146,777 research outputs found
Assessment of site investigation and tunnel contract cost
The thesis concerns the research into the development and application of empirical guidelines regarding the capability of site investigation to define uncertainty in ground conditions and hence to minimise contract cost. The data has been abstracted from the documents of contracts on the Northumbrian Water Authority's Tyneside Sewerage Scheme and, to allow cost comparisons to be made, a system of index-linking costs has been used, which removes their time-dependency. A simplified theoretical approach, based on probability theory and decision analysis, has been included to model the situation of decision under uncertainty and comparisons are subsequently made between this approach and the empirical results. Conclusions are reached regarding the possible reduction in risk, financial uncertainty, with increasing site investigation
The Effect of Violations of the Interstate Agreement on Detainers on Subject Matter Jurisdiction
Quantum Hall-like effect on strips due to geometry
In this Letter we present an exact calculation of the effective potential
which appears on a helicoidal strip. This potential leads to the appearance of
lcalized states at a distance \xi_0 from the central axis. The twist \omega of
the strip plays the role of a magnetic field and is responsable for the
appearance of these localized states and an effective transverse electric field
thus this is reminiscent of the quantum Hall effect. At very low temperatures
the twisted configuration of the strip may be stalilized by the electronic
states.Comment: 3 page
Folly to the Greeks: Good Reasons to Give up Reason
A discussion of why a strong doctrine of 'reason' may not be worth sustaining in the face of modern scientific speculation, and the difficulties this poses for scientific rationality, together with comments on the social understanding of religion, and why we might wish to transcend common sense
Effects of inlet treatment location and treatment cavity depth on compressor noise
The ability of acoustic liners to reduce compressor noise inside and in front of an inlet was studied. An axial flow research compressor and a specially designed inlet were used inside an anechoic chamber. Acoustic and performance data were obtained for a range of inlet treatment locations and cavity depths to determine their effects on inlet noise over a range of blade passing frequencies. The greatest noise reductions in front of the inlet were obtained with acoustic treatment located close to the compressor and backed with the deepest cavities tested. Inside the inlet the maximum noise level reductions were obtained in the area of the treatment regardless of treatment location. No appreciable losses in compressor performance were measured
Studies of water storage and other contributions to changes in the rotation of the Earth
The effects were determined of the global redistribution of water mass on various geodetic observables, especially polar motion, and complementary observables such as geodetic satellite positions. The effect of water mass redistribution has been and continues to be less well known and more difficult to observe than effects of air mass distribution, yet the water contribution is potentially significant over a large range of periods. The current understanding is reviewed of the contribution of polar drift, decadal polar motion, Chandler and annual wobbles, and higher frequency polar motion, as determined through the efforts of the funded work within the NASA Crustal Dynamics Project, and in the context of the general literature on the subject. Water mass redistribution is either demonstrably important to the excitation of each of these, or is probably important given a lack of other likely excitation sources
Evaluation of chilling requirements for six Arkansas blackberry cultivars utilizing stem cuttings
Woody perennial plants including blackberries (Rubus subgenus Rubus) require certain amounts of chilling or rest hours below 7ºC during the dormant season for successful bud break the following year. Arkansas-developed blackberry cultivars are being grown in various climates worldwide and all cultivars need chilling requirement estimates for accurate recommendations of adaptation. Determining chilling requirement using stem cuttings collected from field-grown plants rather than whole plants is a desirable system. We conducted a study to evaluate both artificial and field chilling of six cultivars. For the artificial-chilling study, 12- node stem cuttings were collected 2 days after the first killing frost. These were then placed in a moist medium in a walk-in cooler at 3ºC. At 100 hour chilling intervals, five cuttings of each cultivar were placed under an intermittent mist system. For the field-chilling study, a biophenometer was placed in the field to measure chill, and ten 12-node stem cuttings of each cultivar were collected at 100-hour intervals of chilling up to 1000 hours below 7ºC and placed under mist. For both studies the mist bench was located in a heated greenhouse (min. temperature of 15ºC), and cuttings were placed according to a completely random design. Budbreak was recorded weekly. Studies were analyzed separately by SAS. Results for Study One, artificial-chilling, were inconclusive due to a lack of clear differentiation among the cultivars and chilling intervals. Study Two, using field-chilling, showed a significant chilling interval x cultivar interaction. ‘Arapaho’ appeared to have a chilling requirement of 400 to 500 hours, ‘Kiowa’ 200 hours, ’Shawnee’ 400 to 500 hours, and ‘Chickasaw’ possibly 600 to 700 hours. The cultivars Choctaw and Apache did not provide clear chilling interval differentiation in the study. Our results indicate that the use of stem cuttings receiving field chilling to evaluate chilling requirement of blackberry cultivars has merit and can be a successful method in this research area
Determination of Chilling Requirement of Arkansas Thornless Blackberry Cultivars
Little research has been done to determine the chilling requirement for blackberry cultivars. However, field observations from areas where fewer hours of chilling occur indicate that ‘Navaho’ requires more hours of chilling than does ‘Arapaho’. The objective of our study was to determine a method for measuring the chilling requirement using whole plants of two blackberry cultivars, Arapaho and Navaho. One-year old, bare-root plants were field-dug on 26 October 1999 and placed in a cold chamber at 3ºC. Ten single-plant replications of each cultivar were removed at 100-hour intervals up to 1000 hours. The plants were potted and placed in a greenhouse (daily minimum temperature 15ºC), and plants were arranged on benches in a completely randomized design. Budbreak was recorded on a weekly basis. Data for budbreak were analyzed as a two-factor factorial (2 cultivars and 10 chilling treatments) by SAS and means were separated by least significant difference (P = 0.05). Data indicated that the chilling requirement for Arapaho is between 400 and 500 hours. For Navaho, the data indicated the chilling requirement was between 800 and 900 hours. These data support previous observations and indicate that the method used was successful in determining the chilling requirement for blackberries
Electrical self-aligning connector
A self-aligning electrical connector device includes a receptacle component having a conically contoured interior and a plug component having a correspondingly contoured conical body receivable in the receptacle component. The plug component has a number of spaced conductive ring elements with a mating face and the receptacle component includes corresponding spaced conductive ring elements providing mating interface with the mating face of the ring elements of the plug component when connected to it. Each ring element of the receptacle component has several segmented portions which defect downwardly when the plug component is inserted. A biasing force is asserted against the face of the ring elements of the plug component providing positive electrical contact and connection between the ring elements of the components
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