8,346 research outputs found
Transistor servo system including a unique differential amplifier circuit Patent
Electric motor control system with pulse width modulation for providing automatic null seeking serv
Induction motor control system with voltage controlled oscillator circuit
A voltage controlled oscillator circuit is reported in which there are employed first and second differential amplifiers. The first differential amplifier, being employed as an integrator, develops equal and opposite slopes proportional to an input voltage, and the second differential amplifier functions as a comparator to detect equal amplitude positive and negative selected limits and provides switching signals which gate a transistor switch. The integrating differential amplifier is switched between charging and discharging modes to provide an output of the first differential amplifier which upon the application of wave shaping provides a substantially sinusoidal output signal. A two phased version with a second integrator provides a second 90 deg phase shifted output for induction motor control
Tablet computers in assessing performance in a high stakes exam : opinion matters
The authors would like to thank Dr Craig brown, University of Aberdeen for assistance with data analysis.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Socioeconomic inequalities in childhood exposure to secondhand smoke before and after smoke-free legislation in three UK countries
Background: Secondhand smoke (SHS) exposure is higher among lower socioeconomic status (SES) children. Legislation restricting smoking in public places has been associated with reduced childhood SHS exposure and increased smoke-free homes. This paper examines socioeconomic patterning in these changes.<p></p>
Methods: Repeated cross-sectional survey of 10 867 schoolchildren in 304 primary schools in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. Children provided saliva for cotinine assay, completing questionnaires before and 12 months after legislation.<p></p>
Results: SHS exposure was highest, and private smoking restrictions least frequently reported, among lower SES children. Proportions of saliva samples containing <0.1 ng/ml (i.e. undetectable) cotinine increased from 31.0 to 41.0%. Although across the whole SES spectrum, there was no evidence of displacement of smoking into the home or increased SHS exposure, socioeconomic inequality in the likelihood of samples containing detectable levels of cotinine increased. Among children from the poorest families, 96.9% of post-legislation samples contained detectable cotinine, compared with 38.2% among the most affluent. Socioeconomic gradients at higher exposure levels remained unchanged. Among children from the poorest families, one in three samples contained > 3 ng/ml cotinine. Smoking restrictions in homes and cars increased, although socioeconomic patterning remained.<p></p>
Conclusions Urgent action is needed to reduce inequalities in SHS exposure. Such action should include emphasis on reducing smoking in cars and homes
An archival case study : revisiting the life and political economy of Lauchlin Currie
This paper forms part of a wider project to show the significance of archival material on distinguished economists, in this case Lauchlin Currie (1902-93), who studied and taught at Harvard before entering government service at the US Treasury and Federal Reserve Board as the intellectual leader of Roosevelt's New Deal, 1934-39, as FDR's White House economic adviser in peace and war, 1939-45, and as a post-war development economist. It discusses the uses made of the written and oral material available when the author was writing his intellectual biography of Currie (Duke University Press 1990) while Currie was still alive, and the significance of the material that has come to light after Currie's death
Suffix conjugates for a class of morphic subshifts
Let A be a finite alphabet and f: A^* --> A^* be a morphism with an iterative
fixed point f^\omega(\alpha), where \alpha{} is in A. Consider the subshift (X,
T), where X is the shift orbit closure of f^\omega(\alpha) and T: X --> X is
the shift map. Let S be a finite alphabet that is in bijective correspondence
via a mapping c with the set of nonempty suffixes of the images f(a) for a in
A. Let calS be a subset S^N be the set of infinite words s = (s_n)_{n\geq 0}
such that \pi(s):= c(s_0)f(c(s_1)) f^2(c(s_2))... is in X. We show that if f is
primitive and f(A) is a suffix code, then there exists a mapping H: calS -->
calS such that (calS, H) is a topological dynamical system and \pi: (calS, H)
--> (X, T) is a conjugacy; we call (calS, H) the suffix conjugate of (X, T). In
the special case when f is the Fibonacci or the Thue-Morse morphism, we show
that the subshift (calS, T) is sofic, that is, the language of calS is regular
Quality of the urban environment as perceived by residents of slow and fast growth cities
Report : 27, 11 leaves
"Presented at the Canadian Urban Studies Conference, Winnipeg, Manitoba, August, 1985"
On the General Ericksen-Leslie System: Parodi's Relation, Well-posedness and Stability
In this paper we investigate the role of Parodi's relation in the
well-posedness and stability of the general Ericksen-Leslie system modeling
nematic liquid crystal flows. First, we give a formal physical derivation of
the Ericksen-Leslie system through an appropriate energy variational approach
under Parodi's relation, in which we can distinguish the
conservative/dissipative parts of the induced elastic stress. Next, we prove
global well-posedness and long-time behavior of the Ericksen-Leslie system
under the assumption that the viscosity is sufficiently large. Finally,
under Parodi's relation, we show the global well-posedness and Lyapunov
stability for the Ericksen-Leslie system near local energy minimizers. The
connection between Parodi's relation and linear stability of the
Ericksen-Leslie system is also discussed
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