17,223 research outputs found

    Solution of three-dimensional afterbody flow using reduced Navier-Stokes equations

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    The flow over afterbody geometries was investigated using the reduced Navier-Stokes (RNS) approximation. Both pressure velocity flux-split and composites velocity primitive variable formulations were considered. Pressure or pseudopotential relaxation procedures are combined with sparse matrix or coupled strongly implicit algorithms to form a three-dimensional solver for general non-orthogonal coordinates. Three-dimensional subsonic and transonic viscous/inviscid interacting flows were evaluated. Solutions with and without regions of recirculation were obtained

    A pressure flux-split technique for computation of inlet flow behavior

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    A method for calculating the flow field in aircraft engine inlets is presented. The phenomena of inlet unstart and restart are investigated. Solutions of the reduced Navier-Stokes (RNS) equations are obtained with a time consistent direct sparse matrix solver that computes the transient flow field both internal and external to the inlet. Time varying shocks and time varying recirculation regions can be efficiently analyzed. The code is quite general and is suitable for the computation of flow for a wide variety of geometries and over a wide range of Mach and Reynolds numbers

    Stationary Points of Scalar Fields Coupled to Gravity

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    We investigate the dynamics of gravity coupled to a scalar field using a non-canonical form of the kinetic term. It is shown that its singular point represents an attractor for classical solutions and the stationary value of the field may occur distant from the minimum of the potential. In this paper properties of universes with such stationary states are considered. We reveal that such state can be responsible for modern dark energy density.Comment: H. Kroger, invited talk, FFP6, Udine (2004), revised version with corrected author lis

    Intelligent Guidance of an Unmanned Helicopter

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    Sex differences in HIV effects on visual memory among substance-dependent individuals

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    HIV’s effects on episodic memory have not been compared systematically between male and female substance-dependent individuals. We administered the Brief Visuospatial Memory Test–Revised (BVMT–R) to 280 substance-dependent HIV+ and HIV– men and women. Groups were comparable on demographic, substance use, and comorbid characteristics. There were no significant main effects of sex or HIV serostatus on BVMT–R performance, but HIV+ women performed significantly more poorly on delayed recall. This effect was most prominent among cocaine-dependent HIV+ women. Our findings are consistent with recent speculation that memory impairment may be more common among HIV+ women, particularly those with a history of cocaine dependence

    Hereditary diffuse gastric cancer: One family\u27s story

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    Sufficient Covariate, Propensity Variable and Doubly Robust Estimation

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    Statistical causal inference from observational studies often requires adjustment for a possibly multi-dimensional variable, where dimension reduction is crucial. The propensity score, first introduced by Rosenbaum and Rubin, is a popular approach to such reduction. We address causal inference within Dawid's decision-theoretic framework, where it is essential to pay attention to sufficient covariates and their properties. We examine the role of a propensity variable in a normal linear model. We investigate both population-based and sample-based linear regressions, with adjustments for a multivariate covariate and for a propensity variable. In addition, we study the augmented inverse probability weighted estimator, involving a combination of a response model and a propensity model. In a linear regression with homoscedasticity, a propensity variable is proved to provide the same estimated causal effect as multivariate adjustment. An estimated propensity variable may, but need not, yield better precision than the true propensity variable. The augmented inverse probability weighted estimator is doubly robust and can improve precision if the propensity model is correctly specified

    A Conversation Among Deans on Results: Legal Education, Institutional Change, and a Decade of Gender Studies

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    On March 10, 2006, the Harvard Journal of Law & Gender, cosponsoring with the Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review and the Harvard Law Review, hosted a conference, Results: Legal Education, Institutional Change, and a Decade of Gender Studies, to address the number of student experience studies that detail women\u27s lower performance in and dissatisfaction with law school. Rather than advocate for a particular set of responses to the different experiences of men and women in legal education, this conference sought to foster a discussion about the institutional challenges these patterns highlight. As one means of accomplishing this end, law school deans from across the country spoke about their strategies to change legal education. Edward Rubin, dean of Vanderbilt Law School, discussed how law school still acts as a rite of passage that is more suited to an era when the public sphere was male-dominated, and suggested reforms in legal curriculum in light of changes in the legal profession. W. H. Knight, dean of the University of Washington School of Law, concentrated on how law school culture might change as to become more rewarding for students and more inclusive of students from diverse backgrounds. Katherine Bartlett, dean of Duke Law School, spoke about the role of technology in infusing the context in which law operates in the study of law, as well as the Duke Blueprint, a mission statement that helps students (and faculty) examine the motives and values they will bring to becoming a lawyer
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