18,215 research outputs found
High-frequency sound propagation in a spatially varying mean flow
An equation for acoustic ray paths in a spatially varying mean flow was examined to determine some of the characteristics of the flow gradient effects on sound propagation. In a potential flow, the acoustic rays are deflected in the direction of increasing mean flow, and the gradient of the mean flow speed is the dominant factor causing the ray deflection. In contrast, in a sheared mean flow, the vorticity is the dominant factor in deflection of the acoustic rays
Analysis of fatigue, fatique-crack propagation, and fracture data
Analytical methods have been developed for consolidation of fatigue, fatigue-crack propagation, and fracture data for use in design of metallic aerospace structural components. To evaluate these methods, a comprehensive file of data on 2024 and 7075 aluminums, Ti-6A1-4V, and 300M and D6Ac steels was established. Data were obtained from both published literature and unpublished reports furnished by aerospace companies. Fatigue and fatigue-crack-propagation analyses were restricted to information obtained from constant-amplitude load or strain cycling of specimens in air at room temperature. Fracture toughness data were from tests of center-cracked tension panels, part-through crack specimens, and compact-tension specimens
Internal visual workmanship standard for microelectronic devices /NASA STD XX-2/ and training manual, volume 2
Internal visual workmanship standards for monolithic microelectronic devices - training manua
Acoustic performance of inlet multiple-pure-tone suppressors installed on NASA quiet engine C
The length of multiple-pure-tone (MPT) treatment required to reasonably suppress the MPT's produced by a supersonic tip speed fan was defined. Other suppression, broadband, and blade passing frequency, which might be accomplished were also determined. The experimental results are presented in terms of both far-field and duct acoustic data
Alterity In/Of Happiness: Reflecting on the radical possibilities of unruly bodies
This paper examines how fat and disabled subjects may be taught to appear as happy through biopedagogies in order to manage shame and disgust evoked by their unruly, non-conforming bodies. We begin by articulating what we mean by “biopedagogies”. We then unpack how the requirement to be happy feeds directly into a neoliberal agenda, which demands we must take care of ourselves both economically and emotionally in order to be considered good citizens. We explore how, in the midst of the requirement to be happy while living in bodies not recognised as inhabitable, we create and find moments of alterity in/of happiness. Through analysing art by disabled and fat activists and artists, we examine how disabled and fat people find happiness in difference, rather than in spite of it while at the same time, hanging on to rage and dull pain within this alterity of happiness
Random wave functions and percolation
Recently it was conjectured that nodal domains of random wave functions are
adequately described by critical percolation theory. In this paper we
strengthen this conjecture in two respects. First, we show that, though wave
function correlations decay slowly, a careful use of Harris' criterion confirms
that these correlations are unessential and nodal domains of random wave
functions belong to the same universality class as non critical percolation.
Second, we argue that level domains of random wave functions are described by
the non-critical percolation model.Comment: 13 page
Heterogeneous responses of dorsal root ganglion neurons in neuropathies induced by peripheral nerve trauma and the antiretroviral drug stavudine
© 2014 The Authors. European Journal of Pain published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of European Pain Federation - EFIC®. Funding sources E.K.B. was funded by a BBSRC PhD studentship. A.N., A.S.C.R. and T.P. were funded by a Wellcome Trust Strategic Award (London Pain Consortium; ref. 083259). A.S.C.R. and W.H. were funded by the Innovative Medicines Initiative Joint Undertaking (Europain; grant agreement no. 115007). We thank Pfizer for providing stavudine. Conflicts of interest None declared. Funded by BBSRC PhD studentship Wellcome Trust Strategic Award. Grant Number: 083259 Innovative Medicines Initiative Joint Undertaking. Grant Number: 115007Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Pheromone mating disruption: novel, non-toxic control of the European corn borer
The European corn borer is one of the most damaging insects in Iowa cornfields, causing more than $100 million in crop losses each year. In this project, the sex attractant pheromone of the European corn borer was used to obstruct the ability of the adult male moths to locate females for mating. In the first year, efforts focused on mating disruption in a small area, while in the second year dispensers were deployed on a larger scale and evaluated for efficacy
Anomalous Hall conductivity of clean Sr2RuO4 at finite temperatures
Building on previous work, we calculate the temperature- and
frequency-dependent {\it anomalous} Hall conductivity for the putative
multiband chiral superconductor \Sr using a simple microscopic two-orbital
model without impurities. A Hall effect arises in this system without the
application of an external magnetic field due to the time-reversal-symmetry
breaking chiral superconducting state. The anomalous Hall conductivity is
nonzero only when there is more than one superconducting order parameter,
involving inter- as well as intra-band Cooper pairing. We find that such a
multiband superconducting state gives rise to a distinctive resonance in the
frequency-dependence of the Hall conductivity at a frequency close to the
inter-orbital hopping energy scale that describes hopping between Ru
and orbitals. The detection of this feature, robust to temperature and
impurity effects in the superconducting phase, would thus constitute compelling
evidence in favour of a multiband origin of superconductivity in \Sr, with
strong superconductivity on the and bands. The temperature
dependence of the Hall conductivity and Kerr rotation angle are studied within
this model at the one-loop approximation.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figures. Invited submission, proceedings of M2S 2012.
Published versio
On the Role of Global Warming on the Statistics of Record-Breaking Temperatures
We theoretically study long-term trends in the statistics of record-breaking
daily temperatures and validate these predictions using Monte Carlo simulations
and data from the city of Philadelphia, for which 126 years of daily
temperature data is available. Using extreme statistics, we derive the number
and the magnitude of record temperature events, based on the observed Gaussian
daily temperatures distribution in Philadelphia, as a function of the number of
elapsed years from the start of the data. We further consider the case of
global warming, where the mean temperature systematically increases with time.
We argue that the current warming rate is insufficient to measurably influence
the frequency of record temperature events over the time range of the
observations, a conclusion that is supported by numerical simulations and the
Philadelphia temperature data.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, 2-column revtex4 format. For submission to
Journal of Climate. Revised version has some new results and some errors
corrected. Reformatted for Journal of Climate. Second revision has an added
reference. In the third revision one sentence that explains the simulations
is reworded for clarity. New revision 10/3/06 has considerable additions and
new results. Revision on 11/8/06 contains a number of minor corrections and
is the version that will appear in Phys. Rev.
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