4,599 research outputs found
Pressure and velocity measurements in a three-dimensional wall jet
The effects on the flow fields of varying the ratio of the velocity at the exit plane of the nozzle to the outer tunnel flow are reported. The pressure-velocity correlations are taken and some trends are discussed. Emphasis is placed on comparing the coherence between the fluctuating pressure and velocity fields at various locations in the different flow configurations
An experimental investigation of an axisymmetric jet in a coflowing airstream
The flow development of an axisymmetric jet exhausting into a moving airstream has been studied. The jet has a Reynolds number of 22,600, and the ratio of the jet velocity to the wind tunnel velocity is 5.1 to 1. The flow field of the axisymmetric jet was examined at locations varying from approximately zero to eight diameters downstream of the orifice. Of primary concern at each downstream location was the mapping of the one point statistical properties of the flow, including mean velocity, turbulent intensity, and intermittency. Autocorrelations and power spectral density curves were determined for both the fluctuating velocity field and the concentration signal at various distances from the jet's center line for different downstream locations. A laser Doppler velocimeter, using a phase locked loop processor, was used to make the desired velocity field measurements which were compared with hot wire anemometer and pressure probe data
Investigations of scaling laws for jet impingement
The statistical properties of tangential flows over surfaces were investigated by two techniques. In one, a laser-Doppler velocimeter was used in a smoke-laden jet to measure one-point statistical properties, including mean velocities, turbulent intensities, intermittencies, autocorrelations, and power spectral densities. In the other technique, free stream and surface pressure probes connected to 1/8 inch microphones were used to obtain single point rms and 1/3 octave pressures, as well as two point cross correlations, the latter being converted to auto spectra, amplitude ratios, phase lags, and coherences. The results of these studies support the vortex model of jets, give some insights into the effects of surface impingement, and confirm that jet diameter and velocity are the scaling parameters for circular jets, while Reynolds number is relatively unimportant
A Monodentate 1,3-Diphenyl-2-triazeno Terpyridineplatinum(II) Complex
The compound (l,3-diphenyl-2-triazeno )(2,2',2"-
terpyridine)platinum(II) perchlorate dimethylformamide
solvate (1) is formed by reaction of dpt (dptH = 1,3-diphenyltriazene) and [Pt(tpy)Cl]Cl (tpy =
terpyridine) in the presence of excess base (NEt3). There are two independent cations in the asymmetric unit. The platinum centers have a monodentate triazeno ligand with the remaining coordination sites occupied by the terpyridine group. The crystal packing is dominated by π-π stacking interactions, and metal-metal interactions are conspicuously absent
Unsteady loads due to propulsive lift configurations. Part B: Pressure and velocity measurements in a three dimensional wall jet
The effects of increasing the velocity ratio, lambda sub j were explored. The quantities measured include the width of the mixing region, the mean velocity field, turbulent intensities and time scales. In addition, wall and static pressure velocity correlations and coherences are presented. The velocity measurements were made using a laser Doppler velocimeter with a phase locked loop processor. The fluctuating pressures were monitored using condenser type microphones
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Tablet Keyboard Configuration Affects Performance, Discomfort and Task Difficulty for Thumb Typing in a Two-Handed Grip
When holding a tablet computer with two hands, the touch keyboard configuration imposes postural constraints on the user because of the need to simultaneously hold the device and type with the thumbs. Designers have provided users with several possible keyboard configurations (device orientation, keyboard layout and location). However, potential differences in performance, usability and postures among these configurations have not been explored. We hypothesize that (1) the narrower standard keyboard layout in the portrait orientation leads to lower self-reported discomfort and less reach than the landscape orientation; (2) a split keyboard layout results in better overall outcomes compared to the standard layout; and (3) the conventional bottom keyboard location leads to the best outcomes overall compared to other locations. A repeated measures laboratory experiment of 12 tablet owners measured typing speed, discomfort, task difficulty, and thumb/wrist joint postures using an active marker system during typing tasks for different combinations of device orientation (portrait and landscape), keyboard layout (standard and split), and keyboard location (bottom, middle, top). The narrower standard keyboard with the device in the portrait orientation was associated with less discomfort (least squares mean (and S.E.) 2.9±0.6) than the landscape orientation (4.5±0.7). Additionally, the split keyboard decreased the amount of reaching required by the thumb in the landscape orientation as defined by a reduced range of motion and less MCP extension, which may have led to reduced discomfort (2.7±0.6) compared to the standard layout (4.5±0.7). However, typing speed was greater for the standard layout (127±5 char./min.) compared to the split layout (113±4 char./min.) regardless of device orientation and keyboard location. Usage guidelines and designers can incorporate these findings to optimize keyboard design parameters and form factors that promote user performance and usability for thumb interaction
Unsteady loads due to propulsive lift configurations
The flow of a jet over an airfoil representative of upper surface blowing was studied using laser techniques. Experimental techniques were developed for the investigation of unsteady pressures behind a cold model jet. Construction of a 1/4 scale model of the 'Beach' test configuration was completed along with construction of a portable detector. The portable detector is used in conjunction with a laser to measure jet flows during tests on the 'Beach' facility. The detector incorporates both optical and electronic components
Cascading the use of Web 2.0 technology in secondary schools in the United Kingdom: identifying the barriers beyond pre-service training
This paper reports on research that took place at Nottingham Trent University and Sheffield Hallam University, United Kingdom, over two years. The research focuses on the use of Web 2.0 technology, specifically web logs, with pre-service teachers, both during their university programme and the first year of teaching as full-time newly qualified teachers (NQTs). The purpose of this research was to add a developing body of knowledge by identifying whether technology used by pre-service teachers during their training course can be cascaded into their practice once qualified. Key findings identify a number of enablers and barriers to cascading technology in the classroom; these include curriculum time, pupil skills and support. The research concludes that early professional support and development should be on-going and assumptions about new teachers as champions of cascading innovative use of Web 2 technologies into their practice as NQTs may be over optimisti
Redox and Peroxidase Activities of the Hemoglobin Superfamily: Relevance to Health and Disease
Significance: Erythrocyte hemoglobin (Hb) and myocyte myoglobin, although primarily oxygen-carrying proteins,
have the capacity to do redox chemistry. Such redox activity in the wider family of globins now appears to have important
associations with the mechanisms of cell stress response. In turn, an understanding of such mechanisms in vivo may have
a potential in the understanding of cancer therapy resistance and neurodegenerative disorders such as Alzheimer’s.
Recent Advances: There has been an enhanced understanding of the redox chemistry of the globin superfamily
in recent years, leading to advances in development of Hb-based blood substitutes and in hypotheses relating to
specific disease mechanisms. Neuroglobin (Ngb) and cytoglobin (Cygb) have been linked to cell protection
mechanisms against hypoxia and oxidative stress, with implications in the onset and progression of neurodegenerative
diseases for Ngb and cancer for Cygb.
Critical Issues: Despite advances in the understanding of redox chemistry of globins, the physiological roles of
many of these proteins still remain ambiguous at best. Confusion over potential physiological roles may relate
to multifunctional roles for globins, which may be modulated by surface-exposed cysteine pairs in some
globins. Such roles may be critical in deciphering the relationships of these globins in human diseases.
Future Directions: Further studies are required to connect the considerable knowledge on the mechanisms of globin
redox chemistry in vitro with the physiological and pathological roles of globins in vivo. In doing so, new therapies
for neurodegenerative disorders and cancer therapy resistance may be targeted
Efficient noninteractive certification of RSA moduli and beyond
In many applications, it is important to verify that an RSA public key (N; e) speci es a
permutation over the entire space ZN, in order to prevent attacks due to adversarially-generated
public keys. We design and implement a simple and e cient noninteractive zero-knowledge
protocol (in the random oracle model) for this task. Applications concerned about adversarial
key generation can just append our proof to the RSA public key without any other modi cations
to existing code or cryptographic libraries. Users need only perform a one-time veri cation of
the proof to ensure that raising to the power e is a permutation of the integers modulo N. For
typical parameter settings, the proof consists of nine integers modulo N; generating the proof
and verifying it both require about nine modular exponentiations.
We extend our results beyond RSA keys and also provide e cient noninteractive zero-
knowledge proofs for other properties of N, which can be used to certify that N is suitable
for the Paillier cryptosystem, is a product of two primes, or is a Blum integer. As compared to
the recent work of Auerbach and Poettering (PKC 2018), who provide two-message protocols for
similar languages, our protocols are more e cient and do not require interaction, which enables
a broader class of applications.https://eprint.iacr.org/2018/057First author draf
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