18,715 research outputs found

    Regenerative fuel cell combines high efficiency with low cost

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    Hydrogen/oxygen regenerative fuel cell stores electrical energy efficiently and inexpensively. The fuel cell has a high energy-to-weight ratio, and is adapted for a large number of cycles with deep discharge

    Schemata as Building Blocks: Does Size Matter?

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    We analyze the schema theorem and the building block hypothesis using a recently derived, exact schemata evolution equation. We derive a new schema theorem based on the concept of effective fitness showing that schemata of higher than average effective fitness receive an exponentially increasing number of trials over time. The building block hypothesis is a natural consequence in that the equation shows how fit schemata are constructed from fit sub-schemata. However, we show that generically there is no preference for short, low-order schemata. In the case where schema reconstruction is favoured over schema destruction large schemata tend to be favoured. As a corollary of the evolution equation we prove Geiringer's theorem. We give supporting numerical evidence for our claims in both non-epsitatic and epistatic landscapes.Comment: 17 pages, 10 postscript figure

    Transient Response of Shells of Revolution by Direct Integration and Modal Superposition Methods

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    The results of an analytical effort to obtain and evaluate transient response data for a cylindrical and a conical shell by use of two different approaches: direct integration and modal superposition are described. The inclusion of nonlinear terms is more important than the inclusion of secondary linear effects (transverse shear deformation and rotary inertia) although there are thin-shell structures where these secondary effects are important. The advantages of the direct integration approach are that geometric nonlinear and secondary effects are easy to include and high-frequency response may be calculated. In comparison to the modal superposition technique the computer storage requirements are smaller. The advantages of the modal superposition approach are that the solution is independent of the previous time history and that once the modal data are obtained, the response for repeated cases may be efficiently computed. Also, any admissible set of initial conditions can be applied
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