870 research outputs found

    Analysis of dynamic stall using unsteady boundary-layer theory

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    The unsteady turbulent boundary layer and potential flow about a pitching airfoil are analyzed using numerical methods to determine the effect of pitch rate on the delay in forward movement of the rear flow reversal point. An explicit finite difference scheme is used to integrate the unsteady boundary layer equations, which are coupled at each instant of time to a fully unsteady and nonlinear potential flow analysis. A substantial delay in forward movement of the reversal point is demonstrated with increasing pitch rate, and it is shown that the delay results partly from the alleviation of the gradients in the potential flow, and partly from the effects of unsteadiness in the boundary layer itself. The predicted delay in flow-reversal onset, and its variation with pitch rate, are shown to be in reasonable agreement with experimental data relating to the delay in dynamic stall. From the comparisons it can be concluded (a) that the effects of time-dependence are sufficient to explain the failure of the boundary layer to separate during the dynamic overshoot, and (b) that there may be some link between forward movement of the reversal point and dynamic stall

    Determining the physical limits on semiā€active control performance: a tutorial

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    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/106822/1/stc1602.pd

    Additional three-dimensional boundary-layer computations for a finite swept wing

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    Calculations have been made of the three-dimensional, compressible, turbulent boundary layer on the finite supercritical wing of the NASA modified F-8 transonic research airplane. The calculations were based on the wing pressure distribution measured in flight at M = 0.90, instead of on wind tunnel data at M = 0.50 and 0.99. Data on the boundary-layer thickness, displacement thickness, skin-friction components, and integrated streamwise skin friction are presented for points along the streamwise stations at which pressure measurements were made

    Transient Vision Loss Associated with Prefilled Aflibercept Syringes: A Case Series and Analysis of Injection Force

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    Purpose To describe cases of significant vision loss after intravitreal aflibercept administration using prefilled syringes (PFS) and to study the relationships among syringe design, injection speed, and injection force. Design Retrospective case series and experimental study. Participants Twelve patients who received intravitreal aflibercept via PFS. Methods All retina specialists (n = 13) at Oregon Health & Science University and the Veterans Affairs Portland Medical Center were queried in December 2020 to report episodes of significant vision loss after aflibercept PFS use. Chart review was completed for all affected patients. Using a commercially available force measuring system, injection force was measured for aflibercept PFS, ranibizumab PFS, and a tuberculin syringe at various injection speeds. Main Outcome Measures Number of significant vision loss episodes after aflibercept PFS use and average injection force (Newtons) at various injection speeds across different syringes. Results Ten specialists (76.9%) reported a perceived increase in vision loss after injection with aflibercept PFS. Sixteen events of light perception or worse vision were reported immediate after aflibercept PFS use. Chart review was available for 12 of these events. The indication for aflibercept was exudative age-related macular degeneration (n = 8), diabetic macular edema (n = 3), and central serous chorioretinopathy (n = 1). The median age of affected patients was 71 years (range, 49ā€“94 years). Two patients were being treated for glaucoma (n = 1) or ocular hypertension (n = 1); 1 patient was a glaucoma suspect. Anterior chamber paracentesis was performed in 4 patients to normalize intraocular pressure (IOP) promptly. Laboratory experiments demonstrated that higher injection speeds were associated with higher injection forces for all syringe types. Injection forces were consistently greater with aflibercept PFS than with the ranibizumab PFS or tuberculin syringe (P \u3c 0.0001). Conclusions Retina specialists at our institutions have noted numerous cases of severe transient vision loss with aflibercept PFS use. The average injection force may be greater with the aflibercept PFS when compared with other intravitreal antiā€“vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) options. Additional clinical studies are needed to understand better how syringe design and fluid dynamics may contribute to vision loss after injection

    Pull From the Knee: Proper Technique and Application

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    The pull from the knee is a weightlifting movement derivative that can be used in the teaching progression of the clean and snatch exercises. This exercise emphasizes positional strength during the transition phase and the triple extension of the hip, knee, and ankle joints that is characteristic of weightlifting movements

    Repositioning of special schools within a specialist, personalised educational marketplace - the need for a representative principle

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    This paper considers how notions of inclusive education as defined in the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) Salamanca Agreement (1994) have become dissipated, and can be developed and reframed to encourage their progress. It analyses the discourse within a range of academic, legal and media texts, exploring how this dissipation has taken place within the UK. Using data from 78 specialist school websites it contextualises this change in the use of the terms and ideas of inclusion with the rise of two other constructs, the 'specialist school' and 'personalisation'. It identifies the need for a precisely defined representative principle to theorise the type of school which inclusion aims to achieve, which cannot be subsumed by segregated providers. It suggests that this principle should not focus on the individual, but draw upon a liberal/democratic view of social justice, underlining inclusive education's role in removing social barriers that prevent equity, access and participation for all

    Average Cross-Sectional Area of DebriSat Fragments Using Volumetrically Constructed 3D Representations

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    Debris fragments from the hypervelocity impact testing of DebriSat are being collected and characterized for use in updating existing satellite breakup models. One of the key parameters utilized in these models is the ballistic coefficient of the fragment which is directly related to its areatomass ratio. However, since the attitude of fragments varies during their orbital lifetime, it is customary to use the average crosssectional area in the calculation of the areatomass ratio. The average crosssectional area is defined as the average of the projected surface areas perpendicular to the direction of motion and has been shown to be equal to onefourth of the total surface area of a convex object. Unfortunately, numerous fragments obtained from the DebriSat experiment show significant concavity (i.e., shadowing) and thus we have explored alternate methods for computing the average crosssectional area of the fragments. An imaging system based on the volumetric reconstruction of a 3D object from multiple 2D photographs of the object was developed for use in determining the size characteristic (i.e., characteristics length) of the DebriSat fragments. For each fragment, the imaging system generates N number of images from varied azimuth and elevation angles and processes them using a spacecarving algorithm to construct a 3D point cloud of the fragment. This paper describes two approaches for calculating the average crosssectional area of debris fragments based on the 3D imager. Approach A utilizes the constructed 3D object to generate equally distributed crosssectional area projections and then averages them to determine the average crosssectional area. Approach B utilizes a weighted average of the area of the 2D photographs to directly compute the average crosssectional area. A comparison of the accuracy and computational needs of each approach is described as well as preliminary results of an analysis to determine the "optimal" number of images needed for the 3D imager to accurately measure the average cross sectional area of objects with known dimensions

    Avoimen systeemin magmaattisten prosessien diagnosointi Magmakammiosimulaattorilla. Osa II: hivenalkuaineet ja isotoopit

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    The Magma Chamber Simulator (MCS) is a thermodynamic model that computes the phase, thermal, and compositional evolution of a multiphaseā€“multicomponent system of a Fractionally Crystallizing resident body of magma (i.e., melt Ā± solids Ā± fluid), linked wallrock that may either be assimilated as Anatectic melts or wholesale as Stoped blocks, and multiple Recharge reservoirs (RnASnFC system, where n is the number of user-selected recharge events). MCS calculations occur in two stages; the first utilizes mass and energy balance to produce thermodynamically constrained major element and phase equilibria information for an RnASnFC system; this tool is informally called MCS-PhaseEQ, and is described in a companion paper (Bohrson et al. 2020). The second stage of modeling, called MCS-Traces, calculates the RASFC evolution of up to 48 trace elements and seven radiogenic and one stable isotopic system (Sr, Nd, Hf, 3xPb, Os, and O) for the resident melt. In addition, trace element concentrations are calculated for bulk residual wallrock and each solid (Ā± fluid) phase in the cumulate reservoir and residual wallrock. Input consists of (1) initial trace element concentrations and isotope ratios for the parental melt, wallrock, and recharge magmas/stoped wallrock blocks and (2) solid-melt and solidā€“fluid partition coefficients (optional temperature-dependence) for stable phases in the resident magma and residual wallrock. Output can be easily read and processed from tabulated worksheets. We provide trace element and isotopic results for the same example cases (FC, R2FC, AFC, S2FC, and R2AFC) presented in the companion paper. These simulations show that recharge processes can be difficult to recognize based on trace element data alone unless there is an independent reference frame of successive recharge events or if serial recharge magmas are sufficiently distinct in composition relative to the parental magma or magmas on the fractionation trend. In contrast, assimilation of wallrock is likely to have a notable effect on incompatible trace element and isotopic compositions of the contaminated resident melt. The magnitude of these effects depends on several factors incorporated into both stages of MCS calculations (e.g., phase equilibria, trace element partitioning, style of assimilation, and geochemistry of the starting materials). Significantly, the effects of assimilation can be counterintuitive and very different from simple scenarios (e.g., bulk mixing of magma and wallrock) that do not take account phase equilibria. Considerable caution should be practiced in ruling out potential assimilation scenarios in natural systems based upon simple geochemical ā€œrules of thumbā€. The lack of simplistic responses to open-system processes underscores the need for thermodynamical RASFC models that take into account mass and energy conservation. MCS-Traces provides an unprecedented and detailed framework for utilizing thermodynamic constraints and element partitioning to document trace element and isotopic evolution of igneous systems. Continued development of the Magma Chamber Simulator will focus on easier accessibility and additional capabilities that will allow the tool to better reproduce the documented natural complexities of open-system magmatic processes.Peer reviewe

    Model-Based Systems Engineering and Fā€™: Proof of Concept Via the Creation of an On-Orbit Textual Command Parsing Component for the ABEX Mission

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    The Alabama Burst Energetics eXplorer (ABEX) mission is defining spacecraft architecture, behavior, mission phases, operational states, risks, and requirements in a Model-Based Systems Engineering (MBSE) Integrated Systems Model (ISM) using SysML in Cameo Enterprise Architecture (CEA). The satellite structural design can be exported from CEA as Extensible Markup Language (XML) specifications and imported to Fā€™, an open-source Flight Software (FSW) framework from NASAā€™s Jet Propulsion Laboratory. Fā€™ contains background components intended to be connected to user-defined components in the XML after it is exported from the ISM; in this work, ABEX is representing Fā€™ background components in SysML Internal Block Diagrams from which the XML is generated. As a proof of concept for this MBSE-centric FSW implementation, the ABEX FSW team has created a Command Reader component from MBSE-generated XML and tested command enaction on a Raspberry Pi breadboard system for three test cases representing on-orbit command triggers

    Validity of the new lifestyles NL-1000 accelerometer for measuring time spent in moderate-to-vigorous physical activity in school settings

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    Current interest in promoting physical activity in the school environment necessitates an inexpensive, accurate method of measuring physical activity in such settings. Additionally, it is recognized that physical activity must be of at least moderate intensity in order to yield substantial health benefits. The purpose of the study, therefore, was to determine the validity of the New Lifestyles NL-1000 (New Lifestyles, Inc., Lee's Summit, Missouri, USA) accelerometer for measuring moderate-to-vigorous physical activity in school settings, using the Actigraph GT1M (ActiGraph, Pensacola, Florida, USA) as the criterion. Data were collected during a cross-country run (n = 12), physical education (n = 18), and classroom-based physical activities (n = 42). Significant and meaningful intraclass correlations between methods were found, and NL-1000 estimates of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity were not meaningfully different from GT1M-estimated moderate- to-vigorous physical activity. The NL-1000 therefore shows promising validity evidence as an inexpensive, convenient method of measuring moderate-to-vigorous physical activity in school settings
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