193 research outputs found

    Partial discharge testing of defective three-phase PILC cable under rated conditions

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    The ability to accurately monitor the health of power distribution plant is a very attractive prospect for utility companies. This capability would provide a system that engineers could use to assess the real-time state of the network. Analysis of the data produced could allow for more informed decisions to be made in the areas of asset replacement and maintenance scheduling amongst others. It is widely accepted that partial discharge activity is linked with the electrical ageing/degradation of high voltage equipment. Work at Southampton is focused on obtaining a better understanding of the characteristics and trends of partial discharge events associated with medium voltage cables under, 'real life' conditions. An experiment has been developed that allows for service conditions to be applied to defective paper insulated lead covered cable samples. The samples under investigation were exposed to mechanical damage designed to replicate typical problems found on an active circuit. Partial discharge measurement was undertaken during the stressing process

    Partial discharge analysis of defective three-phase cable

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    Power distribution cable networks represent a dynamic and complex challenge with regard to the issues of maintenance and providing a reliable, high quality supply of electrical power. Utilities historically used regular off-line testing to investigate the health of their assets. This method of testing is reasonably effective for this purpose but does have certain drawbacks associated with it; customer supply can be interrupted during the testing process and the cables are generally not tested under normal operating conditions. Meaning that the test data is not representative of the Partial discharge (PD) activity that is apparent under on-line conditions and the testing activity itself could trigger previously dormant PD sources. The modern approach for understanding the health of medium voltage (MV) cable distribution networks is to continuously monitor the assets whilst on-line. Analysis if the field data is then used to inform decisions regarding asset replacement and maintenance strategies. PD activity is widely recognised as a symptom linked to the degradation of the dielectric properties of high voltage plant. UK Power Networks sponsored research is being undertaken to investigate the evolution of PD activity within three-phase paper insulated lead covered (PILC) cables containing introduced defects. An experiment has been designed to stress cable lengths in a manner that is representative of the conditions met by on-line circuits [1]. A cable section containing a defect that is known to lead to the premature failure of in-service cables has been PD tested over a range of operating temperatures. The experiment utilizes three-phase energization at rated voltage as well as thermal cycling of the cable to replicate the daily load pattern experienced by circuits in the field. The extension to this work involves PD testing cable samples containing a range of defects to produce a data set consisting of PD pulses produced by varied sources. Analysis of this data should lead to a better understanding of the signals produced by the premature ageing of these types of cable

    A new method for automatic Multiple Partial Discharge Classification

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    A new wavelet based feature parameter have been developed to represent the characteristics of PD activities, i.e. the wavelet decomposition energy of PD pulses measured from non-conventional ultra wide bandwidth PD sensors such as capacitive couplers (CC) or high frequency current transformers (HFCT). The generated feature vectors can contain different dimensions depending on the length of recorded pulses. These high dimensional feature vectors can then be processed using Principal Component Analysis (PCA) to map the data into a three dimensional space whilst the first three most significant components representing the feature vector are preserved. In the three dimensional mapped space, an automatic Density-Based Spatial Clustering of Applications with Noise (DBSCAN) algorithm is then applied to classify the data cluster(s) produced by the PCA. As the procedure is undertaken in a three dimensional space, the obtained clustering results can be easily assessed. The classified PD sub-data sets are then reconstructed in the time domain as phase-resolved patterns to facilitate PD source type identification. The proposed approach has been successfully applied to PD data measured from electrical machines and power cables where measurements were undertaken in different laboratories

    Probabilistic ballistic annihilation with continuous velocity distributions

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    We investigate the problem of ballistically controlled reactions where particles either annihilate upon collision with probability pp, or undergo an elastic shock with probability 1p1-p. Restricting to homogeneous systems, we provide in the scaling regime that emerges in the long time limit, analytical expressions for the exponents describing the time decay of the density and the root-mean-square velocity, as continuous functions of the probability pp and of a parameter related to the dissipation of energy. We work at the level of molecular chaos (non-linear Boltzmann equation), and using a systematic Sonine polynomials expansion of the velocity distribution, we obtain in arbitrary dimension the first non-Gaussian correction and the corresponding expressions for the decay exponents. We implement Monte-Carlo simulations in two dimensions, that are in excellent agreement with our analytical predictions. For p<1p<1, numerical simulations lead to conjecture that unlike for pure annihilation (p=1p=1), the velocity distribution becomes universal, i.e. does not depend on the initial conditions.Comment: 10 pages, 9 eps figures include

    Sequential versus combination chemotherapy for the treatment of advanced colorectal cancer (FFCD 2000-05): an open-label, randomised, phase 3 trial

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    BACKGROUND: The optimum use of cytotoxic drugs for advanced colorectal cancer has not been defined. Our aim was to investigate whether combination treatment is better than the sequential administration of the same drugs in patients with advanced colorectal cancer. METHODS: In this open-label, randomised, phase 3 trial, we randomly assigned patients (1:1 ratio) with advanced, measurable, non-resectable colorectal cancer and WHO performance status 0-2 to receive either first-line treatment with bolus (400 mg/m(2)) and infusional (2400 mg/m(2)) fluorouracil plus leucovorin (400 mg/m(2)) (simplified LV5FU2 regimen), second-line LV5FU2 plus oxaliplatin (100 mg/m(2)) (FOLFOX6), and third-line LV5FU2 plus irinotecan (180 mg/m(2)) (FOLFIRI) or first-line FOLFOX6 and second-line FOLFIRI. Chemotherapy was administered every 2 weeks. Randomisation was done centrally using minimisation (minimisation factors were WHO performance status, previous adjuvant chemotherapy, number of disease sites, and centre). The primary endpoint was progression-free survival after two lines of treatment. Analyses were by intention-to-treat. This trial is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT00126256. FINDINGS: 205 patients were randomly assigned to the sequential group and 205 to the combination group. 161 (79%) patients in the sequential group and 161 (79%) in the combination group died during the study. Median progression-free survival after two lines was 10·5 months (95% CI 9·6-11·5) in the sequential group and 10·3 months (9·0-11·9) in the combination group (hazard ratio 0·95, 95% CI 0·77-1·16; p=0·61). All six deaths caused by toxic effects of treatment occurred in the combination group. During first-line chemotherapy, significantly fewer severe (grade 3-4) haematological adverse events (12 events in 203 patients in sequential group vs 83 events in 203 patients in combination group; p&lt;0·0001) and non-haematological adverse events (26 events vs 186 events; p&lt;0·0001) occurred in the sequential group than in the combination group. INTERPRETATION: Upfront combination chemotherapy is more toxic and is not more effective than the sequential use of the same cytotoxic drugs in patients with advanced, non-resectable colorectal cancer. FUNDING: Sanofi-Aventis France

    KL to pi0 e+ e- and KL to pi0 mu+ mu- : A binary star on the stage of flavor physics

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    A systematic analysis of New Physics impacts on the rare decays KL to pi0 l+ l- is performed. Thanks to their different sensitivities to flavor-changing local effective interactions, these two modes could provide valuable information on the nature of the possible New Physics at play. In particular, a combined measurement of both modes could disentangle scalar/pseudoscalar from vector or axial-vector contributions. For the latter, model-independent bounds are derived. Finally, the KL to pi0 mu+ mu- forward-backward CP-asymmetry is considered, and shown to give interesting complementary information.Comment: 20 pages, 5 figures. Comments and references added, minor numerical changes, conclusion unchanged, to appear in JHE

    Asteroid Confusions with Extremely Large Telescopes

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    Asteroids can be considered as sources of contamination of point sources and also sources of confusion noise, depending whether their presence is detected in the image or their flux is under the detection limit. We estimate that at low ecliptic latitudes, ~10,000--20,000 asteroids/sq. degree will be detected with an E-ELT like telescope, while by the end of Spitzer and Herschel missions, infrared space observatories will provide ~100,000 serendipitous asteroid detections. The detection and identification of asteroids is therefore an important step in survey astronomy.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, accepted by Earth, Moon and Planets, ELT Conference (Elba, 2009 Sept.) S
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