24,620 research outputs found
Three-Dimensional Navier-Stokes Simulation of Space Shuttle Main Propulsion 17-inch Disconnect Valves
A steady incompressible three-dimensional viscous flow analysis has been conducted for the Space Shuttle external tank/orbiter propellant feed line disconnect flapper valves with upstream elbows. The Navier-Stokes code, INS3D, is modified to handle interior obstacles and a simple turbulence model. The flow solver is tested for stability and convergence in the presence of interior flappers. An under-relaxation scheme has been incorporated to improve the solution stability. Important flow characteristics such as secondary flows, recirculation, vortex and wake regions, and separated flows are observed. Computed values for forces, moments, and pressure drop are in satisfactory agreement with water flow test data covering a maximum tube Reynolds number of 3.5 million. The predicted hydrodynamical stability of the flappers correlates well with the measurements
Linear response to leadership, effective temperature and decision making in flocks
Large collections of autonomously moving agents, such as animals or
micro-organisms, are able to 'flock' coherently in space even in the absence of
a central control mechanism. While the direction of the flock resulting from
this critical behavior is random, this can be controlled by a small subset of
informed individuals acting as leaders of the group. In this article we use the
Vicsek model to investigate how flocks respond to leadership and make
decisions. Using a combination of numerical simulations and continuous modeling
we demonstrate that flocks display a linear response to leadership that can be
cast in the framework of the fluctuation-dissipation theorem, identifying an
'effective temperature' reflecting how promptly the flock reacts to the
initiative of the leaders. The linear response to leadership also holds in the
presence of two groups of informed individuals with competing interests,
indicating that the flock's behavioral decision is determined by both the
number of leaders and their degree of influence.Comment: 8 pages (incl. supplementary information), 8 figures, Supplementary
movies can be found at
http://wwwhome.lorentz.leidenuniv.nl/~giomi/sup_mat/20151108
How valuable are the tropical forests? Demonstrating and capturing economic value as a means of addressing the causes of deforestation
Scalable Breadth-First Search on a GPU Cluster
On a GPU cluster, the ratio of high computing power to communication
bandwidth makes scaling breadth-first search (BFS) on a scale-free graph
extremely challenging. By separating high and low out-degree vertices, we
present an implementation with scalable computation and a model for scalable
communication for BFS and direction-optimized BFS. Our communication model uses
global reduction for high-degree vertices, and point-to-point transmission for
low-degree vertices. Leveraging the characteristics of degree separation, we
reduce the graph size to one third of the conventional edge list
representation. With several other optimizations, we observe linear weak
scaling as we increase the number of GPUs, and achieve 259.8 GTEPS on a
scale-33 Graph500 RMAT graph with 124 GPUs on the latest CORAL early access
system.Comment: 12 pages, 13 figures. To appear at IPDPS 201
The impact of the graduated driver licence scheme on road traffic accident youth mortality in New Zealand
This paper examines the impact of the introduction of New Zealand’s Graduated Driving Licence System (GDLS) on patterns of road traffic accident mortality amongst the young driving population from 1980 to 2001. Results show that the mortality rate has declined, but that rates in New Zealand are three times greater than in England and Wales and twice those of Scotland. When the data is adjusted to take account of differences in the minimum driving age, rates remain consistently higher in New Zealand and the proportional reduction in road traffic accident youth mortality is not significantly better than that experienced in Great Britain
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