Author(s):  
F. Riva ◽  
T. Fracasso ◽  
A. Guerra ◽  
P. Genet

AbstractIn shooting crimes, ballistics tests are often recommended in order to reproduce the wound characteristics of the involved persons. For this purpose, several “simulants” can be used. However, despite the efforts in the research of “surrogates” in the field of forensic ballistic, the development of synthetic models needs still to be improved through a validation process based on specific real caseworks. This study has been triggered by the findings observed during the autopsy performed on two victims killed in the same shooting incident, with similar wounding characteristics; namely two retained head shots with ricochet against the interior wall of the skull; both projectiles have been recovered during the autopsies after migration in the brain parenchyma. The thickness of the different tissues and structures along the bullets trajectories as well as the incident angles between the bullets paths and the skull walls have been measured and reproduced during the assemblage of the synthetic head models. Two different types of models (“open shape” and “spherical”) have been assembled using leather, polyurethane and gelatine to simulate respectively skin, bone and soft tissues. Six shots have been performed in total. The results of the models have been compared to the findings of post-mortem computed tomography (PMCT) and the autopsy findings.Out of the six shots, two perforated the models and four were retained. When the projectile was retained, the use of both models allowed reproducing the wounds characteristics observed on both victims in terms of penetration and ricochet behaviour. However, the projectiles recovered from the models showed less deformation than the bullets collected during the autopsies. The “open shape” model allowed a better controlling on the shooting parameters than the “spherical” model. Finally, the difference in bullet deformation could be caused by the choice of the bone simulant, which might under-represent either the strength or the density of the human bone. In our opinion, it would be worth to develop a new, more representative material for ballistic which simulates the human bone.


1964 ◽  
Vol 16 (3) ◽  
pp. 268-271
Author(s):  
N. S. Sutherland

In a previous experiment on the visual discrimination of open and closed shapes by rats (Sutherland, Carr, and Mackintosh, 1962) it was found that (1) at the beginning of training the animals exhibited a strong preference for the more open shape; (2) shapes differing in their horizontal projections only were more discriminable than shapes differing in their vertical projections only. The present experiment is a replication of the earlier one using different shapes and different apparatus. The first result was fully confirmed and some confirmation was obtained for the second, although late in training the differences between groups trained with shapes differing on opposite projections were not statistically significant.


2016 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 40-50 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. A. L. Traversari ◽  
C. Bottenheft ◽  
R. Louman ◽  
S. P. M. van Heumen ◽  
J. Böggemann

Background: Operating lamps are often seen as the most disruptive factors within the protective area in the operating theater (OT). The effect of the operation lamps (with different shapes) should be demonstrated in an OT by trial, since research on the effects of the lamps is still limited. Objectives: The main aim of this study was to determine the effects of a skirt, different lamps, and the position of the lamp on the protected area. Methods: The concentration of airborne particles was measured under different circumstances, in order to determine the size and quality of the protected area. This entrainment/segregation test is based on the deliberate and controlled emission of particles outside the zone that is protected. Findings and Conclusions: The degree of protection (DP) at the center of the protected area was higher for the case with the skirt. This skirt stimulates more down flow and prevents the early entry of particles into the protected area. It can also be concluded that Lamp Y, due to its open shape, has the most positive effect on the DP at the center. It has also been shown that the position of the lamp has an effect on the protected area.


2021 ◽  
pp. 108128652110454
Author(s):  
Xu Wang ◽  
Peter Schiavone

With the aid of conformal mapping and analytic continuation, we prove that within the framework of anti-plane elasticity, a non-parabolic open elastic inhomogeneity can still admit an internal uniform stress field despite the presence of a nearby non-circular Eshelby inclusion undergoing uniform anti-plane eigenstrains when the surrounding elastic matrix is subjected to uniform remote stresses. The non-circular inclusion can take the form of a Booth’s lemniscate inclusion, a generalized Booth’s lemniscate inclusion or a cardioid inclusion. Our analysis indicates that the uniform stress field within the non-parabolic inhomogeneity is independent of the specific open shape of the inhomogeneity and is also unaffected by the existence of the nearby non-circular inclusion. On the other hand, the non-parabolic shape of the inhomogeneity is caused solely by the presence of the non-circular inclusion.


2013 ◽  
Vol 435 (4) ◽  
pp. 740-744 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amin Sagar ◽  
Nagesh Peddada ◽  
Ashish k. Solanki ◽  
Vikas Choudhary ◽  
Renu Garg ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

2013 ◽  
Vol 199 ◽  
pp. 472-477
Author(s):  
Piotr Szota ◽  
Sebastian Mróz ◽  
Andrzej Stefanik ◽  
Henryk Dyja

In this work, a rolling schedule has been developed, which allows the scrapped S60 railway rail to be used for further processing into semi-finished or finished products. The main purpose of the investigations was to develop the shape and dimensions the rolling grooves and to select the strains in various passes in the ploughshare rolling process. The main problem during roll pass design was the ploughshare shape which is asymmetric and has a varying thickness along the width. The developed roll pass design consist of five passes: one open shape pass, one edging pass and three closed shape passes. The first open shape pass is characterized by an unusual shape which tends to reduce the band asymmetricality in the horizontal axis in such a manner as to prevent the formation of lapping in the sharp corner areas resulting from cutting. Based on the numerical modelling it has been found that the developed roll pass design allows the production of a ploughshare of dimensions conforming to the dimensional assumptions. For the numerical modelling of the rolling process, the Forge2008® computer program was employed.


Author(s):  
Erdmann Dahm

The present status of some of the fish stocks in North Sea and Baltic shows them to be outside safe biological limits. Reasons for this lie partly in hydrographic and ecological changes not in favour for a constant supply of fresh recruits to the fishery every year. On the other hand, fishery has its share in the observed downward trend by growth overfishing and reducing the size and number of possible spawners. The only mean available for the fishery management to restore a fish stock composed of several year classes is to apply technical measures as e.g.closures in space and time or fishing gear regulations. The breakdown of the historical measure “mesh size regulation in diamond mesh trawls” due to technological progress has created a wave of worldwide research. It has focused on trawl codends where the meshes are held artificially in their most open shape or by introducing into the trawl metal structures able to separate small from big fish or fish from crayfish. A parallel development of a scientifically objective mesh measuring instrument will help to enforce the new regulations. However, longer use of some of the new designs has revealed some deficiencies. Other innovative designs or the concept of certified codends will hopefully ensure the permanently better selectivity of contemporary trawl codends.


Author(s):  
Robin M. Neville ◽  
Alberto Pirrera ◽  
Fabrizio Scarpa

This work presents an “open” and deployable honeycomb configuration created using kirigami-inspired cutting and folding techniques. The open honeycomb differs from traditional “closed” honeycomb by its reduced density and its increased flexibility. The exploitation of these characteristics for multifunctional applications is the focus of this work. Potential fields in which the open honeycomb could find application include sandwich panel manufacturing, morphing, and deployable structures.


2019 ◽  
pp. 241-254
Author(s):  
Alexandra Nestorovič ◽  
Laurent Chrzanovski

This research highlights a recent discovery, at Poetovio, among a huge number of standard imported Roman oil lamps, of an open-shape copper-alloy lamp to be used with tallow (type Loeschcke XXV). This form, together with its clay counterpart (type Loeschcke XI), is typical of the northern Roman limes provinces where its production and usage was almost exclusive. To understand the uniqueness of this find so far south, the authors have mapped all the known parallels made of different metals. They also present a short introduction to the very eclectic clay variant, which is marginal almost everywhere except for Trier, where it constitutes by far the most common type, quantitatively speaking, of Roman lamps found in situ.


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