72,627 research outputs found
Little green steps: sustainability practice for early years comes to WA.
Little Green Steps, a training workshop on education for sustainability for early years educators, was recently conducted by the Australian Association for Environmental Education - Western Australian Chapter (MEE-WAJ. With a grant from the Waste Authority of Western Australia, AAEE-WA was able to provide professional learning for staff of childcare services, kindergartens and preschools. The purpose of the training was to encourage sustainable practice through zero waste policy and practical implementation of these practices for children, staff and parents. This training was developed by Lady Gowrie Child Centre In Sydney and the Department of Environment, Climate Change and Water in New South Wales, and assisted in the setting up of the professional development component of Gosford City and Wyong Shire Councils' Little Green Steps Program. To increase national exposure to the program two days were offered in WA. Each day stood alone as a discrete training program
CF6 jet engine performance deterioration results
The use of the performance baseline from the flight planning manual as a reference to measure changes in cruise fuel flow rates was discussed. For the CF6-6D engine, the introduction of design changes for performance and durability reasons was seen to introduce an average increment relative to this baseline of 3.2% WFM increase at Nl, 2.5% Fn increase at Nl, 0.8% specific fuel consumption (SFC) increase at Fn, and 7 C EGT increase at Nl, while maintaining sufficient SFC margin of the delivered airplane. The effect of revenue service deterioration and performance restoration relative to the reference was shown to be an adder on top of these design effects. A schematic of typical CF6-6D performance through revenue service and airline maintenance is presented in terms of percent cruise SFC relative to an airline datum point (average level upon entering revenue service). The typical changes in SFC margin are shown for airline revenue service through for installations and refurbishments
Preformed stiffeners used to fabricate structural components for pressurized tanks
Process of fabricating stiffened section components of pressurized tanks for aerospace use was developed. A potential use of the fabrication process is the production of gore and quarter-panel sections of hydrogen and oxygen tanks for space vehicle boosters
A Simple Boltzmann Transport Equation for Ballistic to Diffusive Transient Heat Transport
Developing simplified, but accurate, theoretical approaches to treat heat
transport on all length and time scales is needed to further enable scientific
insight and technology innovation. Using a simplified form of the Boltzmann
transport equation (BTE), originally developed for electron transport, we
demonstrate how ballistic phonon effects and finite-velocity propagation are
easily and naturally captured. We show how this approach compares well to the
phonon BTE, and readily handles a full phonon dispersion and energy-dependent
mean-free-path. This study of transient heat transport shows i) how fundamental
temperature jumps at the contacts depend simply on the ballistic thermal
resistance, ii) that phonon transport at early times approach the ballistic
limit in samples of any length, and iii) perceived reductions in heat
conduction, when ballistic effects are present, originate from reductions in
temperature gradient. Importantly, this framework can be recast exactly as the
Cattaneo and hyperbolic heat equations, and we discuss how the key to capturing
ballistic heat effects is to use the correct physical boundary conditions.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figure
ICF core sets for low back pain: do they include what matters to patients?
To investigate whether the International Classification of Functioning Disability and Health (ICF) Core Sets for low back pain encompass the key functional problems of patients
The effect of wall cooling on a compressible turbulent boundary layer
Experimental results are presented for two turbulent boundary-layer experiments conducted at a free-stream Mach number of 4 with wall cooling. The first experiment examines a constant-temperature cold-wall boundary layer subjected to adverse and favourable pressure gradients. It is shown that the boundary-layer data display good agreement with Colesā general composite boundary-layer profile using Van Driest's transformation. Further, the pressure-gradient parameter Ī²_K found in previous studies to correlate adiabatic high-speed data with low-speed data also correlates the present cooled-wall high-speed data. The second experiment treats the response of a constant-pressure high-speed boundary layer to a near step change in wall temperature. It is found that the growth rate of the thermal boundary layer within the existing turbulent boundary layer varies considerably depending upon the direction of the wall temperature change. For the case of an initially cooled boundary layer flowing onto a wall near the recovery temperature, it is found that Ī“_T ~ x whereas the case of an adiabatic boundary layer flowing onto a cooled wall gives Ī“_T ~ x^Ā½. The apparent origin of the thermal boundary layer also changes considerably, which is accounted for by the variation in sublayer thicknesses and growth rates within the sublayer
An experiment on the adiabatic compressible turbulent boundary layer in adverse and favourable pressure gradients
A wind-tunnel model was developed to study the two-dimensional turbulent boundary layer in adverse and favourable pressure gradients with out the effects of streamwise surface curvature. Experiments were performed at Mach 4 with an adiabatic wall, and mean flow measurements within the boundary layer were obtained. The data, when viewed in the velocity transformation suggested by Van Driest, show good general agreement with the composite boundary-layer profile developed for the low-speed turbulent boundary layer. Moreover, the pressure gradient parameter suggested by Alber & Coats was found to correlate the data with low-speed results
Understanding Teacher Leadership in Middle School Mathematics: A Collaborative Research Effort
We report ļ¬ndings from a collaborative research effort designed to examine how teachers act as leaders in their schools. We ļ¬nd that teachers educated by the Math in the Middle Institute act as key sources of advice for colleagues within their schools while drawing support from a network consisting of other teachers in the program and university-level advisors. In addition to reporting on our ļ¬ndings, we reļ¬ect on our research process, noting some of the practical challenges involved, as well as some of the beneļ¬ts of collaboration
Stigma, coping, stress and distress in the veterinary profession - the importance of evidence-based discourse
What you need to know:
- Discourse about mental health and wellbeing in the veterinary profession must be informed by critical consideration of appropriate evidence.
- It is important that we do not normalise ill-health or pathologise short-term stress. However, it should be recognised that chronic stress has negative implications for psychological and physical health.
- Coping with stress requires both addressing the problem and managing the related emotions.
- The coping circumplex model integrates a number of different stress management theories and may be a useful framework for conceptualising approaches to coping with stres
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