11,380 research outputs found
Model studies of Helmholtz resonances in rooms with windows and doorways
Numerical analysis of Helmholtz resonator system established between windows and open doors when subjected to sonic boom impulsive load
Parallel execution of horn claus programs
Imperial Users onl
Space station experiment definition: Advanced power system test bed
A conceptual design for an advanced photovoltaic power system test bed was provided and the requirements for advanced photovoltaic power system experiments better defined. Results of this study will be used in the design efforts conducted in phase B and phase C/D of the space station program so that the test bed capabilities will be responsive to user needs. Critical PV and energy storage technologies were identified and inputs were received from the idustry (government and commercial, U.S. and international) which identified experimental requirements. These inputs were used to develop a number of different conceptual designs. Pros and cons of each were discussed and a strawman candidate identified. A preliminary evolutionary plan, which included necessary precursor activities, was established and cost estimates presented which would allow for a successful implementation to the space station in the 1994 time frame
On the changing shape of the Australian mortality curve
Over the course of the twentieth century, mortality rates in Australia have shown substantial improvements at all ages. The improvements which have taken place at different ages, however, have not occurred at a uniform pace, and as a result, the shapes of the national mortality curves have varied over time. The most noticeable change for males has been the development of an ‘accident hump’ in the late teens and early twenties mid-century, the growth of this ‘hump’ in the 1960s and 1970s, and its sudden disappearance, or transformation into a ‘bulge’, in the late 1980s. This paper examines the reasons for the disappearance of the male ‘accident hump’, and the changes in mortality by cause which have occurred over the decade to 1992 and influenced the level and shape of the whole mortality curve both for males and for females. Extrapolating the trends observed for the various cause-specific mortality rates obtains projected life tables for Australian males and females in the year 2002
Recent developments in the application of risk analysis to waste technologies.
The European waste sector is undergoing a period of unprecedented change driven
by business consolidation, new legislation and heightened public and government
scrutiny. One feature is the transition of the sector towards a process industry
with increased pre-treatment of wastes prior to the disposal of residues and the
co-location of technologies at single sites, often also for resource recovery
and residuals management. Waste technologies such as in-vessel composting, the
thermal treatment of clinical waste, the stabilisation of hazardous wastes,
biomass gasification, sludge combustion and the use of wastes as fuel, present
operators and regulators with new challenges as to their safe and
environmentally responsible operation. A second feature of recent change is an
increased regulatory emphasis on public and ecosystem health and the need for
assessments of risk to and from waste installations. Public confidence in waste
management, secured in part through enforcement of the planning and permitting
regimes and sound operational performance, is central to establishing the
infrastructure of new waste technologies. Well-informed risk management plays a
critical role. We discuss recent developments in risk analysis within the sector
and the future needs of risk analysis that are required to respond to the new
waste and resource management agenda
Using think-aloud interviews to characterize model-based reasoning in electronics for a laboratory course assessment
Models of physical systems are used to explain and predict experimental
results and observations. The Modeling Framework for Experimental Physics
describes the process by which physicists revise their models to account for
the newly acquired observations, or change their apparatus to better represent
their models when they encounter discrepancies between actual and expected
behavior of a system. While modeling is a nationally recognized learning
outcome for undergraduate physics lab courses, no assessments of students'
model-based reasoning exist for upper-division labs. As part of a larger effort
to create two assessments of students' modeling abilities, we used the Modeling
Framework to develop and code think-aloud problem-solving activities centered
on investigating an inverting amplifier circuit. This study is the second phase
of a multiphase assessment instrument development process. Here, we focus on
characterizing the range of modeling pathways students employ while
interpreting the output signal of a circuit functioning far outside its
recommended operation range. We end by discussing four outcomes of this work:
(1) Students engaged in all modeling subtasks, and they spent the most time
making measurements, making comparisons, and enacting revisions; (2) Each
subtask occurred in close temporal proximity to all over subtasks; (3)
Sometimes, students propose causes that do not follow logically from observed
discrepancies; (4) Similarly, students often rely on their experiential
knowledge and enact revisions that do not follow logically from articulated
proposed causes.Comment: 18 pages, 5 figure
Testing for sexually transmitted infections among students: a discrete choice experiment of service preferences
Objectives To assess preferences among students for sexually transmitted infection (STI) testing services, with a view to establishing strength of preference for different service attributes.
Design Online discrete choice experiment (DCE) questionnaire.
Setting South East of England.
Participants A convenience sample of 233 students from two universities.
Outcomes Adjusted ORs in relation to service characteristics.
Results The study yielded 233 responses. Respondents’ ages ranged from 16 to 34 years with a mean age of 22 years. Among this sample, the respondents demonstrated strong preferences for a testing service which provided tests for all STIs including syphilis, herpes and HIV (OR 4.1; 95% CI 3.36 to 4.90) and centres staffed by a doctor or nurse with specialist knowledge of STIs (OR 2.1; 95% CI 1.78 to 2.37). Receiving all test results, whether positive or negative, was also significantly preferable to not being notified when tests were all negative (‘no news is good news’; OR 1.3; 95% CI 1.16 to 1.5). The length of time waiting for an appointment and the method by which results are received were not significant service characteristics in terms of preferences. Patient level characteristics such as age, sex and previous testing experience did not predict the likelihood of testing.
Conclusions This study demonstrates that of the examined attributes, university students expressed the strongest preference for a comprehensive testing service. The next strongest preferences were for being tested by specialist STI staff and receiving negative as well as positive test results. However, it remains unclear how strong these preferences are in relation to characteristics which were not part of the study design and whether or not they are cost-effective
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