498 research outputs found
Sailboat propeller drag
All but the smallest classes of modern keelboats are fitted with inboard engines and consequently, when making way under sail, the craft experience parasitic drag due to trailing propellers and associated appendages. The variety of screw configurations used on sailing boats includes fixed-blade, feathering, and folding set-ups, with blades numbering two or three. Although the magnitude of the resultant drag is thought to have a significant influence on sailing performance, the published literature having regard to this problem is sparse. Here, the aim was to evaluate the drag effect of fixed-blade propellers of types commonly used on sailing craft. The results of towing tank tests on full-scale propellers are presented for the locked shaft condition; these are presented along with reconfigured data from the few previously published sources. For the case in which the propeller is allowed to rotate, tests were conducted on a typical screw with a range of braking torques being applied. It was hypothesised that the performance coefficients of the Wageningen B-Screw Series could be used to characterise adequately the types of screw of interest and that these could be extrapolated to enable prediction of the drag of a freewheeling propeller; an assessment of this formed part of the investigation
Ten Years in Australia Being the Results of his Experience as a Settler During that Period
https://commons.und.edu/settler-literature/1088/thumbnail.jp
Forecast combination for discrete choice models: predicting FOMC monetary policy decisions
This paper provides a methodology for combining forecasts based on several discrete choice models. This is achieved primarily by combining one-step-ahead probability forecast associated with each model. The paper applies well-established scoring rules for qualitative response models in the context of forecast combination. Log-scores and quadratic-scores are both used to evaluate the forecasting accuracy of each model and to combine the probability forecasts. In addition to producing point forecasts, the effect of sampling variation is also assessed. This methodology is applied to forecast the US Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) decisions in changing the federal funds target rate. Several of the economic fundamentals influencing the FOMC decisions are nonstationary over time and are modelled in a similar fashion to Hu and Phillips (2004a, JoE). The empirical results show that combining forecasted probabilities using scores mostly outperforms both equal weight combination and forecasts based on multivariate models
Detailed study of the ac susceptibility of Sr2RuO4 in oriented magnetic fields
We have investigated the ac susceptibility of the spin triplet superconductor
SrRuO as a function of magnetic field in various directions at
temperatures down to 60 mK. We have focused on the in-plane field configuration
(polar angle ), which is a prerequisite for inducing
multiple superconducting phases in SrRuO. We have found that the
previous attribution of a pronounced feature in the ac susceptibility to the
second superconducting transition itself is not in accord with recent
measurements of the thermal conductivity or of the specific heat. We propose
that the pronounced feature is a consequence of additional involvement of
vortex pinning originating from the second superconducting transition.Comment: Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Low temperature electronic properties of Sr_2RuO_4 III: Magnetic fields
Based on the microscopic model introduced previously the observed specific
heat and ac-susceptibility data in the superconducting phase in Sr_2RuO_4 with
applied magnetic fields are described consistently within a phenomenological
approach. Discussed in detail are the temperature dependence of the upper
critical fields H_{c2} and H_2, the dependence of the upper critical fields on
the field direction, the linear specific heat below the superconducting phase
transition as a function of field or temperature, the anisotropy of the two
spatial components of the order parameter, and the fluctuation field H_p.Comment: 8 pages REVTEX, 4 figure
Superconductivity in the Correlated Pyrochlore Cd_2Re_2O_7
We report the observation of superconductivity in high-quality
CdReO single crystals with room-temperature pyrochlore structure.
Resistivity and ac susceptibility measurements establish an onset transition
temperature T = 1.47 K with transition width T = 0.25
K. In applied magnetic field, the resistive transition shows a type-II
character, with an approximately linear temperature-dependence of the upper
critical field H. The bulk nature of the superconductivity is confirmed
by the specific heat jump with C = 37.9 mJ/mol-K. Using the
value extracted from normal-state specific heat data, we obtain
C/T = 1.29, close to the weak coupling BCS value. In the
normal state, a negative Hall coefficient below 100 K suggests electron-like
conduction in this material. The resistivity exhibits a quadratic T-dependence
between 2 and 60 K, i.e., +AT, indicative of Fermi-liquid
behavior. The values of the Kadowaki-Woods ratio A/ and the Wilson
ratio are comparable to that for strongly correlated materials.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Interface superconductivity in the eutectic Sr2RuO4-Ru: 3-K phase of Sr2RuO4
The eutectic system Sr2RuO4-Ru is referred to as the 3-K phase of the
spin-triplet supeconductor Sr2RuO4 because of its enhanced superconducting
transition temperature Tc of ~3 K. We have investigated the field-temperature
(H-T) phase diagram of the 3-K phase for fields parallel and perpendicular to
the ab-plane of Sr2RuO4, using out-of-plane resistivity measurements. We have
found an upturn curvature in the Hc2(T) curve for H // c, and a rather gradual
temperature dependence of Hc2 close to Tc for both H // ab and H // c. We have
also investigated the dependence of Hc2 on the angle between the field and the
ab-plane at several temperatures. Fitting the Ginzburg-Landau effective-mass
model apparently fails to reproduce the angle dependence, particularly near H
// c and at low temperatures. We propose that all of these charecteric features
can be explained, at least in a qualitative fashion, on the basis of a theory
by Sigrist and Monien that assumes surface superconductivity with a
two-component order parameter occurring at the interface between Sr2RuO4 and Ru
inclusions. This provides evidence of the chiral state postulated for the 1.5-K
phase by several experiments.Comment: 7 pages and 5 figs; accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Edge states and determination of pairing symmetry in superconducting Sr2RuO4
We calculate the energy dispersion of the surface Andreev states and their
contribution to tunneling conductance for the order parameters with horizontal
and vertical lines of nodes proposed for superconducting Sr2RuO4. For vertical
lines, we find double peaks in tunneling spectra reflecting the van Hove
singularities in the density of surface states originating from the turning
points in their energy dispersion. For horizontal lines, we find a single
cusp-like peak at zero bias, which agrees very well with the experimental data
on tunneling in Sr2RuO4.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures. V.2: comparison with experiment added and
discussion of horizontal nodes expanded. v.3: significant expansion: 1 figure
and 2 pages added. v.4: acknowledgements added. Additional viewgraphs with
experimental and theoretical curves superimposed are available at
http://www2.physics.umd.edu/~yakovenk/talks/Sr2RuO4
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