19,973 research outputs found
Proceedings of the Second Work Study School Conference Cranfield, 1955
The second Annual Reunion Conference of students who had attended
courses at the Work Study School, Cranfield, was held on the lst.,
2nd. and 3rd. of April, 1955.
These conferences are intended to provide an opportunity to ex-students
to revisit Cranfield and meet old and new friends with a mutual
interest in Work Study developments. In order that full benefit is derived
from such contacts a limit of approximately forty reservations is imposed.
The papers presented are compiled and delivered by ex-students
and are contained herein in almost verbatim form. Only minor editing
has been carried out as this report is intended to be a record of the
major formal proceedings and not a dissertation on The Work Study School's
thinking
Work study in Germany: a report of the activities of REFA
The writer was in Germany from April 4th. to April 16th. 1955 for
discussions with the headquarters' staff of the REFA Organisation,
and practitioners of the REFA techniques in various factories.
This report deals with the advice and impressions received
during that visit
Propagation of the First Flames in Type Ia Supernovae
We consider the competition of the different physical processes that can
affect the evolution of a flame bubble in a Type Ia supernovae -- burning,
turbulence and buoyancy. Even in the vigorously turbulent conditions of a
convecting white dwarf, thermonuclear burning that begins at a point near the
center (within 100 km) of the star is dominated by the spherical laminar
expansion of the flame, until the burning region reaches kilometers in size.
Consequently flames that ignite in the inner ~20 km promptly burn through the
center, and flame bubbles anywhere must grow quite large--indeed, resolvable by
large-scale simulations of the global system--for significant motion or
deformation occur. As a result, any hot-spot that successfully ignites into a
flame can burn a significant amount of white dwarf material. This potentially
increases the stochastic nature of the explosion compared to a scenario where a
simmering progenitor can have small early hot-spots float harmlessly away.
Further, the size where the laminar flame speed dominates other relevant
velocities sets a characteristic scale for fragmentation of larger flame
structures, as nothing--by definition--can easily break the burning region into
smaller volumes. This makes possible the development of semi-analytic
descriptions of the earliest phase of the propagation of burning in a Type Ia
supernovae, which we present here. Our analysis is supported by fully resolved
numerical simulations of flame bubbles.Comment: 33 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Prospects for reduced energy transports: A preliminary analysis
The recent energy crisis and subsequent substantial increase in fuel prices have provided increased incentive to reduce the fuel consumption of civil transport aircraft. At the present time many changes in operational procedures have been introduced to decrease fuel consumption of the existing fleet. In the future, however, it may become desirable or even necessary to introduce new fuel-conservative aircraft designs. This paper reports the results of a preliminary study of new near-term fuel conservative aircraft. A parametric study was made to determine the effects of cruise Mach number and fuel cost on the optimum configuration characteristics and on economic performance. For each design, the wing geometry was optimized to give maximum return on investment at a particular fuel cost. Based on the results of the parametric study, a nominal reduced energy configuration was selected. Compared with existing transport designs, the reduced energy design has a higher aspect ratio wing with lower sweep, and cruises at a lower Mach number. It has about 30% less fuel consumption on a seat-mile basis
The AXAF technology program: The optical flats tests
The results of a technology program aimed at determining the limits of surface polishing for reflecting X-ray telescopes is presented. This program is part of the major task of developing the Advanced X-ray Astrophysical Facility (AXAF). By studying the optical properties of state-of-the-art polished flat surfaces, conclusions were drawn as to the potential capability of AXAF. Surface microtopography of the flats as well as their figure are studied by X-ray, visual, and mechanical techniques. These techniques and their results are described. The employed polishing techniques are more than adequate for the specifications of the AXAF mirrors
ePortfolios: Mediating the minefield of inherent risks and tensions
The ePortfolio Project at the Queensland University of Technology (QUT) exemplifies an innovative and flexible harnessing of current portfolio thinking and design that has achieved substantial buy-in across the institution with over 23000 active portfolios. Robust infrastructure support, curriculum integration and training have facilitated widespread take-up, while QUT’s early adoption of ePortfolio technology has enabled the concomitant development of a strong policy and systems approach to deal explicitly with legal and design responsibilities. In the light of that experience, this paper will highlight the risks and tensions inherent in ePortfolio policy, design and implementation. In many ways, both the strengths and weaknesses of ePortfolios lie in their ability to be accessed by a wider, less secure audience – either internally (e.g. other students and staff) or externally (e.g. potential employees and referees). How do we balance the obvious requirement to safeguard students from the potential for institutionally-facilitated cyber-harm and privacy breaches, with this generation’s instinctive personal and professional desires for reflections, private details, information and intellectual property to be available freely and with minimal restriction? How can we promote collaboration and freeform expression in the blog and wiki world but also manage the institutional risk that unauthorised use of student information and work so palpably carries with it? For ePortfolios to flourish and to develop and for students to remain engaged in current reflective processes, holistic guidelines and sensible boundaries are required to help safeguard personal details and journaling without overly restricting students’ emotional, collaborative and creative engagement with the ePortfolio experience. This paper will discuss such issues and suggest possible ways forward
Efficacy of a Workbook to Promote Forgiveness: A Randomized Controlled Trial with University Students
Objective
The present study investigated the efficacy of a 6-hour self-directed workbook adapted from the REACH Forgiveness intervention. Method
Undergraduates (N = 41) were randomly assigned to either an immediate treatment or waitlist control condition. Participants were assessed across 3 time periods using a variety of forgiveness outcome measures. Results
The 6-hour workbook intervention increased forgiveness, as indicated by positive changes in participants’ forgiveness ratings that differed by condition. In addition, benchmarking analysis showed that the self-directed workbook intervention is at least as efficacious as the delivery of the REACH Forgiveness model via group therapy. Conclusion
A self-directed workbook intervention adapted from the REACH Forgiveness intervention provides an adjunct to traditional psychotherapy that could assist the mental health community to manage the burden of unforgiveness among victims of interpersonal harm
Pairs of Bloch electrons and magnetic translation groups
A product of irreducible representations of magnetic translation group is
considered. It leads to irreducible representations which were previously
rejected as nonphysical. A very simple example indicates a possible application
of these representations. In particular, they are important in descriptions of
pairs of electrons in a magnetic field and a periodic potential. The
periodicity of some properties with respect to the charge of a particle is
briefly discussed.Comment: 4 pages, RevTex. Latex2.09, amsfont
Analytical and experimental study of stratification and liquid-ullage coupling, 1 June 1964 - 31 May 1965
Closed-form solution for stratification of subcooled fluids in containers subjected to heating, and for liquid-ullage vapor couplin
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