6,954 research outputs found

    Trickery, Mockery and the Scottish Way of War

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    This article seeks to examine two prominent themes, those of trickery and mockery, in how warfare against England was represented in Scottish historical narratives of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. Careful analysis of these specific themes allows a variety of insights to be presented. It will show some of the rich uses to which such texts can be put by exploring them in a historically informed context. One aspect of this is the endeavour to illuminate ways in which these sources, although treacherous in relation to specifics, can provide accurate, and previously unnoticed, more general insights into the cultures of war embraced by the Scots. Analysis of the texts also demonstrates the complex and changing ways in which perceptions about the practice of war have shaped Scottish senses of identity. It becomes clear that ideas about their mode of war were vital in how the Scots saw themselves. And such ideas were also fundamental in shaping the much more hostile view of them developed by their regular enemies, the English. The main sources given consideration are the Gesta Annalia II, once attributed to John of Fordun (composed c1363) (Chron Fordun)1

    The Administration of a Tort Liability Law in New York

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    Dolomitization Processes in Hydrocarbon Reservoirs: Insight from Geothermometry Using Clumped Isotopes

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    Clumped isotopes geothermometry was applied to two dolomitic hydrocarbon reservoirs. Results indicate that late burial dolomitization occurred at ~110°C in the Albian Pinda dolostone (offshore Angola) and ~90°C in the Mano-Meillon dolostone (Aquitaine Basin, France), and did not continue on during subsequent burial/thermal evolution to present-day conditions (150-160°C). This study illustrates the great potential of the clumped isotopes approach to help unravel dolomitization processes in hydrocarbon reservoirs

    It's hip to be square : The CubeSat revolution

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    With the launch of the UK’s first commercial CubeSat, UKube-1, on the horizon, Malcolm Macdonald and Christopher Lowe look at what the future holds for this standardised spacecraft platform

    Neurons and circuits for odor processing in the piriform cortex

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    Increased understanding of the early stages of olfaction has lead to a renewed interest in the higher brain regions responsible for forming unified ‘odor images’ from the chemical components detected by the nose. The piriform cortex, which is one of the first cortical destinations of olfactory information in mammals, is a primitive paleocortex that is critical for the synthetic perception of odors. Here we review recent work that examines the cellular neurophysiology of the piriform cortex. Exciting new findings have revealed how the neurons and circuits of the piriform cortex process odor information, demonstrating that, despite its superficial simplicity, the piriform cortex is a remarkably subtle and intricate neural circuit

    Log::ProgramInfo: A Perl module to collect and log data for bioinformatics pipelines.

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    BackgroundTo reproduce and report a bioinformatics analysis, it is important to be able to determine the environment in which a program was run. It can also be valuable when trying to debug why different executions are giving unexpectedly different results.ResultsLog::ProgramInfo is a Perl module that writes a log file at the termination of execution of the enclosing program, to document useful execution characteristics. This log file can be used to re-create the environment in order to reproduce an earlier execution. It can also be used to compare the environments of two executions to determine whether there were any differences that might affect (or explain) their operation.AvailabilityThe source is available on CPAN (Macdonald and Boutros, Log-ProgramInfo. http://search.cpan.org/~boutroslb/Log-ProgramInfo/).ConclusionUsing Log::ProgramInfo in programs creating result data for publishable research, and including the Log::ProgramInfo output log as part of the publication of that research is a valuable method to assist others to duplicate the programming environment as a precursor to validating and/or extending that research

    Citizenship, community, and counter-terrorism : UK security discourse, 2001-2011

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    This paper analyses a corpus of UK policy documents which sets out national security policy as an exemplar of the contemporary discourse of counter-terrorism in Europe, the USA and worldwide. A corpus of 148 documents (c. 2.8 million words) was assembled to reflect the security discourse produced by the UK government before and after the 7/7 attacks on the London Transport system. To enable a chronological comparison, the two sub-corpora were defined: one relating to a discourse of citizenship and community cohesion (2001-2006); and one relating to the ‘Preventing Violent Extremism’ discourse (2007-2011). Wordsmith Tools (Scott 2008) was used to investigate keywords and patterns of collocation. The results present themes emerging from a comparative analysis of the 100 strongest keywords in each sub- corpus; as well as a qualitative analysis of related patterns of the collocation, focusing inparticular on features of connotation and semantic prosody

    Non-linear autopilot design using the philosophy of variable transient response

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    The novel non-linear controller design methodology of Variable Transient Response (VTR) is presented in this research. The performance of VTR is compared to that of successful non-linear controller designs (such as Robust Inverse Dynamics Estimation and a traditional autopilot design) by application to a non-linear missile model. The simulated results of this application demonstrate that the inclusion of VTR into the RIDE design results in a 50% improvement in response time and 100% improvement in settling time whilst achieving stable and accurate tracking of a command input. Analysis demonstrates that VTR dynamically alters the system's damping, resulting in a non-linear response. The system stability is analysed during actuator saturation using non-linear stability criteria. The results of this analysis show that the inclusion of VTR into the RIDE design does not compromise non-linear system stability

    Through-life modelling of nano-satellite power system dynamics

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    This paper presents a multi-fidelity approach to finding optimal, mission-specific power system configurations for CubeSats. The methodology begins with propagation of the orbit elements over the mission lifetime, via a continuous-time model, accounting for orbital perturbations (drag, solar radiation and non-spherical geo-potential). Analytical sizing of the power system is then achieved at discrete long-term intervals, to account for the effects of variations in environmental conditions over the mission life. This sizing is based on worst case power demand and provides inputs to a numerical assessment of the in-flight energy collection for each potential solar array deployment configuration. Finally, two objective functions (minimum deviation about the orbit average power and maximum average power over the entire mission) are satisfied to identify the configurations most suitable for the specific mission requirement. Most Nano-satellites are designed with relatively simple, static-models only and tend to be over-engineered as a result, often leading to a power-limited system. The approach described here aims to reduce the uncertainty in energy collection during flight and provide a robust approach to finding the optimal solution for a given set of mission requirements

    Parametric CubeSat flight simulation architecture

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    This paper presents the architecture of a system of models that provides realistic simulation of the dynamic, in-orbit behaviour of a CubeSat. Time-dependent relationships between sub-systems and between the satellite and external nodes (ground stations and celestial bodies) are captured through numerical analysis of a multi-disciplinary set of state variables including position, attitude, stored energy, stored data and system temperature. Model-Based Systems Engineering and parametric modelling techniques are employed throughout to help visualise the models and ensure flexibility and expandability. Operational mode states are also incorporated within the design, allowing the systems engineer to assess flight behaviour over a range of mission scenarios. Finally, both long and short term dynamics are captured using a coupled-model philosophy; described as Lifetime and Operations models. An example mission is analysed and preliminary results are presented as an illustration of early capabilities
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