12,914 research outputs found
Planar motion of a human being under the action of a body-fixed thrust
Weightless astronaut maneuvering device for directional and attitude control feasibility study using two body system equations of motio
Experimental investigation of planar motions of a human being under the action of a body- fixed thrust
Planar motion of human being subjected to action of body-fixed forc
Elevated temperature deformation of thoria dispersed nickel-chromium
The deformation behavior of thoria nickel-chromium (TD-NiCr) was examined over the temperature range 593 C (1100 F) to 1260 C (2300 F) in tension and compression and at 1093 C (2000 F) in creep. Major emphasis was placed on: (1) the effects of the material and test related variables (grain size, temperature, stress and strain rate) on the deformation process; and (2) the evaluation of single crystal TD-NiCr material produced by a directional recrystallization process. Elevated temperature yield strength levels and creep activation enthalpies were found to increase with increasing grain size reaching maximum values for the single crystal TD-NiCr. Stress exponent of the steady state creep rate was also significantly higher for the single crystal TD-NiCr as compared to that determined for the polycrystalline materials. The elevated temperature deformation of TD-NiCr was analyzed in terms of two concurrent, parallel processes: diffusion controlled grain boundary sliding, and dislocation motion
Guest Editors’ Introduction: Towards a Vertigology of Contemporary Cities
In this introduction, the guest editors set out the contextual and theoretical rationale for the Special Issue: Vertigo in the City. It begins with some basic definitions and uses of the term vertigo, before tracing the relationship between vertigo and the environmental, emotional and representational landscape of the high-rise, high-density modern city. Drawn from a multidisciplinary research project which culminated in 2015, the six papers selected for the SI are then briefly described, highlighting contributions and intersections between the different papers. The introduction ends with a call for the development of an interdisciplinary approach to the study of vertigo, with a view to further opening up inter-disciplinary research in the future
Simulations for Multi-Object Spectrograph Planet Surveys
Radial velocity surveys for extra-solar planets generally require substantial
amounts of large telescope time in order to monitor a sufficient number of
stars. Two of the aspects which can limit such surveys are the single-object
capabilities of the spectrograph, and an inefficient observing strategy for a
given observing window. In addition, the detection rate of extra-solar planets
using the radial velocity method has thus far been relatively linear with time.
With the development of various multi-object Doppler survey instruments, there
is growing potential to dramatically increase the detection rate using the
Doppler method. Several of these instruments have already begun usage in large
scale surveys for extra-solar planets, such as FLAMES on the VLT and Keck ET on
the Sloan 2.5m wide-field telescope.
In order to plan an effective observing strategy for such a program, one must
examine the expected results based on a given observing window and target
selection. We present simulations of the expected results from a generic
multi-object survey based on calculated noise models and sensitivity for the
instrument and the known distribution of exoplanetary system parameters. We
have developed code for automatically sifting and fitting the planet candidates
produced by the survey to allow for fast follow-up observations to be
conducted. The techniques presented here may be applied to a wide range of
multi-object planet surveys.Comment: 15 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
When is an alternative possibility robust?
According to some, free will requires alternative possibilities. But not any old alternative possibility will do. Sometimes, being able to bring about an alternative does not bestow any control on an agent. In order to bestow control, and so be directly relevant qua alternative to grounding the agent's moral responsibility, alternatives need to be robust. Here, I investigate the nature of robust alternatives. I argue that Derk Pereboom's latest robustness criterion is too strong, and I suggest a different criterion based on the idea that what agents need to be able to do is keep open the possibility of securing their blamelessness, rather than needing to directly ensure their own blamelessness at the time of decision
Storm-time changes of geomagnetic field at MAGSAT altitudes (325-550 Km) and their comparison with changes at ground locations
The values of H, X, Y, Z at MAGSAT altitudes were first expressed as residuals delta H, delta X, delta Y, delta Z after subtracting the model HMD, XMD, YMD, ZMC. The storm-time variations of H showed that delta H (Dusk) was larger (negative) than delta H (Dawn) and occurred earlier, indicating a sort of hysteresis effect. Effects at MAGSAT altitudes were roughly the same (10% accuracy) as at ground, indicating that these effects were mostly of magnetospheric origin. The delta Y component also showed large storm-time changes. The latitudinal distribution of storm-time delta H showed north-south asymmetries varying in nature as the storm progressed. It seems that the central plane of the storm-time magnetospheric ring current undergoes latitudinal meanderings during the course of the storm
Why P/OF should look for evidences of over-dense structures in solar flare hard X-ray sources
White-light and hard X-ray (HXR) observations of two white-light flares (WLFs) show that if the radiative losses in the optical continuum are powered by fast electrons directly heating the WLF source, then the column density constraints imposed by the finite range of the electrons requires that the WLF consist of an over-dense region in the chromosphere, with density exceeding 10 to the 14th power/cu cm. Thus, we recommend that P/OF search for evidences of over-dense structures in HXR images obtained simultaneously with optical observations of flares
Versatile liquid helium scintillation counter of large volume design
Design and performance of large liquid helium scintillation counter for meson experiment
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