4,270 research outputs found
Seismic Analysis Capability in NASTRAN
Seismic analysis is a technique which pertains to loading described in terms of boundary accelerations. Earthquake shocks to buildings is the type of excitation which usually comes to mind when one hears the word seismic, but this technique also applied to a broad class of acceleration excitations which are applied at the base of a structure such as vibration shaker testing or shocks to machinery foundations. Four different solution paths are available in NASTRAN for seismic analysis. They are: Direct Seismic Frequency Response, Direct Seismic Transient Response, Modal Seismic Frequency Response, and Modal Seismic Transient Response. This capability, at present, is invoked not as separate rigid formats, but as pre-packaged ALTER packets to existing RIGID Formats 8, 9, 11, and 12. These ALTER packets are included with the delivery of the NASTRAN program and are stored on the computer as a library of callable utilities. The user calls one of these utilities and merges it into the Executive Control Section of the data deck to perform any of the four options are invoked by setting parameter values in the bulk data
The Use of PRS in Introductory Microeconomics: Some Evidence on Performance and Attendance
This paper uses a sample of 425 students from 4 large sections of Introductory Microeconomics during the period 2005 – 2007 to examine the impact of using the Personal Response System (PRS or Clickers) on class attendance and exam performance. The evidence suggests that the use of PRS has led to improved attendance. The exam scores are similar to classes that used online quizzes instead of the PRS. A survey of student attitudes towards the PRS indicates that the use of PRS helps with student learning and reinforcing important concepts. Based on the results of this study the authors believe that the PRS is a useful tool for all instructors, particularly those faced with large sections.
Statistical correlation analysis for comparing vibration data from test and analysis
A theory was developed to compare vibration modes obtained by NASTRAN analysis with those obtained experimentally. Because many more analytical modes can be obtained than experimental modes, the analytical set was treated as expansion functions for putting both sources in comparative form. The dimensional symmetry was developed for three general cases: nonsymmetric whole model compared with a nonsymmetric whole structural test, symmetric analytical portion compared with a symmetric experimental portion, and analytical symmetric portion with a whole experimental test. The theory was coded and a statistical correlation program was installed as a utility. The theory is established with small classical structures
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Predicting Domestic Homicides and Serious Violence in Dorset: A Replication of Thornton's Thames Valley Analysis
Research Question: What facts known to police, if any, could have predicted the 107 domestic and family murders and near-murders in Dorset (UK) police area over a recent seven-year period, using methods identical to Thornton’s (2011, 2017)?
Data: All 107 cases of domestic murders, manslaughter, attempted murder or grievous bodily harm with intent in Dorset between April 2009 and March 2015, plus a matched case-control sample of 214 arrestees for less-deadly violent offences.
Methods: Replicating Thornton’s Thames Valley analysis, two methods were used: 1) calculating errors in predictions from previous risk assessments using the UK’s DASH (Domestic Abuse, Stalking and Harassment) risk assessment protocol, and 2) making a case-control comparisons of Thornton’s risk factors between the deadly domestic violence cases in Dorset to a Dorset sample of victims and offenders in all violence cases during the same time period.
Findings: False negative risk assessments were found in 67% of the deadly violence cases with prior police contact (45 of 67) not classified by DASH as “high risk.“ The false positives in the same time period totalled 12,279 cases of no serious harm among 12,301 cases receiving high-risk assessments, for a 99% false positive rate.
Possible alternative predictors were found in differences between deadly offenders and controls, both male and female, although it is not known whether these variables were added to the records before or after the deadly violence event. Male offenders in deadly violence cases were 120% more likely to have their police records note a self-harm warning, 20% more likely to have a suicide warning, yet only half as likely to have a mental health warning as control case males. Female offenders in deadly violence cases were 355% more likely to have a weapons warning on file, 244% more likely to have a mental health warning, and 146% more likely to have a drugs warning than female control case offenders.
Conclusions: The current risk assessment tool (DASH) failed to predict the majority of deadly domestic violence cases over six years in Dorset. Other factors could do better, but more research is required before highly accurate forecasting tools can be applied to help save the lives of more domestic abuse victims.
Key Words: Domestic homicide, prediction, DASH, case control, suicide threats, self-harm
Large-wavelength instabilities in free-surface Hartmann flow at low magnetic Prandtl numbers
We study the linear stability of the flow of a viscous electrically
conducting capillary fluid on a planar fixed plate in the presence of gravity
and a uniform magnetic field. We first confirm that the Squire transformation
for MHD is compatible with the stress and insulating boundary conditions at the
free surface, but argue that unless the flow is driven at fixed Galilei and
capillary numbers, the critical mode is not necessarily two-dimensional. We
then investigate numerically how a flow-normal magnetic field, and the
associated Hartmann steady state, affect the soft and hard instability modes of
free surface flow, working in the low magnetic Prandtl number regime of
laboratory fluids. Because it is a critical layer instability, the hard mode is
found to exhibit similar behaviour to the even unstable mode in channel
Hartmann flow, in terms of both the weak influence of Pm on its neutral
stability curve, and the dependence of its critical Reynolds number Re_c on the
Hartmann number Ha. In contrast, the structure of the soft mode's growth rate
contours in the (Re, alpha) plane, where alpha is the wavenumber, differs
markedly between problems with small, but nonzero, Pm, and their counterparts
in the inductionless limit. As derived from large wavelength approximations,
and confirmed numerically, the soft mode's critical Reynolds number grows
exponentially with Ha in inductionless problems. However, when Pm is nonzero
the Lorentz force originating from the steady state current leads to a
modification of Re_c(Ha) to either a sublinearly increasing, or decreasing
function of Ha, respectively for problems with insulating and conducting walls.
In the former, we also observe pairs of Alfven waves, the upstream propagating
wave undergoing an instability at large Alfven numbers.Comment: 58 pages, 16 figure
Statistical correlation of structural mode shapes from test measurements and NASTRAN analytical values
The software and procedures of a system of programs used to generate a report of the statistical correlation between NASTRAN modal analysis results and physical tests results from modal surveys are described. Topics discussed include: a mathematical description of statistical correlation, a user's guide for generating a statistical correlation report, a programmer's guide describing the organization and functions of individual programs leading to a statistical correlation report, and a set of examples including complete listings of programs, and input and output data
Any-order propagation of the nonlinear Schroedinger equation
We derive an exact propagation scheme for nonlinear Schroedinger equations.
This scheme is entirely analogous to the propagation of linear Schroedinger
equations. We accomplish this by defining a special operator whose algebraic
properties ensure the correct propagation. As applications, we provide a simple
proof of a recent conjecture regarding higher-order integrators for the
Gross-Pitaevskii equation, extend it to multi-component equations, and to a new
class of integrators.Comment: 10 pages, no figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
The Use of PRS in Introductory Microeconomics: Some Evidence on Performance and Attendance
This paper uses a sample of 425 students from 4 large sections of Introductory Microeconomics during the period 2005 – 2007 to examine the impact of using the Personal Response System (PRS or Clickers) on class attendance and exam performance. The evidence suggests that the use of PRS has led to improved attendance. The exam scores are similar to classes that used online quizzes instead of the PRS. A survey of student attitudes towards the PRS indicates that the use of PRS helps with student learning and reinforcing important concepts. Based on the results of this study the authors believe that the PRS is a useful tool for all instructors, particularly those faced with large sections
The measurement of choroidal blood flow using krypton-85
Chapter 1 contains a brief description of the anatomy of the eye followed by a review of the methods used previously to measure ocular blood flow. The theory of the Inert gas clearance method for measuring blood flow in homogeneously perfused tissues is discussed, in Chapter 2. A series of experiments designed to measure control values of choroidal blood flow in rabbits using krypton-85 is described in Chapter 5. The clearance of krypton from rabbit ocular tissue is complex. An explanation of the complex nature of the clearance curve was obtained by studying the diffusion of krypton in ocular tissue. Initially a diffusion model whose structure was based on the anatomy of the rabbit eye was developed (Chapter 4). Predicted clearance curves, obtained from this model, indicated that the half life of the initial exponential decline of the clearance curve was a measure of choroidal blood flow and that the subsequent decline in radioactivity was dependent on the diffusion of krypton in ocular tissue, A model based on the anatomy of the baboon eye was also developed. In Chapter 6 the results of measurements of the linear absorption coefficient, solubilities and diffusion coefficients of krypton in the different ocular tissues are presented. These are necessary for the numerical evaluation of the model. In Chapter 7 method has been applied to examine the effect of increased arterial carbon dioxide tension on the choroidal blood flow in rabbits and baboons. The response of the choroidal blood flow in rabbits was variable. In the baboon there was a 3.5% increase in choroidal blood flew per mmHg rise in PaCO2. Chapter 8 is a general discussion of the work presented in this thesis and its value
A Parameterized Centrality Metric for Network Analysis
A variety of metrics have been proposed to measure the relative importance of
nodes in a network. One of these, alpha-centrality [Bonacich, 2001], measures
the number of attenuated paths that exist between nodes. We introduce a
normalized version of this metric and use it to study network structure,
specifically, to rank nodes and find community structure of the network.
Specifically, we extend the modularity-maximization method [Newman and Girvan,
2004] for community detection to use this metric as the measure of node
connectivity. Normalized alpha-centrality is a powerful tool for network
analysis, since it contains a tunable parameter that sets the length scale of
interactions. By studying how rankings and discovered communities change when
this parameter is varied allows us to identify locally and globally important
nodes and structures. We apply the proposed method to several benchmark
networks and show that it leads to better insight into network structure than
alternative methods.Comment: 11 pages, submitted to Physical Review
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