27,654 research outputs found
Rotating launch device for a remotely piloted aircraft
A method and apparatus for launching a remotely piloted aircraft is disclosed, wherein the aircraft is revolved about a fixed pivot point until a predetermined speed is reached whereupon the vehicle is released from the launching apparatus. The vehicle is attached to one end of a rotatable arm, the imbalance on the arm being counteracted by a counter weight attached to the opposite end. The counter weight is released from the arm at the same time as the aircraft so as to avoid structural damage to the apparatus caused by rotation in the unbalanced condition. The arm is oriented such that it rotates in a plane inclined obliquely to the local gravitational field of the launch site
Outer trapped surfaces are dense near MOTSs
We show that any vacuum initial data set containing a marginally outer
trapped surface S and satisfying a "no KIDs" condition can be perturbed near S
so that S becomes strictly outer trapped in the new vacuum initial data set.
This, together with the results in [9], gives a precise sense in which generic
initial data containing marginally outer trapped surfaces lead to geodesically
incomplete spacetimes.Comment: 14 pages, minor rewording
Uniqueness of static black-holes without analyticity
We show that the hypothesis of analyticity in the uniqueness theory of
vacuum, or electrovacuum, static black holes is not needed. More generally, we
show that prehorizons covering a closed set cannot occur in well-behaved
domains of outer communications.Comment: 6 pages, 1 figur
Mathematical general relativity: a sampler
We provide an introduction to selected recent advances in the mathematical
understanding of Einstein's theory of gravitation.Comment: Some updates. A shortened version, to appear in the Bulletin of the
AMS, is available online at
http://www.ams.org/journals/bull/0000-000-00/S0273-0979-2010-01304-
Effect of neck cut position on time to collapse in halal slaughtered cattle without stunning
This study examined the effect of neck cut position on the time to physical collapse in upright restrained halal slaughtered cattle (n = 644). Time to collapse was used as an indirect indicator of the early stages of onset of unconsciousness. Cattle were slaughtered with either a conventional low (LNC) (n = 561) or a high neck cut (HNC) (n = 83). Mean time to final collapse was higher in the LNC compared to HNC group (18.9 ± 1.1 s and 13.5 ± 1.3 s respectively (P 20 s to final collapse had larger false aneurysms. In summary, the HNC reduced the mean time to final collapse and the frequency of animals that took longer than 20 s to collapse
Defining the gap between research and practice in public relations programme evaluation - towards a new research agenda
The current situation in public relations programme evaluation is neatly summarized by McCoy who commented that 'probably the most common buzzwords in public relations in the last ten years have been evaluation and accountability' (McCoy 2005, 3). This paper examines the academic and practitioner-based literature and research on programme evaluation and it detects different priorities and approaches that may partly explain why the debate on acceptable and agreed evaluation methods continues. It analyses those differences and proposes a research agenda to bridge the gap and move the debate forward
On the engineering of crucial software
The various aspects of the conventional software development cycle are examined. This cycle was the basis of the augmented approach contained in the original grant proposal. This cycle was found inadequate for crucial software development, and the justification for this opinion is presented. Several possible enhancements to the conventional software cycle are discussed. Software fault tolerance, a possible enhancement of major importance, is discussed separately. Formal verification using mathematical proof is considered. Automatic programming is a radical alternative to the conventional cycle and is discussed. Recommendations for a comprehensive approach are presented, and various experiments which could be conducted in AIRLAB are described
The wall shear stress produced by the normal impingement of a jet on a flat surface
A method for the theoretical determination of the wall shear stress under impinging jets of various congurations is presented. Axisymmetric and two-dimensional
incompressible jets of a wide range of Reynolds numbers and jet heights are considered. Theoretical predictions from this approach are compared with available wall shear stress measurements. These data are critically evaluated based on the method of measurement and its applicability to the boundary layer under consideration. It was found that impingement-region wall shear stress measurements using the electrochemical method in submerged impinging liquid jets provide the greatest accuracy of any indirect method. A unique wall shear stress measurement technique, based
on observing the removal of monosized spheres from well-characterized surfaces, was used to conrm the impinging jet analysis presented for gas jets. The technique was also used to determine an empirical relation describing the rise in wall shear stress due to compressibility eects in impinging high-velocity jets
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