39,387 research outputs found
Almost rolling motion: An investigation of rolling grooved cylinders
We examine the dynamics of cylinders that are grooved to form N teeth for
rolling motion down an inclined plane. The grooved cylinders are experimentally
found to reach a terminal velocity. This result can be explained by the
inclusion of inelastic processes which occur whenever a tooth hits the surface.
The fraction of the angular velocity that is lost during an inelastic collision
is phenomenologically found to be proportional to
(2*sin^2*pi/N)-(alpha*sin^3*pi/N), and the method of least squares is used to
find the constant alpha=0.98. The adjusted theoretical results for the time of
rolling as well as for terminal velocity are found to be in good agreement with
the experimental results.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures http://link.aip.org/link/?AJPIAS/66/202/
High temperature alloy
Molybdenum is substituted for tungsten on an atomic basis in a cobalt-based alloy, S-1, thus enabling the alloy to be formed into various mill products, such as tubing and steels. The alloy is weldable, has good high temperature strength and is not subject to embrittlement produced by high temperature aging
Natural aging and reversion behavior of Al-Cu-Li-Ag-Mg alloy Weldalite (tm) 049
This study was initiated to understand the natural aging and reversion behavior of Weldalite (trademark) 049 in tempers without cold work. Of particular interest are: (1) the microstructural basis for the high strength in the T4 condition; (2) an explanation of the reversion phenomenon; and (3) the effect of re-aging at room temperature after a reversion treatment. Mechanical properties were measured and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) analysis performed at various stages of microstructural development during aging, reversion, and subsequent re-aging
Structure and properties during aging of an Al-Cu-Li-Ag-Mg alloy, Weldalite (tm) 049
An Al-Cu-Li-Ag-Mg alloy, Weldalite (trademark) 049, was recently introduced as an ultra-high strength alloy (7000 MPa yield strength in artificially aged tempers) with good weldability. In addition, the alloy exhibits an extraordinary natural aging response (440 MPa yield strength (YS) in the unstretch condition) and a high ductility reversion condition which may be useful as a cold-forming temper. In contrast to other Al-Li alloys, these properties can essentially be obtained with or without a stretch or other coldworking operation prior to aging. Preliminary studies have revealed that the T4 temper (no stretch, natural age) is strengthened by a combination of GP zones and delta prime (Al3Li). The T6 temper (no stretch, aged at 180 C to peak strength) was reported to be strengthened primarily by T(sub 1) phase (Al2CuLi) with a minor presence of a theta prime like (Al2Cu) phase. On the other hand, a similar but lower solute containing alloy was reported to contain omega, (stoichiometry unknown), theta prime, and S prime in the peak strength condition. The purpose of this study is to further elucidate the strengthening phases in Weldalite (trademark) 049 in the unstretched tempers, and to follow the development of the microstructure from the T4 temper through reversion (180 C for 5 to 45 minutes) to the T6 temper
Boundary-layer and wake measurements on a swept, circulation-control wing
Wind-tunnel measurements of boundary-layer and wake velocity profiles and surface static pressure distributions are presented for a swept, circulation-control wing. The model is an aspect-ratio-four semispan wing mounted on the tunnel side wall at a sweep angle of 45 deg. A full-span, tangential, rearward blowing, circulation-control slot is located ahead of the trailing edge on the upper surface. Flow surveys were obtained at mid-semispan at freestream Mach numbers of 0.425 and 0.70. Boundary-layer profiles measured on the forward portions of the wing are approximately streamwise and two dimensional. The flow in the vicinity of the jet exit and in the near wake is highly three dimensional. The jet flow near the slot on the Coanda surface is directed normal to the slot. Near-wake surveys show large outboard flows at the center of the wake. At Mach 0.425 and a 5-deg angle of attack, a range of jet-blowing rates was found for which an abrupt transition from incipient separation to attached flow occurs in the boundary layer upstream of the slot. The variation in the lower-surface separation location with blowing rate was determined from boundary-layer measurements at Mach 0.425
Empirical investigation of investment behaviour in Australia's pastoral region
Optimal intertemporal investment behaviour ofAustralian pastoralists is modelled using panel data for the period 1979ā1993.Results indicate that quasi-fixity of inputs of labour, capital, sheep numbers and cattle numbers is characteristic of production in the pastoral region. It takes about two years for labour, four years for capital and a little over two years for both sheep numbers and cattle numbers to adjust towards long-run optimal levels. Results also indicate that, after accounting for adjustment costs, own-price product supply and input demand responses are inelastic in both the short and long run.adjustment costs, pastoralism, supply response, Agribusiness,
Boundary-layer and wake measurements on a swept, circulation-control wing
Wind tunnel measurements of boundary layer and wake velocity profiles and surface static pressure distributions are presented for a swept, circulation control wing. The model is an aspect ratio four semispan wing mounted on the tunnel side wall as a sweep angle of 45 deg. A full span, tangetial, rearward blowing, circulation control slot is located ahead of the trailing edge on the upper surface. Flow surveys were obtained at mid-semispan at freestream Mach numbers of 0.425 and 0.70. Boundary layer profiles measured on the forward portions of the wing are approximately streamwise and two dimensional. The flow in the vicinity of the jet exit and in the near wake is highly three dimensional. The jet flow near the slot on the Coanda surface is directed normal to the slot. Near wake surveys show large outboard flows at the center of the wake. At Mach 0.425 and a 5 deg angle of attack, a range of jet blowing rates was found for which an abrupt transition from incipient separation to attached flow occurs in the boundary layer upstream of the slot. The variation in the lower surface separation location with blowing rate was determined from the boundary layer measurements at Mach 0.425
High resolution electron microscopy study of a high Cu variant of Weldalite (tm) 049 and a high strength Al-Cu-Ag-Mg-Zr alloy
Weldalite (trademark) 049 is an Al-Cu-Li-Ag-Mg alloy that is strengthened in artificially aged tempers primarily by very thin plate-like precipitates lying on the set of (111) matrix planes. This precipitate might be expected to be the T(sub 1) phase, Al2CuLi, which has been observed in Al-Cu-Li alloys. However, in several ways this precipitate is similar to the omega phase which also appears as the set of (111) planes plates and is found in Al-Cu-Ag-Mg alloys. The study was undertaken to identify the set of (111) planes precipitate or precipitates in Weldalite (trademark) 049 in the T8 (stretched and artificially aged) temper, and to determine whether T(sub 1), omega, or some other phase is primarily responsible for the high strength (i.e., 700 MPa tensile strength) in this Al-Cu-Li-Ag-Mg alloy
Communication over Finite-Chain-Ring Matrix Channels
Though network coding is traditionally performed over finite fields, recent
work on nested-lattice-based network coding suggests that, by allowing network
coding over certain finite rings, more efficient physical-layer network coding
schemes can be constructed. This paper considers the problem of communication
over a finite-ring matrix channel , where is the channel
input, is the channel output, is random error, and and are
random transfer matrices. Tight capacity results are obtained and simple
polynomial-complexity capacity-achieving coding schemes are provided under the
assumption that is uniform over all full-rank matrices and is uniform
over all rank- matrices, extending the work of Silva, Kschischang and
K\"{o}tter (2010), who handled the case of finite fields. This extension is
based on several new results, which may be of independent interest, that
generalize concepts and methods from matrices over finite fields to matrices
over finite chain rings.Comment: Submitted to IEEE Transactions on Information Theory, April 2013.
Revised version submitted in Feb. 2014. Final version submitted in June 201
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