3,076 research outputs found
Instability thresholds for flexible rotors in hydrodynamic bearings
Two types of fixed pad hydrodynamic bearings (multilobe and pressure dam) were considered. Optimum and nonoptimum geometric configurations were tested. The optimum geometric configurations were determined by using a theoretical analysis and then the bearings were constructed for a flexible rotor test rig. It was found that optimizing bearings using this technique produces a 100% or greater increase in rotor stability. It is shown that this increase in rotor stability is carried out in the absence of certain types of instability mechanisms such as aerodynamic crosscoupling. However, the increase in rotor stability should greatly improve rotating machinery performance in the presence of such forces as well
Origin Gaps and the Eternal Sunshine of the Second-Order Pendulum
The rich experiences of an intentional, goal-oriented life emerge, in an
unpredictable fashion, from the basic laws of physics. Here I argue that this
unpredictability is no mirage: there are true gaps between life and non-life,
mind and mindlessness, and even between functional societies and groups of
Hobbesian individuals. These gaps, I suggest, emerge from the mathematics of
self-reference, and the logical barriers to prediction that self-referring
systems present. Still, a mathematical truth does not imply a physical one: the
universe need not have made self-reference possible. It did, and the question
then is how. In the second half of this essay, I show how a basic move in
physics, known as renormalization, transforms the "forgetful" second-order
equations of fundamental physics into a rich, self-referential world that makes
possible the major transitions we care so much about. While the universe runs
in assembly code, the coarse-grained version runs in LISP, and it is from that
the world of aim and intention grows.Comment: FQXI Prize Essay 2017. 18 pages, including afterword on
Ostrogradsky's Theorem and an exchange with John Bova, Dresden Craig, and
Paul Livingsto
Engineering robust polar chiral clathrate crystals
This is the author's accepted manuscript. The final published article is available from the link below. Copyright @ Royal Society of Chemistry 2013.The R-(+)-enantiomeric form of Dianin's compound and the S-(+)-enantiomeric form of its direct thiachroman analogue both obtained chromatographically employing a cellulose tris(3,5-dimethylphenylcarbamate) column, are shown to undergo supramolecular assembly to form a polar clathrate lattice which is stable even in the absence of a consolidating guest component
Dielectric constants of bulk ferroelectric PZTmeasured by terahertz time-domain spectroscopy
The complex permittivity of bulk ceramic ferroelectric of nominal composition PbZr0.4Ti0.6O3 was measured in the range 0.2–2 THz using transmission time-domain spectroscopy. The results indicate strong absorption and dispersion in this frequency range as often seen in highly disordered and polar materials. The results are compared to equivalent thin film data in the literature, and significant differences in the real and imaginary permittivity suggest that substrate clamping and degree of polarisation of the ferroelectric thin film materials affect dielectric properties even at these high frequencies
Limiting the Weingarten Right in the Nonunion Setting: The Implications of Sears, Roebuck and Co.
Limiting the Weingarten Right in the Nonunion Setting: The Implications of Sears, Roebuck and Co.
Why Are Male Social Relationships Complex in the Doubtful Sound Bottlenose Dolphin Population?
Copyright 2008 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
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