387 research outputs found
The Influence of Spatial Resolution due to Hot-Wire Sensors on Measurements in Wall-Bounded Turbulence.
Reassessment of compiled data reveal that recorded scatter in the hot-wire measured near-wall peak in viscous-scaled streamwise turbulence intensity is due in large part to the simultaneous competing effects of Reynolds number and viscous-scaled wire-length l ( lUt n, where l is the wirelength, Ut is friction velocity and n is kinematic viscosity). These competing factors can explain much of the disparity in existing literature, in particular explaining how previous studies have incorrectly concluded that the inner-scaled near-wall peak is independent of Re. We also investigate the appearance of the, so-called, âouterpeakâ in the broadband streamwise intensity, found by some researchers to occur within the log-region of high Reynolds number boundary layers. We show that this âouter-peakâ is most likely a symptom of attenuation of small-scales due to large l . Fully mapped energy spectra, obtained with two different l , are presented to demonstrate this phenomena. The spatial attenuation resulting from wires with large l effectively filters small-scale fluctuations from the recorded signal
Hydraulic resistance in open-channel flows over self-affine rough beds
Acknowledgements The authors wish to express their gratitude to Stephan Spiller for advice regarding the silicone moulds, to Cameron Scott for assisting with manufacturing of the roughness elements and Davide Collautti for help with conducting experiments.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Flow development in rough-bed open channels : mean velocities, turbulence statistics, velocity spectra, and secondary currents
Acknowledgements: The authors wish to express their gratitude to Roy Gillanders for the help provided in the laboratory and to the School of Engineering of the University of Aberdeen for the support. The comments and suggestions of the Associate Editor and two anonymous reviewers helped to improve the final version of the paper and are much appreciated. Funding The study has been supported by three Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council/UK grants: âHigh-resolution numerical and experimental studies of turbulence-induced sediment erosion and near-bed transportâ (EP/G056404/1), âBed friction in rough-bed free-surface flows: a theoretical framework, roughness regimes, and quantificationâ (EP/K041088/1) and âSecondary currents in turbulent flows over rough wallsâ (EP/V002414/1). Publisher Copyright: © 2022 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
High energy Coulomb-scattered electrons for relativistic particle beam diagnostics
A new system used for monitoring energetic Coulomb-scattered electrons as the
main diagnostic for accurately aligning the electron and ion beams in the new
Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) electron lenses is described in detail.
The theory of electron scattering from relativistic ions is developed and
applied to the design and implementation of the system used to achieve and
maintain the alignment. Commissioning with gold and 3He beams is then described
as well as the successful utilization of the new system during the 2015 RHIC
polarized proton run. Systematic errors of the new method are then estimated.
Finally, some possible future applications of Coulomb-scattered electrons for
beam diagnostics are briefly discussed.Comment: 16 pages, 23 figure
âThe International Teacher Leadership project,â a case of international action research.
Copyright CARNThe paper arises from the International Teacher Leadership project, a research and development project involving researchers and practitioners in 14 European countries. The paper provides a conceptual exploration of the idea of teacher leadership and its role in educational reform, central to which is the idea that teachers, regardless of their level of power and organisational position, can engage in the leadership of enquiry-based development activity aimed at influencing their colleagues and embedding improved practices in their schools. The paper provides an outline of the projectâs methodology which builds on that used in the Carpe Vitam Leadership for Learning project (Frost, 2008a). It is a form of collaborative
action research which is highly developmental and discursive. It seeks to identify principles, strategies and tools that can be applied in a range of cultural settings. The paper includes a thematic analysis of the cultural contexts and policy environments of the participating countries in order to identify the obstacles to teacher leadership and to inform the nature of the support strategies employed
When linearity prevails over hierarchy in syntax
Hierarchical structure has been cherished as a grammatical universal. We use experimental methods to show where linear order is also a relevant syntactic relation. An identical methodology and design were used across six research sites on South Slavic languages. Experimental results show that in certain configurations, grammatical production can in fact favor linear order over hierarchical structure. However, these findings are limited to coordinate structures and distinct from the kind of production errors found with comparable configurations such as âattractionâ errors. The results demonstrate that agreement morphology may be computed in a series of steps, one of which is partly independent from syntactic hierarchy
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