17,476 research outputs found
Acoustic effects on profile drag of a laminar flow airfoil
A two-dimensional laminar flow airfoil (NLF-0414) was subjected to high-intensity sound (pure tones and white noise) over a frequency range of 2 to 5 kHz, while immersed in a flow of 240 ft/sec (Rn of 3 million) in a quiet flow facility. Using a wake-rake, wake dynamic pressures were determined and the deficit in momentum was used to calculate a two dimensional drag coefficient. Significant increases in drag were observed when the airfoil was subjected to the high intensity sound at critical sound frequencies. However, the increased drag was not accompanied by movement of the transition location
Proton - Lambda correlations in Au-Au Collisions at GeV from the STAR experiment
The space-time evolution of the source of particles formed in the collision
of nuclei can be studied through particle correlations. The STAR experiment is
dedicated to study ultra-relativistic heavy ions collisions and allows to
measure non-identical strange particle correlations. The source size can be
extracted by studying , ,
and correlation functions. Strong interaction potential has
been studied for these systems using an analytical model. Final State
Interaction (FSI) parameters have been determined and has shown a significant
annihilation process present in and systems
not present in and .Comment: contribution to the 20th Winter Workshop on Nuclear Dynamic
Incident-energy and system-size dependence of directed flow
We present STAR's measurements of directed flow for charged hadrons in Au+Au
and Cu+Cu collisions at GeV and 62.4 GeV, as a
function of pseudorapidity, transverse momentum and centrality. We find that
directed flow depends on the incident energy, but not on the system size. We
extend the validity of limiting fragmentation hypothesis to different collision
systems.Comment: Quark Matter 2006 proceedings, 4 pages, 4 figures, submitted to J.
Phys.
The language of leadership in Laos
© 2016, © The Author(s) 2016. This paper responds to recent calls in the leadership studies literature for anthropologically informed empirical research on leadership phenomena in non-Western and non-Anglophone settings. The authors have worked extensively on rural development projects in Laos and draw on ethnographic ‘observant-participation’ and interview data to explore how leadership is construed in a contested terrain where traditional concepts intersect with those of official government and international development agencies. A theoretical discussion of linguistic relativity and the socially constitutive nature of language in general is offered as background justification for studying the language of leadership in context. The anthropological distinction between etic and emic operations is also introduced to differentiate between various interpretative positions that can be taken in relation to the fieldwork and data discussed in this paper. The study shows how difficult it can be for native Lao speakers to find words to describe leadership or give designations to ‘leaders’ outside of officially sanctioned semantic and social fields. A key finding of the study is that, viewed from the perspective of the Lao People’s Revolutionary Party, authority and leadership are coextensive. This social fact is reflected in the linguistic restrictions on what can and cannot be described as leadership in Laos
Monitoring sediment transfer processes on the desert margin
LANDSAT Thematic Mapper and Multispectral Scanner data have been used to construct change detection images for three playas in south-central Tunisia. Change detection images have been used to analyze changes in surface reflectance and absorption between wet and dry season (intra-annual change) and between different years (inter-annual change). Change detection imagery has been used to examine geomorphological changes on the playas. Changes in geomorphological phenomena are interpreted from changes in soil and foliar moisture levels, differences in reflectances between different salt and sediments and the spatial expression of geomorphological features. Intra-annual change phenomena that can be detected from multidate imagery are changes in surface moisture, texture and chemical composition, vegetation cover and the extent of aeolian activity. Inter-annual change phenomena are divisible into those restricted to marginal playa facies (sedimentation from sheetwash and alluvial fans, erosion from surface runoff and cliff retreat) and these are found in central playa facies which are related to the internal redistribution of water, salt and sediment
REGIONAL IMPACT OF URBAN WATER USE ON IRRIGATED AGRICULTURE
Linear programming and regional input-output models were applied to estimate the impacts of increased pumping costs for irrigated agriculture due to groundwater depletion principally caused by the expanding urban area of San Antonio, Texas. A biophysical simulator was use to estimate linear programming coefficients of crop yield by irrigation level and timing. The results indicated significant local (county) economic impacts from groundwater mining but insignificant regional impacts. A major improvement on irrigation efficiency would be required to offset the increased pumping costs and reduce water availability associated with increased lifts due to urban expansion.Resource /Energy Economics and Policy,
Transport processes of particles in non-dilute suspensions in turbulent water flow—phase I: Experimental measurements
Increased utilization of non-dilute, solid-fluid suspensions in transporting materials and in estimating the distribution of particles from atmospheric fallout, demands that the basic fluid-particle interactions be thoroughly understood. Our previous studies of such interactions were conducted on only dilute suspensions, whereas this study has been conducted in the same vertical flows but with solid spherical particle suspensions with concentrations, ɸ, from O to 10 percent by volume, a range of practical interest to sedimentation and erosion as well as in slurry pipelines. Detailed experimental results of the particle-fluid relative mean and rms velocities as well as particle dispersion were obtained for two particle densities and several ɸ values. Both particle types showed a rapid rise of both relative mean and rms velocities as ɸ increased to about 1-2 percent and fell off gradually for higher ɸ values. Dispersion followed a similar behavior. The higher free fall velocity particles exhibited larger rms velocities and increased dispersion from the lighter, lower free fall velocity particles. Analytical models of the ɸ-dependence showed good agreement with the data, suggesting their use in engineering predictions.U.S. Department of the InteriorU.S. Geological SurveyOpe
Document granting John G. Jones the ability to perform marital rites based on credentials, 23 February 1827
https://egrove.olemiss.edu/aldrichcorr_a/1024/thumbnail.jp
The ISCIP Analyst, Volume II, Issue 5
This repository item contains a single issue of The ISCIP Analyst, an analytical review journal published from 1996 to 2010 by the Boston University Institute for the Study of Conflict, Ideology, and Policy
Military election notice, 17 November 1837
https://egrove.olemiss.edu/aldrichcorr_a/1073/thumbnail.jp
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