151,588 research outputs found
Structural modelling and testing of failed high energy pipe runs: 2D and 3D pipe whip
Copyright @ 2011 ElsevierThe sudden rupture of a high energy piping system is a safety-related issue and has been the subject of extensive study and discussed in several industrial reports (e.g. [2], [3] and [4]). The dynamic plastic response of the deforming pipe segment under the blow-down force of the escaping liquid is termed pipe whip. Because of the potential damage that such an event could cause, various geometric and kinematic features of this phenomenon have been modelled from the point of view of dynamic structural plasticity. After a comprehensive summary of the behaviour of in-plane deformation of pipe runs [9] and [10] that deform in 2D in a plane, the more complicated case of 3D out-of-plane deformation is discussed. Both experimental studies and modelling using analytical and FE methods have been carried out and they show that, for a good estimate of the “hazard zone” when unconstrained pipe whip motion could occur, a large displacement analysis is essential. The classical, rigid plastic, small deflection analysis (e.g. see [2] and [8]), is valid for estimating the initial failure mechanisms, however it is insufficient for describing the details and consequences of large deflection behaviour
Extending the RP survey to the outer LMC
We are extending our search for faint PNe in the LMC to include the outer 56
deg2 area not covered in the original UKST survey of the central 25 deg2
region. Candidate PNe have been selected using the Magellanic Cloud Emission
Line Survey (MCELS) and the first round of observations has yielded 93 new LMC
PNe while confirming the 102 previously known PNe in the outer LMC. We plan to
continue our spectroscopic object identification program until we cover all our
remaining candidates in the survey area. These observations, providing medium
and high resolution spectra from 3650 Ang to 6900 Ang will additionally be used
to measure fluxes for a series of research projects including luminosity
functions, abundances and LMC kinematics.Comment: 2 pages, 1 figure, IAU283 poster contributio
Pattern Formation in a 2D Elastic Solid
We present a dynamical theory of a two-dimensional martensitic transition in
an elastic solid, connecting a high-temperature phase which is nondegenerate
and has triangular symmetry, and a low-temperature phase which is triply
degenerate and has oblique symmetry. A global mode-based Galerkin method is
employed to integrate the deterministic equation of motion, the latter of which
is derived by the variational principle from a nonlinear, nonlocal
Ginzburg-Landau theory which includes the sound-wave viscosity. Our results
display (i) the phenomenon of surface nucleation, and (ii) the dynamical
selection of a length scale of the resultant patterns.Comment: LaTeX, 14 pages with four post-script figures included by psfig.
Three of these are colour, but viewable in black-and-white. Presented at the
conference "Collective Phenomena in Physics: Pattern Formation in Fluids and
Materials", University of Western Ontario, London, June 199
The Quebec Tercentenary, 1908: Canada’s First National Military Pageant
The Quebec Tercentenary celebrations of 1908 constituted one of the largest gatherings of military forces on Canadian soil before 1914, yet the affair has been largely eclipsed by the momentous events of the First World War. The recent donation to the Canadian War Museum of the scrapbooks of General Sir William Otter, however, have provided some information on the contemporary view of the Tercentenary as seen through the eyes of Canadian journalists. The 19 leather-bound folios, covering his entire military career, were compiled by his loyal wife “Molly,” and contain a wealth of newspaper clippings, official programs and invitations. Every scrap and memento has been neatly trimmed and pasted before being carefully identified in her clear long-hand script
Collection Development in a Small Library
“Libraries need to become fundamentally different institutions than they were twenty years ago.” So says Mark Sandler in his article, “Collection Development in the Day of Google” in the October, 2006 issue of Library Resources & Technical Services.1 Is your collection development policy up to date? Does it reflect user’s expectations? Does it provide for an expanded range of formats? Does it address funding issues?
As the small college library develops a collection that supports the curriculum of the college, the policy that governs that responsibility must be reflective of the community it serves. Overarching issues like information literacy and the rapidly changing information environment must also be considered
Small Library, Big Job
Many small college libraries employ only one professional. T hat means one person serves as reference librarian, cataloger, acquisitions specialist, circulation supervisor, inter-library loan officer, periodicals manager, information literacy instructor, and administrator- as well as conm1ittee member and sometimes teacher. (We won\u27t mention organist, student activity sponsor, or even volleyball coach.) Wearing so many hats at one time can be both a bane and a blessing. No two days are ever alike. I like being my own boss. It\u27s never boring. A 2004 ACL Conference roundtable discussion brought out all of these positives about working in the single-professional library. But the twenty or so librarians who attended were also quick to mention long hours, stress, and backlogs of work that burden them in their assigned places of service. They shared some very help fit! words of advice for those who work in similar situations
Decentralisation: does the New Zealand local government system measure up?
Decentralisation continues to be well received as a strategy for improving the governance of countries and delivering more responsive and efficient services. Cheerleaders include multilateral agencies like the World Bank and developed countries, like England, which seek to reverse years of centralisation. Evaluating the effectiveness of decentralised models raises the question of what it means to be ‘decentralised’, and how decentralisation itself is measured. This article describes the World Bank’s diagnostic framework for assessing decentralisation and applies the framework to the New Zealand local government system. 
Nonnormal del Pezzo surfaces
This paper studies reduced, connected, Gorenstein surfaces with ample -K,
assumed to be reducible or nonnormal. The normalisation is a union of one or
more standard surfaces (scrolls and Veronese surfaces), marked with a conic as
double locus. The question is how to glue these together to get a Gorenstein
scheme. In characteristic 0, the results amount to a classification of
projective surfaces in the style of the 1880s. However, the methods involve a
study of the dualising sheaf of a nonnormal variety in terms of Rosenlicht
differentials, and there is a subtle pathology in characteristic p due to Mori
and S. Goto.Comment: amsTeX 2.1 (amsppt format), submitted to Math Proceedings, RIM
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