189,331 research outputs found
The curatorial consequences of being moved, moveable or portable: the case of carved stones
It matters whether a carved stone is moved, moveable or portable. This influences perceptions of significance and of form and nature – is it a monument or an artefact? This duality may in turn affect understanding and appreciation of the resource. It has implications for how and if carved stones can be legally protected, who owns them, where and how they are administered, and by whom. The complexities of the legislation mean that all too often this is also a grey area. This paper explores these curatorial issues and their impact
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Human Activity Modelling in the Specification of Operational Requirements: Work in Progress
This paper describes our experience of integrating HCI concepts and techniques into a concurrent requirements engineering process called RESCUE. We focus on the use of a model of current human activity to inform specification of a future system. We show how human activity descriptions, written using a specially designed template, can facilitate the authoring of use case descriptions to be used in the elicitation of requirements for complex socio-technical systems. We describe our experience of using descriptions of human activity, written using the template, to support specification of operational requirements for DMAN, a system to support air traffic controllers in managing the departure of aircraft from airports. We end with a discussion of lessons learnt from our experience and present some ideas for future development of work in this area
Representation and matching of knowledge to design digital systems
A knowledge-based expert system is described that provides an approach to solve a problem requiring an expert with considerable domain expertise and facts about available digital hardware building blocks. To design digital hardware systems from their high level VHDL (Very High Speed Integrated Circuit Hardware Description Language) representation to their finished form, a special data representation is required. This data representation as well as the functioning of the overall system is described
Repair techniques for celion/LARC-160 graphite/polyimide composite structures
The large stiffness-to-weight and strength-to-weight ratios of graphite composite in combination with the 600 F structural capability of the polyimide matrix can reduce the total structure/TPS weight of reusable space vehicles by 20-30 percent. It is inevitable that with planned usage of GR/PI structural components, damage will occur either in the form of intrinsic flaw growth or mechanical damage. Research and development programs were initiated to develop repair processes and techniques specific to Celion/LARC-160 GR/PI structure with emphasis on highly loaded and lightly loaded compression critical structures for factory type repair. Repair processes include cocure and secondary bonding techniques applied under vacuum plus positive autoclave pressure. Viable repair designs and processes are discussed for flat laminates, honeycomb sandwich panels, and hat-stiffened skin-stringer panels. The repair methodology was verified through structural element compression tests at room temperature and 315 C (600 F)
The Fornax Spectroscopic Survey --- Low Surface Brightness Galaxies in Fornax
The Fornax Spectroscopic Survey is a large optical spectroscopic survey of
ALL 14,000 objects with 16.5<Bj<19.7 in a 12 sq.deg area of sky centered on the
Fornax Cluster. We are using the 400-fibre Two Degree Field spectrograph on the
Anglo-Australian Telescope: the multiplex advantage of this system allows us to
observe objects conventionally classified as `stars' as well as `galaxies'.
This is the only way to minimise selection effects caused by image
classification or assessing cluster membership.
In this paper we present the first measurements of low surface brightness
(LSB) galaxies we have detected both in the Fornax Cluster and among the
background field galaxies. The new cluster members include some very low
luminosity (M_B approx -11.5 mag) dwarf ellipticals, whereas the background LSB
galaxies are luminous (-19.6<M_B<-17.0 mag) disk-like galaxies.Comment: To appear in "The Low Surface Brightness Universe", IAU Coll 171,
eds. J.I. Davies et al., A.S.P. Conference Series. 8 pages, LaTex, 6
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