CHAPTER TEN. GENERAL BEHAVIOUR AND ACTIVITIES

1955 ◽  
pp. 101-113
Keyword(s):  
1968 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-12 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. F. Black

Where a rotor runs within a clearance space, the clearance being comparable with rotor mass unbalance, the synchronous whirling behaviour of the rotor may be considerably affected by intermittent interaction with the stator at the clearance position. Discontinuity and jump phenomena may occur: in general, behaviour will be different with increasing speed from that with decreasing speed, and in either case zones may exist in which rotor-stator interaction is possible but not certain. In the analysis here presented, rotor and stator are regarded as linear multi-degree-of-freedom systems including damping; dry friction at the clearance space is taken into account. Discussion is limited to cases with radial symmetry, and interaction is assumed limited to the position of the clearance space. Polar receptances are used to establish equilibrium conditions with interaction, and speed zones are defined within which interaction may occur. Some hypothetical cases are fully explored, demonstrating that rotor-stator interactions may occur in a variety of forms and circumstances. Interactions with dry friction counterwhirling are also considered. Some experimental results on counterwhirl within a ball bearing are given and qualitatively compared with theory.


2005 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
pp. 327-344 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marta B. Manser ◽  
Lindsay B. Fletcher

In this study of the functionally referential alarm calls in the meerkats (Suricata suricatta), we tested the hypothesis that the ability to refer to a specific location was an important factor in the evolution of discrete vocalizations. We investigated what information receivers gained about the location of the predator from alarm calls with high stimulus specificity compared to alarm calls with low stimulus specificity. Furthermore, we studied whether visual cues about the localization of the predator may be available from the posture of the caller. We described the general behaviour of the caller, the caller’s posture, and in particular its gaze direction. We then observed receivers responding to the different call types, to determine whether the acoustic structure of the calls was enough for them to respond in the appropriate way, or whether they used additional visual cues from the caller. We tested this with specific manipulation experiments, using three set ups of playback experiments: (1) no caller visible; (2) model guard with specific gaze direction; and (3) live sentinel. Natural observations and experiments confirmed that in high urgency situations the meerkats have enough information from the acoustic structure of the call to respond appropriately. When hearing low urgency calls that are less stimuli specific, meerkats used visual cues as an additional source of information in a few cases. This may indicate that functionally referential calls evolved to denote the location of the predator, rather than the predator type or its velocity of approach. However, when discussing this result in comparison to other functionally referential calls, such as the food associated calls and recruitment calls, this localization hypothesis does not appear to apply to the functionally referential calls in general.


1974 ◽  
Vol 62 (1) ◽  
pp. 115-143 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohamed Gad-El-Hak ◽  
Stanley Corrsin

Wind-tunnel turbulence behind a parallel-rod grid with jets evenly distributed along each rod is nearly isotropic. Homogeneity improvement over prior related experiments was attained by the use of controllable nozzles. Compared with the ‘passive’ case, the downwind-jet ‘active’ grid has a smaller static pressure drop across it and gives a smaller turbulence level at a prescribed distance from it, while the upwind-jet grid gives a larger static pressure drop and larger turbulence level. ‘Counterflow injection’ generates larger turbulence energy and larger scales, both events being evidently associated with instability of the jet system. This behaviour is much like that commonly observed behind passive grids of higher solidities.If the turbulent kinetic energy is approximated as an inverse power law in distance, the (positive) exponent decreases with increasing (downwind or upwind) jet strength, corresponding to slower absolute decay rates. No peculiar decay behaviour occurs when the jet grid is ‘self-propelled’ (zero net average force), or when the static pressure drop across it is zero.The injection does not change the general behaviour of the energy spectra, although the absolute spectra change inasmuch as the turbulence kinetic energy changes.


2011 ◽  
Vol 2011 ◽  
pp. 1-10 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eduardo Navarro ◽  
S. J. Alonso ◽  
R. Navarro

Elenine is the aglycone of elenoside, a cytotoxic arylnaphthalene lignan (NSC 644013-W/1) derived fromJusticia hyssopifolia. (Family: Acanthaceae). Elenoside is a β-D-glucoside, with a similar chemical structure to etoposide, exhibiting central depressant activity. In the present study, elenine was given to mice and rats at doses of 10, 20, and 40 mg/kg. Acute toxicity (24 h) and general behaviour in mice was studied as well as its effects on muscular relaxant activity, locomotor activity (Varimex test), and the open-field test and were compared with 10 mg/kg of chlorpromazine. Elenine produced a reduction in the permanence time in muscular relaxant activity (traction test). Spontaneous activity was lower in the Varimex test. The ambulation and rearing were lower compared with the control group, and an increase in boluses was observed in the open-field test. Thus, it can be concluded that elenine has central sedative effects at lower doses than those used with elenoside and has a possible application in conditions of anxiety.


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Samuel D. Parkinson ◽  
Simon W. Funke ◽  
Jon Hill ◽  
Matthew D. Piggott ◽  
Peter A. Allison

Abstract. Turbidity currents are one of the main drivers for sediment transport from the continental shelf to the deep ocean. The resulting sediment deposits can reach hundreds of kilometres into the ocean. Computer models that simulate turbidity currents and the resulting sediment deposit can help to understand their general behaviour. However, in order to recreate real-world scenarios, the challenge is to find the turbidity current parameters that reproduce the observations of sediment deposits. This paper demonstrates a solution to the inverse sediment transportation problem: for a known sedimentary deposit, the developed model reconstructs details about the turbidity current that produced these deposits. The reconstruction is constrained here by a shallow water sediment-laden density current model, which is discretised by the finite element method and an adaptive time-stepping scheme. The model is differentiated using the adjoint approach and an efficient gradient-based optimisation method is applied to identify turbidity parameters which minimise the misfit between modelled and observed field sediment deposits. The capabilities of this approach are demonstrated using measurements taken in the Miocene-age Marnoso Arenacea Formation (Italy). We find that whilst the model cannot match the deposit exactly due to limitations in the physical processes simulated, it provides valuable insights into the depositional processes and represents a significant advance in our toolset for interpreting turbidity current deposits.


Koedoe ◽  
1973 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
C.J. Stutterheim ◽  
J.D. Skinner

A captive colony of Gerbillurus p. paeba was studied inan outdoor enclosure and observation cages. The general behaviour is discussed and notes on the reproduction andreproductive behaviour given. Increasing the number of lighthours and increasing the temperature seem to induce fertilityin both males and females. The external parasites found on Gerbillurus are listed.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Jack Holligan

Yang-Mills theories based on the symplectic groups – denoted by Sp(2N) – are inter-esting for both theoretical and phenomenological reasons. Sp(2N) theories with two fundamental Dirac fermions give rise to pseudo-Nambu-Goldstone bosons which can be interpreted as a composite Higgs particle. This framework can describe the existing Higgs boson without the need for unnatural fine-tuning. This justifies a programme of wider investigations of Sp(2N) gauge theories aimed at understanding their general behaviour. In this work, we study the glueball mass spectrum for Sp(2N) Yang-Mills theories using the variational method applied to Monte-Carlo generated gauge config-urations. This is carried out both for finite N and in the limit N → ∞. The results are compared to existing results for SU(N) Yang-Mills theories, again, for finite- and large-N. Our glueball analysis is then used to investigate some conjectures related to the behaviour of the spectrum in Yang-Mills theories based on a generic non-Abeliangauge group G. We also find numerical evidence that Sp(2N) groups confine both for finite and large N. As well as studying the glueball spectrum, we examine the quenched-meson spectrum for fermions in the fundamental, antisymmetric and sym-metric representations for N = 2 and N = 3. This study enables us to provide a first account of how the related observables vary with N. The investigations presented in this work contribute to our understanding of the non-perturbative dynamics of Sp(2N) gauge theories in connection with Higgs compositeness and, more in general, with fun-damental open problems in non-Abelian gauge theories such as confinement and global symmetry breaking.


2021 ◽  
Vol 54 (2) ◽  
pp. 409-426
Author(s):  
Peng Qi ◽  
Xianbo Shi ◽  
Nazanin Samadi ◽  
Dean Chapman

X-ray Laue-type monochromators are common and essential optical components at many high-power X-ray facilities, e.g. synchrotron facilities. The X-ray optics of bent Laue crystals is a well developed area. An incident X-ray beam penetrating a bent Laue crystal will result in a diffracted beam with different angles and energies. There is a need for a way of organizing the rays that allows one to sort out the energy and spatial properties of the diffracted beam. The present work introduces a new approach for describing the general behaviour of bent Laue crystals from a ray-tracing point of view. This quasi-monochromatic beam approach provides an intuitive view of bent-crystal diffraction and leads to deeper understanding. It explains the energy and spatial properties of common and special cases of bent Laue optics, predicts phenomena that can improve energy-dispersion-related X-ray imaging techniques and provides a theoretical framework that makes ray-tracing simulation easier to realize.


2016 ◽  
Vol 802 ◽  
pp. 186-202 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xisheng Luo ◽  
Ping Dong ◽  
Ting Si ◽  
Zhigang Zhai

The Richtmyer–Meshkov instability on a ‘V’ shaped air/SF$_{6}$ gaseous interface is experimentally studied in a shock tube. By the soap film technique, a discontinuous interface without supporting mesh is formed so that the initial conditions of the interface can be accurately controlled. Five ‘V’ shaped air/$\text{SF}_{6}$ interfaces with different vertex angles ($60^{\circ }$, $90^{\circ }$, $120^{\circ }$, $140^{\circ }$ and $160^{\circ }$) are created where the ratio of the initial interface amplitude to the wavelength varies to highlight the effects of initial condition on the flow characteristics. The wave patterns and interface morphologies are clearly identified in the high-speed schlieren sequences, which show that the interface deforms in a less pronounced manner with less vortices generated as the vertex angle increases. A regime change is observed in the interface width growth rate near a vertex angle of $160^{\circ }$, which provides an experimental evidence for the numerical results obtained by McFarland et al. (Phys. Scr. vol. T155, 2013, 014014). The growth rate of interface width in the linear phase is compared with the theoretical predictions from the classical impulsive model and a modified linear model, and the latter is proven to be effective for a moderate to large initial amplitude. It is found that the initial growth rate of the interface width is a non-monotone function of the initial vertex angle (amplitude–wavelength ratio), i.e. the interface width growth rate in the linear stage experiences an increase and then a decrease as the vertex angle increases. A similar conclusion was also reached by Dell et al. (Phys. Plasmas, vol. 22, 2015, 092711) numerically for a sinusoidal interface. Finally, the general behaviour of the interface width growth in the nonlinear stage can be well captured by the nonlinear model proposed by Dimonte & Ramaprabhu (Phys. Fluids, vol. 22, 2010, 014104).


Author(s):  
Fiona Ecarnot ◽  
Romain Chopard ◽  
Francois Schiele ◽  
Nicolas Meneveau

Introduction: Guidelines rely on evidence-based data, and clinical research is key to providing this evidence-base. Yet the factors that influence a patient’s decision to participate (or not) in research remain poorly documented. We aimed to investigate the factors that determine the decision to accept or decline clinical trial participation, using a qualitative approach. Methods: Single-centre, qualitative study using semi-directive interviews with patients (pts) who had been invited to participate in a randomized clinical trial and who had given their decision. Both pts who refused and pts who accepted were included. There were no inclusion criteria; all pts who met the inclusion criteria of the selected trial and had been approached for consent were eligible. Pts also completed a questionnaire rating 16 statements examining reasons for accepting or declining trial entry. Verbatim from the interviews were analysed using a grounded theory (GT) approach. Results: To date, 14 patients have been interviewed; average age 75±7 years. Two pts did not know if they were currently participating in a trial or not; 1 said he was not participating although he had provided consent. From a GT perspective, the main concern of patients does not appear to be the question of research participation, but rather the fact of being sick, and their overriding preoccupation is how to return to their previous state of wellbeing and overcome the current acute episode. Regarding the decision to participate in research, the main themes that arose were: (1) the positive value of the trial for the patient (benefitting from the intervention; interest in receiving closer and/or more regular follow-up due to trial participation), although some pts clearly do not understand the concept of randomization; (2) the level of engagement in the process of care (some pts do not bother to read the information given to them, but just accept what is proposed without question, while others decline immediately without reading trial information). Two dimensions emerge, namely physical and emotional health, with a spectrum ranging from fragile to robust. Where the patient is situated on this spectrum appears to influence their attitude towards research participation. Conclusions: The decision to participate (or not) in clinical research appears to be more related to the patient’s general behaviour and attitude when sick, rather than any specific trial-related constraints or advantages. The level of comprehension of pts who have been through the consent process casts a doubt on the “informed” character of the consent.


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