5,385 research outputs found
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The problem of offset in acoustic pulse reflectometry
Acoustic pulse reflectometry has become established as a useful non-invasive technique for measuring a variety of duct properties. A sound pulse is injected into the duct under investigation and the resultant reflections are recorded. Suitable analysis of the reflections yields the input impulse response of the duct, from which both its input impedance and its internal dimensions can be calculated. However, an input impulse response measurement made using acoustic pulse reflectometry generally contains an offset. Unless this offset is removed, the application of a bore reconstruction algorithm results in a calculated duct profile which expands or contracts spuriously.
In this paper, the offset in an input impulse response measurement is shown to consist of both constant and time-varying components. Methods of preventing or removing these DC and time-varying offsets are proposed and subsequent improvements to the bore reconstruction accuracy are demonstrated
Attribution of injury in the shrimp antidumping case: A simultaneous equations approach
We apply a simultaneous equations framework, similar to that of Prusa and Sharp (2001), to the recent shrimp antidumping investigation in order to determine how much injury to the domestic industry—proxied by deterioration in domestic shrimp prices—is attributable to subject imports versus other market factors. We construct an econometric model then estimated with three-stage least squares (3SLS). We then apply the movements of each explanatory variable over the period of investigation (POI) to its respective coefficient in order to determine how much injury is attributable to that particular market factor. We find that subject and non-subject imports were essentially equal causes of injury to the domestic industry.3SLS
Properties of "35" Spin-(5/2) Baryon Resonances in a Model with Broken SU(3)
We investigate the properties of a set of J =(5/2)^+ resonances appearing in a 35-dimensional representation of
SU(3), as proposed by Abers, Balázs, and Hara. A simple dynamical calculation gives an estimate for the
mass differences within the supermultiplet. The matrix elements for the SU(3) allowed decays into meson
plus resonance are given in terms of one parameter and the SU(3)-violating matrix elements for decay into
meson plus baryon are given by two parameters
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Developing and evaluating a hybrid wind instrument
A hybrid wind instrument generates self-sustained sounds via a real-time interaction between a computed excitation model (such as the physical model of human lips interacting with a mouthpiece) and a real acoustic resonator. Attempts to produce a hybrid instrument have so far fallen short, in terms of both the accuracy and the variation in the sound produced. The principal reason for the failings of previous hybrid instruments is the actuator which, controlled by the excitation model, introduces a fluctuating component into the air flow injected into the resonator. In the present paper, the possibility of using a loudspeaker to supply the calculated excitation signal is evaluated. A theoretical study has facilitated the modeling of the loudspeaker-resonator system and the design of a feedback and feedforward filter to successfully compensate for the presence of the loudspeaker. The resulting self-sustained sounds are evaluated by a mapping of their sound descriptors to the input parameters of the physical model of the embouchure, both for sustained and attack sounds. Results are compared with simulations. The largely coherent functioning confirms the usefulness of the device in both musical and research contexts
LIF measurement of the diluting effect of surface waves on turbulent buoyant plumes.
In this paper, the diluting effect of surface waves on a buoyant plume has been measured using a Laser Induced Fluorescence (LIF) technique. The resulting time-averaged, full field concentration maps have allowed quantification of enhanced mixing due to surface waves as well as measurement of other plume parameters
Virtual Pitch and Pitch Shifts in Church Bells
It is well established that musical sounds comprising multiple partials with frequencies approximately in the ratio of small integers give rise to a strong sensation of pitch even if the lowest or fundamental partial is missing—the so-called virtual pitch effect. Experiments on thirty test subjects demonstrate that this virtual pitch is shifted significantly by changes in the spacing of the constituent partials. The experiments measured pitch by comparison of sounds of similar timbre and were automated so that they could be performed remotely across the Internet. Analysis of the test sounds used shows that the pitch shifts are not predicted by Terhardt’s classic model of virtual pitch. The test sounds used were modelled on the sounds of church bells, but a further experiment on seventeen test subjects showed that changes in partial amplitude only had a minor effect on the pitch shifts observed, and that a pitch shift was still observed when two of the lowest frequency partials were removed, so that the effects reported are of general interest
Formal structure of scientific journals and types of scientific papers
Les revistes científiques tenen una estructura formal que cal que els qui hi estan en contacte (autors, lectors i editors) comprenguin per tal que els siguin útils. L'autor analitza els tipus d'article que hi ha a tres revistes mèdiques i a una altra d'informació científica general (comunicacions preliminars, articles de revisió, editorials, secció de correspondència) i com s'estructuren els articles de recerca, perquè les altres seccions són de format més lliure.Scientific journals have a formal structure that has to be understood by all those who read it (authors, readers and editors) in order to be useful. The author analyses different types of articles in three medical journals and one of general science (preliminar communications, review articles, editorials, letters to the editor) and how research articles are structurated, because the other sections have a more free format
Systems Engineering Self Assessment of an Air Force Acquisition Unit
In February of 2009, our unit performed a Systems Engineering {SE} Self Assessment using the Air Force Systems Engineering Assessment Model (AF SEAM}. The AF SEAM consists of 190 SE best practices spanning the following ten SE Process Areas: Configuration Management, Decision Analysis, Design, Manufacturing, Project Planning, Requirements, Risk Management, Sustainment, Technical Management and Control, and Verification and Validation.
During the SE Self Assessment, we graded our unit on a pass/fail basis for each SE best practice. The SE best practices are split into Specific Practices and General Practices. The former only apply to one of the ten SE Process Areas, while the later apply to all ten SE Process Areas. The unit\u27s score for each SE Process Area is an average of the percentage of passing Specific Practices and the percentage of passing General Practices.
Our unit received passing grades for Configuration Management, Manufacturing, and Sustainment; and failing grades for Decision Analysis, Design, Project Planning, Requirements, Risk Management, Technical Management and Control, and Verification and Validation.
In addition to grading the unit\u27s SE based on best practices, the SE Self Assessment collected the participants\u27 comments. This report is an analysis of these comments; the intent of this report is to capture useful comments and distill them into actionable findings.
Analysis of the SE Self Assessment uncovered 120 key findings that fall into 20 SE problems. In an attempt to hone in on the most pressing SE problems, each problem was evaluated based on the number of findings per problem, the feasibility of solving the problem, and the potential gain for solving the problem. As a result of this evaluation, the top SE problems facing our unit are as follows: inadequate communication, insufficient training, and unclear roles and responsibilities. In order to address these SE problems, this report recommends the following:
Inadequate Communication: The unit should matrix four people into the Development Squadron covering the following disciplines: Configuration Management, Information Assurance, Requirements, and Test and Evaluation. These Systems Engineers would report to the Engineering Division Chief, but they would work with the Development Squadron on a day to day basis.
Insufficient Training: The unit should pursue an aggressive training program to improve general and SE knowledge. The following courses and presentations should be developed: Unit 101 as a newcomers orientation, Intro to the Systems Engineering Plan and Intro to the Systems Test Plan to socialize these important documents, Integrated Product/Process Team (IPT) Training to improve our teaming skills, Eight Step Problem Solving Method as a Decision Analysis tool, and AF SEAM Mastery as a way to use the model to teach basic SE principles. Also, the unit leadership should encourage personnel to enroll in SE certificate and masters programs.
Unclear Roles and Responsibilities:The unit should assign a SE Process Champion to each of the ten SE Process Areas. These champions would be the focal people for improving each area. Also, a SE Process
Improvement Lead should be created. The SE Process Improvement Lead and the SE Process Area Champions would work towards the goal of achieving passing marks in the next SE Self Assessment held in February, 2010.
Note: All of the material contained in this report has been scrubbed to remove references to people, as well as project names. For example, a specific hardware intensive project is described as hardware project instead of its name. Other generalizations include the following: software project, technology demonstration (tech demo} project, component, contractor, and FFRDC. The reader\u27s patience is appreciated when these sanitization efforts sometimes result in incongruent phrases.
A note on tense: This paper uses the first person tense. This is intentional. I am a member of the unit studied, and thus I stand to benefit or suffer from the consequences of any implementation suggested in this report. Exclusive use of the third person would imply a distance and impartiality that does not exist
Hijacked Christianity: How An Aberrant Eschatology Enables A Grievance Culture That Supplants Christian Grace For An Extremist Meritocracy
The Evangelical participation attack on Capitol Hill that happened on January 6th, 2021, that almost toppled American Democracy, was an eye-opening experience to the dangers of radicalization. For this paper, the central question is, do recent evolutions to Christian Eschatology (Premillennialism/Postmillennialism) give exigence to the radicalization of mainstream American Evangelicalism via a Dominionist ideology? This study is a rhetorical criticism that will examine sermons of four prominent Neo Charismatic around the time of the 2020 National COVID Lockdown Announcement and the Capitol Hill Insurrection. This study uses a Constant Comparative Method (CCM) to inductively identify the possible themes, and a Cultural Discourse Analysis (CuDA) to provide a more detailed examination of their rhetoric. Findings illustrate that increases in Millennialism rhetoric correlate with radicalization tendencies to create grievances that dehumanize outsiders while stoking existential crises in their own members to propel them into action via quests of significance
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Mutual benefits of collaborations between instrumentmakers, musicians and acousticians
Effective collaboration between instrument makers, musicians and acousticians can be of great benefit to all parties, leading to improved instrument designs, greater understanding of an instrument’s playing characteristics, and an improved knowledge of the physical processes that occur within an instrument. As a working relationship develops between an instrument maker, a musician and an acoustician, the trust that builds up can facilitate increasingly more detailed investigations. Through a series of case studies involving brass and woodwind instruments, this paper charts the development of several maker/player/acoustician collaborations, showing how they have evolved over the years and highlighting the benefits experienced by all the different partners involved
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