8,057 research outputs found

    Chaining of welding and finish turning simulations for austenitic stainless steel components

    Get PDF
    The chaining of manufacturing processes is a major issue for industrials who want to understand and control the quality of their products in order to ensure their in-service integrity (surface integrity, residual stresses, microstructure, metallurgical changes, distortions,…). Historically, welding and machining are among the most studied processes and dedicated approaches of simulation have been developed to provide reliable and relevant results in an industrial context with safety requirements. As the simulation of these two processes seems to be at an operationnal level, the virtual chaining of both must now be applied with a lifetime prediction prospect. This paper will first present a robust method to simulate multipass welding processes that has been validated through an international round robin. Then the dedicated “hybrid method”, specifically set up to simulate finish turning, will be subsequently applied to the welding simulation so as to reproduce the final state of the pipe manufacturing and its interaction with previous operations. Final residual stress fields will be presented and compared to intermediary results obtained after welding. The influence of each step on the final results will be highlighted regarding surface integrity and finally ongoing validation works and numerical modeling enhancements will be discussed

    Noise and thermal stability of vibrating micro-gyrometers preamplifiers

    Get PDF
    The preamplifier is a critical component of gyrometer's electronics. Indeed the resolution of the sensor is limited by its signal to noise ratio, and the gyrometer's thermal stability is limited by its gain drift. In this paper, five different kinds of preamplifiers are presented and compared. Finally, the design of an integrated preamplifier is shown in order to increase the gain stability while reducing its noise and size.Comment: Submitted on behalf of EDA Publishing Association (http://irevues.inist.fr/EDA-Publishing

    MicroRNAs Act as Cofactors in Bicoid-Mediated Translational Repression

    Get PDF
    SummaryNoncoding RNAs have recently emerged as important regulators of mRNA translation and turnover [1, 2]. Nevertheless, we largely ignore how their function integrates with protein-mediated translational regulation. We focus on Bicoid, a key patterning molecule in Drosophila, which inhibits the translation of caudal in the anterior part of the embryo [3, 4]. Previous work showed that Bicoid recruits the cap-binding protein d4EHP on the caudal mRNA to repress translation [5]. Here we show that miR-2 family microRNAs are essential cofactors in the repression of caudal. Using an in vivo sensor, we demonstrate that Bicoid acts through a 63 nt response element in the caudal 3′ UTR that includes a single miR-2 target site. Mutating that site abolishes Bicoid-mediated repression, and this effect can be partly reversed by expressing a microRNA with compensatory changes that restore binding to the mutated target. Four predicted Bicoid splice isoforms are capable of caudal repression, including two that lack the d4EHP interaction domain; all four isoforms require the microRNA target for repression. The synergy between Bicoid and microRNAs appears to have evolved recently in the context of the drosophilid caudal BRE. The discovery that microRNAs play an essential role in Bicoid-mediated translational repression opens up new perspectives on Bicoid’s function and evolution

    Force transmission in a packing of pentagonal particles

    Get PDF
    We perform a detailed analysis of the contact force network in a dense confined packing of pentagonal particles simulated by means of the contact dynamics method. The effect of particle shape is evidenced by comparing the data from pentagon packing and from a packing with identical characteristics except for the circular shape of the particles. A counterintuitive finding of this work is that, under steady shearing, the pentagon packing develops a lower structural anisotropy than the disk packing. We show that this weakness is compensated by a higher force anisotropy, leading to enhanced shear strength of the pentagon packing. We revisit "strong" and "weak" force networks in the pentagon packing, but our simulation data provide also evidence for a large class of "very weak" forces carried mainly by vertex-to-edge contacts. The strong force chains are mostly composed of edge-to-edge contacts with a marked zig-zag aspect and a decreasing exponential probability distribution as in a disk packing

    Tilt and Translation Motion Perception during Off Vertical Axis Rotation

    Get PDF
    The effect of stimulus frequency on tilt and translation motion perception was studied during constant velocity off-vertical axis rotation (OVAR), and compared to the effect of stimulus frequency on eye movements. Fourteen healthy subjects were rotated in darkness about their longitudinal axis 10deg and 20deg off-vertical at 0.125 Hz, and 20deg offvertical at 0.5 Hz. Oculomotor responses were recorded using videography, and perceived motion was evaluated using verbal reports and a joystick with four degrees of freedom (pitch and roll tilt, mediallateral and anteriorposterior translation). During the lower frequency OVAR, subjects reported the perception of progressing along the edge of a cone. During higher frequency OVAR, subjects reported the perception of progressing along the edge of an upright cylinder. The modulation of both tilt recorded from the joystick and ocular torsion significantly increased as the tilt angle increased from 10deg to 20deg at 0.125 Hz, and then decreased at 0.5 Hz. Both tilt perception and torsion slightly lagged head orientation at 0.125 Hz. The phase lag of torsion increased at 0.5 Hz, while the phase of tilt perception did not change as a function of frequency. The amplitude of both translation perception recorded from the joystick and horizontal eye movements was negligible at 0.125 Hz and increased as a function of stimulus frequency. While the phase lead of horizontal eye movements decreased at 0.5 Hz, the phase of translation perception did not vary with stimulus frequency and was similar to the phase of tilt perception during all conditions. During dynamic linear acceleration in the absence of other sensory input (canal, vision) a change in stimulus frequency alone elicits similar changes in the amplitude of both self motion perception and eye movements. However, in contrast to the eye movements, the phase of both perceived tilt and translation motion is not altered by stimulus frequency. We conclude that the neural processing to distinguish tilt and translation linear acceleration stimuli differs between eye movements and motion perception

    What is the Thouless Energy for Ballistic Systems?

    Full text link
    The Thouless energy, \Ec characterizes numerous quantities associated with sensitivity to boundary conditions in diffusive mesoscopic conductors. What happens to these quantities if the disorder strength is decreased and a transition to the ballistic regime takes place? In the present analysis we refute the intuitively plausible assumption that \Ec loses its meaning as an inverse diffusion time through the system at hand, and generally disorder independent scales take over. Instead we find that a variety of (thermodynamic) observables are still characterized by the Thouless energy.Comment: 4 pages REVTEX, uuencoded file. To appear in Physical Review Letter

    Mode coupling control in a resonant device: application to solid-state ring lasers

    Full text link
    A theoretical and experimental investigation of the effects of mode coupling in a resonant macro- scopic quantum device is achieved in the case of a ring laser. In particular, we show both analytically and experimentally that such a device can be used as a rotation sensor provided the effects of mode coupling are controlled, for example through the use of an additional coupling. A possible general- ization of this example to the case of another resonant macroscopic quantum device is discussed
    corecore