693 research outputs found
Loadcell supports for a dynamic force plate
An apparatus was developed to accurately measure components of force along three mutually perpendicular axes, torque, and the center of pressure imposed by the foot of a subject walking over its surface. The data obtained were used to supplement high-speed motion picture and electromyographic (EMG) data for in-depth studies of normal or abnormal human gait. Significant features of the design (in particular, the mechanisms used to support the loadcell transducers) are described. Results of the development program and typical data obtained with the device are presented and discussed
Study of expandable, terminal decelerators for Mars atmosphere entry, volume I Final summary report, Dec. 1965 - Oct. 1966
Expandable terminal decelerators studied for use in Mars atmosphere entr
Study of expandable, terminal decelerators for Mars atmosphere entry Interim summary report, Dec. 1965 - Jun. 1966
Design of expandable terminal decelerators for Mars atmosphere entry by Mars-lander capsul
T-28 data acquisition during COHMEX 1986
As part of the 1986 Cooperative Huntsville Meteorological Experiment (COHMEX) a cloud physics instrumented T-28 aircraft was used in conjunction with multiple ground based Doppler radars to characterize hydrometeors and updraft structure within developing summertime cumulus and cumulonimbus cloud systems near Huntsville, Alabama. Instrumentation aboard the aircraft included a Particle Measuring Systems (PMS) Forward Scattering Spectrometer Probe (FSSP), a PMS 2D Cloud Probe and a PMS 2D Precipitation Probe, as well as a hail spectrometer and a foil impactor. Hydrometeor spectra were obtained in the interior of mature thunderstorms over the size range from cloud droplets through hailstones. In addition, vertical wind speed, temperature, Johnson-Williams (JW) liquid water content and electric field measurements were made. Significant microphysical differences exist between these clouds and summertime cumulonimbus clouds which develop over the Central Plains. One notable difference in clouds displaying similar radar reflectivities is that COHMEX hydrometeors are typically smaller and more numerous than those observed in the Central Plains. The COHMEX cloud microphysical measurements represent ground truth values for the remote sensing instrumentation which was flown over the cloud tops at altitudes between 60,000 and 70,000 ft aboard NASA U-2 and ER-2 aircraft. They are also being used jointly with a numerical cloud model to assist in understanding the development of summertime subtropical clouds
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Security and Performance Trade-offs for Data Distribution Service in Flying Ad-Hoc Networks
This paper focuses on the data distribution service(DDS) middleware and its publish/subscribe logic - a topic thathas recently regained popularity in both academia as well asindustry. DDS is a well-known approach based on publish-subscribe logic. Therefore, only brief introduction of the issueis given followed by practical evaluation of current, availableand real implementations from the security and performancepoint of view. The analysis and evaluation is performed toaid comparison of competing DDS implementation, and thuscould serve well as an input to decision-making about whichof these solutions is best suited for a given situation. Finally,the practical performance evaluation is performed via severaldifferent scenarios to effectively compare the currently most-usedDDS implementations
Dynamics of a cantilever beam with piezoelectric sensor: Parameter identification
This work has been supported by the grant 23-06220S of the Czech Science Foundation within
institutional support RVO:61388998
An unfolding signifier: London's Baltic Exchange in Tallinn
In the summer of 2007 an unusual cargo arrived at Muuga and Paldiski harbors outside Tallinn. It consisted of nearly 50 containers holding over 1,000 tons of building material ranging from marble columns, staircases and fireplaces, to sculpted allegorical figures, wooden paneling and old-fashioned telephone booths. They were once part of the Baltic Exchange in the City of London. Soon they will become facets of the landscape of Tallinn. The following article charts this remarkable story and deploys this fragmented monument to analyze three issues relating to the Estonian capital: the relocation of the âBronze Soldierâ, the demolition of the Sakala Culture Center, and Tallinnâs future role as European Cultural Capital in 2011
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