13,173 research outputs found
The effects of shoe temperature on the kinetics and kinematics of running
The aim of the current investigation was to examine the effects of cooled footwear on the kinetics and kinematics of running in comparison to footwear at normal temperature. Twelve participants ran at 4.0 m/s ± 5% in both cooled and normal temperature footwear conditions over a force platform. Two identical footwear were worn, one of which was cooled for 30 min. Lower extremity kinematics were obtained using a motion capture system and tibial accelerations were measured using a triaxial accelerometer. Differences between cooled and normal footwear temperatures were contrasted using paired samples t-tests. The results showed that midsole temperature (cooled = 4.21 °C and normal = 23.25 °C) and maximal midsole deformation during stance (cooled = 12.85 mm and normal = 14.52 mm) were significantly reduced in the cooled footwear. In addition, instantaneous loading rate (cooled = 186.21 B.W/s and normal = 167.08 B W/s), peak tibial acceleration (cooled = 12.75 g and normal = 10.70 g) and tibial acceleration slope (cooled = 478.69 g/s and normal = 327.48 g/s) were significantly greater in the cooled footwear. Finally, peak eversion (cooled = −10.57 ° and normal = −7.83°) and tibial internal rotation (cooled = 10.67 ° and normal = 7.77°) were also shown to be significantly larger in the cooled footwear condition. This study indicates that running in cooled footwear may place runners at increased risk from the biomechanical parameters linked to the aetiology of injuries
Quantization and simulation of Born-Infeld non-linear electrodynamics on a lattice
Born-Infeld non-linear electrodynamics arises naturally as a field theory
description of the dynamics of strings and branes. Most analyses of this theory
have been limited to studying it as a classical field theory. We quantize this
theory on a Euclidean 4-dimensional space-time lattice and determine its
properties using Monte-Carlo simulations. The electromagnetic field around a
static point charge is measured using Luscher-Weisz methods to overcome the
sign problem associated with the introduction of this charge. The D field
appears identical to that of Maxwell QED. However, the E field is enhanced by
quantum fluctuations, while still showing the short distance screening observed
in the classical theory. In addition, whereas for the classical theory, the
screening increases without bound as the non-linearity increases, the quantum
theory approaches a limiting conformal field theory.Comment: 24 pages, 10 figures. Latex with postscript figure
Cut loci and conjugate loci on Liouville surfaces
In the earlier paper (Itoh and Kiyohara, Manuscr Math 114:247–264, 2004), we showed that the cut locus of a general point on two-dimensional ellipsoid is a segment of a curvature line and proved "Jacobi’s last geometric statement" on the singularities of the conjugate locus. In the present paper,we showthat a wider class of Liouville surfaces possess such simple cut loci and conjugate loci. The results include the determination of cut loci and the set of poles on two-sheeted hyperboloids and elliptic paraboloids
An Australia telescope survey for CMB anisotropies
We have surveyed six distinct `empty fields' using the Australia Telescope
Compact Array in an ultra-compact configuration with the aim of imaging, with a
high brightness sensitivity, any arcmin-scale brightness-temperature
anisotropies in the background radio sky. The six well-separated regions were
observed at a frequency of 8.7 GHz and the survey regions were limited by the
ATCA primary beams which have a full width at half maximum of 6 arcmin at this
frequency; all fields were observed with a resolution of 2 arcmin and an rms
thermal noise of 24 microJy/beam. After subtracting foreground confusion
detected in higher resolution images of the fields, residual fluctuations in
Stokes I images are consistent with the expectations from thermal noise and
weaker (unidentified) foreground sources; the Stokes Q and U images are
consistent with expectations from thermal noise.
Within the sensitivity of our observations, we have no reason to believe that
there are any Sunyaev-Zeldovich holes in the microwave sky surveyed. Assuming
Gaussian-form CMB anisotropy with a `flat' spectrum, we derive 95 per cent
confidence upper limits of Q_flat < 10--11 microK in polarized intensity and
Q_flat < 25 microK in total intensity. The ATCA filter function peaks at l=4700
and has half maximum values at l=3350 and 6050.Comment: 17 pages, includes 8 figures and 6 tables, accepted for publication
in MNRA
Ultra-dense magnetoresistive mass memory
This report details the progress and accomplishments of Nonvolatile Electronics (NVE), Inc., on the design of the wafer scale MRAM mass memory system during the fifth quarter of the project. NVE has made significant progress this quarter on the one megabit design in several different areas. A test chip, which will verify a working GMR bit with the dimensions required by the 1 Meg chip, has been designed, laid out, and is currently being processed in the NVE labs. This test chip will allow electrical specifications, tolerances, and processing issues to be finalized before construction of the actual chip, thus providing a greater assurance of success of the final 1 Meg design. A model has been developed to accurately simulate the parasitic effects of unselected sense lines. This model gives NVE the ability to perform accurate simulations of the array electronic and test different design concepts. Much of the circuit design for the 1 Meg chip has been completed and simulated and these designs are included. Progress has been made in the wafer scale design area to verify the reliable operation of the 16 K macrocell. This is currently being accomplished with the design and construction of two stand alone test systems which will perform life tests and gather data on reliabiliy and wearout mechanisms for analysis
Rapidity Gaps Between Jets
An excess of events with a rapidity gap between jets, over what would be
expected from non-diffractive processes, has been observed at HERA. A process
based on a perturbative QCD calculation of colour singlet exchange has been
added to HERWIG. With this addition, HERWIG is able to describe the number of
events with a gap between jets over the number without a gap. This gap fraction
is predicted to rise at large rapidity intervals between jets which would only
be visible if the detector coverage were increased.Comment: 5 pages including 3 figures. To appear in the conference proceedings
of the Workshop "Future Physics at HERA
3-D kinematic comparison of treadmill and overground running.
Studies investigating the mechanics of human movement are often conducted using the treadmill. The treadmill is an attractive device for the analysis of human locomotion. Studies comparing overground and treadmill running have analyzed discrete variables, however differences in excursion from footstrike to peak angle and range of motion during stance have yet to be examined. This study aimed to examine the 3-D kinematics of the lower extremities during overground and treadmill locomotion to determine the extent to which the two modalities differ. Twelve participants ran at 4.0m/s in both treadmill and overground conditions. 3-D angular kinematic parameters during the stance phase were collected using an eight camera motion analysis system. Hip, knee and ankle joint kinematics were quantified in the sagittal, coronal and transverse planes, then compared using paired t-tests. Of the parameters analyzed hip flexion at footstrike 12° hip range of motion 17°, peak hip flexion 12.7°, hip transverse plane range of motion 8° peak knee flexion 5° and peak ankle excursion range 6.6°, coronal plane ankle angle at toe-off 6.5° and peak ankle eversion 6.3° were found to be significantly different. These results lead to the conclusion that the mechanics of treadmill locomotion cannot be generalized to overground
Evidence for O(2) universality at the finite temperature transition for lattice QCD with 2 flavours of massless staggered quarks
We simulate lattice QCD with 2 flavours of massless quarks on lattices of
temporal extent N_t=8, to study the finite temperature transition from hadronic
matter to a quark-gluon plasma. A modified action which incorporates an
irrelevant chiral 4-fermion interaction is used, which allows simulations at
zero quark mass. We obtain excellent fits of the chiral condensates to the
magnetizations of a 3-dimensional O(2) spin model on lattices small enough to
model the finite size effects. This gives predictions for correlation lengths
and chiral susceptibilities from the corresponding spin-model quantities. These
are in good agreement with our measurements over the relevant range of
parameters. Binder cumulants are measured, but the errors are too large to draw
definite conclusions. From the properties of the O(2) spin model on the
relatively small lattices with which we fit our `data', we can see why earlier
attempts to fit staggered lattice data to leading-order infinite-volume scaling
functions, as well as finite size scaling studies, failed and led to erroneous
conclusions.Comment: 27 pages, Latex with 10 postscript figures. Some of the discussions
have been expanded to satisfy a referee. Typographical errors were correcte
Suggestions for developing a reliable evidence base for the efficacy of dimensions of learning implementations
This paper advocates the development of an empirical evidence base to guide and enhance Dimensions of Learning (DoL) implementations. The discussion is two-fold. The American research evidence base supporting DoL is outlined and categorized in relation to specific Dimensions. The paper then discusses two approaches to how extant data might be used to shed light on the efficacy of DoL implementations in this country. The paper argues that using these approaches will enable the development of a situated, empirical evidence base reliable enough to guide and enhance DoL implementations in Australia.<br /
S-band omnidirectional antenna for the SERT-C satellite
The program to design an S-band omnidirectional antenna system for the SERT-C spacecraft is discussed. The program involved the tasks of antenna analyses by computer techniques, scale model radiation pattern measurements of a number of antenna systems, full-scale RF measurements, and the recommended design, including detailed drawings. A number of antenna elements were considered: the cavity-backed spiral, quadrifilar helix, and crossed-dipoles were chosen for in-depth studies. The final design consisted of a two-element array of cavity-backed spirals mounted on opposite sides of spacecraft and fed in-phase through a hybrid junction. This antenna system meets the coverage requirement of having a gain of at least minus 10 dBi over 50 percent of a 4 pi steradian sphere with the solar panels in operation. This coverage level is increased if the ground station has the capability to change polarization
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