inconsistent system
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Author(s):  
Raphael Barbau ◽  
Conrad Bock ◽  
Mehdi Dadfarnia

Designing complex systems often requires engineers from multiple disciplines (mechanical, electrical, production, and so on) to communicate with each other and exchange system design information. Systems engineering models are a cross-disciplinary foundation for this process, but are not well-integrated with specialized engineering information, leading to redundant and inconsistent system specifications. The software provided here translates system models in the Systems Modeling Language (SysML) to physical interaction and signal flow (also known as lumped-parameter, one-dimensional, or network) files on two simulation platforms used in many engineering domains.


Animals ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (6) ◽  
pp. 335 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bruce Englefield ◽  
Simone A. Blackman ◽  
Melissa Starling ◽  
Paul D. McGreevy

The Australian constitution makes no mention of native animals. Responsibility for animal welfare is largely retained by the states and territories via a fragmented, complex, contradictory, inconsistent system of regulatory management. Given that most jurisdictions have expressly made the possession of wildlife unlawful, the action of taking and possessing an animal, to rehabilitate it, defies the regulatory process. In most jurisdictions, it is illegal to microchip, band, or mark an animal, meaning that no reliable method is available to monitor an animal. Each year, a minimum of 50,000 rehabilitated native animals are released back to the wild, with little post-release monitoring. Where required, the assessments of behavioural and health requirements to confirm suitability for release may be undertaken by people with either negligible or questionable qualifications. Whilst it can be appropriate to rehabilitate and release injured native animals back to the wild, there may be moral, ethical, and practical reasons for not releasing hand-reared orphan native animals. This article examines the evolution, and explains the consequences, of decentralised regulation on wildlife carers and rehabilitating animals. It recommends that the practice of placing hand-reared native animals into the wild, and the regulatory framework that provides for it, should be reviewed.


2011 ◽  
Vol 2011 ◽  
pp. 1-5 ◽  
Author(s):  
Czesław Stępniak

The least squares problem appears, among others, in linear models, and it refers to inconsistent system of linear equations. A crucial question is how to reduce the least squares solution in such a system to the usual solution in a consistent one. Traditionally, this is reached by differential calculus. We present a purely algebraic approach to this problem based on some identities for nonhomogeneous quadratic forms.


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