2,720 research outputs found
Advanced propeller aerodynamic analysis
The analytical approaches as well as the capabilities of three advanced analyses for predicting propeller aerodynamic performance are presented. It is shown that two of these analyses use a lifting line representation for the propeller blades, and the third uses a lifting surface representation
Deep Architectures and Ensembles for Semantic Video Classification
This work addresses the problem of accurate semantic labelling of short
videos. To this end, a multitude of different deep nets, ranging from
traditional recurrent neural networks (LSTM, GRU), temporal agnostic networks
(FV,VLAD,BoW), fully connected neural networks mid-stage AV fusion and others.
Additionally, we also propose a residual architecture-based DNN for video
classification, with state-of-the art classification performance at
significantly reduced complexity. Furthermore, we propose four new approaches
to diversity-driven multi-net ensembling, one based on fast correlation measure
and three incorporating a DNN-based combiner. We show that significant
performance gains can be achieved by ensembling diverse nets and we investigate
factors contributing to high diversity. Based on the extensive YouTube8M
dataset, we provide an in-depth evaluation and analysis of their behaviour. We
show that the performance of the ensemble is state-of-the-art achieving the
highest accuracy on the YouTube-8M Kaggle test data. The performance of the
ensemble of classifiers was also evaluated on the HMDB51 and UCF101 datasets,
and show that the resulting method achieves comparable accuracy with
state-of-the-art methods using similar input features
P\'olya-Vinogradov and the least quadratic nonresidue
It is well-known that cancellation in short character sums (e.g. Burgess'
estimates) yields bounds on the least quadratic nonresidue. Scant progress has
been made on short character sums since Burgess' work, so it is desirable to
find a new approach to nonresidues. The goal of this note is to demonstrate a
new line of attack via long character sums, a currently active area of
research. Among other results, we demonstrate that improving the constant in
the P\'{o}lya-Vinogradov inequality would lead to significant progress on
nonresidues. Moreover, conditionally on a conjecture on long character sums, we
show that the least nonresidue for any odd primitive character (mod ) is
bounded by .Comment: 9 pages; a few small corrections from the previous versio
Randomness in topological models
p. 914-925There are two aspects of randomness in topological models. In the first one, topological
idealization of random patterns found in the Nature can be regarded as planar
representations of three-dimensional lattices and thus reconstructed in the space. Another aspect of randomness is related to graphs in which some properties are determined in a random way. For example, combinatorial properties of graphs: number of vertices, number of edges, and connections between them can be regarded as events in the defined probability space. Random-graph theory deals with a question: at what connection probability a particular property reveals. Combination of probabilistic description of planar graphs and their spatial reconstruction creates new opportunities in structural form-finding, especially in the inceptive, the most creative, stage.Tarczewski, R.; Bober, W. (2010). Randomness in topological models. Editorial Universitat Politècnica de València. http://hdl.handle.net/10251/695
Summary of advanced methods for predicting high speed propeller performance
Three advanced analyses for predicting aircraft propeller performance at high subsonic speeds are described. Two of these analyses use a lifting line representation for the propeller blades and vortex filaments for the blade wakes but differ in the details of the solution. The third analysis is a finite difference solution of the unsteady, three dimensional Euler equations for the flow between adjacent blades. Analysis results are compared to data for a high speed propeller having eight swept blades integrally designed with the spinner and nacelle
Use of potential flow theory to evaluate subsonic inlet data from a simulator-powered nacelle at cruise conditions
Incompressible potential flow theory corrected for compressibility effects, using the Lieblein-Stockman compressibility correction, was used to predict surface and flow field static pressures for a subsonic inlet at cruise conditions. The calculated internal and external surface static pressures were in good agreement with data at most conditions. The analysis was used to determine the capture stream-tube location and static-pressure distribution. Additive drag coefficients obtained from these results were consistently higher than those obtained using one-dimensional compressible flow theory. Increasing the distance between the inlet and boattail increased the cowl drag force. The effect of the boundary layer on internal and external surface static-pressure distributions was small at the design cruise condition. The analytical results may be used as an aid to data reduction and for predicting inlet mass flow, stagnation point location, and inlet additive drag
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