27,004 research outputs found

    Historical development of the windmill

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    Throughout history, windmill technology represented the highest levels of development in those technical fields now referred to as mechanical engineering, civil engineering, and aerodynamics. Key stages are described in the technical development of windmills as prime movers; from antiquity to construction of the well known Smith-Putnam wind turbine generator of the 1940's, which laid the foundation for modern wind turbines. Subjects covered are windmills in ancient times; the vertical axis Persian windmill; the horizontal axis European windmill (including both post mills and tower mills); technology improvements in sails, controls, and analysis; the American farm windmill; the transition from windmills to wind turbines for generating electricity at the end of the 19th century; and wind turbine development in the first half of the 20th century

    “Never give up”: A mixed methods study into the promotion of resilience within a primary school and the way it is experienced

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    Research into the complex field of resilience has significantly increased during the last two decades. The question of how, and to what extent, schools can play a role in the resilience of children and young people has also been raised. The present mixed methods design study uses the Student Resilience Survey and interviews to explore the promotion of resilience through a goal-setting intervention from two angles. The quantitative part of this research compares the resilience scores of 85 participants at two time points from an identified primary school in which the intervention takes place. Results showed a significant decrease in participant’s resilience over the academic year. The qualitative part of this research explores how participants (children, parents and teachers) experience the goal-setting model and what they believe makes the difference at the identified primary school. The qualitative results discovered three main themes: experiencing the school’s core values and the goal-setting model; resilience; and the culture of the school as a whole. When integrated, the results show that despite the children’s resilience decreasing from time point one to time point two, participants see a value in the goal-setting model and the approaches from the school as a whole. Overall, the present study concludes that participants perceive the goal-setting intervention as beneficial, however further research is needed to establish whether the goal-setting model does indeed support the children’s resilience

    Dundee Discussion Papers in Economics 214:Longitudinal analysis of income-related health inequality

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    This paper considers the characterisation and measurement of income-related health inequality using longitudinal data. The paper elucidates the nature of the Jones and Lopez Nicholas (2004) index of “health-related income mobility” and explains the negative values of the index that have been reported in all the empirical applications to date. The paper further questions the value of their index to health policymakers and proposes an alternative index of “income-related health mobility” that measures whether the pattern of health changes is biased in favour of those with initially high or low incomes. We illustrate our work by investigating mobility in the General Health Questionnaire measure of psychological well-being over the first nine waves of the British Household Panel Survey from 1991 to 1999

    Fast fluctuations of soft X-rays from active regions

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    A selection of short lived small soft X-ray bursts is studied using data from the Hard X-ray Imaging Spectrometer (HXIS), and the results are compared with the data from the Hard X-Ray Burst Spectrometer (HXRBS) with a view to understanding conditions at the onset of flares. Short-lived events provide an opportunity to study the radiation from the primary energy transfer process without confusion from the slowly-varying thermal X-ray emission which characterizes the decay of a large flare. The fast decay of the soft X-rays, only a few tens of seconds, suggests that they occur in the dense chromosphere. The results indicate that the short events may be signatures of several different phenomena, depending on their characteristics. Some events occur in association with reverse-drift type III bursts and simultaneous flaring elsewhere on the Sun, thus suggesting dumping of particles accelerated at a remote site. Some events have hard X-ray bursts and normal type III bursts associated with them, while others have neither. The latter events place strong constraints on the nonthermal electron population present

    Prediction of effects of wing contour modifications on low-speed maximum lift and transonic performance for the EA-6B aircraft

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    Computational predictions of the effects of wing contour modifications on maximum lift and transonic performance were made and verified against low speed and transonic wind tunnel data. This effort was part of a program to improve the maneuvering capability of the EA-6B electronics countermeasures aircraft, which evolved from the A-6 attack aircraft. The predictions were based on results from three computer codes which all include viscous effects: MCARF, a 2-D subsonic panel code; TAWFIVE, a transonic full potential code; and WBPPW, a transonic small disturbance potential flow code. The modifications were previously designed with the aid of these and other codes. The wing modifications consists of contour changes to the leading edge slats and trailing edge flaps and were designed for increased maximum lift with minimum effect on transonic performance. The prediction of the effects of the modifications are presented, with emphasis on verification through comparisons with wind tunnel data from the National Transonic Facility. Attention is focused on increments in low speed maximum lift and increments in transonic lift, pitching moment, and drag resulting from the contour modifications
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