952 research outputs found
Chimera states in coupled sine-circle map lattices
Systems of coupled oscillators have been seen to exhibit chimera states, i.e.
states where the system splits into two groups where one group is phase locked
and the other is phase randomized. In this work, we report the existence of
chimera states in a system of two interacting populations of sine circle maps.
This system also exhibits the clustered chimera behavior seen earlier in delay
coupled systems. Rich spatio-temporal behavior is seen in different regimes of
the phase diagram.We carry out a detailed analysis of the stability regimes and
map out the phase diagram using numerical and analytic techniques.Comment: 10 pages, 5 picture
Transport and diffusion in the embedding map
We study the transport properties of passive inertial particles in a
incompressible flows. Here the particle dynamics is represented by the
dissipative embedding map of area-preserving standard map which models
the incompressible flow. The system is a model for impurity dynamics in a fluid
and is characterized by two parameters, the inertia parameter , and the
dissipation parameter . We obtain the statistical characterisers of
transport for this system in these dynamical regimes. These are, the recurrence
time statistics, the diffusion constant, and the distribution of jump lengths.
The recurrence time distribution shows a power law tail in the dynamical
regimes where there is preferential concentration of particles in sticky
regions of the phase space, and an exponential decay in mixing regimes. The
diffusion constant shows behaviour of three types - normal, subdiffusive and
superdiffusive, depending on the parameter regimes. Phase diagrams of the
system are constructed to differentiate different types of diffusion behaviour,
as well as the behaviour of the absolute drift. We correlate the dynamical
regimes seen for the system at different parameter values with the transport
properties observed at these regimes, and in the behaviour of the transients.
This system also shows the existence of a crisis and unstable dimension
variability at certain parameter values. The signature of the unstable
dimension variability is seen in the statistical characterisers of transport.
We discuss the implications of our results for realistic systems.Comment: 28 pages, 14 figures, To Appear in Phys. Rev. E; Vol. 79 (2009
The cost of trauma operating theatre inefficiency.
The National Health Service (NHS) is currently facing a financial crisis with a projected deficit of £2billion by the end of financial year 2015/16. As operating rooms (OR) are one of the costliest components in secondary care, improving theatre efficiency should be at the forefront of efforts to improve health service efficiency. The objectives of this study were to characterize the causes of trauma OR delays and to estimate the cost of this inefficiency. A 1-month prospective single-centre study in St. Marys Hospital. Turnaround time (TT) was used as the surrogate parameter to measure theatre efficiency. Factors including patient age, ASA score and presence of surgical and anaesthetic consultant were evaluated to identify positive or negative associations with theatre delays. Inefficiency cost was calculated by multiplying the time wasted with staff capacity costs and opportunity costs, found to be £24.77/minute. The commonest causes for increased TT were delays in sending for patients (50%) and problems with patient transport to the OR (31%). 461 min of delay was observed in 12 days, equivalent to loss of £951.58/theatre/day. Non-statistically significant trends were seen between length of delays and advancing patient age, ASA score and absence of either a senior clinician or an anaesthetic consultant. Interestingly, the trend was not as strong for absence of an anaesthetic consultant. This study found delays in operating TT to represent a sizable cost, with potential efficiency savings based on TT of £347,327/theatre/year. Further study of a larger sample is warranted to better evaluate the identified trends
An Investigation into the Development of Prospective Indian Austenitic Stainless Steels
The development of substitute stainless steels in which all or the bulk of nickel in the standard austenitic stainless grades is replaced by manganese became it live issue in many steel -producing countries during world War 11 due to restricted or nonavailability of nickel . The research and development work carried out during the war period yielded a series of commercially useful alloy steels, which are enumerated.
The paper goes on to refer to an investigation in
progress in the National Metallurgical Laboratory
into the development of substitute austenitic stainless steels based on the use of manganese, nitrogen , copper, chromium and rare earth additions.The results of experi-mental heats made are presented in terms of working prop-erties , metallographic studies, corrosion resistance under different media, interoranular brittleness and physical tests, etc. Tentative views are expressed on the merits of these austenitic stainless compositions under
Indian conditions , which will be reviewed after further work which is being pursued in the National 'Metall-urgical Laboratory along lines stated
Manufacture in India of Ferro Alloys used in Alloy Steel Industry
The paper starts with an outline of established methods
of manufacture of different ferro-alloys required for making alloy steels with a comparison of their merits as judged by the products made. The ferro-alloys discussed include those based on manganese, chromium, silicon, tungsten, vanadium and phosphorus and of different qual-ities and grades. The position of the production of the
individual ferro-alloys in India is discussed and the
great importance emphasized of expanding production
of those required in relation to the expansion of the Indian iron and steel industry. A programme of ferro-
alloy production is outlined, with discussion of availability of raw materials, manufacturing capacity
and economic factors
Optometrist's Algorithm for Personalizing Robot-Human Handovers
With an increasing interest in human-robot collaboration, there is a need to
develop robot behavior while keeping the human user's preferences in mind.
Highly skilled human users doing delicate tasks require their robot partners to
behave according to their work habits and task constraints. To achieve this, we
present the use of the Optometrist's Algorithm (OA) to interactively and
intuitively personalize robot-human handovers. Using this algorithm, we tune
controller parameters for speed, location, and effort. We study the differences
in the fluency of the handovers before and after tuning and the subjective
perception of this process in a study of non-expert users of mixed
background -- evaluating the OA. The users evaluate the interaction on trust,
safety, and workload scales, amongst other measures. They assess our tuning
process to be engaging and easy to use. Personalization leads to an increase in
the fluency of the interaction. Our participants utilize the wide range of
parameters ending up with their unique personalized handover.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures. Accepted at IEEE-ROMAN 2023. For more information
visit: https://github.com/vivekgupte07/optometrist-algorithm-handover
The Effect of Misch Metal Additions on the Structure and Workability of Al-Mg (7-100/.) Alloys
ON the alloying elements used in aluminium alloys,
copper was one of' the earliest employed commercially
and for many years it has been the principal one. Aluminium-copper alloys to which manganese, magnesium
or silicon has been added, belong to the important
group generally known as "Duralumin".
The binary alloys of aluminium with magnesium attra-
cted the interest of investigators as early as 1900.
There have been numerous attempts to utilise for
general purposes alloys containing as Much as 10%
magnesium ; alloys containing up to 30% magnesium
have been used for special purposes
Tempering of Die-steels based on indigenous materials
This paper present studies on the effects of quenching temperature, tempering temperature and time on the hardness of three die steels of similar carbon contents but having increasing chromium percentages. While tempering in the range of 150°C to 400°C it was observed that hardness decreased as quenching temperature was raised. All the steels showed secondary hardening phenomenon in relation to the variables mentioned above. It was also observed that on tempering the steels above 450°C, after prior quenching from increasing temperatures, hardness gradually increased upto the quenching temperature of 1100°C, beyond which followed a decrease in hardness. This phenomenon was the decrease in hardness. This phenomenon was the same at all tempering temperatures upto 601°C, but the increase in hardness from low quenching temperatures to the maximum quenching temperature was less at 450°C than at the higher temperatures and attained a maximum at 600°C secondary hardening decreased with the increase of quenching temperatur
Study of Microstructure of Chill Cast Aluminium Bronzes (Cu-Al-Fe-Mn)
Substantial information is available on the microstr-uctures of high tensile aluminium bronzes but most of the literature is pertaining to the alloys containing nickel. In the present paper authors have studies and presented the microstructures of various nickel-free aluminium bronze alloys containing iron and manganese. As an exhau-stive amount of work had been done at National Metall-urgical Laboratory to study the mechanical properties of such aluminium bronze alloys in the chill cast condition, the present microstructure study is also limited to the as cast alloys
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