9,303 research outputs found
Coal extrusion in the plastic state
Continuous feeding of coal in a compressing screw extruder is described as a method of introducing coal into pressurized systems. The method utilizes the property of many bituminous coals of softening at temperatures from 350 to 425 C. Coal is then fed, much in the manner of common thermoplastics, using screw extruders. Data on the viscosity and extruder parameters for extrusion of Illinois No. 6 coal are presented
Models of the diffuse radar backscatter from Mars
The topographies of several debris flow units near the Mount St. Helens Volcano were measured at lateral scales of millimeters to meters in September 1990. The objective was to measure the surface roughness of the debris flows at scales smaller than, on the order of, and larger that the radar wavelength of common remote sensing radars. A laser profiling system and surveying instruments were used to obtain elevation data for square areas that varied in size from 10 to 32 cm. The elevation data were converted to estimates of the power spectrum of surface roughness. The conversions were based upon standard periodogram techniques, and upon a modified spectral estimation technique that was developed
Mammals of Southwestern Arkansas Part II. Rodents
This study investigated the composition and habitat affinities of the mammalian fauna of southwestern Arkansas. The study area was comprised of the 21 counties located south and/or west of and including Pulaski County. The previously existing data set pertaining to the mammals of Arkansas was notably incomplete and this study area in particular, was poorly known mammalogically. Specimens were collected by standard trapping and salvage methods throughout the study area. The mammals considered during this study were limited to those species meeting a set of criteria designed to eliminate species that had been introduced or artificially maintained. This study has accumulated records of 25 species of rodents; over 1500 specimens have been recorded; and a total of 95 new county records have been documented
The concealed Caledonide basement of eastern England and the southern North Sea : a review
Field mapping, analysis of borehole core and studies of geophysical potential field and seismic data can be used to demonstrate the existence of a number of distinct crustal blocks within Eastern Avalonia beneath eastern England and the southern North Sea. At the core of these blocks is the Midlands Microcraton which is flanked by Ordovician volcanic arc complexes exposed in Wales and the Lake District. A possible volcanic arc complex of comparable age in eastern England is concealed by late Palaeozoic and Mesozoic cover. These volcanic arc complexes resulted from subduction of oceanic lithosphere beneath Avalonia prior to collision with Baltica and Laurentia in late Ordovician and Silurian time, respectively. The nature of the crust north and east of the concealed Caledonides of Eastern England and south of the lapetus Suture/Tornquist Sea Suture, which forms the basement to the southern North Sea, is unclear. Late Ordovician metamorphic ages from cores penetrating deformed metasedimentary rocks on the Mid-North Sea High suggest these rocks were involved in Avalonia-Baltica collision before final closure of the lapetus Ocean between Laurentia and Avalonia
Method for Computationally Efficient Design of Dielectric Laser Accelerators
Dielectric microstructures have generated much interest in recent years as a
means of accelerating charged particles when powered by solid state lasers. The
acceleration gradient (or particle energy gain per unit length) is an important
figure of merit. To design structures with high acceleration gradients, we
explore the adjoint variable method, a highly efficient technique used to
compute the sensitivity of an objective with respect to a large number of
parameters. With this formalism, the sensitivity of the acceleration gradient
of a dielectric structure with respect to its entire spatial permittivity
distribution is calculated by the use of only two full-field electromagnetic
simulations, the original and adjoint. The adjoint simulation corresponds
physically to the reciprocal situation of a point charge moving through the
accelerator gap and radiating. Using this formalism, we perform numerical
optimizations aimed at maximizing acceleration gradients, which generate
fabricable structures of greatly improved performance in comparison to
previously examined geometries.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figure
Using the Regular Chains Library to build cylindrical algebraic decompositions by projecting and lifting
Cylindrical algebraic decomposition (CAD) is an important tool, both for
quantifier elimination over the reals and a range of other applications.
Traditionally, a CAD is built through a process of projection and lifting to
move the problem within Euclidean spaces of changing dimension. Recently, an
alternative approach which first decomposes complex space using triangular
decomposition before refining to real space has been introduced and implemented
within the RegularChains Library of Maple. We here describe a freely available
package ProjectionCAD which utilises the routines within the RegularChains
Library to build CADs by projection and lifting. We detail how the projection
and lifting algorithms were modified to allow this, discuss the motivation and
survey the functionality of the package
Cylindrical Algebraic Sub-Decompositions
Cylindrical algebraic decompositions (CADs) are a key tool in real algebraic
geometry, used primarily for eliminating quantifiers over the reals and
studying semi-algebraic sets. In this paper we introduce cylindrical algebraic
sub-decompositions (sub-CADs), which are subsets of CADs containing all the
information needed to specify a solution for a given problem.
We define two new types of sub-CAD: variety sub-CADs which are those cells in
a CAD lying on a designated variety; and layered sub-CADs which have only those
cells of dimension higher than a specified value. We present algorithms to
produce these and describe how the two approaches may be combined with each
other and the recent theory of truth-table invariant CAD.
We give a complexity analysis showing that these techniques can offer
substantial theoretical savings, which is supported by experimentation using an
implementation in Maple.Comment: 26 page
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Deaf and hearing children's picture naming Impact of age of acquisition and language modality on representational gesture
Stefanini, Bello, Caselli, Iverson, & Volterra (2009) reported that Italian 24-36 month old children use a high proportion of representational gestures to accompany their spoken responses when labelling pictures. The two studies reported here used the same naming task with (1) typically developing 24-46-month-old hearing children acquiring English and (2) 24-63-month-old deaf children of deaf and hearing parents acquiring British Sign Language (BSL) and spoken English. In Study 1 children scored within the range of correct spoken responses previously reported, but produced very few representational gestures. However, when they did gesture, they expressed the same action meanings as reported in previous research. The action bias was also observed in deaf children of hearing parents in Study 2, who labelled pictures with signs, spoken words and gestures. The deaf group with deaf parents used BSL almost exclusively with few additional gestures. The function of representational gestures in spoken and signed vocabulary development is considered in relation to differences between native and non-native sign language acquisition
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