19,134 research outputs found
Development of an unstructured solution adaptive method for the quasi-three-dimensional Euler and Navier-Stokes equations
A general solution adaptive scheme based on a remeshing technique is developed for solving the two-dimensional and quasi-three-dimensional Euler and Favre-averaged Navier-Stokes equations. The numerical scheme is formulated on an unstructured triangular mesh utilizing an edge-based pointer system which defines the edge connectivity of the mesh structure. Jameson's four-stage hybrid Runge-Kutta scheme is used to march the solution in time. The convergence rate is enhanced through the use of local time stepping and implicit residual averaging. As the solution evolves, the mesh is regenerated adaptively using flow field information. Mesh adaptation parameters are evaluated such that an estimated local numerical error is equally distributed over the whole domain. For inviscid flows, the present approach generates a complete unstructured triangular mesh using the advancing front method. For turbulent flows, the approach combines a local highly stretched structured triangular mesh in the boundary layer region with an unstructured mesh in the remaining regions to efficiently resolve the important flow features. One-equation and two-equation turbulence models are incorporated into the present unstructured approach. Results are presented for a wide range of flow problems including two-dimensional multi-element airfoils, two-dimensional cascades, and quasi-three-dimensional cascades. This approach is shown to gain flow resolution in the refined regions while achieving a great reduction in the computational effort and storage requirements since solution points are not wasted in regions where they are not required
Observation and Understanding of the Initial Unstable Electrical Contact Behaviors
Reliable and long-lifetime electrical contact is a very important issue in the field of radio frequency microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) and in energy transmission applications. In this paper, the initial unstable electrical contact phenomena under the conditions of micro-newton-scale contact force and nanometer-scale contact gap have been experimentally observed. The repetitive contact bounces at nanoscale are confirmed by the measured instantaneous waveforms of contact force and contact voltage. Moreover, the corresponding physical model for describing the competition between the electrostatic force and the restoring force of the mobile contact is present. Then, the dynamic process of contact closure is explicitly calculated with the numerical method. Finally, the effects of spring rigidness and open voltage on the unstable electrical contact behaviors are investigated experimentally and theoretically. This paper highlights that in MEMS systems switch, minimal actuation velocity is required to prevent mechanical bounce and excessive wear
Exponential sum approximations for
Given and , the function may be approximated
for in a compact interval by a sum of terms of the form
, with parameters and . One such an approximation, studied
by Beylkin and Monz\'on, is obtained by applying the trapezoidal rule to an
integral representation of , after which Prony's method is applied
to reduce the number of terms in the sum with essentially no loss of accuracy.
We review this method, and then describe a similar approach based on an
alternative integral representation. The main difference is that the new
approach achieves much better results before the application of Prony's method;
after applying Prony's method the performance of both is much the same.Comment: 18 pages, 5 figures. I have completely rewritten this paper because
after uploading the previous version I realised that there is a much better
approach. Note the change to the title. Have included minor corrections
following revie
Moist Baroclinic Instability in the Presence of Surface–Atmosphere Coupling
The influence of convective heating on baroclinic instability in the presence of surface sensible heat and moisture fluxes is investigated. Following previous numerical work, a two-dimensional continuous model on an f plane incorporates diabatic heating effects due to cumulus convection and surface sensible heat flux using parameterizations based on a wave-induced unstable boundary layer and associated moist convective destabilization. The temperature-damping effect of surface sensible heat flux is assumed to decrease exponentially with height, and the vertical distribution of convective heating uses a prescribed profile. The atmosphere is assumed to overlie an oceanic surface. In this configuration, convective heating occurs in the wave’s cold sector.
General forms of the dispersion relation and eigenfunction are derived analytically. Results show that the most unstable wave is modified by the effect of convective latent heating. With weak convection, the wave’s structure does not change much, while the wave’s energy generation is hampered by the negative contribution of convection. In the presence of moderate convective heating, although the wave’s energy generation is decreased by convection, the wave adjusts its structure to minimize the negative effect of convection and retain growth. In the region with strong convective heating, convective heating significantly changes the wave’s temperature structure. Above and below the strong heating region, the wave structure still retains some features of the Eady mode. The results have bearing on how the structure of oceanic storms may be altered by convection
Spin Transfer Torque for Continuously Variable Magnetization
We report quantum and semi-classical calculations of spin current and
spin-transfer torque in a free-electron Stoner model for systems where the
magnetization varies continuously in one dimension.Analytic results are
obtained for an infinite spin spiral and numerical results are obtained for
realistic domain wall profiles. The adiabatic limit describes conduction
electron spins that follow the sum of the exchange field and an effective,
velocity-dependent field produced by the gradient of the magnetization in the
wall. Non-adiabatic effects arise for short domain walls but their magnitude
decreases exponentially as the wall width increases. Our results cast doubt on
the existence of a recently proposed non-adiabatic contribution to the
spin-transfer torque due to spin flip scattering.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figure
Understanding the Link between Urban Activity Destinations and Human Travel Pattern
URL to abstract on conference site. You have to be a conference participant to access papers.In the urban transportation field, planners and engineers have explored the relationship between urban destinations and travel behavior for more than half a century. However, we still have only a preliminary understanding about how the spatial arrangement of different types of urban activity destinations influence human travel, and how urban development policies influence travel patterns. Recent developments in urban sensing and cell phone technologies have enabled spatially-detailed and massive GIS-based datasets on land use, points of interest (POIs), cell phone and GPS-based tracking, etc. These new datasets provide rich possibilities for better understanding and modeling of urban activity patterns and travel behavior.
In this study, we utilize such spatially-detailed data—POI data and large-scale travel tracker data—to explore the link between urban activity destinations and human travel patterns. First, we employ the timely and large-scale urban activity-based travel survey for the Chicago Metropolitan Area, implemented from January 2007 to February 2008 (Chicago Metropolitan Agency for Planning 2008). We derive travel patterns for both commute and non-commute activities in the Chicago Metropolitan Area for individuals and groups of individuals with various socioeconomic characteristics. The Chicago activity-based travel survey includes 10,552 households (23,452 individuals) who participated in either a one-day or two-day survey, providing detailed travel information for each household member for a particular assigned travel day(s). Second, we combine a spatially-detailed business establishment dataset (the InfoUSA 2008 data) included in the ESRI Business Analyst Package (ESRI 2009) and the employment data in the U.S. census to analyze the spatial distribution of urban activity destinations in the Chicago Metropolitan Area. Finally, we examine the linkage between these two aspects, and demonstrate the impacts of spatial arrangement of urban activity destinations on human travel patterns in the urban settings. This new study is crucial to understanding how the spatial patterns of urban activity destinations influence individuals’ and groups of individuals’ travel patterns at both individual and aggregated level. It is also important for policy making in the fields of urban development and transportation planning.MIT-Portugal ProgramMassachusetts Institute of Technology. Dept. of Urban Studies and Plannin
Activity-Based Human Mobility Patterns Inferred from Mobile Phone Data: A Case Study of Singapore
In this study, with Singapore as an example, we demonstrate how we can use mobile phone call detail record (CDR) data, which contains millions of anonymous users, to extract individual mobility networks comparable to the activity-based approach. Such an approach is widely used in the transportation planning practice to develop urban micro simulations of individual daily activities and travel; yet it depends highly on detailed travel survey data to capture individual activity-based behavior. We provide an innovative data mining framework that synthesizes the state-of-the-art techniques in extracting mobility patterns from raw mobile phone CDR data, and design a pipeline that can translate the massive and passive mobile phone records to meaningful spatial human mobility patterns readily interpretable for urban and transportation planning purposes. With growing ubiquitous mobile sensing, and shrinking labor and fiscal resources in the public sector globally, the method presented in this research can be used as a low-cost alternative for transportation and planning agencies to understand the human activity patterns in cities, and provide targeted plans for future sustainable development.Singapore. National Research Foundation (through the Singapore-MIT Alliance for Research and Technology (SMART) Center for Future Urban Mobility (FM))Center for Complex Engineering Systems at MIT and KACS
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