8,629 research outputs found
Recommended from our members
Intellectual Property Topics in Open University Distance-Taught Courses
Patents lie at the heart of engineering as a permanent and ongoing record of invention. We have taught the subject for about 5 years in both UG and PG courses, written from scratch owing to the absence of textbooks aimed specifically at engineers. Most practising engineers develop patent skills on the job rather than through conventional courses. But there is a need to present such courses as early as possible in the engineering curriculum, so that graduates have a flying start in their first employment
Injury in Ireland
Injury mortality is the fourth commonest cause of death in Ireland. The treatment of injuries has a major impact on our hospitals and on our budget for health. Long term disability following accidents is a serious problem. The aim of this report is to examine the impact of accidents and
injuries on the Irish population by analysing routine mortality and morbidity data, and to identify in turn those areas where preventive measures could have an impact.
In Section One the literature review details the advantages and disadvantages of each type of routine data source used in this report. The interpretation of data should take account of the constraints of the available data collected. The usefulness of routine data collection is highlighted,
while identifying areas for improvement.
In Section Two the methodology employed in the study is detailed. In Section Three data on hospital admissions over a five-year period 1993-1997 are presented. An overview of injury admissions is presented, followed by further analysis of injury data by both cause and by age
group. In Section Four data on all accident-related deaths over a 17-year period, 1980-1996, are presented, with overall mortality data and mortality data by age group and by major causes of injury death detailed.
In Section Five comparisons are made between the eight health board regions for rates of admissions and deaths due to injury.
In presenting the data we use a matrix format devised and recommended by the International Collaborative Effort on Injury Statistics to display injury simultaneously by cause and intent. The use of a common format will also facilitate regional and international comparisons.
In Section Six the priority recommendations for injury prevention are outlined. The key findings are then discussed and further recommendations are presented with the aim of injury prevention, reduction of disability and improvement in injury surveillance
The Distance to the Large Magellanic Cloud from the Eclipsing Binary HV2274
The distance to the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) is crucial for the
calibration of the Cosmic Distance Scale. We derive a distance to the LMC based
on an analysis of ground-based photometry and HST-based spectroscopy and
spectrophotometry of the LMC eclipsing binary system HV2274. Analysis of the
optical light curve and HST/GHRS radial velocity curve provides the masses and
radii of the binary components. Analysis of the HST/FOS UV/optical
spectrophotometry provides the temperatures of the component stars and the
interstellar extinction of the system. When combined, these data yield a
distance to the binary system. After correcting for the location of HV2274 with
respect to the center of the LMC, we find d(LMC) = 45.7 +/- 1.6 kpc or DM(LMC)
= 18.30 +/- 0.07 mag. This result, which is immune to the metallicity-induced
zero point uncertainties that have plagued other techniques, lends strong
support to the ``short'' LMC distance scale as derived from a number of
independent methods.Comment: 6 pages, including 2 pages of figures. Newly available optical (B and
V) photometry has revealed -- and allowed the elimination of -- a systematic
error in the previously reported determination of E(B-V) for HV2274. The new
result is E(B-V) = 0.12 mag (as compared to the value of 0.083 reported in
the original submission) and produces a DECREASE in the distance modulus of
HV2274 by 0.12 mag. ApJ Letters, in pres
Stocking rate and rate of superphosphate in a higher rainfall area
In its virgin state the area carried a forest association of red-gum and jarrah, and the soils are typical of large areas in the south-west of Western Australia.
These gravelly soils have a high requirement for phosphate during their first years under pasture, and this trial was designed to investigate the relationship between rate of phosphate, stocking rate and pasture production over a number of seasons
Recommended from our members
Numerical study of strength mismatch in cross-weld tensile testing
The strength mismatch effect on the deformation behaviour of defect-free cross-weld tensile specimens, where there is a variation in strength along the length of the specimen, was investigated through 2D finite element analysis. A simple bi-material model, which is generally used in current engineering assessments (e.g. R6 “Assessment of the integrity of structures containing defects”) to examine the strength mismatch effect on the deformation and fracture behaviour of a weld which actually includes a heat-affected-zone, could lead to non- conservative or overly conservative predictions. In fusion welded components, one would generally observe that there is a heat-affected zone where the material properties are different from the weld and base material, and there is a continuous gradient of properties between the two. The material properties in HAZ are generally assigned discretely; however, in our multi-material model these properties are successfully assigned continuously by embedding subroutines into finite element model. This multi-material approach was used to examine the effect of strength mismatch on the local and global deformation behavior of fusion welds. It has been found that the bi-material modeling, by ignoring the HAZ, and multi-material discrete HAZ modeling of the cross-weld specimens leads to unrealistically biaxial stresses at the interfaces where there is an abrupt variation of the material properties. However, multi- material continuous HAZ modeling eliminates unrealistic stress biaxiality and enables to examine the local deformation more accurately. It was also found that the global stress-strain behaviour obtained using the bi- material and multi-material modeling is different
- …