5,501 research outputs found

    Policies, Legislation and Organizations Related to Water in South Africa, with Special Reference to the Olifants River Basin

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    water resources management / river basins / water use / organizations / institutions / mapping / government / political aspects / ethnology / social status / water policy / water law / land tenure / water supply /sanitation / water users / land use / conflict / private sector / nongovernmental organizations / local government / water user associations / catchment areas / monitoring / South Africa / Olifants river basin / Steelpoort river basin

    Development and structuring of the sector of full field organic vegetables in cereal zones

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    The organic vegetable consumption shows a progress that proved to be steady over years. Nevertheless, the offer of organic vegetables remains insufficient. The CasDar program dedicated to organic field vegetables, 2010-2013, aimed at studying the conditions for the development of large-scale production, by technical answers, and by contributing to the organization of the sector. This action, that concerned six regions of the North and the Central France, was led by players of the sector, producers, wholesalers, transformers, distributors. This favored a shared analysis of strengths and weaknesses of the sector. In a second step, the partners developed tools, to meet the identified stakes, that can be used in the zones of production of full field vegetables in cereal regions and available to the actors of the sector

    Hydro-institutional mapping in the Steelpoort River Basin, South Africa

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    River basins / Institutions / Organizations / Private sector / Public sector / Local government / Mapping / Water resource management / Water policy / Legislation / Rural women / Constraints / Groundwater / Surface water / Water quality / Water use / Water users / Dams / Reservoirs / Large-scale systems / Irrigation management / Industrialization / Case studies / Operations / Maintenance / Canals / Conflict / Farmer-agency interactions / Policy / Water supply / Rural development

    Experiments and numerical results on nonlinear vibrations of an impacting hertzian contact. Part 2: random excitation

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    Non linear dynamic behaviour of a normally excited preloaded Hertzian contact (including possible contact losses) is investigated using an experimental test rig. It consists on a double sphere plane contact loaded by the weight of a rigid moving mass. Contact vibrations are generated by a external Gaussian white noise and exhibit vibroimpact responses when the input level is sufficiently high. Spectral contents and statistics of the stationary transmitted normal force are analysed. A single-degree-of-freedom non linear oscillator including loss of contact and Hertzian non linearities is built for modelling the experimental system. Theoretical responses are obtained by using the stationary Fokker-Planck equation and also Monte Carlo simulations. When contact loss occurrence is very occasional, numerical results shown a very good agreement with experimental ones. When vibroimpacts occur, results remain in reasonable agreement with experimental ones, that justify the modelling and the numerical methods described in this paper. The contact loss non linearity appears to be rather strong compared to the Hertzian non linearity. It actually induces a large broadening of the spectral contents of the response. This result is of great importance in noise generation for a lot of systems such as mechanisms using contacts to transform motions and forces (gears, ball-bearings, cam systems, to name a few). It is also of great importance for tribologists preoccupied to prevent surface dammage

    Experiments and numerical results on nonlinear vibrations of an impacting hertzian contact. Part 1: harmonic excitation

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    The purpose of this paper is to investigate experimental and numerical dynamic responses of a preloaded vibro-impacting Hertzian contact under sinusoidal excitation. Dynamic response under random excitation is analysed in the second part of this paper. A test rig is built corresponding to a double sphere-plane contact preloaded by the weight of a moving cylinder. Typical response curves are obtained for several input levels. Time traces and spectral contents are explored. Both amplitude and phase of harmonics of the dynamic response are investigated. Linearised resonance frequency and damping ratio are identified from the almost linear behaviour under very small input amplitude. Increasing the external input amplitude, the softening behaviour induced by Hertzian nonlinear stiffness is clearly demonstrated. Resonance peak is confined in a narrow frequency range. Jump discontinuities are identified for both amplitude and phase responses. Forced response spectrum exhibits several harmonics because of nonlinear Hertzian restoring force. Numerical simulations show a very good agreement with experimental results. For higher input amplitude, system exhibits vibro-impacts. Loss of contact non-linearity clearly dominates the dynamic behaviour of the vibroimpacting contact and leads to a wide frequency range softening resonance. Spectral content of the response is dominated by both the first and the second harmonics. Evolution of the experimental downward jump frequency versus input amplitude allows the identification of the nonlinear damping law during intermittent contact. Simulations of the vibroimpacting Hertzian contact are performed using a shooting method and show a very good agreement with experimental results

    Super-Rough Glassy Phase of the Random Field XY Model in Two Dimensions

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    We study both analytically, using the renormalization group (RG) to two loop order, and numerically, using an exact polynomial algorithm, the disorder-induced glass phase of the two-dimensional XY model with quenched random symmetry-breaking fields and without vortices. In the super-rough glassy phase, i.e. below the critical temperature TcT_c, the disorder and thermally averaged correlation function B(r)B(r) of the phase field θ(x)\theta(x), B(r)=ˉB(r) = \bar{} behaves, for rar \gg a, as B(r)A(τ)ln2(r/a)B(r) \simeq A(\tau) \ln^2 (r/a) where r=rr = |r| and aa is a microscopic length scale. We derive the RG equations up to cubic order in τ=(TcT)/Tc\tau = (T_c-T)/T_c and predict the universal amplitude A(τ)=2τ22τ3+O(τ4){A}(\tau) = 2\tau^2-2\tau^3 + {\cal O}(\tau^4). The universality of A(τ)A(\tau) results from nontrivial cancellations between nonuniversal constants of RG equations. Using an exact polynomial algorithm on an equivalent dimer version of the model we compute A(τ){A}(\tau) numerically and obtain a remarkable agreement with our analytical prediction, up to τ0.5\tau \approx 0.5.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure

    Response of an impacting hertzian contact to an order-2 subharmonic excitation : theory and experiments

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    Response of a normally excited preloaded Hertzian contact is investigated in order to analyze the subharmonic resonance of order 2. The nonlinearity associated with contact losses is included. The method of multiple scales is used to obtain the non-trivial steady state solutions, their stability, and the frequency-response curves. To this end, a third order Taylor series of the elastic Hertzian contact force is introduced over the displacement interval where the system remains in contact. A classical time integration method is also used in conjunction with a shooting method to take into account losses of contact. The theoretical results show that the subharmonic resonance constitutes a precursor of dynamic responses characterised by loss of contact, and consequently, the resonance establishes over a wide frequency range. Finally, experimental validations are also presented in this paper. To this end, a specific test rig is used. It corresponds to a double sphere-plane contact preloaded by the weight of a moving mass. Experimental results show good agreements with theoretical ones

    Superconductivity and charge carrier localization in ultrathin La1.85Sr0.15CuO4/La2CuO4\mathbf{{La_{1.85}Sr_{0.15}CuO_4}/{La_2CuO_4}} bilayers

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    La1.85Sr0.15CuO4\mathrm{La_{1.85}Sr_{0.15}CuO_4}/La2CuO4\mathrm{La_2CuO_4} (LSCO15/LCO) bilayers with a precisely controlled thickness of N unit cells (UCs) of the former and M UCs of the latter ([LSCO15\_N/LCO\_M]) were grown on (001)-oriented {\slao} (SLAO) substrates with pulsed laser deposition (PLD). X-ray diffraction and reciprocal space map (RSM) studies confirmed the epitaxial growth of the bilayers and showed that a [LSCO15\_2/LCO\_2] bilayer is fully strained, whereas a [LSCO15\_2/LCO\_7] bilayer is already partially relaxed. The \textit{in situ} monitoring of the growth with reflection high energy electron diffraction (RHEED) revealed that the gas environment during deposition has a surprisingly strong effect on the growth mode and thus on the amount of disorder in the first UC of LSCO15 (or the first two monolayers of LSCO15 containing one CuO2\mathrm{CuO_2} plane each). For samples grown in pure N2O\mathrm{N_2O} gas (growth type-B), the first LSCO15 UC next to the SLAO substrate is strongly disordered. This disorder is strongly reduced if the growth is performed in a mixture of N2O\mathrm{N_2O} and O2\mathrm{O_2} gas (growth type-A). Electric transport measurements confirmed that the first UC of LSCO15 next to the SLAO substrate is highly resistive and shows no sign of superconductivity for growth type-B, whereas it is superconducting for growth type-A. Furthermore, we found, rather surprisingly, that the conductivity of the LSCO15 UC next to the LCO capping layer strongly depends on the thickness of the latter. A LCO capping layer with 7~UCs leads to a strong localization of the charge carriers in the adjacent LSCO15 UC and suppresses superconductivity. The magneto-transport data suggest a similarity with the case of weakly hole doped LSCO single crystals that are in a so-called {"{cluster-spin-glass state}"
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