7,570 research outputs found
Infrared video tracking of UAVs: Guided landing in the absence of GPS signals
Master's Project (M.S.) University of Alaska Fairbanks, 2019Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) use Global Positioning System (GPS) signals to
determine their position for automated flight. The GPS signals require an unobstructed view
of the sky in order to obtain position information. When inside without a clear view of the
sky, such as in a building or mine, other methods are necessary to obtain the relative position
of the UAV. For obstacle avoidance a LIDAR/SONAR system is sufficient to ensure
automated flight, but for precision landing the LIDAR/SONAR system is insufficient for
effectively identifying the location of the landing platform and providing flight control inputs
to guide the UAV to the landing platform. This project was developed in order to solve this
problem by creating a guidance system utilizing an infrared (IR) camera to track an IR LED
and blue LEDs mounted on the UAV from a RaspberryPI 3 Model B+. The RaspberryPI,
using OpenCV libraries, can effectively track the position of the LED lights mounted on the
UAV, determine rotational and lateral corrections based on this tracking, and, using
Dronekit-Python libraries, command the UAV to position itself and land on the platform of
the Husky UGV (Unmanned Ground Vehicle)
Research into the feasibility of thin metal and oxide-film capacitors Final technical report
Feasibility of producing thin metal and oxide- film capacitors with stable electrical properties in high temperature environment
Graphite/Larc-160 technology demonstration segment test results
A structural test program was conducted on a Celion/LARC-160 graphite/polyimide technology demonstration segment (TDS) to verify the technology. The 137 x 152 cm (54 x 60 in.) TDS simulates a full-scale section of the orbiter composite body flap design incorporating three ribs and extending from the forward cove back to the rear spar. The TDS was successfully subjected to mechanical loads and thermal environments (-170 to 316 C) simulating 100 shuttle orbiter missions. Successful completion of the test program verified the design, analysis, and fabrication methodology for bonded Gr/PI honeycomb sandwich structure and demonstration that Gr/PI composite technology readiness is established
Certiorari as Used by the Supreme Court in the Interest of Harmony of Opinion and Uniformity of the Law
It is not my purpose to discuss the writ of certiorari in general, but only such writ as used by the Supreme Court and as directed to the several Courts of Appeals in the interest of harmony of the case law of the state. But whilst this is the purpose I have in mind, yet some general thoughts are not inappropriate. In Missouri we have no general statutes covering the subject of certiorari, as we have covering prohibition, mandamus, habeas corpus and quo warranto. In most respects we use the writ as recognized at common law, and it is no doubt true that when the constitution of 1875, sec. 3 of art. VI, speaks of certiorari, it was used in the common law sense of that term. In many states, by statute the old common law writ has been curtailed, and in others enlarged. And in England Acts of Parliament have changed in some things the old common law certiorari
(SNP068) Louis Graves interviewed by Reed Engle, transcribed by Joy K. Stiles
Records an interview with Louis Graves, who grew up in Madison County, Virginia, not far from the site where President Herbert Hoover would construct a rustic retreat known as Rapidan Camp, and later as Camp Hoover. Hoover paid for the project out of his own funds and the camp was constructed by a detachment of U.S. Marines as a military exercise by March, 1929. Louis Graves recalls speeches given by President Hoover and other dignitaries in Madison, Va., as part of a day-long Hoover Day celebration on August 9, 1929. Graves relates that more than 10,000 people attended the event, including Virginia governor Harry F. Byrd, who arrived at the celebration aboard an Army reconnaissance blimp. Includes a discussion of the economic situation in Madison County in 1929, during a time of prolonged drought and at the onset of the Great Depression.
There is no audio recording for this interview; interview consists of transcript only.https://commons.lib.jmu.edu/snp/1123/thumbnail.jp
Does an Employee\u27s Binding Arbitration Agreement Limit the Enforcement of Powers of the EEOC: The Supreme Court Rules That It Does Not - Equal Employment Opportunity Comm. v. Waffle House
The friction between the FAA and Title VII arises when an injured employee has signed an arbitration agreement with an employer and subsequently experiences discrimination in some fashion in the workplace. The FAA would require that the employee take the action to arbitration, whereas if the EEOC found probable cause, it could file in its own name and avoid the arbitration agreement. So, should the EEOC be allowed to recover on the behalf of an employee who has signed an arbitration agreement? A circuit split on this issue prompted the Supreme Court to grant certiorari in EEOC v. Waffle House
- …