1,485 research outputs found
Living lab methodology as an assessment tool for mass customization
Mass customization has been regularly used as a growth strategy during the last decades. The strength of this approach stems from offering products adjusted to customers' individual needs, resulting in added value. The latter resides in the word 'custom,' implying unique and utilitarian products allowing for self-expression of the consumer. Researchers and practitioners however predominantly focused on the company's internal processes to optimize mass customization, often resulting in market failure. As a response, a framework with five factors determining the success of mass customization was developed. Additionally, Living Lab methodologies have been used to improve innovation contexts that were too closed. This paper will fill a gap in the literature by demonstrating that the integration of the five-factor framework in the Living Lab methodology is well suited to determine the possible success or failure of a mass-customized product in the market by means of a single case study
Continued development of a detailed model of arc discharge dynamics
Using a previously developed set of codes (SEMC, CASCAD, ACORN), a parametric study was performed to quantify the parameters which describe the development of a single electron indicated avalanche into a negative tip streamer. The electron distribution function in Teflon is presented for values of the electric field in the range of four-hundred million volts/meter to four billon volts/meter. A formulation of the scattering parameters is developed which shows that the transport can be represented by three independent variables. The distribution of ionization sites is used to indicate an avalanche. The self consistent evolution of the avalanche is computed over the parameter range of scattering set
Modelling spectral line profiles of wind-wind shock emissions from massive binary systems
One of the most intriguing spectral features of WR binary stars is the
presence of time-dependent line profiles. Long term observations of several
systems revealed the periodicity of this variability, synchronized with the
orbital movement. Several partially successful models have been proposed to
reproduce the observed data. The most promising assume that the origin of the
emission is the wind-wind interaction zone. In this scenario, two high velocity
and dense winds produce a strong shock layer, responsible for most of the
X-rays observed from these systems. As the secondary star moves along its
orbital path, the shock region of conical shape, changes its position with
relation to the line of sight. As a consequence, the stream measured Doppler
shift presents time variations resulting in position changes of the spectral
line. In our work, we present an alternative model, introducing turbulence in
the shock layer to account for the line broadening and opacity effects for the
asymmetry in the line profiles. We showed that the gas turbulence avoids the
need of an unnaturally large contact layer thickness to reproduce line
broadening. Also, we demonstrated that if the emission from the opposing cone
surface is absorbed, the result is a single peaked profile. This result fully
satisfies the recent data obtained from massive binary systems, and can help on
the determination of both winds and orbital parameters. We successfully applied
this model to the Br22 system and determined its orbital parameters.Comment: To appear in the MNRA
Active-Coupling Mixing Times for a Stirred Binary Liquid
Mixing times measured for a stirred critical binary liquid mixture are seen to vary dramatically with Reynolds number, Prandtl number, and the initial value of the order parameter. These variations are far too large to be explained by passive-mixing calculations; they also differ in significant respects from the active-mixing predictions of Ruiz and Nelson
First principles numerical model of avalanche-induced arc discharges in electron-irradiated dielectrics
The model consists of four phases: single electron dynamics, single electron avalanche, negative streamer development, and tree formation. Numerical algorithms and computer code implementations are presented for the first three phases. An approach to developing a code description of fourth phase is discussed. Numerical results are presented for a crude material model of Teflon
Instabilities of waves in nonlinear disordered media
We develop a self-consistent theory of temporal fluctuations of a speckle
pattern resulting from the multiple scattering of a coherent wave in a weakly
nonlinear disordered medium. The speckle pattern is shown to become unstable if
the nonlinearity exceeds a threshold value. The instability is due to a
feedback provided by the multiple scattering and manifests itself in
spontaneous fluctuations of the scattered intensity. The development of
instability is independent of the sign of nonlinearity.Comment: 6 pages, 2 PostScript figures, accepted to Phys. Rev. Let
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