187 research outputs found

    Development of a non-linear simulation for generic hypersonic vehicles - ASUHS1

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    A nonlinear simulation is developed to model the longitudinal motion of a vehicle in hypersonic flight. The equations of motion pertinent to this study are presented. Analytic expressions for the aerodynamic forces acting on a hypersonic vehicle which were obtained from Newtonian Impact Theory are further developed. The control surface forces are further examined to incorporate vehicle elastic motion. The purpose is to establish feasible equations of motion which combine rigid body, elastic, and aeropropulsive dynamics for use in nonlinear simulations. The software package SIMULINK is used to implement the simulation. Also discussed are issues needing additional attention and potential problems associated with the implementation (with proposed solutions)

    Missionary Directory - Churches of Christ: Number Two, March 1966

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    A directory of American Church of Christ missionaries around the world. Entries include name, address, city, and country. Dedication and foreword by Jimmie Lovell.https://digitalcommons.acu.edu/crs_books/1457/thumbnail.jp

    Directory of American Missionaries: Number One, June 1965

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    A directory of American Church of Christ missionaries around the world. Each entry includes name, city, address, and country. Foreword by Alan Bryan, Jimmie Lovell, and Archie Luper.https://digitalcommons.acu.edu/crs_books/1456/thumbnail.jp

    A parametric sensitivity study for single-stage-to-orbit hypersonic vehicles using trajectory optimization

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    The class of hypersonic vehicle configurations with single stage-to-orbit (SSTO) capability reflect highly integrated airframe and propulsion systems. These designs are also known to exhibit a large degree of interaction between the airframe and engine dynamics. Consequently, even simplified hypersonic models are characterized by tightly coupled nonlinear equations of motion. In addition, hypersonic SSTO vehicles present a major system design challenge; the vehicle's overall mission performance is a function of its subsystem efficiencies including structural, aerodynamic, propulsive, and operational. Further, all subsystem efficiencies are interrelated, hence, independent optimization of the subsystems is not likely to lead to an optimum design. Thus, it is desired to know the effect of various subsystem efficiencies on overall mission performance. For the purposes of this analysis, mission performance will be measured in terms of the payload weight inserted into orbit. In this report, a trajectory optimization problem is formulated for a generic hypersonic lifting body for a specified orbit-injection mission. A solution method is outlined, and results are detailed for the generic vehicle, referred to as the baseline model. After evaluating the performance of the baseline model, a sensitivity study is presented to determine the effect of various subsystem efficiencies on mission performance. This consists of performing a parametric analysis of the basic design parameters, generating a matrix of configurations, and determining the mission performance of each configuration. Also, the performance loss due to constraining the total head load experienced by the vehicle is evaluated. The key results from this analysis include the formulation of the sizing problem for this vehicle class using trajectory optimization, characteristics of the optimal trajectories, and the subsystem design sensitivities

    Population structure of three commercially important species in the Gulf of Guinea

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    The Gulf of Guinea Large Marine Ecosystem (LME) extends from the Bissagos Islands to Cape Lopez and takes in the maritime waters of all countries between Guinea Bissau and Gabon. The ecosystem is very productive and the fisheries sector is of great economic importance. This thesis uses molecular markers (mitochondrial DNA and microsatellites) to provide a compara­tive study of the population structure of three commercially important species in the region: Trachurus trecae (Cunene horse mackerel), Pagellus bellottii (Red pandora) and Sepia offici­nalis (Common cuttlefish). T. trecae showed evidence of population subdivision within the Gulf of Guinea (Fst=0.056) which was explicable by temporal (Fst=0.048), as opposed to spatial (^ST=0.001), structuring. Thus contemporaries from the same length cohort showed genetic similarity, regardless of geographic proximity. A significant correlation (correlation coefficient D: r=0.93, p=0.01) was found between the cohort length and Tajima’s D. P. bellottii likewise showed little evidence of spatial subdivision within the Gulf of Guinea (/st=0.009), however four individuals from a single trawl showed high sequence variation from all other samples (and when included in the analysis FsT=0.095). Both fish species displayed bimodal length frequen­cies for some trawls and when split according to cohort length there was evidence of within trawl heterogeneity, indicating that shoals are an aggregation of smaller groups. S. officinalis revealed no spatial subdivision in the the Gulf of Guinea (Fsr=0.00), though four individuals showed highly atypical allele sizes. Possible evidence of selection at one microsatellite locus was found. When compared with outgroups from southwest Africa and Europe T. trecae and S. officinalis showed great differentiation (Fst=0.642 and Fst=0.301 respectively). Comparative results across species therefore indicate (i) that the Gulf of Guinea is a well defined LME and (ii) there are no major oceanographic structures within the LME that have caused spatial pop­ulation subdivision. Given such a lack of spatial subdivision, management needs to operate at a regional level for these species. These results were found for three species with very differing life histories, so they may also be applicable to other marine species in the region

    Polymorphisms within a polymorphism: SNPs in and around a polymorphic Alu insertion in intron 44 of the human dystrophin gene

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    A polymorphic Yb-type Alu insertion on Xp21.3 shows a genotypic gradient across worldwide populations. We used single strand conformational polymorphism (SSCP), denaturing high-pressure liquid chromatography (DHPLC), and sequencing to characterize the level of polymorphism within this region. Two novel polymorphic sites were found within the Alu insertion itself, and a further seven novel polymorphic sites in the 2-kb flanking region. Our results showed that while DHPLC was more sensitive than SSCP, the limitations of DHPLC included the lack of ability to distinguish between multiple alleles or safely identify mutations on a polymorphic background. We believe that this is the first report of polymorphic single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) within a polymorphic Alu distribution and that together they promise to provide a useful marker for human population and evolutionary genetics

    Angular Broadening of Intraday Variable AGN. II. Interstellar and Intergalactic Scattering

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    We analyze a sample of 58 multi-wavelength, Very Long Baseline Array observations of active galactic nuclei (AGN) to determine their scattering properties. Approximately 75% of the sample consists of AGN that exhibit centimeter-wavelength intraday variability (interstellar scintillation) while the other 25% do not show intraday variability. We find that interstellar scattering is measurable for most of these AGN, and the typical broadening diameter is 2 mas at 1 GHz. We find that the scintillating AGN are typically at lower Galactic latitudes than the non-scintillating AGN, consistent with the scenario that intraday variability is a propagation effect from the Galactic interstellar medium. The magnitude of the inferred interstellar broadening measured toward the scintillating AGN, when scaled to higher frequencies, is comparable to the diameters inferred from analyses of the light curves for the more well-known intraday variable sources. However, we find no difference in the amount of scattering measured toward the scintillating versus non-scintillating AGN. A consistent picture is one in which the scintillation results from localized regions ("clumps") distributed throughout the Galactic disk, but which individually make little contribution to the angular broadening. Of the 58 AGN observed, 37 (64%) have measured redshifts. At best, a marginal trend is found for scintillating (non-scintillating) AGN to have smaller (larger) angular diameters at higher redshifts. We also use our observations to try to constrain the possibility of intergalactic scattering. While broadly consistent with the scenario of a highly turbulent intergalactic medium, our observations do not place significant constraints on its properties.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures; AASTeX format; ApJ in pres

    From A to Z: Wearable technology explained

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    Wearable technology (WT) has become a viable means to provide low-cost clinically sensitive data for more informed patient assessment. The benefit of WT seems obvious: small, worn discreetly in any environment, personalised data and possible integration into communication networks, facilitating remote monitoring. Yet, WT remains poorly understood and technology innovation often exceeds pragmatic clinical demand and use. Here, we provide an overview of the common challenges facing WT if it is to transition from novel gadget to an efficient, valid and reliable clinical tool for modern medicine. For simplicity, an A–Z guide is presented, focusing on key terms, aiming to provide a grounded and broad understanding of current WT developments in healthcare

    PMN J1838-3427: A new gravitationally lensed quasar

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    We report the discovery of a new double-image quasar that was found during a search for gravitational lenses in the southern sky. Radio source PMN J1838-3427 is composed of two flat-spectrum components with separation 1", flux density ratio 14:1 and matching spectral indices, in VLA and VLBA images. Ground-based BRI images show the optical counterpart (total I=18.6) is also double with the same separation and position angle as the radio components. An HST/WFPC2 image reveals the lens galaxy. The optical flux ratio (27:1) is higher than the radio value probably due to differential extinction of the components by the lens galaxy. An optical spectrum of the bright component contains quasar emission lines at z=2.78 and several absorption features, including prominent Ly-alpha absorption. The lens galaxy redshift could not be measured but is estimated to be z=0.36 +/- 0.08. The image configuration is consistent with the simplest plausible models for the lens potential. The flat radio spectrum and observed variability of PMN J1838-3427 suggest the time delay between flux variations of the components is measurable, and could thus provide an independent measurement of H_0.Comment: 23 pages, incl. 6 figures, to appear in A.J.; replaced with accepted version; minor changes to text, improved figure

    ‘I’m not your mother’: British social realism, neoliberalism and the maternal subject in Sally Wainwright’s Happy Valley (BBC1 2014-2016)

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    This article examines Sally Wainwright's Happy Valley (BBC1, 2014–2016) in the context of recent feminist attempts to theorise the idea of a maternal subject. Happy Valley, a police series set in an economically disadvantaged community in West Yorkshire, has been seen as expanding the genre of British social realism, in its focus on strong Northern women, by giving it ‘a female voice’ (Gorton, 2016: 73). I argue that its challenge is more substantial. Both the tradition of British social realism on which the series draws, and the neoliberal narratives of the family which formed the discursive context of its production, I argue, are founded on a social imaginary in which the mother is seen as responsible for the production of the selves of others, but cannot herself be a subject. The series itself, however, places at its centre an active, articulate, mobile and angry maternal subject. In so doing, it radically contests both a tradition of British social realism rooted in male nostalgia and more recent neoliberal narratives of maternal guilt and lifestyle choice. It does this through a more fundamental contestation: of the wider cultural narratives about selfhood and the maternal that underpin both. Its reflective maternal subject, whose narrative journey involves acceptance of an irrecoverable loss, anger and guilt as a crucial aspect of subjectivity, and who embodies an ethics of relationality, is a figure impossible in conventional accounts of subject and nation. She can be understood, however, in terms of recent feminist theories of the maternal
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