92,288 research outputs found

    On-Body Wireless Inertial Sensing Foot Control Applications

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    Managed Exercise Monitoring: a Novel Application of Wireless On-Body Inertial Sensing

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    Influence of surface roughness and waviness on film thickness and pressure distribution in elastohydrodynamic contacts

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    The Christensen theory of a stochastic model for hydrodynamic lubrication of rough surfaces was extended to elastohydrodynamic lubrication between two rollers. Solutions for the reduced pressure at the entrance as a function of the ratio of the average nominal film thickness to the rms surface roughness, were obtained numerically. Results were obtained for purely transverse as well as purely longitudinal surface roughness for cases with or without slip. The reduced pressure was shown to decrease slightly by considering longitudinal surface roughness. The same approach was used to study the effect of surface roughness on lubrication between rigid rollers and lubrication of an infinitely wide slider bearing. Using the flow balance concept, the perturbed Reynolds equation, was derived and solved for the perturbed pressure distribution. In addition, Cheng's numerical scheme was modified to incorporate a single two-dimensional elastic asperity on the stationary surface. The perturbed pressures obtained by these three different models were compared

    An experimental study on a motion sensing system for sports training

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    In sports science, motion data collected from athletes is used to derive key performance characteristics, such as stride length and stride frequency, that are vital coaching support information. The sensors for use must be more accurate, must capture more vigorous events, and have strict weight and size requirements, since they must not themselves affect performance. These requirements mean each wireless sensor device is necessarily resource poor and yet must be capable of communicating a considerable amount of data, contending for the bandwidth with other sensors on the body. This paper analyses the results of a set of network traffic experiments that were designed to investigate the suitability of conventional wireless motion sensing system design ïżœ which generally assumes in-network processing - as an efficient and scalable design for use in sports training

    Compressing Inertial Motion Data in Wireless Sensing Systems – An Initial Experiment

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    The use of wireless inertial motion sensors, such as accelerometers, for supporting medical care and sport’s training, has been under investigation in recent years. As the number of sensors (or their sampling rates) increases, compressing data at source(s) (i.e. at the sensors), i.e. reducing the quantity of data that needs to be transmitted between the on-body sensors and the remote repository, would be essential especially in a bandwidth-limited wireless environment. This paper presents a set of compression experiment results on a set of inertial motion data collected during running exercises. As a starting point, we selected a set of common compression algorithms to experiment with. Our results show that, conventional lossy compression algorithms would achieve a desirable compression ratio with an acceptable time delay. The results also show that the quality of the decompressed data is within acceptable range

    The Radio and Gamma-Ray Luminosities of Blazars

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    Based on the Îł\gamma-ray data of blazars in the third EGRET catalog and radio data at 5 GHz, we studied the correlation between the radio and Îł\gamma-ray luminosities using two statistical methods. The first method was the partial correlation analysis method, which indicates that there exist correlations between the radio and Îł\gamma-ray luminosities in both high and low states as well as in the average case. The second method involved a comparison of expected Îł\gamma-ray luminosity distribution with the observed data using the Kolmogorov-- Smirnov (KS) test. In the second method, we assumed that there is a correlation between the radio and Îł\gamma-ray luminosities and that the Îł\gamma-ray luminosity function is proportional to the radio luminosity function. The KS test indicates that the expected gamma-ray luminosity distributions are consistent with the observed data in a reasonable parameter range. Finally, we used different Îł\gamma-ray luminosity functions to estimate the possible 'observed' Îł\gamma-ray luminosity distributions by GLAST.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, one table, PASJ, 53 (2001

    Transient effect of lubricant on elastohydro-dynamic film thickness

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    The inlet solution of the elastohydrodynamic lubricated rolling contact problem was obtained by considering lubricants with transient viscosity. The effect of the viscoelastic retardation time of the lubricant on the center film thickness was investigated. The effect of transient viscosity in response to a sudden pressure was found to be insignificant in determining the film thickness in elastohydrodynamic contacts

    Polarization and Variations of BL Lacertae Objects

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    BL Lacertae objects are an extreme subclass of AGNs showing rapid and large-amplitude variability, high and variable polarization, and core-dominated radio emissions. If a strong beaming effect is the cause of the extreme observation properties, one would expect that these properties would be correlated with each other. Based on the relativistic beaming model, relationships between the polarization and the magnitude variation in brightness, as well as the core- dominance parameter are derived and used statistically to compare with the observational data of a BL Lacertae object sample. The statistical results are consistent with these correlations, which suggests that the polarization, the variation, and the core-dominance parameter are possible indications of the beaming effect.Comment: 6 pages, two figures, one table, some revisions. PASJ, 53 (2001

    Thermal elastohydrodynamic lubrication of spur gears

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    An analysis and computer program called TELSGE were developed to predict the variations of dynamic load, surface temperature, and lubricant film thickness along the contacting path during the engagement of a pair of involute spur gears. The analysis of dynamic load includes the effect of gear inertia, the effect of load sharing of adjacent teeth, and the effect of variable tooth stiffness which are obtained by a finite-element method. Results obtained from TELSGE for the dynamic load distributions along the contacting path for various speeds of a pair of test gears show patterns similar to that observed experimentally. Effects of damping ratio, contact ratio, tip relief, and tooth error on the dynamic load were examined. In addition, two dimensionless charts are included for predicting the maximum equilibrium surface temperature, which can be used to estimate directly the lubricant film thickness based on well established EHD analysis

    Basic properties of Gamma-ray loud blazars

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    In this paper, a method is proposed to determine the basic properties of Îł\gamma-ray loud blazars, among them the central black hole mass, M, the Doppler factor, ÎŽ\delta, the propagation angle of the Îł\gamma-rays with respect to the symmetric axis of a two-temperature accretion disk, Ί\Phi, and the distance (i.e. the height above the accretion disk), d at which the Îł\gamma-rays are created, for seven Îł\gamma-ray loud blazars with available GeV variability timescales and in which the absorption effect of a Îł\gamma-ray and the beaming effect have been taken into account. Our results indicate that, if we take the intrinsic Îł\gamma-ray luminosity to be λ\lambda times the Eddington luminosity, LÎłin=λLEdd.L_{\gamma}^{in} = \lambda L_{Edd.}, the masses of the blazars are in the range of (4∌131)×107M⊙(4 \sim 131)\times 10^{7}M_{\odot}, the Doppler factors (ÎŽ\delta) lie in the range of 0.57 to 5.33 the angle (Ί\Phi) is in the range of 13∘13^{\circ} to 43∘^{\circ} and the distance (d) is in the range of 26R_{g} to 411R_{g}. Our model results are independent of Îł\gamma-ray emission mechanisms but they do depend on the X-ray emission mechanism of the accretion disk.Comment: 14 pages, 3 tables, A&A accepte
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