412 research outputs found
Landslide characterization using P- and S-wave seismic refraction tomography: the importance of elastic moduli
In the broad spectrum of natural hazards, landslides in particular are capable of changing the landscape and causing significant human and economic losses. Detailed site investigations form an important component in the landslide risk mitigation and disaster risk reduction process. These investigations usually rely on surface ob- servations, discrete sampling of the subsurface, and laboratory testing to examine properties that are deemed representative of entire slopes. Often this requires extensive interpolations and results in large uncertainties. To compliment and extend these approaches, we present a study from an active landslide in a Lias Group clay slope, North Yorkshire, UK, examining combined P- and S-wave seismic refraction tomography (SRT) as a means of providing subsurface volumetric imaging of geotechnical proxies. The distributions of seismic wave velocities determined fromSRT at the study site indicated zones with higher porosity and fissure density that are interpreted to represent the extent and depth of mass movements and weathered bedrock zones. Distinguishing the lithological units was facilitated by deriving the Poisson's ratio fromthe SRT data as saturated clay and partially saturated sandy silts showed distinctively different Poisson's ra- tios. Shear and Young's moduli derived from the SRT data revealed the weak nature of the materials in active parts of the landslide (i.e. 25 kPa and 100 kPa respectively). The SRT results are consistent with intrusive (i.e. cone penetration tests), laboratory, and additional geoelectrical data from this site. This study shows that SRT forms a cost-effective method that can significantly reduce uncertainties in the conceptual ground model of geotechnical and hydrological conditions that govern landslide dynamics
Computation of optimized arrays for 3-D electrical imaging surveys
3-D electrical resistivity surveys and inversion models are required to accurately resolve structures in areas with very complex geology where 2-D models might suffer from artefacts. Many 3-D surveys use a grid where the number of electrodes along one direction (x) is much greater than in the perpendicular direction (y). Frequently, due to limitations in the number of independent electrodes in the multi-electrode system, the surveys use a roll-along system with a small number of parallel survey lines aligned along the x-direction. The ‘Compare R' array optimization method previously used for 2-D surveys is adapted for such 3-D surveys. Offset versions of the inline arrays used in 2-D surveys are included in the number of possible arrays (the comprehensive data set) to improve the sensitivity to structures in between the lines. The array geometric factor and its relative error are used to filter out potentially unstable arrays in the construction of the comprehensive data set. Comparisons of the conventional (consisting of dipole-dipole and Wenner-Schlumberger arrays) and optimized arrays are made using a synthetic model and experimental measurements in a tank. The tests show that structures located between the lines are better resolved with the optimized arrays. The optimized arrays also have significantly better depth resolution compared to the conventional array
Implementing positivity constraints in 4-D resistivity time-lapse inversion
Over the last 25 years 2-D and 3-D resistivity surveys have been used for a wide range of engineering, environmental, hydrological and mineral exploration surveys (Loke et al.
2013). In some surveys, the purpose includes the monitoring of subsurface changes with time (Chambers et al. 2014). The 4-D smoothness-constrained inversion method (Loke et
al. 2014) has proved to be a stable and robust method for the inversion of time-lapse data sets. This method inverts the data sets measured at different times simultaneously and it includes a temporal smoothness constraint to ensure that the resistivity changes in a smooth manner with time. In some surveys, such as infiltration experiments (Kuras et al. 2016), it is known that the subsurface resistivity should only decrease (or increase) with time. As the standard 4-D inversion method does not explicitly constrain the direction of the changes with time, this could result in artefacts where an increase in the resistivity is obtained in the inverse model while it is only expected to decrease (or vice versa). In this paper we describe a modification of the 4-D smoothness-constrained inversion method to remove such temporal artefacts
Current and future role of instrumentation and monitoring in the performance of transport infrastructure slopes
Instrumentation is often used to monitor the performance of engineered infrastructure slopes. This paper looks at the current role of instrumentation and monitoring, including the reasons for monitoring infrastructure slopes, the instrumentation typically installed and parameters measured. The paper then investigates recent developments in technology and considers how these may change the way that monitoring is used in the future, and tries to summarize the barriers and challenges to greater use of instrumentation in slope engineering. The challenges relate to economics of instrumentation within a wider risk management system, a better understanding of the way in which slopes perform and/or lose performance, and the complexities of managing and making decisions from greater quantities of data
Spacetime Noncommutativity in Models with Warped Extradimensions
We construct consistent noncommutative (NC) deformations of the
Randall-Sundrum spacetime that solve the NC Einstein equations with a
non-trivial Poisson tensor depending on the fifth coordinate. In a class of
these deformations where the Poisson tensor is exponentially localized on one
of the branes (the NC-brane), we study the effects on bulk particles in terms
of Lorentz-violating operators induced by NC-brane interactions. We sketch two
models in which massive bulk particles mediate NC effects to an
almost-commutative SM-brane, such that observables at high energy colliders are
enhanced with respect to low energy and astrophysical observables.Comment: 15 pages, LaTeX, pdf figures included, to appear in JHE
The Boundary Multiplet of N=4 SU(2)xU(1) Gauged Supergravity on Asymptotically-AdS_5
We consider N=4 SU(2)xU(1) gauged supergravity on asymptotically-AdS_5
backgrounds. By a near-boundary analysis we determine the boundary-dominant
components of the bulk fields from their partially gauge-fixed field equations.
Subdominant components are projected out in the boundary limit and we find a
reduced set of boundary fields, constituting the N=2 Weyl multiplet. The
residual bulk symmetries are found to act on the boundary fields as
four-dimensional diffeomorphisms, N=2 supersymmetry and (super-)Weyl
transformations. This shows that the on-shell N=4 supergravity multiplet yields
the N=2 Weyl multiplet on the boundary with the appropriate local N=2
superconformal transformations. Building on these results we use the AdS/CFT
conjecture to calculate the Weyl anomaly of the dual four-dimensional
superconformal field theories in a generic bosonic N=2 conformal supergravity
background.Comment: 23 pages; to appear in JHE
The Schrdinger-Poisson equations as the large-N limit of the Newtonian N-body system: applications to the large scale dark matter dynamics
In this paper it is argued how the dynamics of the classical Newtonian N-body
system can be described in terms of the Schrdinger-Poisson equations
in the large limit. This result is based on the stochastic quantization
introduced by Nelson, and on the Calogero conjecture. According to the Calogero
conjecture, the emerging effective Planck constant is computed in terms of the
parameters of the N-body system as , where is the gravitational constant, and are the
number and the mass of the bodies, and is their average density. The
relevance of this result in the context of large scale structure formation is
discussed. In particular, this finding gives a further argument in support of
the validity of the Schrdinger method as numerical double of the
N-body simulations of dark matter dynamics at large cosmological scales.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Euro. Phys. J.
Oporność na kwas acetylosalicylowy we wtórnej prewencji udaru mózgu
Wstęp. Autorzy zbadali czynność płytek krwi u pacjentów po udarze
mózgu leczonych kwasem acetylosalicylowym (ASA, acetylsalicylic
acid), w celu zapobieżenia kolejnemu udarowi. Okres obserwacji wynosił
1 rok.
Metoda. W badaniu prospektywnym wzięło udział 291 pacjentów,
u których po raz pierwszy włączono ASA (300 mg/d.) w celu wtórnej
prewencji udaru mózgu. Pomiary agregacji płytek wykonano po
24 godzinach, 3, 6 i 12 miesiącach od rozpoczęcia leczenia.
Wyniki. Dwudziestu jeden pacjentów (7,2%) spośród 291 uznano za
pierwotnie nieodpowiadających na ASA (początkowa niewystarczająca
inhibicja płytek), a 4,1% jako wtórnie nieodpowiadających (niewystarczająca
inhibicja płytek w czasie obserwacji). Nie stwierdzono
istotnych różnic w odniesieniu do wieku, płci, czynników ryzyka i typu
udaru między grupami pacjentów odpowiadajacych i nieodpowiadających
na leczenie ASA.
Wniosek. Oporność na ASA wśród pacjentów po udarze mózgu nie
jest zjawiskiem rzadkim. Kliniczną przydatność rutynowych testów
czynności płytek powinno się ocenić w przyszłych badaniach klinicznych
Digitalized manufacturing logistics in engineer-to-order operations
This is a post-peer-review, pre-copyedit version of an article published in Advances in Production Management Systems. Production Management for the Factory of the Future. APMS 2019. IFIP Advances in Information and Communication Technology, vol. 566. The final authenticated version is available online at: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-30000-5_71. The high complexity in Engineer-To-Order (ETO) operations causes major challenges for manufacturing logistics, especially in complex ETO, i.e. one-of-a-kind production. Increased digitalization of manufacturing logistics processes and activities can facilitate more efficient coordination of the material and information flows for manufacturing operations in general. However, it is not clear how to do this in the ETO environment, where products are highly customized and production is non-repetitive. This paper aims to investigate the challenges related to manufacturing logistics in ETO and how digital technologies can be applied to address them. Through a case study of a Norwegian shipyard, four main challenges related to manufacturing logistics are identified. Further, by reviewing recent literature on ETO and digitalization, the paper identifies specific applications of digital technologies in ETO manufacturing. Finally, by linking manufacturing logistics challenges to digitalization, the paper suggests four main features of digitalized manufacturing logistics in ETO: (i) seamless, digitalized information flow, (ii) identification and interconnectivity, (iii) digitalized operator support, and (iv) automated and autonomous material flow. Thus, the paper provides valuable insights into how ETO companies can move towards digitalized manufacturing logistics
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