12,876 research outputs found
Next Generation Matters: Presidential Candidates Invited For Conversations With UNH Business And Law Students
Closing the achievement gap: colleges making a difference; report of research project undertaken by the Learning and Skills Development Agency
Student retention in further education : a problem of quality or of student finance?
"This paper is an updated version of one presented to the British Educational Research Association Annual Conference in September 1999" -- front cover
Bowling maidens over: 1931 and the beginnings of women's cricket in a Yorkshire town
This article focuses on the development of women's cricket in a West Yorkshire town - Brighouse - in the 1930s. It situates this subject within the context of the growth of women's cricket more generally, and goes on to explore the personality and uniqueness of women's cricket in the town. The article identifies key issues in the way that women's cricket was perceived at the time, particularly in the pages of the Brighouse & Elland Echo, the local newspaper. As such, it considers the novelty of the sport, the gender stereotyping that was an important aspect of newspaper coverage, the relationship between women's and men's cricket, and also the marketing of key fixture
Lattice QCD meets experiment in hadron physics
We review recent results in lattice QCD from numerical simulations that allow
for a much more realistic QCD vacuum than has been possible before. Comparison
with experiment for a variety of hadronic quantities gives agreement to within
statistical and systematic errors of 3%. We discuss the implications of this
for future calculations in lattice QCD, particularly those which will provide
input for B factory experiments.Comment: Review talk at HADRON2003, Aschaffenberg, Germany, September 200
On a three-dimensional lattice approach for modelling corrosion induced cracking and its influence on bond between reinforcement and concrete
The present work involves the discrete modelling of corrosion induced
cracking and its influence on the bond between reinforcement and concrete. A
lattice approach is used to describe the mechanical interaction of a corroding
reinforcement bar, the surrounding concrete and the interface between steel
reinforcement and concrete. The cross-section of the ribbed reinforcement bar
is taken to be circular, assuming that the interaction of the ribs of the
deformed reinforcement bar and the surrounding concrete is included in a
cap-plasticity interface model. The expansion of the corrosion product is
represented by an eigenstrain in the lattice elements forming the interface.
The lattice modelling approach is applied to the analysis of corrosion induced
cracking and its influence of the bond strength. The model capabilities are
assessed by comparing results of analyses with those from unconfined pull-out
tests reported in the literature. Future work will investigate the influence of
the stiffness of interface elements and the effect of lateral confinement on
corrosion induced cracking.Comment: Preprint of conference paper for Fracture Mechanics of Concrete and
Concrete Structures, South Korea, 201
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