179,205 research outputs found

    Travelling-wave similarity solutions for an unsteady shear-stress-driven dry patch in a flowing film

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    We investigate unsteady flow of a thin film of Newtonian fluid around a symmetric slender dry patch moving with constant velocity on an inclined planar substrate, the flow being driven by a prescribed constant shear stress at the free surface of the film (which would be of uniform thickness in the absence of the dry patch). We obtain a novel unsteady travelling-wave similarity solution which predicts that the dry patch has a parabolic shape and that the film thickness increases monotonically away from the dry patch

    Rethinking the Patch Test for Phase Measuring Bathymetric Sonars

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    While conducting hydrographic survey operations in the Florida Keys, NOAA Ship Thomas Jefferson served as a test platform for the initial operational implementation of an L-3 Klein HydroChart 5000 Swath Bathymetry Sonar System1 , a hull-mounted phase measuring bathymetric sonar (PMBS). During the project it became apparent that the traditional patch test typically utilized for multibeam echosounder (MBES) systems was poorly suited to the HydroChart – and perhaps other PMBS systems as well. These systems have several inherent characteristics that make it difficult to isolate and subsequently solve for biases under the traditional patch test paradigm: presence of a nadir gap, wide swaths (typically greater than 6 times water depth), and relatively poor object-detection capability in the outer swath. After “rethinking” the patch test to account for these characteristics, the authors propose a new patch test paradigm that is better suited to the HydroChart and other PMBS systems

    Seasonal dependency of polar cap patches in the high-latitude nightside ionosphere

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    Observations and a computer simulation were used to investigate the seasonal dependency of the occurrence of polar cap patches in the high-latitude nightside ionosphere together with the relative importance of the driving processes. Measurements were conducted above northern Scandinavia around solar maximum (1999-2001) under conditions predicted to be favourable for observing patches with the EISCAT Svalbard Radar (ESR). The requirements were that the ESR was poleward of the convection reversal boundary, in antisunward cross polar cap flow and that IMF Bz was predominantly negative. The high latitude convection pattern was inferred from the Super Dual Auroral Radar Network (SuperDARN) and the IMF was taken from the Advanced Composition Explorer (ACE) spacecraft. In each study the patch-to-background ratio was calculated and, in most of the winter cases, this ratio was greater than two consistent with a polar cap patch. In summer clear electron density enhancements were seen in the nightside ionosphere, but the patch-to-background ratio was less than two. While these enhancements could not formally be called patches, it was clear that the high-latitude convection pattern was responsible for electron density enhancements. Using a computer simulation the relative importance of the physical processes driving the variation in the patch-to-background ratio was investigated. The dominant factor was changes in the thermospheric composition influencing plasma production and recombination rates

    Patch me if you can

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    Considers the circumstances in which repair works may be more appropriate than replacement where a landlord is attempting to claim under a repair covenant. Examines case law on which method is more appropriate and on the standard of remedial work to be undertaken. Reflects on the situation where performance of remedial works would be futile. Comments on the Technology and Construction Court ruling in Carmel Southend Ltd v Strachan & Henshaw Ltd on whether a landlord had been correct to carry out overcladding works to a roof where surveyors had agreed that patch repairs would be adequate

    Gentrifier by John Joe Schlichtman, Jason Patch, and Marc Lamont Hill

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    Review of John Joe Schlichtman, Jason Patch, and Marc Lamont Hill\u27s Gentrifier

    Liturgy at Ground Level

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    (Excerpt) On the back yard of our parish lot is a patch of ground I drive by every day. It is the place where we have a bonfire of trees and greens on the Twelfth Night of Christmas. Each Ash Wednesday, if it is not covered by snow, it is a blackened smudge on the face of the lawn. By Easter, however, that patch seems the most alive. For there the green blade rises, unhindered by dead overgrowth, looking even greener against the charred earth

    Patch

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    A novel technique to improve gain in transparent UWB antennas

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    A novel technique to improve the performance of AgHT-8 transparent polymer antennas is proposed in this paper. A spit-ring resonator is introduced on the radiating patch to enhance gain. The resonator basically concentrates the radiating energy to the central area of the patch thus improving gain. The designed antenna demonstrates good gain while maintaining the original transparency of the material. Such an antenna inscribed on the commercially available AgHT-8 sun shielding film material makes it a viable option for wireless applications like in-house base stations and applications requiring fast data rate transfers which can be mounted on windows and glass panels. © 2011 IEEE.Solutia Inc., St. Louis, Missouri, US
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