11,508 research outputs found
Aeration Effects on Impact: Drop Test of a Flat Plate
Verbatim reproduction or republication of the papers or articles or part of the articles (e.g., figures or tables) by their authors, after the publication or presentation at the ISOPE meetings and journal, is permitted by the International Society of Offshore and Polar Engineers (ISOPE), provided the full credit is given to the authors, to the publisher, The International Society of Offshore and Polar Engineers (ISOPE), and to the Conference, Symposium or Journal - more specifically not to remove the copyright imprint on page 1 of the paper. The permission does not extend to copying for resale and to re-copyrighting the whole or part of the papers. Posting on your organization's website of the paper(s) you specified is allowed only where only your organization's employees including the students can view free of charge the paper authored or co-authored by your organization's employees, and www.isope.org is provided for the paper(s) in the ISOPE proceedings or journals. Regards, Prof. Jin S Chung Executive Director isope, 495 North Whisman Road, Suite 300 Mountain View, California 94043-5711, USA T 1-650-254-1871; F 1-650-254-2038; [email protected] [email protected], www.isope.org www.deepoceanmining.orgAeration effects on impact have been investigated by dropping a flat plate onto the water surface, in which the water is aerated to various degrees. An experimental study has been carried out in the newly commissioned Ocean Basin at Plymouth University’s COAST Lab. The falling block comprises a rigid impact plate connected to two driver plates and its total mass can be varied between 32 kg and 52 kg. The impact plate is 0.25m long, 0.25 m wide and 0.012 m high. The impact velocity is varied between 4 m/s and 7 m/s. Preliminary results of the impact tests are presented here. Visualised results show that there are significant differences between jet formation after impact of the plate in pure water and in aerated water. There is significant reduction of the maximum pressures from those measured in pure water to those measured in aerated water
Multiple Scales in the Fine Structure of the Isoscalar Giant Quadrupole Resonance in ^{208}Pb
The fine structure of the isoscalar giant quadrupole resonance in ^{208}Pb,
observed in high-resolution (p,p') and (e,e') experiments, is studied using the
entropy index method. In a novel way, it enables to determine the number of
scales present in the spectra and their magnitude. We find intermediate scales
of fluctuations around 1.1 MeV, 460 keV and 125 keV for an excitation energy
region 0 - 12 MeV. A comparison with scales extracted from second RPA
calculations, which are in good agreement with experiment, shows that they
arise from the internal mixing of collective motion with two particle-two hole
components of the nuclear wavefunction.Comment: 14 pages including 6 figures (to be published in Phys. Lett. B
Radial excitations of Q-balls, and their D-term
We study the structure of the energy-momentum tensor of radial excitations of
Q-balls in scalar field theories with U(1) symmetry. The obtained numerical
results for the excitations allow us to study in detail
patterns how the solutions behave with N. We show that although the fields and
energy-momentum tensor densities exhibit a remarkable degree of complexity, the
properties of the solutions scale with N with great regularity. This is to best
of our knowledge the first study of the D-term d1 for excited states, and we
demonstrate that it is negative --- in agreement with results from literature
on the d1 of ground state particles.Comment: 11 pages, 12 figure
String Synchronizing Sets: Sublinear-Time BWT Construction and Optimal LCE Data Structure
Burrows-Wheeler transform (BWT) is an invertible text transformation that,
given a text of length , permutes its symbols according to the
lexicographic order of suffixes of . BWT is one of the most heavily studied
algorithms in data compression with numerous applications in indexing, sequence
analysis, and bioinformatics. Its construction is a bottleneck in many
scenarios, and settling the complexity of this task is one of the most
important unsolved problems in sequence analysis that has remained open for 25
years. Given a binary string of length , occupying machine
words, the BWT construction algorithm due to Hon et al. (SIAM J. Comput., 2009)
runs in time and space. Recent advancements (Belazzougui,
STOC 2014, and Munro et al., SODA 2017) focus on removing the alphabet-size
dependency in the time complexity, but they still require time.
In this paper, we propose the first algorithm that breaks the -time
barrier for BWT construction. Given a binary string of length , our
procedure builds the Burrows-Wheeler transform in time and
space. We complement this result with a conditional lower bound
proving that any further progress in the time complexity of BWT construction
would yield faster algorithms for the very well studied problem of counting
inversions: it would improve the state-of-the-art -time
solution by Chan and P\v{a}tra\c{s}cu (SODA 2010). Our algorithm is based on a
novel concept of string synchronizing sets, which is of independent interest.
As one of the applications, we show that this technique lets us design a data
structure of the optimal size that answers Longest Common
Extension queries (LCE queries) in time and, furthermore, can be
deterministically constructed in the optimal time.Comment: Full version of a paper accepted to STOC 201
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