5,356 research outputs found

    Formal verification of an autonomous personal robotic assistant

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    Human–robot teams are likely to be used in a variety of situations wherever humans require the assistance of robotic systems. Obvious examples include healthcare and manufacturing, in which people need the assistance of machines to perform key tasks. It is essential for robots working in close proximity to people to be both safe and trustworthy. In this paper we examine formal verification of a high-level planner/scheduler for autonomous personal robotic assistants such as Care-O-bot ™ . We describe how a model of Care-O-bot and its environment was developed using Brahms, a multiagent workflow language. Formal verification was then carried out by translating this to the input language of an existing model checker. Finally we present some formal verification results and describe how these could be complemented by simulation-based testing and realworld end-user validation in order to increase the practical and perceived safety and trustworthiness of robotic assistants

    Development of CGLARE: Design, Fabrication and Characterisation

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    Fibre Metal Laminates (FMLs) are hybrid materials consisting of metal layers bonded to fibre-reinforced polymer layers. CGLARE is an FML developed at NAL consisting of thin aluminum foil combined with carbon-epoxy and glass-epoxy prepreg materials. CGLARE is proposed as the candidate material for the leading edges of wing and empennage of an aircraft as it has superior characteristics in terms of shape retention (due to highly linearly elastic material like carbon/epoxy), energy absorption capability (due to layered structure and plastic deformation), lightning protection (due to the presence of aluminum layers), and also due to its cost effectiveness (lightweight construction and simple production techniques). This paper describes the issues regarding the development of CGLARE such as surface preparation of aluminum foils and bonding of aluminum with glass. Tensile, Compression, ILSS and Flexure testing of ASTM standard CGLARE specimens for different layups have been done. An important design issue is the internal residual stresses built into the laminate during curing due to differential coefficients of thermal expansion of the different material systems. The paper presents these results that indicate some properties of these material systems that could be exploited for energy absorption in the leading edges of the aircraft

    An integrated kinetic model for downdraft gasifier based on a novel approach that optimises the reduction zone of gasifier

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    A kinetic model was built to estimate the optimum working parameters of a downdraft gasifier, in which a set of chemical kinetics at each zone of the gasifier was described. The model deals with a wide range of biomass types with elemental composition ranges of (38 ≤ C ≤ 52) %, (5.5 ≤ H ≤ 7) %, and (36 ≤ O ≤ 45) %. This model is able to predict gas composition, tar content, temperature and height of each zone, as well as temperature, velocity and pressure distribution at reduction zone with heating value of product gas. The model also gives full design dimensions of a downdraft gasifier. The final results, which proved to be in a good agreement with experimental works under different working conditions of biomass type, moisture content, and air-to-fuel ratio, are based on a new approach that includes calculation of the optimum height of the reduction zone. Calculation based on the optimum height ensures that all the char produced is consumed in the reduction zone, thus leading to the production of the maximum amount of gases. Results conclude that biomass with a moisture content less than 10% and equivalence ratio of 0.3–0.35 leads to the production of higher yield of syngas with low tar content. In particular, woody biomass materials are found to give the higher heating value for producer gas with a reasonable amount of tar

    Vanishing of the upper critical field in Bi_2Sr_2CaCu_2O_{8+\delta} from Landau-Ott scaling

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    We apply Landau-Ott scaling to the reversible magnetization data of Bi2_2Sr2_2CaCu2_2O8+δ_{8+\delta} published by Y. Wang et al. [\emph{Phys. Rev. Lett. \textbf{95} 247002 (2005)}] and find that the extrapolation of the Landau-Ott upper critical field line vanishes at a critical temperature parameter, T^*_c, a few degrees above the zero resistivity critical temperature, T_c. Only isothermal curves below and near to T_c were used to determine this transition temperature. This temperature is associated to the disappearance of the mixed state instead of a complete suppression of superconductivity in the sample.Comment: 3 figure

    Investigating the Thermochemical Conversion of Biomass in a Downdraft Gasifier With a Volatile Break-Up Approach

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    An affordable, reliable and clean energy supply is the major challenge facing by the modern world. Biomass energy is playing a promising role to that, but gasification technology able to convert biomass efficiently to valuable gases for power and heat generation is a vital need. The aim of this study is to develop a robust computational fluid dynamics (CFD) model to better understand the gasification thermochemical processes of a selected biomass (rubber wood) in a 20 kW downdraft gasifier, which includes all the four zones, drying, pyrolysis, oxidation and reduction. A step-by-step approach is proposed to evaluate the composition of different species as a result of volatile break-up during gasification. Effect of the equivalence ratio on the synthesis gas composition is studied with results validated against a kinetic model

    Spectrum and diffusion for a class of tight-binding models on hypercubes

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    We propose a class of exactly solvable anisotropic tight-binding models on an infinite-dimensional hypercube. The energy spectrum is analytically computed and is shown to be fractal and/or absolutely continuous according to the value hopping parameters. In both cases, the spectral and diffusion exponents are derived. The main result is that, even if the spectrum is absolutely continuous, the diffusion exponent for the wave packet may be anything between 0 and 1 depending upon the class of models.Comment: 5 pages Late

    A comparative study of high-field diamagnetic fluctuations in deoxygenated YBa2Cu3O(7-x) and polycrystalline (Bi-Pb)2Sr2Ca3O(10)

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    We studied three single crystals of YBa2Cu3O{7-x} with Tc= 62.5, 52, and 41 K, and a textured specimen of (Bi-Pb)2Sr2Ca2Cu3O10 with Tc=108 K, for H//c axis. The reversible data were interpreted in terms of 2D lowest-Landau-level fluctuation theory. The data were fit well by the 2D LLL expression for magnetization obtained by Tesanovic etal., producing reasonable values of kappa but larger values of dHc2/dT. Universality was studied by obtaining a simultaneous scaling of Y123 data and Bi2223. An expression for the 2D x-axis LLL scaling factor used to obtain the simultaneous scaling was extracted from theory, and compared with the experimental values. The comparison between the values of the x-axis produced a deviation of 40% which suggests that the hypothesis of universality of the 2D-LLL fluctuations is not supported by the studied samples. We finaly observe that Y123 magnetization data for temperatures above TcT_c obbey a universal scaling obtained for the diamagnetic fluctuation magnetization from a theory considering non-local field effects. The same scaling was not obbeyed by the corresponding magnetization calculated from the two-dimensional lowest-Landau-level theory.Comment: 7 pages 5 figures, accept in Journ. Low Temp. Phy

    Latitudinal distribution of the solar wind properties in the low- and high-pressure regimes: Wind observations

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    International audienceThe solar wind properties depend on ?, the heliomagnetic latitude with respect to the heliospheric current sheet (HCS), more than on the heliographic latitude. We analyse the wind properties observed by Wind at 1 AU during about 2.5 solar rotations in 1995, a period close to the last minimum of solar activity. To determine ?, we use a model of the HCS which we fit to the magnetic sector boundary crossings observed by Wind. We find that the solar wind properties mainly depend on the modulus |?|. But they also depend on a local parameter, the total pressure (magnetic pressure plus electron and proton thermal pressure). Furthermore, whatever the total pressure, we observe that the plasma properties also depend on the time: the latitudinal gradients of the wind speed and of the proton temperature are not the same before and after the closest HCS crossing. This is a consequence of the dynamical stream interactions. In the low pressure wind, at low |?|, we find a clear maximum of the density, a clear minimum of the wind speed and of the proton temperature, a weak minimum of the average magnetic field strength, a weak maximum of the average thermal pressure, and a weak maximum of the average ß factor. This overdense sheet is embedded in a density halo. The latitudinal thickness is about 5° for the overdense sheet, and 20° for the density halo. The HCS is thus wrapped in an overdense sheet surrounded by a halo, even in the non-compressed solar wind. In the high-pressure wind, the plasma properties are less well ordered as functions of the latitude than in the low-pressure wind; the minimum of the average speed is seen before the HCS crossing. The latitudinal thickness of the high-pressure region is about 20°. Our observations are qualitatively consistent with the numerical model of Pizzo for the deformation of the heliospheric current sheet and plasma sheet
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