10,618 research outputs found
Subminiature transducer measures unsteady pressures
Transducer has thin piezoelectric sensing element of 0.051-cm-thick lead zirconate titanate crystal which is cut as a conical frustum. Sensing crystal and titanium wire are protected from mechanical shock and vibration. Transducer is insensitive to mechanical vibrations of instrument plug on which it is mounted
Malayala Granthasoochi 2004 of Government Brennen College, Tellycherry: The first electronic catalogue in Indian languages
Government Brennen College released the Malayala Granthasoochi 2004 -CDROM on 30.03.2004 which is first electronic catalogue using search mechanism for original Malayalam script based on UNESCO's CDS/ISIS. This is an extract from the talk conducted in the Seminar in connection with the release of the publication. The talk covers earlier similar attempts as well as the research for developing script and DBMS applications in Malayalam that the computers can search and sort according to the syntactic and semantic relations. The contributions of Sri. K H Hussain, Sri K M Govi and the Rachana Aksharavedi which proclaimed Our Script for Our Language etc are stressed. Expresses the hope that in the development of State Information Infrastructure, in which major part of the content is to be in Malayalam, the concerned can utilize the technology successfully experimented in the present product. In this context the author who managed the project considers that the technology used is highly relevant for ICT application to participatory development as well as providing information services at grass roots level
Aerodynamic measurements concerned with a turret model
An experimental investigation was carried out in the 14 by 14 ft Ames transonic wind tunnel on a turret model. The aerodynamic parameters measured were steady and unsteady pressures (static and total fluid pressures), local mean velocities, and local mean densities at selected locations along the optical beam path for the azimuth look angles of 90, 120, and 150 degrees from the turret. The test stream Mach numbers considered are 0.55, 0.65 and 0.75, and the Reynolds number per meter is in the range of 10 million. The results indicate that severe optical degradation can be expected at aft look azimuth, angles, this degradation in optical performance increases as the azimuth angle is increased. The ratio of rms static pressure to the local mean static pressure peaks in the range of 0.07 to 0.12 and the ratio of rms total pressure to the local mean total pressure peaks in the range of 0.02 to 0.04. These values depend on the Mach number and the aft look azimuth angle. The scale lengths obtained from correlation considerations are also presented
Succinct Indexable Dictionaries with Applications to Encoding -ary Trees, Prefix Sums and Multisets
We consider the {\it indexable dictionary} problem, which consists of storing
a set for some integer , while supporting the
operations of \Rank(x), which returns the number of elements in that are
less than if , and -1 otherwise; and \Select(i) which returns
the -th smallest element in . We give a data structure that supports both
operations in O(1) time on the RAM model and requires bits to store a set of size , where {\cal B}(n,m) = \ceil{\lg
{m \choose n}} is the minimum number of bits required to store any -element
subset from a universe of size . Previous dictionaries taking this space
only supported (yes/no) membership queries in O(1) time. In the cell probe
model we can remove the additive term in the space bound,
answering a question raised by Fich and Miltersen, and Pagh.
We present extensions and applications of our indexable dictionary data
structure, including:
An information-theoretically optimal representation of a -ary cardinal
tree that supports standard operations in constant time,
A representation of a multiset of size from in bits that supports (appropriate generalizations of) \Rank
and \Select operations in constant time, and
A representation of a sequence of non-negative integers summing up to
in bits that supports prefix sum queries in constant
time.Comment: Final version of SODA 2002 paper; supersedes Leicester Tech report
2002/1
Tropical rainforest bird community structure in relation to altitude, tree species composition, and null models in the Western Ghats, India
Studies of species distributions on elevational gradients are essential to
understand principles of community organisation as well as to conserve species
in montane regions. This study examined the patterns of species richness,
abundance, composition, range sizes, and distribution of rainforest birds at 14
sites along an elevational gradient (500-1400 m) in the Kalakad-Mundanthurai
Tiger Reserve (KMTR) of the Western Ghats, India. In contrast to theoretical
expectation, resident bird species richness did not change significantly with
elevation although the species composition changed substantially (<10%
similarity) between the lowest and highest elevation sites. Constancy in
species richness was possibly due to relative constancy in productivity and
lack of elevational trends in vegetation structure. Elevational range size of
birds, expected to increase with elevation according to Rapoport's rule, was
found to show a contrasting inverse U-shaped pattern because species with
narrow elevational distributions, including endemics, occurred at both ends of
the gradient (below 800 m and above 1,200 m). Bird species composition also did
not vary randomly along the gradient as assessed using a hierarchy of null
models of community assembly, from completely unconstrained models to ones with
species richness and range-size distribution restrictions. Instead, bird
community composition was significantly correlated with elevation and tree
species composition of sites, indicating the influence of deterministic factors
on bird community structure. Conservation of low- and high-elevation areas and
maintenance of tree species composition against habitat alteration are
important for bird conservation in the southern Western Ghats rainforests.Comment: 36 pages, 5 figures, two tables (including one in the appendix)
Submitted to the Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society (JBNHS
From exotic phases to microscopic Hamiltonians
We report recent analytical progress in the quest for spin models realising
exotic phases. We focus on the question of `reverse-engineering' a local, SU(2)
invariant S=1/2 Hamiltonian to exhibit phases predicted on the basis of
effective models, such as large-N or quantum dimer models. This aim is to
provide a point-of-principle demonstration of the possibility of constructing
such microscopic lattice Hamiltonians, as well as to complement and guide
numerical (and experimental) approaches to the same question. In particular, we
demonstrate how to utilise peturbed Klein Hamiltonians to generate effective
quantum dimer models. These models use local multi-spin interactions and, to
obtain a controlled theory, a decoration procedure involving the insertion of
Majumdar-Ghosh chainlets on the bonds of the lattice. The phases we thus
realise include deconfined resonating valence bond liquids, a devil's staircase
of interleaved phases which exhibits Cantor deconfinement, as well as a
three-dimensional U(1) liquid phase exhibiting photonic excitations.Comment: Invited talk at Peyresq Workshop on "Effective models for
low-dimensional strongly correlated systems". Proceedings to be published by
AIP. v2: references adde
Experimental study of the effects of secondary air on the emissions and stability of a lean premixed combustor
Tests were run using a perforated plate flameholder with a relatively short attached recirculation zone and a vee gutter flameholder with a relatively long attached recirculation zone. Combustor streamlines were traced in cold flow tests at ambient pressure. The amount of secondary air entrainment in the recirculation zones of the flameholders was determined by tracer gas testing at cold flow ambient pressure conditions. Combustion tests were caried out at entrance conditions of 0.5 MPa/630K and emission of NOx, CO and unburned hydrocarbons were measured along with lean stability and flashback limits. The degree of entrainment increases as dilution air injection decreases. Flashback appears to be a function of overall equivalence ratio and resistance to flashback increases with increasing combustor entrance velocity. Lean stability limit appears to be a function of both primary zone and flameholder recirculation zone equivalence ratios and resistance to lean blowout increases with increasing combustor entrance velocity
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