Liuhua 11-1 FPS Dry-dock Upgrade and Life Extension - Motion Analysis and Weather Window Selection for Towing

2013 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yong Luo ◽  
Shu Guang Huang ◽  
Guang Lei Zhang ◽  
Liang Yang ◽  
Hui Yang
2013 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wen Jun Zhong ◽  
Bo Liu ◽  
Yong Luo ◽  
Hui Yang ◽  
Han Jun Yin

Author(s):  
H K Cole

Continuous review, adaptation and improvement through upkeep and maintenance periods has enabled the Royal Navy submarine fleet to remain fit for purpose through successive life extension programmes. Devonport Royal Dockyard, Plymouth, provides nuclear submarine dry dock facilities for maintenance. The Site Licences which authorise operations of these nuclear facilities are administered by the Office for Nuclear Regulation which ensures that the intent of the facility nuclear safety case is maintained throughout all operations. As such, any dock modifications and refit support equipment or structures must be designed within the framework of the safety case. A requirement to undertake refit activities external to the hull of a nuclear submarine while in dock resulted in a design and build project for a temporary dock-bottom building to provide a safe and capable environment. The design of this building’s structure and sub-systems was heavily influenced by the nuclear safety case. This paper explores the challenges of designing equipment within the constraints of the nuclear licensed site, identifies the provenance and the requirements of the nuclear safety case of a dry dock nuclear facility, and examines the influence of this safety case upon requirements management, and the design lifecycle. The design of the dock-bottom building is presented, including an outline of the technical challenges which arose, and some of the novel solutions developed, including; a modular, seismically- qualified, primary structure; and a modified crane incorporating a crushable element. The paper explores the issues of finite element analysis of the primary structure to substantiate performance and satisfy the safety case. The paper also presents a discussion of the influence and impact of the safety case upon the building design project.


2020 ◽  
Vol 224 (3) ◽  
pp. 1607-1620
Author(s):  
Daniel C Bowden ◽  
Korbinian Sager ◽  
Andreas Fichtner ◽  
Małgorzata Chmiel

SUMMARY Beamforming and backprojection methods offer a data-driven approach to image noise sources, but provide no opportunity to account for prior information or iterate through an inversion framework. In contrast, recent methods have been developed to locate ambient noise sources based on cross-correlations between stations and the construction of finite-frequency kernels, allowing for inversions over multiple iterations. These kernel-based approaches show great promise, both in mathematical rigour and in results, but are less physically intuitive and interpretable. Here we show that these apparently two different classes of methods, beamforming and kernel-based inversion, are achieving exactly the same result in certain circumstances. This paper begins with a description of a relatively simple beamforming or backprojection algorithm, and walks through a series of modifications or enhancements. By including a rigorously defined physical model for the distribution of noise sources and therefore synthetic correlation functions, we come to a framework resembling the kernel-based iterative approaches. Given the equivalence of these approaches, both communities can benefit from bridging the gap. For example, inversion frameworks can benefit from the numerous image enhancement tools developed by the beamforming community. Additionally, full-waveform inversion schemes that require a window selection for the comparisons of misfits can more effectively target particular sources through a windowing in a beamform slowness domain, or might directly use beamform heatmaps for the calculation of misfits. We discuss a number of such possibilities for the enhancement of both classes of methods, testing with synthetic models where possible.


2013 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wen Jun Zhong ◽  
Jia You Mao ◽  
Qi Gao ◽  
Liang Yang ◽  
Yi Yong Liu
Keyword(s):  

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