18,973 research outputs found
The buckling of thin-walled circular cylinders under axial compression and bending
Bucking of thin-walled electroplated copper and Mylar circular cylinders under axial compression and bendin
Acoustic characterization of crack damage evolution in sandstone deformed under conventional and true triaxial loading
We thank the Associate Editor, Michelle Cooke, and the reviewers, Ze'ev Reches and Yves Guéguen, for useful comments which helped to improve the manuscript. We thank J.G. Van Munster for providing access to the true triaxial apparatus at KSEPL and for technical support during the experimental program. We thank R. Pricci for assistance with technical drawings of the apparatus. This work was partly funded by NERC award NE/N002938/1 and by a NERC Doctoral Studentship, which we gratefully acknowledge. Supporting data are included in a supporting information file; any additional data may be obtained from J.B. (e-mail: [email protected]).Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Universal Fluctuations of the Danube Water Level: a Link with Turbulence, Criticality and Company Growth
A global quantity, regardless of its precise nature, will often fluctuate
according to a Gaussian limit distribution. However, in highly correlated
systems, other limit distributions are possible. We have previously calculated
one such distribution and have argued that this function should apply
specifically, and in many instances, to global quantities that define a steady
state. Here we demonstrate, for the first time, the relevance of this
prediction to natural phenomena. The river level fluctuations of the Danube are
observed to obey our prediction, which immediately establishes a generic
statistical connection between turbulence, criticality and company growth
statistics.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figur
Building Booster Separation Aerodynamic Databases for Artemis II
NASAs Artemis II mission will mark the return of humans to near-lunar space for the first time since Apollo. Shortly after launch on the Space Launch System (SLS), a critical phase of ascent occurs when 16 small rockets fire to push the boosters away from the core. Minimizing the risk of failure during separation requires the construction of multiple 13-dimensional databases, including perturbations in position, flight conditions, and engine thrust. The SLS Computational Fluid Dynamics team used NASAs FUN3D flow solver on the Pleiades and Electra supercomputers to run 5,780 simulations at nominal conditions and over 8,000 simulations with a core stage engine failure to generate the databases needed to verify the booster separation system for Artemis II
From random walk to single-file diffusion
We report an experimental study of diffusion in a quasi-one-dimensional (q1D)
colloid suspension which behaves like a Tonks gas. The mean squared
displacement as a function of time is described well with an ansatz
encompassing a time regime that is both shorter and longer than the mean time
between collisions. This ansatz asserts that the inverse mean squared
displacement is the sum of the inverse mean squared displacement for short time
normal diffusion (random walk) and the inverse mean squared displacement for
asymptotic single-file diffusion (SFD). The dependence of the single-file 1D
mobility on the concentration of the colloids agrees quantitatively with that
derived for a hard rod model, which confirms for the first time the validity of
the hard rod SFD theory. We also show that a recent SFD theory by Kollmann
leads to the hard rod SFD theory for a Tonks gas.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Materials on Plant Leaf Surfaces Are Deliquescent in a Variety of Environments
Materials on plant leaf surfaces that attract water impact penetration of foliar-applied agrochemicals, foliar water uptake, gas exchange, and stomatal density. Few studies are available on the nature of these substances, and we quantify the hygroscopicity of these materials. Water vapor sorption experiments on twelve leaf washes of sample leaves were conducted and analyzed with inductively coupled plasma-optical emission spectroscopy (ICP-OES) and X-ray diffraction. All leaf surface materials studied were hygroscopic. Oils were found on the surface of the Eucalyptus studied. For mangroves that excrete salt to the leaf surfaces, significant sorption occurred at high humidity of a total of 316 mg (~0.3 ml) over 6–10 leaves and fitted a Guggenheim, Anderson, and de Böer sorption isotherm. Materials on the plant leaf surface can deliquesce and form an aqueous solution in a variety of environments where plants grow, including glasshouses and by the ocean, which is an important factor when considering plant-atmosphere relations.</p
The articulation of enkinaesthetic entanglement
In this article I present an argument for the necessary co-articulation of meaning within our felt enkinaesthetic engagement with our world. The argument will be developed through a series of stages, the first of which will be an elaboration of the notion of articulation of and through the body. This will be followed by an examination of enkinaesthetic experiential entanglement and the role it plays in rendering our world meaningful and our actions values-realising. At this stage I will begin to extend Husserl’s notion of intentional transgression to the enkinaesthetic sphere of lived experience, and in support of this claim I will examine the theoretical and practical work of osteopathic manual listening [Gens & Roche 2014] and the ‘felt sense’ in focusing [Gendlin] which makes possible a shift from a somatic articulation to a semantic, and potentially conceptual, one. Throughout, my position will be compatible with Merleau-Ponty’s claim that “Whenever I try to understand myself, the whole fabric of the perceptible world comes too, and with it comes the others who are caught in it.” [Merleau-Ponty 1964a, p.15]
Ambient connections realising conformal Tractor holonomy
For a conformal manifold we introduce the notion of an ambient connection, an
affine connection on an ambient manifold of the conformal manifold, possibly
with torsion, and with conditions relating it to the conformal structure. The
purpose of this construction is to realise the normal conformal tractor
holonomy as affine holonomy of such a connection. We give an example of an
ambient connection for which this is the case, and which is torsion free if we
start the construction with a C-space, and in addition Ricci-flat if we start
with an Einstein manifold. Thus for a -space this example leads to an
ambient metric in the weaker sense of \v{C}ap and Gover, and for an Einstein
space to a Ricci-flat ambient metric in the sense of Fefferman and Graham.Comment: 17 page
An experimental test of all theories with predictive power beyond quantum theory
According to quantum theory, the outcomes of future measurements cannot (in
general) be predicted with certainty. In some cases, even with a complete
physical description of the system to be measured and the measurement
apparatus, the outcomes of certain measurements are completely random. This
raises the question, originating in the paper by Einstein, Podolsky and Rosen,
of whether quantum mechanics is the optimal way to predict measurement
outcomes. Established arguments and experimental tests exclude a few specific
alternative models. Here, we provide a complete answer to the above question,
refuting any alternative theory with significantly more predictive power than
quantum theory. More precisely, we perform various measurements on distant
entangled photons, and, under the assumption that these measurements are chosen
freely, we give an upper bound on how well any alternative theory could predict
their outcomes. In particular, in the case where quantum mechanics predicts two
equally likely outcomes, our results are incompatible with any theory in which
the probability of a prediction is increased by more than ~0.19. Hence, we can
immediately refute any already considered or yet-to-be-proposed alternative
model with more predictive power than this.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figure
The prevalences of Salmonella Genomic Island 1 variants in human and animal Salmonella Typhimurium DT104 are distinguishable using a Bayesian approach
Throughout the 1990s, there was an epidemic of multidrug resistant Salmonella Typhimurium DT104 in both animals and humans in Scotland. The use of antimicrobials in agriculture is often cited as a major source of antimicrobial resistance in pathogenic bacteria of humans, suggesting that DT104 in animals and humans should demonstrate similar prevalences of resistance determinants. Until very recently, only the application of molecular methods would allow such a comparison and our understanding has been hindered by the fact that surveillance data are primarily phenotypic in nature. Here, using large scale surveillance datasets and a novel Bayesian approach, we infer and compare the prevalence of Salmonella Genomic Island 1 (SGI1), SGI1 variants, and resistance determinants independent of SGI1 in animal and human DT104 isolates from such phenotypic data. We demonstrate differences in the prevalences of SGI1, SGI1-B, SGI1-C, absence of SGI1, and tetracycline resistance determinants independent of SGI1 between these human and animal populations, a finding that challenges established tenets that DT104 in domestic animals and humans are from the same well-mixed microbial population
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