4,232 research outputs found

    Grain sorting in the morphological active layer of a braided river physical model.

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    A physical scale model of a gravel-bed braided river was used to measure vertical grain size sorting in the morphological active layer aggregated over the width of the river. This vertical sorting is important for analyzing braided river sedimentology, for numerical modeling of braided river morphodynamics, and for measuring and predicting bedload transport rate. We define the morphological active layer as the bed material between the maximum and minimum bed elevations at a point over extended time periods sufficient for braiding processes to rework the river bed. The vertical extent of the active layer was measured using 40 hourly high-resolution DEMs (digital elevation models) of the model river bed. An image texture algorithm was used to map bed material grain size of each DEM. Analysis of the 40 DEMs and texture maps provides data on the geometry of the morphological active layer and variation in grain size in three dimensions. By normalizing active layer thickness and dividing into 10 sublayers, we show that all grain sizes occur with almost equal frequency in all sublayers. Occurrence of patches and strings of coarser (or finer) material relates to preservation of particular morpho-textural features within the active layer. For numerical modeling and bedload prediction, a morphological active layer that is fully mixed with respect to grain size is a reliable approximation

    Submarine landslides on the upper southeast Australian passive continental margin – preliminary findings

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    The southeast Australian passive continental margin is narrow, steep and sediment-deficient, and characterized by relatively low rates of modern sedimentation. Upper slope (\u3c1200m) sediments comprise mixtures of calcareous and terrigenous sand and mud. Three of twelve sediment cores recovered from geologically-recent, submarine landslides located offshore New South Wales/Queensland (NSW/QLD) are interpreted to have sampled failure surfaces at depths of between 85 cm and 220 cm below the present-day seabed. Differences in sediment physical properties are recorded above and below the three slide-plane boundaries. Sediment taken directly above the inferred submarine landslide failure surfaces and presumed to be post-landslide, returned radiocarbon ages of 15.8 ka, 20.7 ka and 20.1 ka. The last two ages correspond to adjacent slide features, which are inferred to be consistent with their being triggered by a single event such as an earthquake. Slope stability models based on classical soil mechanics and measured sediment shearstrengths indicate that the upper slope sediments should be stable. However, multibeam sonar data reveal that many upper slope landslides occur across the margin and that submarine landsliding is a common process. We infer from these results that: a) an unidentified mechanism regularly acts to reduce the shear resistance of these sediments to the very low values required to enable slope failure, and/or b) the margin experiences seismic events that act to destabilise the slope sediments

    Characterization of High-Power Rocket and Jet Noise Using Near-Field Acoustical Holography

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    Structural fatigue, hearing damage, and community disturbances are all consequences of rocket and jet noise, especially as they become more powerful. Noise-reduction schemes require accurate characterization of the noise sources within rocket plumes and jets. Nearfield acoustical holography (NAH) measurements were made to visualize the sound field in the jet exhaust region of an F-22 Raptor. This is one of the largest-scale applications of NAH since its development in the 1980s. A scan-based holographic measurement was made using a 90-microphone array with 15 cm regular grid spacing, for four engine power settings. The array was scanned through 93 measurement positions, along three different planes in a region near 7 m from the jet centerline and 23 m downstream. In addition, 50 fixed reference microphones were placed along the ground 11.6 m from the jet centerline, spanning 30.8 m. The reference microphones have been used to perform virtual coherence on the measurement planes. Statistically-optimized NAH (SONAH) has been used to backpropagate the sound field to the source region for low frequencies, and to identify jet noise characteristics. Ground reflection interference and other non-ideal measurement conditions must be dealt with. Details relating to jet coherence lengths and their relation to reference microphone requirements will be discussed. Preliminary results of this ongoing work will be presented. [Work supported by Air Force SBIR.

    Characterization of Rocket and Jet Noise using Near-Field Acoustic Holography Methods

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    As rockets and jets on military aircraft become more powerful, the noise they produce can lead to structural fatigue, hearing damage, and community disturbances. Noise-reduction technologies and sound radiation prediction require accurate characterization of the noise sources within rocket plumes and jets. Near-field acoustical holography techniques were used to visualize the sound field in the region of the jet exhaust on a high-performance military jet. Holography requires a coherent measurement of the sound field, but the size of the jet made a dense measurement over the entire source region impractical. Thus, a scan-based measurement was performed, after which a partial field decomposition (PFD) procedure was used to tie together incoherent scans. Then, the effective aperture of the measurement was extended utilizing the rigid ground reflection and a processing technique called analytic continuation. Finally, the three-dimensional sound field was reconstructed using statistically-optimized near-field acoustical holography (SONAH). This is the first time such a map has been obtained for a full-scale military aircraft. [Work supported by Air Force SBIR.

    Logro de resultados personales por personas con discapacidades del desarrollo

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    En 1993, El Consejo en Calidad y Liderazgo en Apoyos para Personas con Discapacidad (The Council on Quality and Leadership in Supports for People with Disabilities, The Council) desarrolló un instrumento de evaluación de resultados centrado en la persona, Medidas de Resultados Personales (Personal Outcome Measures, 1997). El Council ha conservado en una base de datos (N = 3.630) las entrevistas Medidas de Resultados Personales llevadas a cabo durante sus revisiones de acreditación. El propósito en este artículo es informar de los hallazgos sobre (a) las relaciones entre las Medidas de Resultados Personales (El Council, 1997) y los patrones de logro de resultado individual y (b) examinar el impacto de variables características (discapacidad, tamaño de la organización, tipo de residencia o fuente de financiación del programa) en el logro individual de resultados personales. Se sugieren alternativas para estudiar las dimensiones de la calidad del servicio y la calidad de vida de las personas con discapacidad

    Livestock preference for endophyte-infected or endophyte-free Oxytropis sericea, Ipomoea carnea, and Ipomoea asarifolia

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    Fungal endophyte-infected forages have been shown to alter herbivore feeding preferences. The objective of this experiment was to compare the preference of cattle, sheep, and goats for plants containing (E+) and not containing (E-) fungal endophytes using freshly harvested Oxytropis sericea, Ipomoea carnea, and Ipomoea asarifolia. Goats and sheep rejected all forage choices regardless of endophyte status except for grass and alfalfa hay. Endophyte status had no influence on cattle forage preferences. Cattle rejected all Oxytropis sericea E+ and E- choices. Cattle discriminated between Ipomoea species, preferring Ipomoea carnea to Ipomoea asarifolia (P = 0.004). In all comparisons, Ipomoea carnea was selected over Ipomoea asarifolia. Cattle did not discriminate between E+ and E- plants of either species (P \u3e 0.33). Cattle preferred E+ Ipomoea carnea over E- Ipomoea asarifolia (P = 0.03), E- Ipomoea carnea over E- Ipomoea asarifolia (P = 0.003), E- Ipomoea carnea over E+ Ipomoea asarifolia (P = 0.001), and E+ Ipomoea carnea over E+ Ipomoea asarifolia (P = 0.01). Nutritional composition, including nonstructural carbohydrate concentrations, did not explain cattle preferences, as Ipomoea asarifolia contained higher total carbohydrate concentrations than did Ipomoea carnea. The presence of ergot and indole diterpene alkaloids in E+ Ipomoea asarifolia, or swainsonine in E+ Oxytropis sericea and E+ Ipomoea carnea did not influence cattle preference because cattle did not discriminate between E- and E+ plants. This study suggests that for these specific toxic plants, endophyte status plays no part in preferences of grazing cattle. For grazing animals, selection by livestock is related to forage scarcity or low nutrient content in the other available forage

    Retail Change and Transition in UK City Centres. Real Estate, Place Adaptation and Innovation within an integrated Retailing system (REPAIR) End of Project Report

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    The UK retailing industry is experiencing unprecedented structural change on the High Street, evidenced through increasing occupier business failures, property vacancies and market uncertainty and instability. The global pandemic during the early 2020s has only served to accelerate changes to established consumer behaviour. In response, this End of Project Report, Retail Change and Transition in UK City Centres, presents the findings of a mixed method study called Real Estate, Place Adaptation and Innovation within an integrated Retailing system or ‘REPAIR’ which investigated the changes experienced across the retail cores of five UK cities – Edinburgh, Glasgow, Hull, Liverpool and Nottingham – between 2000 and 2021. This large-scale study drew on the ‘adaptive cycle’ retail model, whereby the word ‘transition’ explains the current situation in city centres better than the popular quip ‘death of the High Street’. The report describes the ‘adaptive cycle’ model and outlines the research approach, before introducing the case study city centres and the study’s four separate work packages, which examine different aspects of the property market and built environment. 25 recommendations are then presented as part of the study’s wider findings and conclusions
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