Evaluation of Reliability-based Fatigue Strain Data Analysis for an Automobile Suspension Under Various Road Condition

Author(s):  
Nadia Nurnajihah Mohamad Nasir ◽  
◽  
Shahrum Abdullah ◽  
Salvinder Singh Karam Singh ◽  
Sallehudin Mohd Haris ◽  
...  
Measurement ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 177 ◽  
pp. 109279
Author(s):  
Huachen Jiang ◽  
Chunfeng Wan ◽  
Kang Yang ◽  
Youliang Ding ◽  
Songtao Xue

1983 ◽  
Vol 4 ◽  
pp. 147-151 ◽  
Author(s):  
Monica Kristensen ◽  
Vernon A. Squire

Drift tracks of Antarctic tabular icebergs have been studied by means of satellite-tracked buoys since the early 1970s. More recently, a growing interest in the possibility of using Antarctic icebergs to supply fresh water to arid areas has made resources available for more sophisticated experiments, and in 1978 three prototype stations were designed to measure interactions between tabular icebergs and the ocean. These stations were deployed in late 1979, and in early 1981.The purpose of this paper is, firstly, to communicate some of our experiences with an earlier type of automatic data collection platform, and, secondly, to show that the substantial amount of tilt and strain data available from this station is unsuitable for data analysis. We discuss aspects of the data collected by the first of the three automatic stations, paying particular attention to the quality of the recorded strain and tilt data. It is shown that an unfortunate choice of instrument sensitivity and range severely limits the usefulness of the collected data, and that limitations in the data sampling regime make data analysis by conventional statistical methods very difficult. Several changes are proposed for the design of future data collection platforms for tabular icebergs, and some suggestions are made about data sampling. As this paper only concerns iceberg research, we do not discuss investigations of sea-ice drift made in the same area.


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
William E. Windes ◽  
David T. Rohrbaugh ◽  
W. David Swank

Author(s):  
Anatoly A. Svidzinsky ◽  
Robert C. Hilborn

AbstractThe observation of gravitational waves by the three LIGO-Virgo interferometers allows the examination of the polarization of gravitational waves. Here, we analyze the binary neutron star event GW170817, whose source location and distance are determined precisely by concurrent electromagnetic observations. We apply a signal accumulation procedure to the LIGO-Virgo strain data and find that the measured LIGO-Livingston signal is substantially reduced in certain frequency intervals due to real-time noise subtraction. We obtain ratios of the signals detected by the three interferometers excluding these “depleted” regions from the data analysis. We find that the signal ratios are inconsistent with the tensor polarization predictions of general relativity and Einstein’s theory is ruled out at 99% confidence level. Moreover, we find that the signal ratios and distance to the source are consistent with the vector theory of gravity (Phys Scr 92:125001, 2017) and that vector GW polarization is favored over tensor polarization and scalar polarization with exponentially large Bayes factors. If, however, we erroneously include in the data analysis the frequency regions in which the Livingston signal is depleted by noise filtering, we reproduce the result of the LIGO-Virgo collaboration favoring tensor GW polarization over vector polarization with an exponentially large Bayes factor.


1983 ◽  
Vol 4 ◽  
pp. 147-151
Author(s):  
Monica Kristensen ◽  
Vernon A. Squire

Drift tracks of Antarctic tabular icebergs have been studied by means of satellite-tracked buoys since the early 1970s. More recently, a growing interest in the possibility of using Antarctic icebergs to supply fresh water to arid areas has made resources available for more sophisticated experiments, and in 1978 three prototype stations were designed to measure interactions between tabular icebergs and the ocean. These stations were deployed in late 1979, and in early 1981.The purpose of this paper is, firstly, to communicate some of our experiences with an earlier type of automatic data collection platform, and, secondly, to show that the substantial amount of tilt and strain data available from this station is unsuitable for data analysis. We discuss aspects of the data collected by the first of the three automatic stations, paying particular attention to the quality of the recorded strain and tilt data. It is shown that an unfortunate choice of instrument sensitivity and range severely limits the usefulness of the collected data, and that limitations in the data sampling regime make data analysis by conventional statistical methods very difficult. Several changes are proposed for the design of future data collection platforms for tabular icebergs, and some suggestions are made about data sampling. As this paper only concerns iceberg research, we do not discuss investigations of sea-ice drift made in the same area.


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