULAS J1342+0928
We present a 45 ks Chandra observation of the quasar ULAS J1342+0928 at
z=7.54. We detect 14.0^{+4.8}_{-3.7} counts from the quasar in the
observed-frame energy range 0.5-7.0 keV (6-sigma detection), representing the
most distant non-transient astronomical source identified in X-rays to date.
The present data are sufficient only to infer rough constraints on the spectral
parameters. We find an X-ray hardness ratio of HR = -0.51^{+0.26}_{-0.28}
between the 0.5-2.0 keV and 2.0-7.0 keV ranges and derive a power-law photon
index of Gamma = 1.95^{+0.55}_{-0.53}. Assuming a typical value for
high-redshift quasars of Gamma = 1.9, ULAS J1342+0928 has a 2-10 keV rest-frame
X-ray luminosity of L_{2-10} = 11.6^{+4.3}_{-3.5} x 10^{44} erg/s. Its
X-ray-to-optical power-law slope is alpha_{OX}=-1.67^{+0.16}_{-0.10},
consistent with the general trend indicating that the X-ray emission in the
most bolometrically powerful quasars is weaker relative to their optical
emission.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal Letter
An unidentified Fermi source emitting radio bursts in the Galactic bulge
We report on the detection of radio bursts from the Galactic bulge using the
real-time transient detection and localization system, realfast. The pulses
were detected commensally on the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array during a
survey of unidentified Fermi -ray sources. The bursts were localized to
subarcsecond precision using realfast fast-sampled imaging. Follow-up
observations with the Green Bank Telescope detected additional bursts from the
same source. The bursts do not exhibit periodicity in a search up to periods of
480s, assuming a duty cycle of < 20%. The pulses are nearly 100% linearly
polarized, show circular polarization up to 12%, have a steep radio spectral
index of -2.7, and exhibit variable scattering on timescales of months. The
arcsecond-level realfast localization links the source confidently with the
Fermi -ray source and places it nearby (though not coincident with) an
XMM-Newton X-ray source. Based on the source's overall properties, we discuss
various options for the nature of this object and propose that it could be a
young pulsar, magnetar, or a binary pulsar system.Comment: Submitted to The Astrophysical Journa
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