89,621 research outputs found
A new look at decomposition of turbulence forcing field and the structural response
Measured cross-spectrum of a turbulence field usually shows some decay in the statistical correlation in addition to convection at a characteristic velocity. It is shown that a decaying turbulence can be decomposed into frozen-pattern components thus permitting a simpler way to calculate the structural response. This procedure also provides a relationship whereby the measured input spectra can be incorporated. The theory is applied to an infinite beam which is backed on one side by a fluid filled cavity and is exposed on the other side by the turbulence excitation. The effect of the free stream velocity is also taken into consideration
Vibroacoustic response of structures and perturbation Reynolds stress near structure-turbulence interface
The interaction between a turbulent flow and certain types of structures which respond to its excitation is investigated. One-dimensional models were used to develop the basic ideas applied to a second model resembling the fuselage construction of an aircraft. In the two-dimensional case a simple membrane, with a small random variation in the membrane tension, was used. A decaying turbulence was constructed by superposing infinitely many components, each of which is convected as a frozen pattern at a different velocity. Structure-turbulence interaction results are presented in terms of the spectral densities of the structural response and the perturbation Reynolds stress in the fluid at the vicinity of the interface
Effective hadronic Lagrangian for charm mesons
An effective hadronic Lagrangian including the charm mesons is introduced to
study their interactions in hadronic matter. Using coupling constants that are
determined either empirically or by the SU(4) symmetry, we have evaluated the
absorption cross sections of and the scattering cross sections of
and by and mesons.Comment: 5 pages, 4 eps figures, presented at Strangeness 2000, Berkeley. Uses
iopart.cl
Dynamic response of some tentative compliant wall structures to convected turbulence fields
Some tentative compliant wall structures designed for possible skin friction drag reduction are investigated. Among the structural models considered is a ribbed membrane backed by polyurethane or PVS plastisol. This model is simplified as a beam placed on a viscoelastic foundation as well as on a set of evenly spaced supports. The total length of the beam may be either finite or infinite, and the supports may be either rigid or elastic. Another structural model considered is a membrane mounted over a series of pretensioned wires, also evenly spaced, and the entire membrane is backed by an air cavity. The forcing pressure field is idealized as a frozen random pattern convected downstream at a characteristic velocity. The results are given in terms of the frequency response functions of the system, the spectral density of the structural motion, and the spectral density of the boundary layer pressure including the effect of structural motion. These results are used in a parametric study of structural configurations capable of generating favorable wave lengths, wave amplitudes, and wave speeds in the structural motion for potential drag reduction
Statistical Modelling of Information Sharing: Community, Membership and Content
File-sharing systems, like many online and traditional information sharing
communities (e.g. newsgroups, BBS, forums, interest clubs), are dynamical
systems in nature. As peers get in and out of the system, the information
content made available by the prevailing membership varies continually in
amount as well as composition, which in turn affects all peers' join/leave
decisions. As a result, the dynamics of membership and information content are
strongly coupled, suggesting interesting issues about growth, sustenance and
stability.
In this paper, we propose to study such communities with a simple statistical
model of an information sharing club. Carrying their private payloads of
information goods as potential supply to the club, peers join or leave on the
basis of whether the information they demand is currently available.
Information goods are chunked and typed, as in a file sharing system where
peers contribute different files, or a forum where messages are grouped by
topics or threads. Peers' demand and supply are then characterized by
statistical distributions over the type domain.
This model reveals interesting critical behaviour with multiple equilibria. A
sharp growth threshold is derived: the club may grow towards a sustainable
equilibrium only if the value of an order parameter is above the threshold, or
shrink to emptiness otherwise. The order parameter is composite and comprises
the peer population size, the level of their contributed supply, the club's
efficiency in information search, the spread of supply and demand over the type
domain, as well as the goodness of match between them.Comment: accepted in International Symposium on Computer Performance,
Modeling, Measurements and Evaluation, Juan-les-Pins, France, October-200
- …