Expecting the Unexpected: The Influence of Elastic Parameter Variance on Bayesian Facies Inversion

Author(s):  
C. Sanchis ◽  
R. Hauge ◽  
H. Kjonsberg
2005 ◽  
Vol 60 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 29-36 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mina B. Abd-el-Malek ◽  
Medhat M. Helala

The transformation group theoretic approach is applied to the problem of the flow of an electrically conducting incompressible viscoelastic fluid near the forward stagnation point of a heated plate. The application of one-parameter transformation group reduces the number of independent variables, by one, and consequently the basic equations governing flow and heat transfer are reduced to a set of ordinary differential equations. These equations have been solved approximately subject to the relevant boundary conditions by employing the shooting numerical technique. The effect of the magnetic parameter M, the Prandtl number Pr and the non-dimensional elastic parameter representing the non- Newtonian character of the fluid k on velocity field, shear stress, temperature distribution and heat flux are carefully examined.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiaojuan Mo ◽  
Donato Romano ◽  
Mario Milazzo ◽  
Giovanni Benelli ◽  
Wenjie Ge ◽  
...  

Ontogenetic locomotion research focuses on the evolution of locomotion behavior in different developmental stages of a species. Unlike vertebrates, ontogenetic locomotion in invertebrates is poorly investigated. Locusts represent an outstanding biological model to study this issue. They are hemimetabolous insects and have similar aspects and behaviors in different instars. This research is aimed at studying the jumping performance of Locusta migratoria over different developmental instars. Jumps of third instar, fourth instar, and adult L. migratoria were recorded through a high-speed camera. Data were analyzed to develop a simplified biomechanical model of the insect: the elastic joint of locust hind legs was simplified as a torsional spring located at the femur-tibiae joint as a semilunar process and based on an energetic approach involving both locomotion and geometrical data. A simplified mathematical model evaluated the performances of each tested jump. Results showed that longer hind leg length, higher elastic parameter, and longer takeoff time synergistically contribute to a greater velocity and energy storing/releasing in adult locusts, if compared to young instars; at the same time, they compensate possible decreases of the acceleration due to the mass increase. This finding also gives insights for advanced bioinspired jumping robot design.


Author(s):  
Paul A. Johnson ◽  
Bernard Zinszner ◽  
Patrick Rasolofosaon ◽  
Frederic Cohen-Tenoudji ◽  
Koen Van Den Abeele

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