11,193 research outputs found
Wurdi Youang: an Australian Aboriginal stone arrangement with possible solar indications
Wurdi Youang is an egg-shaped Aboriginal stone arrangement in Victoria,
Australia. Here we present a new survey of the site, and show that its major
axis is aligned within a few degrees of east-west. We confirm a previous
hypothesis that it contains alignments to the position on the horizon of the
setting sun at the equinox and the solstices, and show that two independent
sets of indicators are aligned in these directions. We show that these
alignments are unlikely to have arisen by chance, and instead the builders of
this stone arrangement appear to have deliberately aligned the site on
astronomically significant positions.Comment: Accepted by Rock Art Researc
"Bridging the Gap" through Australian Cultural Astronomy
For more than 50,000 years, Indigenous Australians have incorporated
celestial events into their oral traditions and used the motions of celestial
bodies for navigation, time-keeping, food economics, and social structure. In
this paper, we explore the ways in which Aboriginal people made careful
observations of the sky, measurements of celestial bodies, and incorporated
astronomical events into complex oral traditions by searching for written
records of time-keeping using celestial bodies, the use of rising and setting
stars as indicators of special events, recorded observations of variable stars,
the solar cycle, and lunar phases (including ocean tides and eclipses) in oral
tradition, as well as astronomical measurements of the equinox, solstice, and
cardinal points.Comment: Proceedings of IAU Symposium 278, Oxford IX International Symposium
on Archaeoastronomy, International Society for Archaeoastronomy & Astronomy
in Culture (ISAAC), held in Lima, Peru, 5-9 January 2011. 9 pages, 4 images,
1 table (Accepted
Comets in Australian Aboriginal Astronomy
We present 25 accounts of comets from 40 Australian Aboriginal communities,
citing both supernatural perceptions of comets and historical accounts of
bright comets. Historical and ethnographic descriptions include the Great
Comets of 1843, 1861, 1901, 1910, and 1927. We describe the perceptions of
comets in Aboriginal societies and show that they are typically associated with
fear, death, omens, malevolent spirits, and evil magic, consistent with many
cultures around the world. We also provide a list of words for comets in 16
different Aboriginal languages.Comment: Accepted in the "Journal for Astronomical History & Heritage", 17
Pages, 6 Figures, 1 Tabl
Structure of large random hypergraphs
The theme of this paper is the derivation of analytic formulae for certain
large combinatorial structures. The formulae are obtained via fluid limits of
pure jump type Markov processes, established under simple conditions on the
Laplace transforms of their Levy kernels. Furthermore, a related Gaussian
approximation allows us to describe the randomness which may persist in the
limit when certain parameters take critical values. Our method is quite
general, but is applied here to vertex identifiability in random hypergraphs. A
vertex v is identifiable in n steps if there is a hyperedge containing v all of
whose other vertices are identifiable in fewer than n steps. We say that a
hyperedge is identifiable if every one of its vertices is identifiable. Our
analytic formulae describe the asymptotics of the number of identifiable
vertices and the number of identifiable hyperedges for a Poisson random
hypergraph on a set of N vertices, in the limit as N goes to infinity.Comment: Revised version with minor conceptual improvements and additional
discussion. 32 pages, 5 figure
Differential equation approximations for Markov chains
We formulate some simple conditions under which a Markov chain may be
approximated by the solution to a differential equation, with quantifiable
error probabilities. The role of a choice of coordinate functions for the
Markov chain is emphasised. The general theory is illustrated in three
examples: the classical stochastic epidemic, a population process model with
fast and slow variables, and core-finding algorithms for large random
hypergraphs.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/07-PS121 the Probability
Surveys (http://www.i-journals.org/ps/) by the Institute of Mathematical
Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
A high pressure, high temperature combustor and turbine-cooling test facility
A new test facility is being constructed for developing turbine-cooling and combustor technology for future generation aircraft gas turbine engines. Prototype engine hardware will be investigated in this new facility at gas stream conditions up to 2480 K average turbine inlet temperature and 4.14 x 10 to the 6th power n sq m turbine inlet pressure. The facility will have the unique feature of fully automated control and data acquisition through the use of an integrated system of mini-computers and programmable controllers which will result in more effective use of operating time, will limit the number of operators required, and will provide built in self protection safety systems. The facility and the planning and design considerations are described
Comment on ``Method to analyze electromechanical stability of dielectric elastomers" [Appl. Phys. Lett. 91, 061921 (2007)]
The model of Zhao and Suo can be readily generalized to predict the critical
breakdown electric field value of elastomers with arbitrary elastic
strain energy function. An explicit expression for is presented for
elastomeric thin films under biaxial strain and comparisons are made with
experimental data using a two term Ogden rubber elasticity model. Simplified
results for uniaxial and for equi-biaxial stress provide further insight into
the findings of Zhao and Suo.Comment: 2 page
Overlay copy technique to provide high-contrast electron micrographs for automatic metallographic analysis
Overlay copy technique to provide high-contrast electron micrographs for automatically determining quantitative microstructure of multiphase specimen
Orientations of linear stone arrangements in New South Wales
We test the hypothesis that Aboriginal linear stone arrangements in New South
Wales (NSW) are oriented to cardinal directions. We accomplish this by
measuring the azimuths of stone arrangements described in site cards from the
NSW Aboriginal Heritage Information Management System. We then survey a subset
of these sites to test the accuracy of information recorded on the site cards.
We find a preference recorded in the site cards for cardinal orientations among
azimuths. The field surveys show that the site cards are reasonably accurate,
but the surveyors probably did not correct for magnetic declinations. Using
Monte Carlo statistics, we show that these preferred orientations did not occur
by chance and that Aboriginal people deliberately aligned these arrangements to
the approximate cardinal directions. We briefly explore possible reasons for
these preferred orientations and highlight the need for future work.Comment: Australian Archaeology, Volume 75 (December 2012), accepte
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