627 research outputs found

    A METHOD OF MOTION ANALYSIS FOR SELF-PROPELLED AQUATIC CRAFTS

    Get PDF
    Cimematography/videography has been the method of choice for the evaluation of self-propelled aquatic craft kinematics. However, direct measurements of acceleration of this type of craft has proved to be difficult. At Dalhousie the use of acceleration data in combination with video data has facilitated the analysis of rowing and canoeing kinematics. The aim of this study is to describe the method of motion analysis currently used at Dalhousie's Sport Science Lab. Description includes a custom software program developed to divide acceleration data into individual cycles and a cubic spline to normalize the data. In addition, impulse data was calculated integrating by acceleration data using Simpson's Rule as well as the Trapezoidal Rule. A multiple low pass 2nd order Butterworth digital filter has been used successfully to smooth the acceleration data. Video data has been used to confirm that the software correctly detects these variables

    AN ANALYSIS OF SELECTED KINEMATIC VARIABLES IN SCULL ROWING USING MACON AND HATCHET OARS

    Get PDF
    The Hatchet oar is now used extensively in competitive rowing because it is believed to enhance performance. There has been little research to verify this. To determine possible differences between the scull kinematics using the Hatchet and Macon oar, a 24 year old male, lightweight rower, raced 2000 m on two separate days. An 8 mm video camera and a g.analyst accelerometer collected the data. A custom software program, divided the acceleration data into individual strokes and a cubic spline standardized the stroke length. Video data confirmed that the software correctly detected stroke cycles. The acceleration data was integrated using Simpson's Rule as well as the Trapezoidal Rule. First order derivatives where determined using first and second order finite differences and impulse. Velocity data was smoothed using a multiple low pass 2nd order Butterworth digital filter. Twelve discrete measures of percentage stroke length and the value at local vertices, as well as three measures of impulse where examined using one way ANOVAs. Most of the discrete measures examined were statistically significant (

    Searches for Stable Strangelets in Ordinary Matter: Overview and a Recent Example

    Full text link
    Our knowledge on the possible existence in nature of stable exotic particles depends solely upon experimental observation. Guided by this general principle and motivated by theoretical hypotheses on the existence of stable particles of strange quark matter, a variety of experimental searches have been performed. We provide an introduction to the theoretical hypotheses, an overview of the past searches, and a more detailed description of a recent search for helium-like strangelets in the Earth's atmosphere using a sensitive laser spectroscopy method

    An integrated approach to modelling the fluid-structure interaction of a collapsible tube

    Get PDF
    The well known collapsible tube experiment was conducted to obtain flow, pressure and materials property data for steady state conditions. These were then used as the boundary conditions for a fully coupled fluid-structure interaction (FSI) model using a propriety computer code, LS-DYNA. The shape profiles for the tube were also recorded. In order to obtain similar collapse modes to the experiment, it was necessary to model the tube flat, and then inflate it into a circular profile, leaving residual stresses in the walls. The profile shape then agreed well with the experimental ones. Two departures from the physical properties were required to reduce computer time to an acceptable level. One of these was the lowering of the speed of sound by two orders of magnitude which, due to the low velocities involved, still left the mach number below 0.2. The other was to increase the thickness of the tube to prevent the numerical collapse of elements. A compensation for this was made by lowering the Young's modulus for the tube material. Overall the results are qualitatively good. They give an indication of the power of the current FSI algorithms and the need to combine experiment and computer models in order to maximise the information that can be extracted both in terms of quantity and quality

    High Pressure Thermoelasticity of Body-centered Cubic Tantalum

    Full text link
    We have investigated the thermoelasticity of body-centered cubic (bcc) tantalum from first principles by using the linearized augmented plane wave (LAPW) and mixed--basis pseudopotential methods for pressures up to 400 GPa and temperatures up to 10000 K. Electronic excitation contributions to the free energy were included from the band structures, and phonon contributions were included using the particle-in-a-cell (PIC) model. The computed elastic constants agree well with available ultrasonic and diamond anvil cell data at low pressures, and shock data at high pressures. The shear modulus c44c_{44} and the anisotropy change behavior with increasing pressure around 150 GPa because of an electronic topological transition. We find that the main contribution of temperature to the elastic constants is from the thermal expansivity. The PIC model in conjunction with fast self-consistent techniques is shown to be a tractable approach to studying thermoelasticity.Comment: To be appear in Physical Review

    Ab-initio calculation of the 6Li{}^6Li binding energy with the Hybrid Multideterminant scheme

    Full text link
    We perform an ab-initio calculation for the binding energy of 6Li{}^6Li using the CD-Bonn 2000 NN potential renormalized with the Lee-Suzuki method. The many-body approach to the problem is the Hybrid Multideterminant method. The results indicate a binding energy of about 31MeV31 MeV, within a few hundreds KeV uncertainty. The center of mass diagnostics are also discussed.Comment: 18 pages with 3 figures. More calculations added, to be published in EPJ

    The nuclear energy density functional formalism

    Full text link
    The present document focuses on the theoretical foundations of the nuclear energy density functional (EDF) method. As such, it does not aim at reviewing the status of the field, at covering all possible ramifications of the approach or at presenting recent achievements and applications. The objective is to provide a modern account of the nuclear EDF formalism that is at variance with traditional presentations that rely, at one point or another, on a {\it Hamiltonian-based} picture. The latter is not general enough to encompass what the nuclear EDF method represents as of today. Specifically, the traditional Hamiltonian-based picture does not allow one to grasp the difficulties associated with the fact that currently available parametrizations of the energy kernel E[g′,g]E[g',g] at play in the method do not derive from a genuine Hamilton operator, would the latter be effective. The method is formulated from the outset through the most general multi-reference, i.e. beyond mean-field, implementation such that the single-reference, i.e. "mean-field", derives as a particular case. As such, a key point of the presentation provided here is to demonstrate that the multi-reference EDF method can indeed be formulated in a {\it mathematically} meaningful fashion even if E[g′,g]E[g',g] does {\it not} derive from a genuine Hamilton operator. In particular, the restoration of symmetries can be entirely formulated without making {\it any} reference to a projected state, i.e. within a genuine EDF framework. However, and as is illustrated in the present document, a mathematically meaningful formulation does not guarantee that the formalism is sound from a {\it physical} standpoint. The price at which the latter can be enforced as well in the future is eventually alluded to.Comment: 64 pages, 8 figures, submitted to Euroschool Lecture Notes in Physics Vol.IV, Christoph Scheidenberger and Marek Pfutzner editor

    Cross Section Measurements of Charged Pion Photoproduction in Hydrogen and Deuterium from 1.1 to 5.5 GeV

    Get PDF
    The differential cross section for the gamma +n --> pi- + p and the gamma + p --> pi+ n processes were measured at Jefferson Lab. The photon energies ranged from 1.1 to 5.5 GeV, corresponding to center-of-mass energies from 1.7 to 3.4 GeV. The pion center-of-mass angles varied from 50 degree to 110 degree. The pi- and pi+ photoproduction data both exhibit a global scaling behavior at high energies and high transverse momenta, consistent with the constituent counting rule prediction and the existing pi+ data. The data suggest possible substructure of the scaling behavior, which might be oscillations around the scaling value. The data show an enhancement in the scaled cross section at center-of-mass energy near 2.2 GeV. The differential cross section ratios at high energies and high transverse momenta can be described by calculations based on one-hard-gluon-exchange diagrams.Comment: 18 pages, 19 figure
    • …
    corecore