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Process Control of 3D Welding as a Droplet-Based Rapid Prototyping Technique
Three-dimensional welding is investigated as a rapid prototyping technique for the production
of real Inetallic parts using gas metal arc welding principles. A high speed machine vision
system is used to study the correlation between droplet transfer parameters and resultant weld
penetration characteristics. Experimental work is conducted to determine how droplet transfer
frequency, droplet size, and number of passes affect the geometrical and Inetallurgical properties
ofthe weld penetration. A finite element analysis is performed in order to study what influence
additional layering has on the cooling characteristics and resultant penetration profile.Mechanical Engineerin
Review of: Sociable Letters by Margaret Cavendish
This article reviews the book Sociable Letters by Margaret Cavendish
Review of: Spinoza\u27s Heresy: Immortality And The Jewish Mind by Steven Nadler
This article reviews the book Spinoza\u27s Heresy: Immortality and the Jewish Mind, by Steven Nadler
Review of: From Stevin to Spinoza: An Essay on Philosophy in the Seventeenth-Century Dutch Republic by Wiep Van Bunge
Reviews the book From Stevin to Spinoza: An Essay an Philosophy in the Seventeenth-Century Dutch Republic, by Wiep Van Bunge
A Correlation Between Changes in Solar Luminosity and Differential Radius Measurements
Solar luminosity variations occurring during solar cycle 21 can be attributed in large part to the presence of sunspots and faculae. Nevertheless, there remains a residual portion of the luminosity variation distinctly unaccounted for by these phenomena of solar activity. At the Santa Catalina Laboratory for Experimental Relativity by Astrometry (SCLERA), observations of the solar limb are capable of detecting changes in the solar limb darkening function by monitoring a quantity known as the differential radius. These observations are utilized in such a way that the effects of solar activity are minimized in order to reveal the more fundamental structure of the photosphere. The results of observations made during solar cycle 21 at various solar latitudes indicate that a measurable change did occur in the global photospheric limb darkening function. It is proposed that the residual luminosity change is associated in part with this change in limb darkening
Review of: Spinoza To The Letter: Studies In Words, Texts And Books by Fokke Akkerman and Piet Steenbakkerseds
This article reviews the book Spinoza To The Letter: Studies In Words, Texts And Books by Fokke Akkerman and Piet Steenbakkerseds
Long-term moored array measurements of currents and hydrography over Georges Bank : 1994–1999
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2009. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Elsevier B.V. for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Progress In Oceanography 82 (2009): 191-223, doi:10.1016/j.pocean.2009.07.004.In conjunction with the GLOBEC (Global Ocean Ecosystems Dynamics) program,
measurements of moored currents, temperature and salinity were made during 1994-1999 at
locations in 76 m of water along the Southern Flank of Georges Bank and at the Northeastern
Peak. The measurements concentrate on the biologically crucial winter and spring periods, and
coverage during the fall is usually poorer.
Current time series were completely dominated by the semidiurnal M2 tidal component, while
other tidal species (including the diurnal K1 component) were also important. There was a
substantial wind-driven component of the flow, which was linked, especially during the summer,
to regional–scale response patterns. The current response at the Northeast Peak was especially
strong in the 3-4 day period band, and this response is shown to be related to an amplifying
topographic wave propagating eastward along the northern flank. Monthly mean flows on the
southern flank are southwestward throughout the year, but strongest in the summertime. The
observed tendency for summertime maximum along-bank flow to occur at depth is rationalized
in terms of density gradients associated with a near-surface freshwater tongue wrapping around
the Bank.
Temperature and salinity time series demonstrate the presence, altogether about 25% of the time,
of a number of intruding water masses. These intrusions could last anywhere from a couple days
up to about a month. The sources of these intrusions can be broadly classified as the Scotian
Shelf (especially during the winter), the Western Gulf of Maine (especially during the summer),
and the deeper ocean south of Georges Bank (throughout the year). On longer time scales, the
temperature variability is dominated by seasonal temperature changes. During the spring and
summer, these changes are balanced by local heating or cooling, but wintertime cooling involves
advective lateral transports as well. Salinity variations have weak, if any, seasonal variability, but
are dominated by interannual changes that are related to regional- or basin-scale changes.
All considered, Georges Bank temperature and salinity characteristics are found to be highly
dependent on the surrounding waters, but many questions remain, especially in terms of whether
intrusive events leave a sustained impact on Bank waters.This work took place as part of the GLOBEC Northwest Atlantic/Georges Bank field project,
and was sponsored through NSF Biological Oceanography grants OCE- 80644500 and OCE-
80644501
U.S. GLOBEC Georges Bank long-term moored program : part 1 - mooring configuration
As part of the U.S. GLOBEC Northwest Atlantic/Georges Bank program, moorings were deployed on Georges
Bank as part of the broad-scale survey component to help measure the temporal variability of both physical
and biological characteristics on the Bank. The array consisted of a primary mooring site on the Southern
Flank which was maintained for the full 5-year duration of the field program, plus secondary moorings, with
fewer sensors and of shorter duration, in the well-mixed water on the Crest and in the cod/haddock
spawning region on the Northeast Peak. Temperature and conductivity (salinity) were measured at 5-m
intervals, ADCP velocity profiles were obtained with 1-m vertical resolution, and bio-optical packages
(measuring fluorescence, optical transmission and photosynthetically active radiation) were deployed at
10-m and 40-m depths. Bottom pressure was measured at the Southern Flank site. The buoy design, sensors
and mooring configuration is presented and discussed below, and the data obtained is presented and
discussed in an accompanying reports “U.S. GLOBEC Georges Bank Long-Term Moored Program: Part 2 –
Yearly Data Summary and Report,” and “U.S. GLOBEC Georges Bank Long-Term Moored Program: Part 3 –
Data Summary.”Funding was provided by the National Science Foundation under grant numbers
OCE-93-13670, OCE-96-32348, OCE98-06379, OCE-98-06445 and OCE-02-27679
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