5,152 research outputs found
The importance of accurate time-integration in the numerical modelling of P-wave propagation
The numerical dissipation characteristics of the Newmark and generalised-α time-integration schemes are investigated for P-wave propagation in a fully saturated level-ground sand deposit, where higher frequencies than those for S-waves are of concern. The study focuses on resonance, which has been shown to be of utmost importance for triggering liquefaction due to P-waves alone. The generalised-α scheme performs well, provided that the time-step has been carefully selected. Conversely, the dissipative Newmark method can excessively damp the response, changing radically the computed results. This implies that a computationally prohibiting small time-step would be required for Newmark to provide an accurate solution
Numerical Modelling of Multi-directional Earthquake Loading and Its Effect on Sand Liquefaction
Earthquakes generate multi-directional ground motions, two components in the horizontal direction and one in the vertical. Nevertheless, the effect of vertical motion on site response analysis has not been the object of extensive research. The 2010/2011 Canterbury sequence of seismic events in New Zealand is a prime example among other earlier field observations strongly corroborating that the vertical acceleration may have a detrimental effect on soil liquefaction. Consequently, this study aims to provide insight into the influence of the input vertical motion on sand liquefaction. For this reason, two ground motions, with very different frequency contents, are used as the input excitations. Non-linear elasto-plastic plane strain fully coupled effective stress-based finite element analyses are conducted to investigate the occurrence of liquefaction in a hypothetical fully saturated Fraser River Sand deposit. The results indicate that the frequency content of the input motion is of utmost importance for the response of sands to liquefaction when the vertical loading is considered
QUASAT: An orbiting very long baseline interferometer program using large space antenna systems
QUASAT, which stands for QUASAR SATELLITE, is the name given to a new mission being studied by NASA. The QUASAT mission concept involves a free flying Earth orbiting large radio telescope, which will observe astronomical radio sources simultaneously with ground radio telescopes. The primary goal of QUASAT is to provide a system capable of collecting radio frequency data which will lead to a better understanding of extremely high energy events taking place in a variety of celestial objects including quasars, galactic nuclei, interstellar masers, radio stars and pulsars. QUASAT's unique scientific contribution will be the increased resolution in the emission brightness profile maps of the celestial objects
The evolution of electron overdensities in magnetic fields
When a neutral gas impinges on a stationary magnetized plasma an enhancement in the ionization rate occurs when the neutrals exceed a threshold velocity. This is commonly known as the critical ionization velocity effect. This process has two distinct timescales: an ion–neutral collision time and electron acceleration time. We investigate the energization of an ensemble of electrons by their self-electric field in an applied magnetic field. The evolution of the electrons is simulated under different magnetic field and density conditions. It is found that electrons can be accelerated to speeds capable of electron impact ionization for certain conditions. In the magnetically dominated case the energy distribution of the excited electrons shows that typically 1% of the electron population can exceed the initial electrostatic potential associated with the unbalanced ensemble of electrons
Numerical investigation of the effect of the irregular nature of seismic loading on the liquefaction resistance of saturated sand deposits
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Management and drivers of change of pollinating insects and pollination services. National Pollinator Strategy: for bees and other pollinators in England, Evidence statements and Summary of Evidence
These Evidence Statements provide up-to-date information on what is known (and not known) about the status, values, drivers of change, and responses to management of UK insect pollinators (as was September 2018). This document has been produced to inform the development of England pollinator policy, and provide insight into the evidence that underpins policy decision-making. This document sits alongside a more detailed Summary of Evidence (Annex I) document written by pollinator experts. For information on the development of the statements, and confidence ratings assigned to them, please see section ‘Generation of the statements’ below. Citations for these statements are contained in the Summary of Evidence document
Arthropod pest control for UK oilseed rape – Comparing insecticide efficacies, side effects and alternatives
Oilseed rape (Brassica napus) is an important combinable break crop in the UK, which is largely protected from arthropod pests by insecticidal chemicals. Despite ongoing debate regarding the use of neonicotinoids, the dominant seed treatment ingredients used for this crop, there is little publicly available data comparing the efficacy of insecticides in controlling key arthropod pests or comparing the impacts on non-target species and the wider environment. To provide an insight into these matters, a UK-wide expert survey targeting agronomists and entomologists was conducted from March to June 2015. Based on the opinions of 90 respondents, an average of 20% yield loss caused by the key arthropod pests was expected to have occurred in the absence of insecticide treatments. Relatively older chemical groups were perceived to have lower efficacy for target pests than newer ones, partly due to the development of insecticide resistance. Without neonicotinoid seed treatments, a lack of good control for cabbage stem flea beetle was perceived. Wide spectrum foliar insecticide sprays were perceived to have significantly greater negative impacts than seed treatments on users' health, natural enemies, pollinators, soil and water, and many foliar active ingredients have had potential risks for non-target arthropod species in UK oilseed rape fields for the past 25 years. Overall, 72% of respondents opposed the neonicotinoid restriction, while 10% supported it. Opposition and support of the restriction were largely based on concerns for pollinators and the wider environment, highlighting the uncertainty over the side effects of neonicotinoid use. More people from the government and research institutes leaned towards neutrality over the issue, compared to those directly involved in growing the crop. Neonicotinoid restriction was expected to result in greater effort and expenditure on pest control and lower production (0–1 t/ha less). Alternatives for future oilseed rape protection were then discussed
Ferromagnetic phase transition for the spanning-forest model (q \to 0 limit of the Potts model) in three or more dimensions
We present Monte Carlo simulations of the spanning-forest model (q \to 0
limit of the ferromagnetic Potts model) in spatial dimensions d=3,4,5. We show
that, in contrast to the two-dimensional case, the model has a "ferromagnetic"
second-order phase transition at a finite positive value w_c. We present
numerical estimates of w_c and of the thermal and magnetic critical exponents.
We conjecture that the upper critical dimension is 6.Comment: LaTex2e, 4 pages; includes 6 Postscript figures; Version 2 has
expanded title as published in PR
Critical speeding-up in a local dynamics for the random-cluster model
We study the dynamic critical behavior of the local bond-update (Sweeny)
dynamics for the Fortuin-Kasteleyn random-cluster model in dimensions d=2,3, by
Monte Carlo simulation. We show that, for a suitable range of q values, the
global observable S_2 exhibits "critical speeding-up": it decorrelates well on
time scales much less than one sweep, so that the integrated autocorrelation
time tends to zero as the critical point is approached. We also show that the
dynamic critical exponent z_{exp} is very close (possibly equal) to the
rigorous lower bound \alpha/\nu, and quite possibly smaller than the
corresponding exponent for the Chayes-Machta-Swendsen-Wang cluster dynamics.Comment: LaTex2e/revtex4, 4 pages, includes 5 figure
Cluster simulations of loop models on two-dimensional lattices
We develop cluster algorithms for a broad class of loop models on
two-dimensional lattices, including several standard O(n) loop models at n \ge
1. We show that our algorithm has little or no critical slowing-down when 1 \le
n \le 2. We use this algorithm to investigate the honeycomb-lattice O(n) loop
model, for which we determine several new critical exponents, and a
square-lattice O(n) loop model, for which we obtain new information on the
phase diagram.Comment: LaTex2e, 4 pages; includes 1 table and 2 figures. Totally rewritten
in version 2, with new theory and new data. Version 3 as published in PR
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