7,786 research outputs found
Visibility graphs and landscape visibility analysis
Visibility analysis based on viewsheds is one of the most frequently used GIS analysis tools. In this paper we present an approach to visibility analysis based on the visibility graph. A visibility graph records the pattern of mutual visibility relations in a landscape, and provides a convenient way of storing and further analysing the results of multiple viewshed analyses for a particular landscape region. We describe how a visibility graph may be calculated for a landscape. We then give examples, which include the interactive exploration ofa landscape, and the calculation of new measures of a landscape?s visual properties based on graph metrics ? in particular, neighbourhood clustering coefficient and path length analysis. These analyses suggest that measures derived from the visibility graph may be of particular relevance to the growing interest in quantifying the perceptual characteristics of landscapes
Strong-field tidal distortions of rotating black holes: II. Horizon dynamics from eccentric and inclined orbits
In a previous paper, we developed tools for studying the horizon geometry of
a Kerr black hole that is tidally distorted by a binary companion using
techniques that require large mass ratios but can be applied to any bound orbit
and allow for arbitrary black hole spin. We now apply these tools to generic
Kerr black hole orbits. This allows us to investigate horizon dynamics: the
tidal field perturbing the horizon's geometry varies over a generic orbit, with
significant variations for eccentric orbits. Many of the features of the
horizon's behavior found previously carry over to the dynamical case in a
natural way. In particular, we find significant offsets between the applied
tide and the horizon's response. This leads to bulging in the horizon's
geometry which can lag or lead the orbit, depending upon the hole's rotation
and the orbit's geometry. An interesting and apparently new feature we find are
small-amplitude, high-frequency oscillations in the horizon's response. We have
not been able to identify a mechanism for producing these oscillations, but
find that they appear most clearly when rapidly rotating black holes are
distorted by very strong-field orbits.Comment: 24 pages, 15 figures. Final accepted version, to appear in Phys. Rev.
From isovists to visibility graphs: a methodology for the analysis of architectural space
An isovist, or viewshed, is the area in a spatial environment directly visible from a location within the space. Here we show how a set of isovists can be used to generate a graph of mutual visibility between locations. We demonstrate that this graph can also be constructed without reference to isovists and that we are in fact invoking the more general concept of a visibility graph. Using the visibility graph, we can extend both isovist and current graph-based analyses of architectural space to form a new methodology for the investigation of configurational relationships. The measurement of local and global characteristics of the graph, for each vertex or for the system as a whole, is of interest from an architectural perspective, allowing us to describe a configuration with reference to accessibility and visibility, to compare from location to location within a system, and to compare systems with different geometries. Finally we show that visibility graph properties may be closely related to manifestations of spatial perception, such as way-finding, movement, and space use
Strong-field tidal distortions of rotating black holes: III. Embeddings in hyperbolic 3-space
In previous work, we developed tools for quantifying the tidal distortion of
a black hole's event horizon due to an orbiting companion. These tools use
techniques which require large mass ratios (companion mass much smaller
than black hole mass ), but can be used for arbitrary bound orbits, and for
any black hole spin. We also showed how to visualize these distorted black
holes by embedding their horizons in a global Euclidean 3-space,
. Such visualizations illustrate interesting and important
information about horizon dynamics. Unfortunately, we could not visualize black
holes with spin parameter : such holes cannot
be globally embedded into . In this paper, we overcome this
difficulty by showing how to embed the horizons of tidally distorted Kerr black
holes in a hyperbolic 3-space, . We use black hole perturbation
theory to compute the Gaussian curvatures of tidally distorted event horizons,
from which we build a two-dimensional metric of their distorted horizons. We
develop a numerical method for embedding the tidally distorted horizons in
. As an application, we give a sequence of embeddings into
of a tidally interacting black hole with spin . A
small amplitude, high frequency oscillation seen in previous work shows up
particularly clearly in these embeddings.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figure
Improved performance of motor-drive systems by SAW shaft torque feedback
The paper describes the application of a non-contact, high bandwidth, low cost, SAW-based torque
measuring system for improving the dynamic performance
of industrial process motor-drive systems. Background to
the SAW technology and its motor integration is discussed
and a resonance ratio control (RRC) technique for the
coordinated motion control of multi-inertia mechanical
systems, based on the measurement of shaft torque via a
SAW-based torque sensor is proposed. Furthermore, a
new controller structure, RRC plus disturbance feedback
is proposed, which enables the controller to be designed to
independently satisfy tracking and regulation
performance. A tuning method for the RRC structure is
given based on the ITAE index, normalized as a function of
the mechanical parameters enabling a direct performance
comparison between a basic proportional and integral (PI)
controller. The use of a reduced-order state observer is
presented to provide a dynamic estimate of the load-side
disturbance torque for a multi-inertia mechanical system,
with an appraisal of the composite closed-loop dynamics.
The control structures are experimentally validated and
demonstrate significant improvement in dynamic tracking
performance, whilst additionally rejecting periodic load
side disturbances, a feature previously unrealisable except
by other, high-gain control schemes that impose small
stability margins
The effect of different metallic counterface materials and different surface treatments on the wear and friction of polyamide 66 and its composite in rolling-sliding contact
Original article can be found at: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/00431648 Copyright Elsevier B. V. DOI: 10.1016/S0043-1648(03)00054-1The effect of different metallic counterface materials and different surface treatments on the tribological behaviour of polymer and polymer composite under unlubricated, non-conformal and rolling-sliding contact has been investigated. The most widely used polymer materials - unreinforced polyamide 66 and its composite (RFL4036) – were tested. The metallic materials include aluminium, brass and steel and the surface treatments include Tufftride** treated (known as nitrocarbonising) and magnesium phosphate treated, etc. Tests were conducted over a range of slip ratios at a fixed load of 300 N, 1000 rpm rotational speed using a twin-disc test rig. The experimental results showed that the polyamide composite exhibited less friction and wear than the unreinforced polyamide 66 when running against steel and aluminium counterfaces. However, when tested against brass, polyamide 66 exhibited lower wear than the composite. The surface treatment of steel has a significant effect on the coefficient of friction and the wear rate, as well as on the tribological mechanism, of polyamide 66 composites. It has been observed that a thin film on the contact surface plays a dominant role in reducing the wear and friction of the composite and in suppressing the transverse cracks. This study clearly indicates that both the characteristics of the different counterface metallic materials and the surface treatment greatly control the wear behaviour of polyamide 66 and its composite.Peer reviewe
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