1,667 research outputs found
First and second simulator evaluations of advanced integrated display and control systems
Advanced integrated visual and control systems simulator evaluations for post-Apollo manned spacecraf
Wind tunnel and analytical investigation of over-the-wing propulsion/air frame interferences for a short-haul aircraft at Mach numbers from 0.6 to 0.78
Results of analytical calculations and wind tunnel tests at cruise speeds of a representative four engine short haul aircraft employing upper surface blowing (USB) with a supercritical wing are discussed. Wind tunnel tests covered a range of Mach number M from 0.6 to 0.78. Tests explored the use of three USB nozzle configurations. Results are shown for the isolated wing body and for each of the three nozzle types installed. Experimental results indicate that a low angle nacelle and streamline contoured nacelle yielded the same interference drag at the design Mach number. A high angle powered lift nacelle had higher interference drag primarily because of nacelle boattail low pressures and flow separation. Results of varying the spacing between the nacelles and the use of trailing edge flap deflections, wing upper surface contouring, and a convergent-divergent nozzle to reduce potential adverse jet effects were also discussed. Analytical comparisons with experimental data, made for selected cases, indicate favorable agreement
Quantum macrostatistical picture of nonequilibrium steady states
We employ a quantum macrostatistical treatment of irreversible processes to
prove that, in nonequilibrium steady states, (a) the hydrodynamical observables
execute a generalised Onsager-Machlup process and (b) the spatial correlations
of these observables are generically of long range. The key assumptions behind
these results are a nonequilibrium version of Onsager's regression hypothesis,
together with certain hypotheses of chaoticity and local equilibrium for
hydrodynamical fluctuations.Comment: TeX, 13 page
Interaction and observation: categorical semantics of reactive systems trough dialgebras
We use dialgebras, generalising both algebras and coalgebras, as a complement
of the standard coalgebraic framework, aimed at describing the semantics of an
interactive system by the means of reaction rules. In this model, interaction
is built-in, and semantic equivalence arises from it, instead of being
determined by a (possibly difficult) understanding of the side effects of a
component in isolation. Behavioural equivalence in dialgebras is determined by
how a given process interacts with the others, and the obtained observations.
We develop a technique to inter-define categories of dialgebras of different
functors, that in particular permits us to compare a standard coalgebraic
semantics and its dialgebraic counterpart. We exemplify the framework using the
CCS and the pi-calculus. Remarkably, the dialgebra giving semantics to the
pi-calculus does not require the use of presheaf categories
Factors influencing prognosis in adults with acute myelogenous leukaemia.
A study of the thymidine labelling index (TLI) of bone marrow blast cells in 58 untreated patients with acute myelogenous leukemia showed no correlation with remission rate but there was a strong correlation between labelling index and remission length in the 21 patients who achieved remission. The median remission length of the patients was 33 weeks. Of the 12 patients with initial labelling indices greater than 10%, only 2 had remissions longer than 33 weeks whereas 8 of the 9 patients with labelling indices less than 10% had remissions longer than 33 weeks. No correlation could be found between the degree of cytological differentiation and remission induction, remission length or survival. No correlation was found between the TLI and the degree of cytological differentiation. Age and initial platelet count were confirmed to be important factors influencing complete remission rate, but these factors did not correlate with remission length. Sixteen patients had their pretreatment sera assayed for mouse marrow colony stimulating activity and inhibitor levels but there was no correlation with subsequent response to treatment, although the number of patients examined was clearly too small for any definite conclusions to be drawn
Off-Diagonal Long-Range Order in Bose Liquids: Irrotational Flow and Quantization of Circulation
On the basis of gauge invariance, it is proven in an elementary and
straightforward manner, but without invoking any {\it ad hoc} assumption, that
the existence of off-diagonal long-range order in one-particle reduced density
matrix in Bose liquids implies both the irrotational flow in a simply connected
region and the quantization of circulation in a multiply connected region, the
two fundamental properties of a Bose superfluid. The origin for both is the
phase coherence of condensate wave-functions. Some relevant issues are also
addressed.Comment: Revtex, 4 pages, no figure
Religion and religious education : comparing and contrasting pupilsâ and teachersâ views in an English school
This publication builds on and develops the English findings of the qualitative study of European teenagersâ perspectives on religion and religious education (Knauth et al. 2008), part of âReligion in Education: A contribution to dialogue or a factor of conflict in transforming societies of European countries?â (REDCo) project. It uses data gathered from 27 pupils, aged 15-16, from a school in a multicultural Northern town in England and compares those findings with data gathered from ten teachers in the humanities faculty of the same school, collected during research for the Warwick REDCo Community of Practice. Comparisons are drawn between the teachersâ and their pupilsâ attitudes and values using the same structure as the European study: personal views and experiences of religion, the social dimension of religion, and religious education in school. The discussion offers an analysis of the similarities and differences in worldviews and beliefs which emerged. These include religious commitment/observance differences between the mainly Muslim-heritage pupils and their mainly non-practising Christian-heritage teachers. The research should inform the ways in which the statutory duties to promote community cohesion and equalities can be implemented in schools. It should also facilitate intercultural and interreligious understanding between teachers and the pupils from different ethnic and religious backgrounds
Analytic Evaluation of the Decay Rate for Accelerated Proton
We evaluate the decay rate of the uniformly accelerated proton. We obtain an
analytic expression for inverse beta decay process caused by the acceleration.
We evaluate the decay rate both from the inertial frame and from the
accelerated frame where we should consider thermal radiation by Unruh effect.
We explicitly check that the decay rates obtained in both frame coincide with
each other.Comment: 11 page
Girlsâ and womenâs education within Unesco and the World Bank, 1945â2000
By 2000, girlsâ and womenâs education was a priority for international development organisations. While studies have examined the impact of recent campaigns and programmes, there has been less exploration of ideas about girlsâ and womenâs education within development thought in the immediate post?colonial period, and the political mechanisms through which this came to be a global concern. Through a study of policy documents, this paper investigates how the education of girls and women came to be prioritised within the two principle UN agencies involved with education since 1945, the World Bank and Unesco. A shift in priorities is evident, from ensuring formal rights and improving the status of women, to expanding the productive capacities of women, fertility control and poverty reduction. While the ascendance of human capital theory provided a space for a new perception of the role of womenâs education in development, in other policy arenas womenâs education was central to exploring more substantive, rights?based notions of gender equality. Ultimately, the goal of improving girlsâ and womenâs education fitted into diverse development agendas, paving the way for it to become a global development priority
Black Hole Thermodynamics and Lorentz Symmetry
Recent developments point to a breakdown in the generalized second law of
thermodynamics for theories with Lorentz symmetry violation. It appears
possible to construct a perpetual motion machine of the second kind in such
theories, using a black hole to catalyze the conversion of heat to work. Here
we describe and extend the arguments leading to that conclusion. We suggest the
inference that local Lorentz symmetry may be an emergent property of the
macroscopic world with origins in a microscopic second law of causal horizon
thermodynamics.Comment: 4 pages; v2: Version to appear in Foundations of Physics. Potential
counterexamples addressed, argument given applying to LV theories where all
speeds (or horizons) coincide, and editing for clarit
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