59 research outputs found
Space Station Freedom/lunar transfer vehicle propellant operation hazard analysis
Space Station Freedom (SSF), as a transportation node for Space Exploration Initiative missions, would involve the assembly and refurbishing of lunar and Mars transfer vehicles. This includes operations involving cryogenic propellants (LH2 7 LO2) such as storing and handling of loaded propellant tanks, assembly onto the vehicle, and propellant transfer. Cryogenic propellants dictate rigorous safety precautions and impose unique requirements to ensure flight safety to both personnel and SSF elements. The objective of this study is to identify potential hazards and risks associated with cryogenic propellants. This involves identification of pertinent system design features and operational procedures. Criticality of identified risks/hazards shall be assessed and those that fall in the catastrophic and critical categories shall include mitigating solutions
System-of-Systems Technology-Portfolio-Analysis Tool
Advanced Technology Life-cycle Analysis System (ATLAS) is a system-of-systems technology-portfolio-analysis software tool. ATLAS affords capabilities to (1) compare estimates of the mass and cost of an engineering system based on competing technological concepts; (2) estimate life-cycle costs of an outer-space-exploration architecture for a specified technology portfolio; (3) collect data on state-of-the-art and forecasted technology performance, and on operations and programs; and (4) calculate an index of the relative programmatic value of a technology portfolio. ATLAS facilitates analysis by providing a library of analytical spreadsheet models for a variety of systems. A single analyst can assemble a representation of a system of systems from the models and build a technology portfolio. Each system model estimates mass, and life-cycle costs are estimated by a common set of cost models. Other components of ATLAS include graphical-user-interface (GUI) software, algorithms for calculating the aforementioned index, a technology database, a report generator, and a form generator for creating the GUI for the system models. At the time of this reporting, ATLAS is a prototype, embodied in Microsoft Excel and several thousand lines of Visual Basic for Applications that run on both Windows and Macintosh computers
Technology Directions for the 21st Century
New technologies will unleash the huge capacity of fiber-optic cable to meet growing demands for bandwidth. Companies will continue to replace private networks with public network bandwidth-on-demand. Although asynchronous transfer mode (ATM) is the transmission technology favored by many, its penetration will be slower than anticipated. Hybrid networks - e.g., a mix of ATM, frame relay, and fast Ethernet - may predominate, both as interim and long-term solutions, based on factors such as availability, interoperability, and cost. Telecommunications equipment and services prices will decrease further due to increased supply and more competition. Explosive Internet growth will continue, requiring additional backbone transmission capacity and enhanced protocols, but it is not clear who will fund the upgrade. Within ten years, space-based constellations of satellites in Low Earth orbit (LEO) will serve mobile users employing small, low-power terminals. 'Little LEO's' will provide packet transmission services and geo-position determination. 'Big LEO's' will function as global cellular telephone networks, with some planning to offer video and interactive multimedia services. Geosynchronous satellites also are proposed for mobile voice grade links and high-bandwidth services. NASA may benefit from resulting cost reductions in components, space hardware, launch services, and telecommunications services
Crossings, Motzkin paths and Moments
Kasraoui, Stanton and Zeng, and Kim, Stanton and Zeng introduced certain
-analogues of Laguerre and Charlier polynomials. The moments of these
orthogonal polynomials have combinatorial models in terms of crossings in
permutations and set partitions. The aim of this article is to prove simple
formulas for the moments of the -Laguerre and the -Charlier polynomials,
in the style of the Touchard-Riordan formula (which gives the moments of some
-Hermite polynomials, and also the distribution of crossings in matchings).
Our method mainly consists in the enumeration of weighted Motzkin paths, which
are naturally associated with the moments. Some steps are bijective, in
particular we describe a decomposition of paths which generalises a previous
construction of Penaud for the case of the Touchard-Riordan formula. There are
also some non-bijective steps using basic hypergeometric series, and continued
fractions or, alternatively, functional equations.Comment: 21 page
Algebras, BPS States, and Strings
We clarify the role played by BPS states in the calculation of threshold
corrections of D=4, N=2 heterotic string compactifications. We evaluate these
corrections for some classes of compactifications and show that they are sums
of logarithmic functions over the positive roots of generalized Kac-Moody
algebras. Moreover, a certain limit of the formulae suggests a reformulation of
heterotic string in terms of a gauge theory based on hyperbolic algebras such
as . We define a generalized Kac-Moody Lie superalgebra associated to
the BPS states. Finally we discuss the relation of our results with string
duality.Comment: 64 pages, harvmac (b), Discussion of BRST improved, typos fixed, two
references adde
The classification of almost affine (hyperbolic) Lie superalgebras
We say that an indecomposable Cartan matrix A with entries in the ground
field of characteristic 0 is almost affine if the Lie sub(super)algebra
determined by it is not finite dimensional or affine but the Lie (super)algebra
determined by any submatrix of A, obtained by striking out any row and any
column intersecting on the main diagonal, is the sum of finite dimensional or
affine Lie (super)algebras. A Lie (super)algebra with Cartan matrix is said to
be almost affine if it is not finite dimensional or affine, and all of its
Cartan matrices are almost affine.
We list all almost affine Lie superalgebras over complex numbers correcting
two earlier claims of classification and make available the list of almost
affine Lie algebras obtained by Li Wang Lai.Comment: 92 page
Incipient Social Groups: An Analysis via In-Vivo Behavioral Tracking
Social psychology is fundamentally the study of individuals in groups, yet there remain basic unanswered questions about group formation, structure, and change. We argue that the problem is methodological. Until recently, there was no way to track who was interacting with whom with anything approximating valid resolution and scale. In the current study we describe a new method that applies recent advances in image-based tracking to study incipient group formation and evolution with experimental precision and control. In this method, which we term "in vivo behavioral tracking," we track individuals' movements with a high definition video camera mounted atop a large field laboratory. We report results of an initial study that quantifies the composition, structure, and size of the incipient groups. We also apply in-vivo spatial tracking to study participants' tendency to cooperate as a function of their embeddedness in those crowds. We find that participants form groups of seven on average, are more likely to approach others of similar attractiveness and (to a lesser extent) gender, and that participants' gender and attractiveness are both associated with their proximity to the spatial center of groups (such that women and attractive individuals are more likely than men and unattractive individuals to end up in the center of their groups). Furthermore, participants' proximity to others early in the study predicted the effort they exerted in a subsequent cooperative task, suggesting that submergence in a crowd may predict social loafing. We conclude that in vivo behavioral tracking is a uniquely powerful new tool for answering longstanding, fundamental questions about group dynamics
Interprofessional Education and Community Engagement: Eleven Professions Collaborating To Address Diabetes in Our Community
Nova Southeastern University has developed an interprofessional education and practice initiative designed to prepare emerging health care professionals to participate on interprofessional teams while helping community members prevent and manage diabetes. Consistent with best practices, the Interprofessional Diabetes Education and Awareness (IDEA) Initiative partners with 17 corporate, municipal, non-profit, and academic communities designed to promote diabetes prevention and management through community workshops for children and adults most prone to diabetes. Currently in its fifth year, this collaborative interprofessional diabetes education project includes a variety of relevant topics such as disease overview, nutrition, pharmacy and exercise. 60-70 health professions students and 12 faculty from 10 academic programs provide diabetes education workshops in south Florida and has served nearly 2,500 community members
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