CFlow: A Learning-Based Compressive Flow Statistics Collection Scheme for SDNs

Author(s):  
Mingyan Li ◽  
Cailian Chen ◽  
Cunqing Hua ◽  
Xinping Guan
Keyword(s):  
1975 ◽  
Vol 14 (72) ◽  
pp. 395-406 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chalmers M. Clapperton

In Svalbard and Iceland there appears to be much more debris entrained in glaciers that surge than in those which do not. Conditions particularly favourable for the basal incorporation of debris develop as a consequence of the high flow velocities attained by a surge. These are increased cavitation in the lee of obstacles and an increased supply of basal melt water resulting from frictional heat and from the trigger zone. Layers of regelation ice incorporating debris can thus develop to a much greater vertical and horizontal extent than in non-surging glaciers. Excessive shearing, and the distortion of foliation structures in the terminal zone of compressive flow, enhance the vertical development of the debris-rich regelation layers. Glaciers that surge over outwash and/or fjord-bottom sediments become particularly rich in debris.


1981 ◽  
Vol 2 ◽  
pp. 115-115 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. G. Croot

Recent work by Clapperton (1975) proposes that the rapid rates of advance experienced by glaciers which surge may lead to enhanced debris incorporation, increased compressive flow near the glacier snout at the point of maximum extension, and to the upward translation and vertical stacking of debris near the glacier snout and margin. Five glaciers in Spitsbergen (Battyebreen, Holmströmbreen, Lisbetbreen, Vonbreen, Elnabreen) display morphological features which are widely accepted as being diagnostic of surging glaciers.Results of detailed observations regarding the nature, distribution, melt-out, and reworking of englacial debris at Battyebreen are presented. Basally derived till is brought to the surface of the glacier in narrow lateral and terminal belts, no more than 100 m wide. Within this zone, (i.e. up-valley from the snout and towards the valley centre) the ice is debris-free with the exception of small amounts of en-glacial debris which form the core of lobate medial moraines. Differential ablation of debris-free and debris-rich ice leads to the production of a topographic basin within which melt-out and reworking processes occupy restricted locations, as follows. Immediately inside the encircling melt-out till, a zone of flow tills is found. Melt streams are located at the foot of, the flow till-mantled slope, producing narrow (150 m wide) outwash trains, which merge into deltas. The central area of the topographic basin is occupied by a supraglacial lake.Observations of the remaining four locations confirm that other glaciers in the vicinity, which display similar characteristics associated with surging, are developing a stagnant-ice zone of identical appearance. The pattern of processes observed at Battyebreen is thus repeated at each site.A simple model of depositional landscape development is proposed for surging valley glaciers in a sub-polar environment.


1997 ◽  
Vol 24 ◽  
pp. 255-261 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cecilie Rolstad ◽  
Jostein Amlien ◽  
Jon-Ove Hagen ◽  
Bengt Lundén

A field of vectors showing the average velocity of the surging glacier Osbornebreen, Svalbard, was determined by comparing sequential SPOT (Système pour l’Observation de la Terre) and Landsat thematic mapper images. Crevasses which developed during the initial phase of the surge in the winter of 1986–87 were tracked using a fast Fourier chip cross-correlation technique. A digital elevation model (DEM) was developed using digital photogrammetry on aerial photographs from 1990. This new DEM was compared with a map drawn in 1966. The velocity field could be almost entirely determined with 1 month separation of the images, but only partly determined with images 1 year apart, due to changes of the crevasse pattern. The velocity field is similar to that found for Kronebreen, a continuously fast-moving tidewater glacier. No distinct zones of compressive flow were present and the data gave no evidence of a compression zone/surge front traveling downstream. The velocity field, the rapid advance of the terminus and the development of transverse crevasses in the upper accumulation area within a 6 month period may indicate that the surge developed as a zone of extension starting near the terminus and propagating quickly upstream. The crevasse pattern in the images is therefore interpreted to be the result of the extension zone traveling upstream, and, as the whole glacier starts to slide, the crevasse pattern alters according to the bedrock topography.


2013 ◽  
Vol 48 (11) ◽  
pp. 1313-1321 ◽  
Author(s):  
S Gangolu ◽  
AG Rao ◽  
N Prabhu ◽  
VP Deshmukh ◽  
BP Kashyap

1987 ◽  
Vol 24 (10) ◽  
pp. 2004-2015 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen R. Hicock

Near Hemlo, Ontario, highly calcareous till is confined to areas located downglacier from Precambrian uplands, at least 150 km from the Paleozoic–Precambrian boundary. It comprises subglacial meltout till between lodgment tills, and the calcareous package overlies noncalcareous basal till (not studied) and underlies noncalcareous supraglacial meltout till. The tills can be distinguished by textural, carbonate, and clast compositions. Glaciotectonic deformations, stone fabrics and striae, and stone provenance from the tills, as well as erosional and depositional landforms, indicate that ice advanced to the south–southwest across bedrock contacts and over Precambrian uplands.Deposition of all five tills can be explained with one glacial event. As the Late Wisconsinan margin of the Laurentide ice sheet advanced against uplands about 20 km northeast of Hemlo it experienced compressive flow while depositing the non calcareous basal till. Upshearing of stoss-side local debris high into the ice also occurred as englacial ice overrode the slowed basal zone. Once over the upland, englacial ice assumed extending flow, and downshearing of distal debris, which was deposited as calcareous lodgment till on the lee sides of uplands. After the glacial maximum, the glacier ceased internal movement and subglacial meltout till was laid down. A late reactivation of the ice deposited the upper lodgment till and final stagnation formed the supraglacial meltout till.


2021 ◽  
Vol 1023 ◽  
pp. 75-81
Author(s):  
Aappo Mustakangas ◽  
Atef Hamada ◽  
Antti Järvenpää

Cost-efficient 3D-printing can create a lot of new opportunities in engineering as it enables rapid prototyping of models and functional parts. In the present study, Polylactic acid (PLA) cubic specimens with different types of infill patterns (IPs), rectilinear, grid and cuboid, were additively manufactured by Fused Filament Fabrication 3D-printing. The PLA cubes are fabricated with one perimeter and different IPs density (10, 20, and 30%). Subsequently, the compressive strengths of the PLA materials were measured in two loading directions, i.e., the layers building direction is parallel (PD) to the loading axis and perpendicular (ND) to the loading direction. An optical microscope was used to examine the deformed IPs in both loading directions. The compressive flow stress curves of the PLA cubes infilled with rectilinear and grid patterns exhibited strong fluctuations with lower compressive strengths in the loading direction along ND. The PLA with 30% grid IP revealed a superior strength of ~12 kN in the loading direction along PD. On the contrary, the same material exhibited a worst compressive strength 3 kN along ND.


Author(s):  
Kuenzang Jurmey ◽  
Nishan Sharma Ghimire ◽  
Vigneswaran Sivahar ◽  
Gayan Aravinda Abeygunawardane ◽  
Miyuru Piyathilake

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