51 research outputs found
Networking Communication Operating System (NCOS)
This paper presents an overall view of the project goals and present facilities of the Experimental Data Communication Network established in Warsaw, Gdansk, and Katowice, Poland, by the Institute of Communication in Warsaw, within the framework of its research program during the period 1974 to 1976. The experiment consists of linking different host computers, via nodal computers, using the packet switching technique. It is proposed to connect the Warsaw node of the above network to the IIASA Network, enabling several subscribers selected in Poland to link to the IIASA Network
The Tourist Library Series: Defining a Collective Japanese Nation for Foreigners in the 1930's
As the idea of empires and colonization grew increasingly unwelcome within the international community, Japanese government officials strove to present Japan as an equal among imperial powers in the years leading up to WWII. To promote this image, the Japanese government increasingly focused on making Japan an attractive site for international tourism. And so, in 1935 the government’s Board of Tourist Industry created Tourist Library Series (TLS) (1935-1942) to explain and advertise Japan to foreigners. Unlike other tourist literature that focused on presenting Japan as an attractive and interesting tourist destination, TLS focused on providing its readers with an adequate understanding of Japan’s unique culture. The series, authored by recognized authorities, ranged in topic from stamps and tea ceremony to architecture and religion, to explain the “essence” and defining principles that made up a “Japanese national culture”. In doing so, the series departs from the general trend in tourist literature to focus on what can be experienced or purchased by foreign visitors to Japan. Rather, the TLS describes a Japan that transcends time and place. I contend that TLS demonstrates a unique approach, but one very much in concert with other efforts by the Japanese government and its representatives, to place Japan as an equal among imperial nation's leading up to WWII. Furthermore, by examining TLS I hold that invaluable insight can be acquired on how tourism’s potential to represent Japan could be successfully maximized through the narrative format
Final Report : Low Cycle Fatigue of Butt Weldments of Hy-100 (T) and HY-130(T) Steel
An evaluation of the axial fatigue behavior of plain plates and
full penetration butt-welded joints in HY-130(T) steel is presented. The
weldments were fabricated using GMA and SMA welding processes. Fatigue tests
were conducted with sound weldments and weldments containing internal defects
including slag, porosity, and lack of fusion. Radiographic and ultrasonic
inspection techniques were used to- study the initiation and propagation of
fatigue cracks originating at internal weld flaws. Acoustic emission measurements
were taken for smooth and notched HY-130(T) specimens tested in static
tension and in fatigue. The results of preliminary tests of plain plates and
butt weldments of HY-100(T) [HY-IIO] steel are presented.
Comparison of the fatigue results for the HY-130(T) specimens with
equivalent data for HY-80 and HY-IOO steel has indicated that, within the
range of lives from approximately 104 to 106 cycles, the fatigue behavior of
as-rolled (mill-scale intact) plain plates of the three materials may be described
by a single S-N regression line. Surface treatments, including gritblasting
and polishing, were found to significantly increase the fatigue lives
of the HY-130(T) plate specimens.
Wide variations in fatigue life were exhibited by the HY-130(T) and
HY-100(T) butt-welded specimens in which cracking initiated at internal weld
discontinuities. The scatter in lives could not be explained on the basis of
the type of weld defect initiating failure, nor could it be attributed to differences
in the weld metal composition or the welding process. However, through
application of the concepts of fracture mechanics, it was found that the fraction
of the total fatigue life spent in macroscopic crack propagation could be
estimated with reasonable reliability if the through-thickness dimension of
the crack-initiating defect, its position relative to the specimen surface,
and the nominal cyclic stress are known.
Results obtained from the monitoring of the acoustic emission from
specimens subjected to both static and cyclic loading have indicated that
this technique is potentially an effective tool for in-service nondestructive
testing of structural components.The Naval Ship Systems Command, U.S. Navy ; Contract N00024-69-C-5297; Project Serial No. SF51-541-002; Task 72
Fatigue Crack Initiation and Propagation in High Yeild-Strength Steel Weld Metal
Full penetration, double-vee butt welds with reinforcement removed have been fabricated using a high-yield-strength steel, HY-130. Various filler metals and welding techniques were used. Most welds contained intentionally incorporated weld discontinuities such as slag, lack of fusion and /or porosity. Fatigue specimens were cut from these welds and tested in zero-to-tension, axial fatigue. The point at which a fatigue crack began to propagate within the specimen was determined by radiographic measurements. The fatigue life of a specimen could therefore be separated into two parts-that portion spent in initiating a fatigue crack and that spent in fatigue crack propagation. The influence of flaw size and geometry upon the crack propagation portions of the fatigue life was found to be large and to depend upon the thickness of the member. The results of these studies were found to be in good agreement with the fatigue lives predicted on the basis of a fracture mechanics analysis.ASM
Fatigue Data Bank and Data Analysis Investigation
A library system has been developed for the acquisition, compilation and
storage of information relating to the fatigue behavior of metal members and
structures. Test data obtained from the various information sources are stored on
both data sheets (for individual examination), and on standard computer punch cards.
A computer program has been developed to sort the data into sets satisfying certain
stipulated specimen types and loading conditions. A "best-fit" S-N curve for each
specified data set is then established using a least squares error of estimate and
correlation coefficient of the regression line, and the lower tolerance limits for
99 percent survival at 50 percent and 95 percent confidence levels. The data and
S-N curve are visually displayed using a CALCOMP plotter printout.
Information obtained from an analysis of the data in the Fatigue Data Bank
for several selected details indicates that the current AASHO bridge design specification
provisions, for these details, do not provide consistent correlations nor
properly model the fatigue behavior of the details as established by laboratory
tests.The State of Illinois. Department of Transportation, Division of Highway.The U.S. Department of Transportation. Federal Works Administration.Project IHR-6
Fatigue Behavior of Mechanically Peened HY-80 Weldments Subjected to Axial Loading
An evaluation of the axial fatigue behavior of mechanically peened transverse tee-weldments and transverse butt-welded joints in HY-80 steel is presented. The data show that mechanical peening along the toe of the weld results in an improvement In the fatigue resistance of both types of weldment relative to the behavior of similar joints tested in the as-welded condition. The process of fatigue crack initiation and propagation was examined for several of the mechanically peened weldments. In the majority of members cracks nucleated at the toe of the weld in the trough formed by the peening operation. Nucleation normally occurred within the first 20 percent of the cyclic lifetime of a specimen, and was followed by a long period of slow, erratic crack propagation, eventually culminating in a short final stage of rapid extension to failure.Bureau of Ships, U.S. Navy.Contract NObs 92240Project Serial No. SR-007-01-01, Task 85
Fatigue of Plates and Weldments in HY-100 and HY-130/150 Steels
An evaluation of the axial fatigue behavior of plain plates and full
penetration weldments in HY-lOO steel is presented. Transverse butt-welded specimens
welded with the MIL-11018 electrodes were found to contain minute internal
weld flaws which often serve as critical locations for fatigue crack initiation.
The weld flaws, although not detected by usual radiographic inspection, were
successfully located with the use of ul trasonic detection equipment. The ultrasonic
equipment was used also to study the initiation and propagation of fatigue
cracks in several test weldments, A preliminary investigation of the axial fatigue
behavior of HY-l30/l50 steel plain plates is reported.Bureau of Ships, U.S. Navy.Contract NObs 92226Project Series No. SR-007-01-01, Task 88
Fatigue of Plates And Weldments In High Strength Steels
An evaluation of the axial fatigue behavior of transverse buttwelded joints in HY-100 steel is presented. Welding procedures, using MIL-12018 and MIL-11018 electrodes, have been developed in which the defect density is held to a minimum. Specimens welded in accordance with these procedures initiated fatigue failures on the surface at the stress raiser created by the geometry at toe of the weld. Fore these members, the S-N curve for the life range from 10⁴ to 10⁶ cycles is presented for a stress cycle of zero-to-tension. Radiographic and ultrasonic inspections were used to study fatigue crack initiation and propagation originating at an internal weld flaw. A preliminary investigation of the axial fatigue behavior of MIG weldments in HY-130/150 steel is reported. The majority of the transverse butt-welded specimens prepared at each of three laboratories initiated fatigue failures at a variety of internal defects when subjected to a cyclic maximum stress of approximately half the ultimate strength of the base metal. Several alterations in the standard MIG welding procedures were studied in an effort to improve the weld quality; however no modification has been entirely successful in eliminating all the defects which have proven to be critical points for fatigue crack nucleation.The Naval Ship Systems Command, U.S. Navy, under Contract N0bs 94232, Project Serial No. SF-020-01-05, Task 729-
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