7,876 research outputs found

    Cavitation induced starvation for piston-ring/liner tribological conjunction

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    The study investigates the mechanism of ring-liner lubrication in the vicinity of the top and bottom dead centres of an internal combustion engine. Predicting lubricant transient behaviour is critical when the inlet reversal leads to thin films and inherent metal-to-metal interaction. It was found that the cavitation, which is located at the trailing edge of the contact before reversal, briefly survives after reversal as a confined bubble at the leading edge. This depletes the film promoting starvation. Several algorithms were compared. It is concluded that the lubricant film is thinner than initially thought

    A catalog of planetary nebulae in the elliptical galaxy NGC 4697

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    We present a catalog of 535 planetary nebulae discovered in the flattened elliptical galaxy NGC 4697, using the FORS1 Cassegrain spectrograph of the Very Large Telescope of the European Southern Observatory at Cerro Paranal, Chile. The catalog provides positions (x, y coordinates relative to the center of light of NGC 4697, as well as RA, Dec.), and, for almost all PNs, the magnitude m(5007) and the heliocentric radial velocity in km/s.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figures, ApJS in pres

    Internal Migration and Regional Population Dynamics in Europe: Romanian Case Study

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    The report analyses population migration and change in Romania over the period 1984-1994. The analysis of population change is conducted for 2948 communes and towns, the finest administrative division for which population data are available. The lack of migration data on the level of communes and towns makes in-depth analysis of the migration for small spatial units impossible. For that reason analysis of the patterns of migration is conducted for 40 Judete (also referred to as counties or regions) and the capital city of Bucharest, i.e. 41 units altogether. Council of Europe Publishing, F-67075 Strasbourg - Cedex, France

    Aspects of meson properties in dense nuclear matter

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    We investigate the modification of meson spectral densities in dense nuclear matter at zero temperature. These effects are studied in a fully relativistic mean field model which goes beyond the linear density approximation and also includes baryon resonances. In particular, the role of N*(1520) and N*(1720) on the rho meson spectral density is highlighted. Even though the nucleon-nucleon loop and the nucleon-resonance loop contribute with the opposite sign, an overall reduction of rho meson mass is still observed at high density. Importantly, it is shown that the resonances cause substantial broadening of the rho meson spectral density in matter and also induces non-trivial momentum dependence. The spectral density of the a0 meson is also shown. We study the dispersion relations and collective oscillations induced by the rho meson propagation in nuclear matter together with the influence of the mixing of rho with the a0 meson. The relevant expression for the plasma frequency is also recovered analytically in the appropriate limit.Comment: 19 pages, 17 figure

    Generating High-Quality Emotion Arcs For Low-Resource Languages Using Emotion Lexicons

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    Automatically generated emotion arcs -- that capture how an individual or a population feels over time -- are widely used in industry and research. However, there is little work on evaluating the generated arcs in English (where the emotion resources are available) and no work on generating or evaluating emotion arcs for low-resource languages. Work on generating emotion arcs in low-resource languages such as those indigenous to Africa, the Americas, and Australia is stymied by the lack of emotion-labeled resources and large language models for those languages. Work on evaluating emotion arcs (for any language) is scarce because of the difficulty of establishing the true (gold) emotion arc. Our work, for the first time, systematically and quantitatively evaluates automatically generated emotion arcs. We also compare two common ways of generating emotion arcs: Machine-Learning (ML) models and Lexicon-Only (LexO) methods. By running experiments on 42 diverse datasets in 9 languages, we show that despite being markedly poor at instance level emotion classification, LexO methods are highly accurate at generating emotion arcs when aggregating information from hundreds of instances. (Predicted arcs have correlations ranging from 0.94 to 0.99 with the gold arcs for various emotions.) We also show that for languages with no emotion lexicons, automatic translations of English emotion lexicons can be used to generate high-quality emotion arcs -- correlations above 0.9 with the gold emotion arcs in all six indigenous African languages explored. This opens up avenues for work on emotions in numerous languages from around the world; crucial not only for commerce, public policy, and health research in service of speakers of those languages, but also to draw meaningful conclusions in emotion-pertinent research using information from around the world (thereby avoiding a western-centric bias in research).Comment: 32 pages, 16 figures. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:2210.0738

    Two-dimensional contact mechanics problems involving inhomogeneously elastic solids split into three distinct layers

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    This paper investigates the frictionless two-dimensional contact problem of an inhomogeneously elastic material under a rigid punch. The inhomogeneous solid is deemed to comprise three distinct regions which represent a homogeneously elastic coating and substrate joined together by a functionally graded transition layer (interlayer) whose shear modulus depends exponentially on the vertical coordinate. We propose closed form solutions for the horizontal and vertical displacements of the solid which are analytic if the contact pressure is known exactly. These solutions are further used to derive a fast and efficient iterative algorithm from which the contact footprint resulting from the rigid stamp problem may be computed. A selection of numerical results are then presented using this method and it is found that our model compares well with those of other authors in the two particular limiting cases considered here. We then investigate the effects of material inhomogeneity and coating thickness on the cylindrical stamp problem and it is found that the maximum principal stress is highly dependent on the thickness and mechanical properties of the layer. In particular, it is found that the maximum principal stress that occurs in a material with a hard coating may be reduced by increasing the thickness of the transition layer whilst lower stresses are achieved in materials with soft coatings by decreasing interlayer thickness

    Predicting the deflection and sub-surface stress field within two-dimensional inhomogeneously elastic bonded layered solids under pressure

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    This paper describes a Fourier series based solution method for the displacements and sub-surface stresses within a graded elastic layered solid under pressure. The solid is assumed to be in a state of plane strain and thus the derived solution is valid for two-dimensional problems. Whilst this method provides a fully analytic solution when the contact pressure is known exactly, it may also be used when the contact pressure is only known numerically (see Section 4). The solution given in this paper is generic and easily utilised to solve real problems as it requires only known physical characteristics of the solid under study and an applied surface pressure. The solid consists of two distinct regions which are considered to be perfectly bonded. These comprise a graded elastic coating whose shear modulus varies exponentially with the depth coordinate and a homogeneously elastic substrate. As the stresses and displacements induced by the applied pressure decay very quickly outside of the contact region, the contact problem need only be solved in a small piece of the solid as the remainder is unaffected. It is found that accurate results are obtained when the contact problem is solved over a region of the solid 10 times larger than the contact region. This method as a result is computationally cheap to use as the number of Fourier modes needed to accurately capture the solution is small

    Newtonian mechanics in scale of minutia

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    This article commemorates Newton's contributions to mechanics in small scale. In particular, it deals with Newtonian slow viscous action of fluids in narrow conjunctions leading to hydrodynamics. It is shown that the Newtonian continuum relies on some bulk properties of fluids as opposed to their molecular interactions. When the latter and surface energy effects become dominant, the interaction potentials deviate from the Newtonian continuum. A plethora of largely empirically based force laws are used to describe conjunctional behaviours in nanoscale, usually lightly loaded. Some of these force laws are described, and their applicability to nanoconjunctions of very small devices and some biological systems is noted. In general, a thorough understanding of all the involved kinetics is required. Representative problems in soft nanoscale contacts in normal (humid) atmosphere are highlighted in the article. It is shown that contact load/adhesion depends on several key parameters including surface roughness, surface free energy, atmospheric moisture, and normal approach velocity
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