Perception of straightness and parallelism with minimal distance information.
Rogers, Brian; Naumenko, Olga
2016-07-01
The ability of human observers to judge the straightness and parallelism of extended lines has been a neglected topic of study since von Helmholtz's initial observations 150 years ago. He showed that there were significant misperceptions of the straightness of extended lines seen in the peripheral visual field. The present study focused on the perception of extended lines (spanning 90° visual angle) that were directly fixated in the visual environment of a planetarium where there was only minimal information about the distance to the lines. Observers were asked to vary the curvature of 1 or more lines until they appeared to be straight and/or parallel, ignoring any perceived curvature in depth. When the horizon between the ground and the sky was visible, the results showed that observers' judgements of the straightness of a single line were significantly biased away from the veridical, great circle locations, and towards equal elevation settings. Similar biases can be seen in the jet trails of aircraft flying across the sky and in Rogers and Anstis's new moon illusion (Perception, 42(Abstract supplement) 18, 2013, 2016). The biasing effect of the horizon was much smaller when observers were asked to judge the straightness and parallelism of 2 or more extended lines. We interpret the results as showing that, in the absence of adequate distance information, observers tend to perceive the projected lines as lying on an approximately equidistant, hemispherical surface and that their judgements of straightness and parallelism are based on the perceived separation of the lines superimposed on that surface.
The new moon illusion and the role of perspective in the perception of straight and parallel lines.
Rogers, Brian; Naumenko, Olga
2015-01-01
In the new moon illusion, the sun does not appear to be in a direction perpendicular to the boundary between the lit and dark sides of the moon, and aircraft jet trails appear to follow curved paths across the sky. In both cases, lines that are physically straight and parallel to the horizon appear to be curved. These observations prompted us to investigate the neglected question of how we are able to judge the straightness and parallelism of extended lines. To do this, we asked observers to judge the 2-D alignment of three artificial "stars" projected onto the dome of the Saint Petersburg Planetarium that varied in both their elevation and their separation in horizontal azimuth. The results showed that observers make substantial, systematic errors, biasing their judgments away from the veridical great-circle locations and toward equal-elevation settings. These findings further demonstrate that whenever information about the distance of extended lines or isolated points is insufficient, observers tend to assume equidistance, and as a consequence, their straightness judgments are biased toward the angular separation of straight and parallel lines.
Lu, Xiaofeng; Song, Li; Shen, Sumin; He, Kang; Yu, Songyu; Ling, Nam
2013-01-01
Hough Transform has been widely used for straight line detection in low-definition and still images, but it suffers from execution time and resource requirements. Field Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGA) provide a competitive alternative for hardware acceleration to reap tremendous computing performance. In this paper, we propose a novel parallel Hough Transform (PHT) and FPGA architecture-associated framework for real-time straight line detection in high-definition videos. A resource-optimized Canny edge detection method with enhanced non-maximum suppression conditions is presented to suppress most possible false edges and obtain more accurate candidate edge pixels for subsequent accelerated computation. Then, a novel PHT algorithm exploiting spatial angle-level parallelism is proposed to upgrade computational accuracy by improving the minimum computational step. Moreover, the FPGA based multi-level pipelined PHT architecture optimized by spatial parallelism ensures real-time computation for 1,024 × 768 resolution videos without any off-chip memory consumption. This framework is evaluated on ALTERA DE2-115 FPGA evaluation platform at a maximum frequency of 200 MHz, and it can calculate straight line parameters in 15.59 ms on the average for one frame. Qualitative and quantitative evaluation results have validated the system performance regarding data throughput, memory bandwidth, resource, speed and robustness. PMID:23867746
Lu, Xiaofeng; Song, Li; Shen, Sumin; He, Kang; Yu, Songyu; Ling, Nam
2013-07-17
Hough Transform has been widely used for straight line detection in low-definition and still images, but it suffers from execution time and resource requirements. Field Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGA) provide a competitive alternative for hardware acceleration to reap tremendous computing performance. In this paper, we propose a novel parallel Hough Transform (PHT) and FPGA architecture-associated framework for real-time straight line detection in high-definition videos. A resource-optimized Canny edge detection method with enhanced non-maximum suppression conditions is presented to suppress most possible false edges and obtain more accurate candidate edge pixels for subsequent accelerated computation. Then, a novel PHT algorithm exploiting spatial angle-level parallelism is proposed to upgrade computational accuracy by improving the minimum computational step. Moreover, the FPGA based multi-level pipelined PHT architecture optimized by spatial parallelism ensures real-time computation for 1,024 × 768 resolution videos without any off-chip memory consumption. This framework is evaluated on ALTERA DE2-115 FPGA evaluation platform at a maximum frequency of 200 MHz, and it can calculate straight line parameters in 15.59 ms on the average for one frame. Qualitative and quantitative evaluation results have validated the system performance regarding data throughput, memory bandwidth, resource, speed and robustness.
Gyrokinetic continuum simulation of turbulence in a straight open-field-line plasma
Shi, E. L.; Hammett, G. W.; Stoltzfus-Dueck, T.; ...
2017-05-29
Here, five-dimensional gyrokinetic continuum simulations of electrostatic plasma turbulence in a straight, open-field-line geometry have been performed using a full- discontinuous-Galerkin approach implemented in the Gkeyll code. While various simplifications have been used for now, such as long-wavelength approximations in the gyrokinetic Poisson equation and the Hamiltonian, these simulations include the basic elements of a fusion-device scrape-off layer: localised sources to model plasma outflow from the core, cross-field turbulent transport, parallel flow along magnetic field lines, and parallel losses at the limiter or divertor with sheath-model boundary conditions. The set of sheath-model boundary conditions used in the model allows currentsmore » to flow through the walls. In addition to details of the numerical approach, results from numerical simulations of turbulence in the Large Plasma Device, a linear device featuring straight magnetic field lines, are presented.« less
Pattern Recognition by Retina-Like Devices.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Weiman, Carl F. R.; Rothstein, Jerome
This study has investigated some pattern recognition capabilities of devices consisting of arrays of cooperating elements acting in parallel. The problem of recognizing straight lines in general position on the quadratic lattice has been completely solved by applying parallel acting algorithms to a special code for lines on the lattice. The…
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Shi, E. L.; Hammett, G. W.; Stoltzfus-Dueck, T.
Here, five-dimensional gyrokinetic continuum simulations of electrostatic plasma turbulence in a straight, open-field-line geometry have been performed using a full- discontinuous-Galerkin approach implemented in the Gkeyll code. While various simplifications have been used for now, such as long-wavelength approximations in the gyrokinetic Poisson equation and the Hamiltonian, these simulations include the basic elements of a fusion-device scrape-off layer: localised sources to model plasma outflow from the core, cross-field turbulent transport, parallel flow along magnetic field lines, and parallel losses at the limiter or divertor with sheath-model boundary conditions. The set of sheath-model boundary conditions used in the model allows currentsmore » to flow through the walls. In addition to details of the numerical approach, results from numerical simulations of turbulence in the Large Plasma Device, a linear device featuring straight magnetic field lines, are presented.« less
27 CFR 9.222 - Naches Heights.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-04-01
... the intersection of the Burlington Northern single-track rail line and the Congdon (Schuler) Canal... a straight line approximately 0.15 mile to the Congdon (Schuler) Canal, which closely parallels the... Congdon (Schuler) Canal, onto the Selah map, approximately 3.25 miles, returning to the beginning point...
27 CFR 9.222 - Naches Heights.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-04-01
... the intersection of the Burlington Northern single-track rail line and the Congdon (Schuler) Canal... a straight line approximately 0.15 mile to the Congdon (Schuler) Canal, which closely parallels the... Congdon (Schuler) Canal, onto the Selah map, approximately 3.25 miles, returning to the beginning point...
27 CFR 9.222 - Naches Heights.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-04-01
... the intersection of the Burlington Northern single-track rail line and the Congdon (Schuler) Canal... a straight line approximately 0.15 mile to the Congdon (Schuler) Canal, which closely parallels the... Congdon (Schuler) Canal, onto the Selah map, approximately 3.25 miles, returning to the beginning point...
The Universal Transverse Mercator (UTM) grid
,
1997-01-01
The most convenient way to identify points on the curved surface of the Earth is with a system of reference lines called parallels of latitude and meridians of longitude. On some maps the meridians and parallels appear as straight lines. On most modern maps, however, the meridians and parallels may appear as curved lines. These differences are due to the mathematical treatment required to portray a curved surface on a flat surface so that important properties of the map (such as distance and areal accuracy) are shown with minimum distortion. The system used to portray a portion of the round Earth on a flat surface is called a map projection.
The Universal Transverse Mercator (UTM) grid
,
1999-01-01
The most convenient way to identify points on the curved surface of the Earth is with a system of reference lines called parallels of latitude and meridians of longitude. On some maps, the meridians and parallels appear as straight lines. On most modern maps, however, the meridians and parallels appear as curved lines. These differences sre due to the mathematical treatment required to portray a curved surface on a flat surface so that important properties of the map (such as distance and areal accuracy) are shown with minimum distortion. The system used to portray a portion of the round Earth on a flat surface is called a map projection.
DIAC object recognition system
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Buurman, Johannes
1992-03-01
This paper describes the object recognition system used in an intelligent robot cell. It is used to recognize and estimate pose and orientation of parts as they enter the cell. The parts are mostly metal and consist of polyhedral and cylindrical shapes. The system uses feature-based stereo vision to acquire a wireframe of the observed part. Features are defined as straight lines and ellipses, which lead to a wireframe of straight lines and circular arcs (the latter using a new algorithm). This wireframe is compared to a number of wire frame models obtained from the CAD database. Experimental results show that image processing hardware and parallelization may add considerably to the speed of the system.
Statistical Estimation of Some Irrational Numbers Using an Extension of Buffon's Needle Experiment
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Velasco, S.; Roman, F. L.; Gonzalez, A.; White, J. A.
2006-01-01
In the nineteenth century many people tried to seek a value for the most famous irrational number, [pi], by means of an experiment known as Buffon's needle, consisting of throwing randomly a needle onto a surface ruled with straight parallel lines. Here we propose to extend this experiment in order to evaluate other irrational numbers, such as…
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Pourteau, Marie-Line; Servin, Isabelle; Lepinay, Kévin; Essomba, Cyrille; Dal'Zotto, Bernard; Pradelles, Jonathan; Lattard, Ludovic; Brandt, Pieter; Wieland, Marco
2016-03-01
The emerging Massively Parallel-Electron Beam Direct Write (MP-EBDW) is an attractive high resolution high throughput lithography technology. As previously shown, Chemically Amplified Resists (CARs) meet process/integration specifications in terms of dose-to-size, resolution, contrast, and energy latitude. However, they are still limited by their line width roughness. To overcome this issue, we tested an alternative advanced non-CAR and showed it brings a substantial gain in sensitivity compared to CAR. We also implemented and assessed in-line post-lithographic treatments for roughness mitigation. For outgassing-reduction purpose, a top-coat layer is added to the total process stack. A new generation top-coat was tested and showed improved printing performances compared to the previous product, especially avoiding dark erosion: SEM cross-section showed a straight pattern profile. A spin-coatable charge dissipation layer based on conductive polyaniline has also been tested for conductivity and lithographic performances, and compatibility experiments revealed that the underlying resist type has to be carefully chosen when using this product. Finally, the Process Of Reference (POR) trilayer stack defined for 5 kV multi-e-beam lithography was successfully etched with well opened and straight patterns, and no lithography-etch bias.
26 CFR 1.167(b)-1 - Straight line method.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-04-01
... 26 Internal Revenue 2 2014-04-01 2014-04-01 false Straight line method. 1.167(b)-1 Section 1.167(b... Straight line method. (a) In general. Under the straight line method the cost or other basis of the... may be reduced to a percentage or fraction. The straight line method may be used in determining a...
Monson, H.O.
1961-01-24
A radiator-type fuel block assembly is described. It has a hexagonal body of neutron fissionable material having a plurality of longitudinal equal- spaced coolant channels therein aligned in rows parallel to each face of the hexagonal body. Each of these coolant channels is hexagonally shaped with the corners rounded and enlarged and the assembly has a maximum temperature isothermal line around each channel which is approximately straight and equidistant between adjacent channels.
Carbide Derived Carbon Super Capacitor Application
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Appelgate, James; Bauer, Dave; Quirin, James; Lofland, S. E.; Hettinger, J. D.; Heon, M.; Gogotsi, Y.
2010-02-01
Supercapacitors can be applied into many different fields from nano-robots to high density energy storage. Growing TiC films from a know recipe and removing the transition metal element, Titanium, by chlorination leaves a carbon film that can then be applied as an electrode in a super capacitor. The problem is when the Titanium is removed from the film the stress induced by this process causes the films to fracture into isolated islands. The islands allow electrons to travel across them every easily, but there is no transfer of electrons from island to island. We present results of an investigation of a technique control the location of the fractures and use them to our benefit. Ideally, we want to create them to fracture in parallel lines. To force these fractures into straight lines we will purchase substrates with thermal SiO2 created on the surface of Si. Using an etching process we will removed a channel of SiO2 the same as the thickness of the TiC film we plan on growing. These channels will allow the fractures to form in a correlated way creating a straight line. )
Parallel algorithm for determining motion vectors in ice floe images by matching edge features
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Manohar, M.; Ramapriyan, H. K.; Strong, J. P.
1988-01-01
A parallel algorithm is described to determine motion vectors of ice floes using time sequences of images of the Arctic ocean obtained from the Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) instrument flown on-board the SEASAT spacecraft. Researchers describe a parallel algorithm which is implemented on the MPP for locating corresponding objects based on their translationally and rotationally invariant features. The algorithm first approximates the edges in the images by polygons or sets of connected straight-line segments. Each such edge structure is then reduced to a seed point. Associated with each seed point are the descriptions (lengths, orientations and sequence numbers) of the lines constituting the corresponding edge structure. A parallel matching algorithm is used to match packed arrays of such descriptions to identify corresponding seed points in the two images. The matching algorithm is designed such that fragmentation and merging of ice floes are taken into account by accepting partial matches. The technique has been demonstrated to work on synthetic test patterns and real image pairs from SEASAT in times ranging from .5 to 0.7 seconds for 128 x 128 images.
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Cooper, D. B.; Yalabik, N.
1975-01-01
Approximation of noisy data in the plane by straight lines or elliptic or single-branch hyperbolic curve segments arises in pattern recognition, data compaction, and other problems. The efficient search for and approximation of data by such curves were examined. Recursive least-squares linear curve-fitting was used, and ellipses and hyperbolas are parameterized as quadratic functions in x and y. The error minimized by the algorithm is interpreted, and central processing unit (CPU) times for estimating parameters for fitting straight lines and quadratic curves were determined and compared. CPU time for data search was also determined for the case of straight line fitting. Quadratic curve fitting is shown to require about six times as much CPU time as does straight line fitting, and curves relating CPU time and fitting error were determined for straight line fitting. Results are derived on early sequential determination of whether or not the underlying curve is a straight line.
A computer program for converting rectangular coordinates to latitude-longitude coordinates
Rutledge, A.T.
1989-01-01
A computer program was developed for converting the coordinates of any rectangular grid on a map to coordinates on a grid that is parallel to lines of equal latitude and longitude. Using this program in conjunction with groundwater flow models, the user can extract data and results from models with varying grid orientations and place these data into grid structure that is oriented parallel to lines of equal latitude and longitude. All cells in the rectangular grid must have equal dimensions, and all cells in the latitude-longitude grid measure one minute by one minute. This program is applicable if the map used shows lines of equal latitude as arcs and lines of equal longitude as straight lines and assumes that the Earth 's surface can be approximated as a sphere. The program user enters the row number , column number, and latitude and longitude of the midpoint of the cell for three test cells on the rectangular grid. The latitude and longitude of boundaries of the rectangular grid also are entered. By solving sets of simultaneous linear equations, the program calculates coefficients that are used for making the conversion. As an option in the program, the user may build a groundwater model file based on a grid that is parallel to lines of equal latitude and longitude. The program reads a data file based on the rectangular coordinates and automatically forms the new data file. (USGS)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Narahara, Koichi
2017-06-01
A scheme is proposed for generating multiphase oscillatory signals in millimeter-wave frequencies based on the dynamics of a traveling pulse developed in a closed transmission line periodically loaded with resonant-tunneling diodes (RTDs) that is coupled with several straight RTD lines. When supplied with an appropriate voltage at the end of an RTD line, a pulse edge is shown to exhibit a spatially extended limit-cycle oscillation on the line. We consider the case where several RTD lines are connected halfway to a closed one at even intervals. In this case, the oscillatory edge developed in each straight RTD line is mutually synchronized such that a pulse-shaped rotary traveling wave develops on the closed RTD line. The oscillating edge on each straight line is also synchronized with the traveling pulse on the closed line, such that the leading edge of the traveling pulse on the closed line and the forward edge on the straight line pass the cross point simultaneously. As a result, when N L straight lines are connected to the closed line, the phase difference between two adjacent oscillatory edges becomes 2 π/ N L . On the other hand, the trailing edge of the traveling pulse at the cross point breaks the voltage wave on the straight line into two pieces, one of which travels forward to form a solitary wave and the other of which travels backward to reach the input end, where it is reflected and starts to travel forward and this forward moving edge is supposed to be synchronized with the leading edge of the traveling pulse. It means that a back-and-forth edge and a forward-moving solitary wave develop periodically on each straight line. Because the time required for the traveling pulse to go around the closed line must be coincident with the period of the edge oscillation on each straight line, a unique traveling pulse cannot synchronize with each oscillating edge when the cell size of the closed line becomes large, resulting in the development of multiple traveling pulses on the closed line. In this paper, the design criteria are discussed concerning the connecting point between the straight and closed lines, the number of straight lines, and the size of the closed line. In addition, we describe several measurement results that validate the essential properties of the traveling pulse and then show several results of full-wave analysis of a monolithically integrated RTD line.
The art and science of straight lines in radiology.
Day, Cynthia M; Sodickson, Aaron
2011-02-01
The purpose of this article is to review the physical basis for straight radiographic lines, identify the possible components that may form a straight line interface in the body, provide illustrative examples across multiple organ systems and modalities, and explore how the detection of these interfaces can support specific diagnoses. Detection of a straight line interface can help the radiologist recognize otherwise difficult or subtle pathologic processes, and identification of its components can provide valuable clues to diagnosis.
The effect of spatial orientation on detecting motion trajectories in noise.
Pavan, Andrea; Casco, Clara; Mather, George; Bellacosa, Rosilari M; Cuturi, Luigi F; Campana, Gianluca
2011-09-15
A series of experiments investigated the extent to which the spatial orientation of a signal line affects discrimination of its trajectory from the random trajectories of background noise lines. The orientation of the signal line was either parallel (iso-) or orthogonal (ortho-) to its motion direction and it was identical in all respects to the noise (orientation, length and speed) except for its motion direction, rendering the signal line indistinguishable from the noise on a frame-to-frame basis. We found that discrimination of ortho-trajectories was generally better than iso-trajectories. Discrimination of ortho-trajectories was largely immune to the effects of spatial jitter in the trajectory, and to variations in step size and line-length. Discrimination of iso-trajectories was reliable provided that step-size was not too short and did not exceed line length, and that the trajectory was straight. The new result that trajectory discrimination in moving line elements is modulated by line orientation suggests that ortho- and iso-trajectory discrimination rely upon two distinct mechanisms: iso-motion discrimination involves a 'motion-streak' process that combines motion information with information about orientation parallel to the motion trajectory, while ortho-motion discrimination involves extended trajectory facilitation in a network of receptive fields with orthogonal orientation tuning. Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
1961-03-06
and area of cultivation land. Otherwise, we cannot keep an accurate account of land and Water, and in the straight - line planning there will be...of production. If we let the masses possess a production direction map and the straight - line planning method, and at the same time formulate them...supplies needed, we not only can use these as the basis for straight - line planning, but we also can list the results attained by straight - line planning
Objects of attention, objects of perception.
Avrahami, J
1999-11-01
Four experiments were conducted, to explore the notion of objects in perception. Taking as a starting point the effects of display content on rapid attention transfer and manipulating curvature, closure, and processing time, a link between objects of attention and objects of perception is proposed. In Experiment 1, a number of parallel, equally spaced, straight lines facilitated attention transfer along the lines, relative to transfer across the lines. In Experiment 2, with curved, closed-contour shapes, no "same-object" facilitation was observed. However, when a longer time interval was provided, in Experiment 3, a same-object advantage started to emerge. In Experiment 4, using the same curved shapes but in a non-speeded distance estimation task, a strong effect of objects was observed. It is argued that attention transfer is facilitated by line tracing but that line tracing is encouraged by objects.
An image overall complexity evaluation method based on LSD line detection
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Li, Jianan; Duan, Jin; Yang, Xu; Xiao, Bo
2017-04-01
In the artificial world, whether it is the city's traffic roads or engineering buildings contain a lot of linear features. Therefore, the research on the image complexity of linear information has become an important research direction in digital image processing field. This paper, by detecting the straight line information in the image and using the straight line as the parameter index, establishing the quantitative and accurate mathematics relationship. In this paper, we use LSD line detection algorithm which has good straight-line detection effect to detect the straight line, and divide the detected line by the expert consultation strategy. Then we use the neural network to carry on the weight training and get the weight coefficient of the index. The image complexity is calculated by the complexity calculation model. The experimental results show that the proposed method is effective. The number of straight lines in the image, the degree of dispersion, uniformity and so on will affect the complexity of the image.
26 CFR 1.9001-1 - Change from retirement to straight-line method of computing depreciation.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
..., DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY (CONTINUED) INCOME TAX (CONTINUED) INCOME TAXES General Actuarial Valuations § 1.9001-1 Change from retirement to straight-line method of computing depreciation. (a) In general. The... irrevocable election to have the provisions of the Retirement-Straight Line Adjustment Act of 1958 apply. This...
Power spectrum weighted edge analysis for straight edge detection in images
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Karvir, Hrishikesh V.; Skipper, Julie A.
2007-04-01
Most man-made objects provide characteristic straight line edges and, therefore, edge extraction is a commonly used target detection tool. However, noisy images often yield broken edges that lead to missed detections, and extraneous edges that may contribute to false target detections. We present a sliding-block approach for target detection using weighted power spectral analysis. In general, straight line edges appearing at a given frequency are represented as a peak in the Fourier domain at a radius corresponding to that frequency, and a direction corresponding to the orientation of the edges in the spatial domain. Knowing the edge width and spacing between the edges, a band-pass filter is designed to extract the Fourier peaks corresponding to the target edges and suppress image noise. These peaks are then detected by amplitude thresholding. The frequency band width and the subsequent spatial filter mask size are variable parameters to facilitate detection of target objects of different sizes under known imaging geometries. Many military objects, such as trucks, tanks and missile launchers, produce definite signatures with parallel lines and the algorithm proves to be ideal for detecting such objects. Moreover, shadow-casting objects generally provide sharp edges and are readily detected. The block operation procedure offers advantages of significant reduction in noise influence, improved edge detection, faster processing speed and versatility to detect diverse objects of different sizes in the image. With Scud missile launcher replicas as target objects, the method has been successfully tested on terrain board test images under different backgrounds, illumination and imaging geometries with cameras of differing spatial resolution and bit-depth.
Full-f version of GENE for turbulence in open-field-line systems
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Pan, Q.; Told, D.; Shi, E. L.; Hammett, G. W.; Jenko, F.
2018-06-01
Unique properties of plasmas in the tokamak edge, such as large amplitude fluctuations and plasma-wall interactions in the open-field-line regions, require major modifications of existing gyrokinetic codes originally designed for simulating core turbulence. To this end, the global version of the 3D2V gyrokinetic code GENE, so far employing a δf-splitting technique, is extended to simulate electrostatic turbulence in straight open-field-line systems. The major extensions are the inclusion of the velocity-space nonlinearity, the development of a conducting-sheath boundary, and the implementation of the Lenard-Bernstein collision operator. With these developments, the code can be run as a full-f code and can handle particle loss to and reflection from the wall. The extended code is applied to modeling turbulence in the Large Plasma Device (LAPD), with a reduced mass ratio and a much lower collisionality. Similar to turbulence in a tokamak scrape-off layer, LAPD turbulence involves collisions, parallel streaming, cross-field turbulent transport with steep profiles, and particle loss at the parallel boundary.
26 CFR 7.57(d)-1 - Election with respect to straight line recovery of intangibles.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... Tax Reform Act of 1976. Under this election taxpayers may use cost depletion to compute straight line... wells to which the election applies, cost depletion to compute straight line recovery of intangibles for... whether or not the taxpayer uses cost depletion in computing taxable income. (5) The election is made by a...
Windstorm Impact Reduction Implementation Plan
2007-01-01
wind events, including hurricanes, tornadoes and straight line winds from thunderstorms. This information is repeated in brief during severe weather...event documentation and damage analyses. Better understanding of atmospheric dynamics of straight - line winds Wind observing systems and...Developed techniques for improved extreme wind speed maps Investigation of straight - line winds Wind speed and direction analysis for input to
27 CFR 9.46 - Livermore Valley.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-04-01
... straight line approximately 4.2 miles, passing onto the Cedar Mtn. map, to BM 1878, 40 feet north of Mines..., R1E; then (18) Continue northwest in a straight line approximately 1.1 miles to an unnamed, 1,291-foot..., 840-foot peak, T3S, R2W; then (24) Proceed north-northeast in a straight line approximately 3.4 miles...
27 CFR 9.46 - Livermore Valley.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-04-01
... straight line approximately 4.2 miles, passing onto the Cedar Mtn. map, to BM 1878, 40 feet north of Mines..., R1E; then (18) Continue northwest in a straight line approximately 1.1 miles to an unnamed, 1,291-foot..., 840-foot peak, T3S, R2W; then (24) Proceed north-northeast in a straight line approximately 3.4 miles...
27 CFR 9.46 - Livermore Valley.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-04-01
... straight line approximately 4.2 miles, passing onto the Cedar Mtn. map, to BM 1878, 40 feet north of Mines..., R1E; then (18) Continue northwest in a straight line approximately 1.1 miles to an unnamed, 1,291-foot..., 840-foot peak, T3S, R2W; then (24) Proceed north-northeast in a straight line approximately 3.4 miles...
Competition of Perpendicular and Parallel Flows in a Straight Magnetic Field
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Li, Jiacong; Diamond, Patrick; Hong, Rongjie; Tynan, George
2017-10-01
In tokamaks, intrinsic rotations in both toroidal and poloidal directions are important for the stability and confinement. Since they compete for energy from background turbulence, the coupling of them is the key to understanding the physics of turbulent state and transport bifurcations, e.g. L-H transition. V⊥ can affect the parallel Reynolds stress via cross phase and energetics, and thus regulates the parallel flow generation. In return, the turbulence driven V∥ plays a role in the mean vorticity flux, influencing the generation of V⊥. Also, competition of intrinsic azimuthal and axial flows is observed in CSDX-a linear plasma device with straight magnetic fields. CSDX is a well diagnosed venue to study the basic physics of turbulence-flow interactions in straight magnetic fields. Here, we study the turbulent energy branching between the turbulence driven parallel flow and perpendicular flow. Specifically, the ratio between parallel and perpendicular Reynolds power decreases when the mean perpendicular flow increases. As the mean parallel flow increases, this ratio first increases and then decreases before the parallel flow shear hits the parallel shear flow instability threshold. We seek to understand the flow states and compare with CSDX experiments. This material is based upon work supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Fusion Energy Sciences, under Award Number DE-FG02-04ER54738.
Line drawing extraction from gray level images by feature integration
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Yoo, Hoi J.; Crevier, Daniel; Lepage, Richard; Myler, Harley R.
1994-10-01
We describe procedures that extract line drawings from digitized gray level images, without use of domain knowledge, by modeling preattentive and perceptual organization functions of the human visual system. First, edge points are identified by standard low-level processing, based on the Canny edge operator. Edge points are then linked into single-pixel thick straight- line segments and circular arcs: this operation serves to both filter out isolated and highly irregular segments, and to lump the remaining points into a smaller number of structures for manipulation by later stages of processing. The next stages consist in linking the segments into a set of closed boundaries, which is the system's definition of a line drawing. According to the principles of Gestalt psychology, closure allows us to organize the world by filling in the gaps in a visual stimulation so as to perceive whole objects instead of disjoint parts. To achieve such closure, the system selects particular features or combinations of features by methods akin to those of preattentive processing in humans: features include gaps, pairs of straight or curved parallel lines, L- and T-junctions, pairs of symmetrical lines, and the orientation and length of single lines. These preattentive features are grouped into higher-level structures according to the principles of proximity, similarity, closure, symmetry, and feature conjunction. Achieving closure may require supplying missing segments linking contour concavities. Choices are made between competing structures on the basis of their overall compliance with the principles of closure and symmetry. Results include clean line drawings of curvilinear manufactured objects. The procedures described are part of a system called VITREO (viewpoint-independent 3-D recognition and extraction of objects).
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
De, P.K.
1973-08-01
The Cherenkov radiation emitted by an oscillating dipole moving in a semi-infinite dielectric with a constant velocity along a straight line parallel to the conducting boundary is calculated by using Maxwell's equations. The wave nature of electromagnetic intensities reveals that waves propagate in two modes, and the radiation takes place in the form of two cones which are semicircular in section, the axes of the cones coinciding wiih the path of the dipole. Conditions for the existence of only one cone are given. The intensity of radiation fluctuates spatially. The conducting boundary acts as a promoter and plays an importantmore » role in the graduation of energy loss which is technically important for concentration of radiation. (RWR)« less
A novel line segment detection algorithm based on graph search
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Zhao, Hong-dan; Liu, Guo-ying; Song, Xu
2018-02-01
To overcome the problem of extracting line segment from an image, a method of line segment detection was proposed based on the graph search algorithm. After obtaining the edge detection result of the image, the candidate straight line segments are obtained in four directions. For the candidate straight line segments, their adjacency relationships are depicted by a graph model, based on which the depth-first search algorithm is employed to determine how many adjacent line segments need to be merged. Finally we use the least squares method to fit the detected straight lines. The comparative experimental results verify that the proposed algorithm has achieved better results than the line segment detector (LSD).
27 CFR 9.194 - San Antonio Valley.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-04-01
... southeast in a straight line for approximately 5 miles across sections 24 and 25, T23S, R9E, and sections 30... Tierra Redonda Mountain map; then (3) Continue southeast in a straight line for approximately 3.25 miles... the Bradley map; then (4) Proceed straight south for approximately 2.5 miles along the eastern...
A method of plane geometry primitive presentation
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Jiao, Anbo; Luo, Haibo; Chang, Zheng; Hui, Bin
2014-11-01
Point feature and line feature are basic elements in object feature sets, and they play an important role in object matching and recognition. On one hand, point feature is sensitive to noise; on the other hand, there are usually a huge number of point features in an image, which makes it complex for matching. Line feature includes straight line segment and curve. One difficulty in straight line segment matching is the uncertainty of endpoint location, the other is straight line segment fracture problem or short straight line segments joined to form long straight line segment. While for the curve, in addition to the above problems, there is another difficulty in how to quantitatively describe the shape difference between curves. Due to the problems of point feature and line feature, the robustness and accuracy of target description will be affected; in this case, a method of plane geometry primitive presentation is proposed to describe the significant structure of an object. Firstly, two types of primitives are constructed, they are intersecting line primitive and blob primitive. Secondly, a line segment detector (LSD) is applied to detect line segment, and then intersecting line primitive is extracted. Finally, robustness and accuracy of the plane geometry primitive presentation method is studied. This method has a good ability to obtain structural information of the object, even if there is rotation or scale change of the object in the image. Experimental results verify the robustness and accuracy of this method.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
McMullen, Jessie L.
Scope and method of study. This study describes the advantages and the disadvantages of straight-lined and nonstraight-lined organizations at the MMAC FAA Academy. The primary focus will be on the AF division within the FAA Academy. This study will assist in making sound decisions about which structure is better at the present time. Others who read this research will gain an awareness of advantages and disadvantages of each structure. The reason for focusing primarily on individuals from the FAA is because of their experience in straight-line and nonstraight-line organizations. Data were collected during the study and analyzed to determine what the majority of the candidates thought about the structure. Findings and conclusions. Many of the respondents believe the FAA Academy AF Division should be straight-lined to the AFZ organization in Headquarters. Most of the respondents still see the FAA organization as a closed-type structure with a top-down management style. Another important outcome of the findings was many of the respondents believed, regardless of the structure, employees should be empowered more and allowed to participate in the decision-making process. Based on the findings some of the advantages of straight-lined organizations were: it brings the parent organization in and gives them a first hand view of its operations, there is no middle person involved, and there is a direct line to parent organization. The disadvantages of straight-lined organizations based on the findings were: there is no middle management to speak to headquarters as an intermediator on training issues/concerns, it requires more resources and funding that may not be forthcoming, and it compels a parent organization to acquire more resources to handle its own business.
27 CFR 9.179 - Southern Oregon.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-04-01
... township line T22S-T23S; then (4) Proceed southeast approximately 8.5 miles along a straight line to the intersection of township line T23S-T24S with range line R7W-R8W; then south along the R7W-R8W range line... a straight line approximately 3.5 miles toward the intersection of township line T25S-T26S with...
27 CFR 9.179 - Southern Oregon.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... township line T22S-T23S; then (4) Proceed southeast approximately 8.5 miles along a straight line to the intersection of township line T23S-T24S with range line R7W-R8W; then south along the R7W-R8W range line... a straight line approximately 3.5 miles toward the intersection of township line T25S-T26S with...
Mean-flow measurements of the flow field diffusing bend
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Mcmillan, O. J.
1982-01-01
Time-average measurements of the low-speed turbulent flow in a diffusing bend are presented. The experimental geometry consists of parallel top and bottom walls and curved diverging side walls. The turning of the center line of this channel is 40 deg, the area ratio is 1.5 and the ratios of height and center-line length to throat width are 1.5 and 3, respectively. The diffusing bend is preceded and followed by straight constant area sections. The inlet boundary layers on the parallel walls are artificially thickened and occupy about 30% of the channel height; those on the side walls develop naturally and are about half as thick. The free-stream speed at the inlet was approximately 30 m/sec for all the measurements. Inlet boundary layer mean velocity and turbulence intensity profiles are presented, as are data for wall static pressures, and at six cross sections, surveys of the velocity-vector and static-pressure fields. The dominant feature of the flow field is a pair of counter-rotating streamwise vortices formed by the cross-stream pressure gradient in the bend on which an overall deceleration is superimposed.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-04-01
... for 0.4 mile to the intersection of the 1,400-foot elevation line and an unnamed intermittent creek... straight line for 0.45 mile to the intersection of the 1,380-foot elevation line and an unnamed, unimproved...; then (3) Proceed south-southeast in a straight line for 0.6 mile to the unnamed 1,804-foot elevation...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-04-01
... for 0.4 mile to the intersection of the 1,400-foot elevation line and an unnamed intermittent creek... straight line for 0.45 mile to the intersection of the 1,380-foot elevation line and an unnamed, unimproved...; then (3) Proceed south-southeast in a straight line for 0.6 mile to the unnamed 1,804-foot elevation...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-04-01
... for 0.4 mile to the intersection of the 1,400-foot elevation line and an unnamed intermittent creek... straight line for 0.45 mile to the intersection of the 1,380-foot elevation line and an unnamed, unimproved...; then (3) Proceed south-southeast in a straight line for 0.6 mile to the unnamed 1,804-foot elevation...
Roadway data representation and application development : final report, December 2009.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2009-08-06
The Straight-line Diagrammer, a web-based application to produce Straight-line Diagrams (SLDs) automatically, was developed in this project to replace old application (AutoSLD) which has outdated structure and limited capabilities.
De Winter, Joeri; Wagemans, Johan
2008-01-01
Attneave (1954 Psychological Review 61 183-193) demonstrated that a line drawing of a sleeping cat can still be identified when the smoothly curved contours are replaced by straight-line segments connecting the positive maxima and negative minima of contour curvature. Using the set of line drawings by Snodgrass and Vanderwart (1980 Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Learning and Memory 6 174-215) we made outline versions (with known curvature values along the contour) that can still be identified and that can be used to test Attneave's demonstration more systematically and more thoroughly. In five experiments (with 444 subjects in total), we tested identifiability of straight-line versions of 184 stimuli with different selections of points to be connected (using 24 to 28 subjects per stimulus per condition). Straight-line versions connecting curvature extrema were easier to identify than those based on inflections (where curvature changes sign), and those connecting salient points (determined by 161 independent subjects) were easier than those connecting midpoints. However, identification varied considerably between objects: some were almost always identifiable and others almost never, regardless of the selection criterion, whereas identifiability depended on the specific shape attributes preserved in the straight-line version of the outline in other objects. Results are discussed in relation to Attneave's original hypotheses as well as in the light of more recent theories on shape perception and object identification.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-07-01
... defined by a series of points of contact, with the boat structure, by straight lines at 45 degree angles... the line defined by a series of points of contact with the boat structure, by straight lines at 45 degree angles to the horizontal and contained in a vertical plane normal to the outside edge of the boat...
The extent of visual space inferred from perspective angles
Erkelens, Casper J.
2015-01-01
Retinal images are perspective projections of the visual environment. Perspective projections do not explain why we perceive perspective in 3-D space. Analysis of underlying spatial transformations shows that visual space is a perspective transformation of physical space if parallel lines in physical space vanish at finite distance in visual space. Perspective angles, i.e., the angle perceived between parallel lines in physical space, were estimated for rails of a straight railway track. Perspective angles were also estimated from pictures taken from the same point of view. Perspective angles between rails ranged from 27% to 83% of their angular size in the retinal image. Perspective angles prescribe the distance of vanishing points of visual space. All computed distances were shorter than 6 m. The shallow depth of a hypothetical space inferred from perspective angles does not match the depth of visual space, as it is perceived. Incongruity between the perceived shape of a railway line on the one hand and the experienced ratio between width and length of the line on the other hand is huge, but apparently so unobtrusive that it has remained unnoticed. The incompatibility between perspective angles and perceived distances casts doubt on evidence for a curved visual space that has been presented in the literature and was obtained from combining judgments of distances and angles with physical positions. PMID:26034567
Parallel filtering in global gyrokinetic simulations
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Jolliet, S.; McMillan, B. F.; Villard, L.; Vernay, T.; Angelino, P.; Tran, T. M.; Brunner, S.; Bottino, A.; Idomura, Y.
2012-02-01
In this work, a Fourier solver [B.F. McMillan, S. Jolliet, A. Bottino, P. Angelino, T.M. Tran, L. Villard, Comp. Phys. Commun. 181 (2010) 715] is implemented in the global Eulerian gyrokinetic code GT5D [Y. Idomura, H. Urano, N. Aiba, S. Tokuda, Nucl. Fusion 49 (2009) 065029] and in the global Particle-In-Cell code ORB5 [S. Jolliet, A. Bottino, P. Angelino, R. Hatzky, T.M. Tran, B.F. McMillan, O. Sauter, K. Appert, Y. Idomura, L. Villard, Comp. Phys. Commun. 177 (2007) 409] in order to reduce the memory of the matrix associated with the field equation. This scheme is verified with linear and nonlinear simulations of turbulence. It is demonstrated that the straight-field-line angle is the coordinate that optimizes the Fourier solver, that both linear and nonlinear turbulent states are unaffected by the parallel filtering, and that the k∥ spectrum is independent of plasma size at fixed normalized poloidal wave number.
Multioriented and curved text lines extraction from Indian documents.
Pal, U; Roy, Partha Pratim
2004-08-01
There are printed artistic documents where text lines of a single page may not be parallel to each other. These text lines may have different orientations or the text lines may be curved shapes. For the optical character recognition (OCR) of these documents, we need to extract such lines properly. In this paper, we propose a novel scheme, mainly based on the concept of water reservoir analogy, to extract individual text lines from printed Indian documents containing multioriented and/or curve text lines. A reservoir is a metaphor to illustrate the cavity region of a character where water can be stored. In the proposed scheme, at first, connected components are labeled and identified either as isolated or touching. Next, each touching component is classified either straight type (S-type) or curve type (C-type), depending on the reservoir base-area and envelope points of the component. Based on the type (S-type or C-type) of a component two candidate points are computed from each touching component. Finally, candidate regions (neighborhoods of the candidate points) of the candidate points of each component are detected and after analyzing these candidate regions, components are grouped to get individual text lines.
Microelectromechanical ratcheting apparatus
Barnes, Stephen M.; Miller, Samuel L.; Jensen, Brian D.; Rodgers, M. Steven; Burg, Michael S.
2001-01-01
A microelectromechanical (MEM) ratcheting apparatus is disclosed which includes an electrostatic or thermal actuator that drives a moveable member in the form of a ring gear, stage, or rack. Motion is effected by one or more reciprocating pawls driven by the actuator in a direction that is parallel to, in line with, or tangential to the path. The reciprocating pawls engage indexing elements (e.g. teeth or pins) on the moveable member to incrementally move the member along a curved or straight path with the ability to precisely control and determine the position of the moveable member. The MEM apparatus can be formed on a silicon substrate by conventional surface micromachining methods.
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Armstrong, Wilbur C.
1992-01-01
The piping in a liquid rocket can assume complex configurations due to multiple tanks, multiple engines, and structures that must be piped around. The capability to handle some of these complex configurations have been incorporated into the ADMIT code. The capability to modify the input on line has been implemented. The configurations allowed include multiple tanks, multiple engines, the splitting of a pipe into unequal segments going to different (or the same) engines. This program will handle the following type elements: straight pipes, bends, inline accumulators, tuned stub accumulators, Helmholtz resonators, parallel resonators, pumps, split pipes, multiple tanks, and multiple engines.
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Armstrong, Wilbur C.
1992-01-01
The piping in a liquid rocket can assume complex configurations due to multiple tanks, multiple engines, and structures that must be piped around. The capability to handle some of these complex configurations have been incorporated into the SSFREQ code. The capability to modify the input on line has been implemented. The configurations allowed include multiple tanks, multiple engines, the splitting of a pipe into equal segments going to different (or the same) engines. This program will handle the following type elements: straight pipes, bends, inline accumulators, tuned stub accumulators, Helmholtz resonators, parallel resonators, pumps, split pipes, multiple tanks, and multiple engines.
Nanoscale shift of the intensity distribution of dipole radiation.
Shu, Jie; Li, Xin; Arnoldus, Henk F
2009-02-01
The energy flow lines (field lines of the Poynting vector) for radiation emitted by a dipole are in general curves, rather than straight lines. For a linear dipole the field lines are straight, but when the dipole moment of a source rotates, the field lines wind numerous times around an axis, which is perpendicular to the plane of rotation, before asymptotically approaching a straight line. We consider an elliptical dipole moment, representing the most general state of oscillation, and this includes the linear dipole as a special case. Due to the spiraling near the source, for the case of a rotating dipole moment, the field lines in the far field are displaced with respect to the outward radial direction, and this leads to a shift of the intensity distribution of the radiation in the far field. This shift is shown to be independent of the distance to the source and, although of nanoscale dimension, should be experimentally observable.
26 CFR 1.9001 - Statutory provisions; Retirement-Straight Line Adjustment Act of 1958.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... line property on his 1956 adjustment date may elect to have this section apply. Such an election shall... beginning after December 31, 1940, and before January 1, 1956, changed from the retirement to the straight line method of computing the allowance of deductions for depreciation. (d) Basis adjustments as of 1956...
33 CFR 80.712 - Morris Island, SC to Hilton Head Island, SC.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-07-01
... Edisto River Entrance to the shore of Botany Bay Island. (d) A line drawn from the microwave antenna..., SC to Hilton Head Island, SC. (a) A straight line drawn from the seaward tangent of Folly Island through across Stono River to the shoreline of Sandy Point. (b) A straight line drawn from the seaward...
33 CFR 80.712 - Morris Island, SC to Hilton Head Island, SC.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-07-01
... Edisto River Entrance to the shore of Botany Bay Island. (d) A line drawn from the microwave antenna..., SC to Hilton Head Island, SC. (a) A straight line drawn from the seaward tangent of Folly Island through across Stono River to the shoreline of Sandy Point. (b) A straight line drawn from the seaward...
Mattern, Thomas; Ellenberg, Ursula; Houston, David M; Lamare, Miles; Davis, Lloyd S; van Heezik, Yolanda; Seddon, Philip J
2013-01-01
Free-ranging marine predators rarely search for prey along straight lines because dynamic ocean processes usually require complex search strategies. If linear movement patterns occur they are usually associated with travelling events or migratory behaviour. However, recent fine scale tracking of flying seabirds has revealed straight-line movements while birds followed fishing vessels. Unlike flying seabirds, penguins are not known to target and follow fishing vessels. Yet yellow-eyed penguins from New Zealand often exhibit directed movement patterns while searching for prey at the seafloor, a behaviour that seems to contradict common movement ecology theories. While deploying GPS dive loggers on yellow-eyed penguins from the Otago Peninsula we found that the birds frequently followed straight lines for several kilometres with little horizontal deviation. In several cases individuals swam up and down the same line, while some of the lines were followed by more than one individual. Using a remote operated vehicle (ROV) we found a highly visible furrow on the seafloor most likely caused by an otter board of a demersal fish trawl, which ran in a straight line exactly matching the trajectory of a recent line identified from penguin tracks. We noted high abundances of benthic scavengers associated with fisheries-related bottom disturbance. While our data demonstrate the acute way-finding capabilities of benthic foraging yellow-eyed penguins, they also highlight how hidden cascading effects of coastal fisheries may alter behaviour and potentially even population dynamics of marine predators, an often overlooked fact in the examination of fisheries' impacts.
Comparison of glue-line quality between gang edging and straight-line ripping
Charles J. Gatchell; James R. Olson; James R. Olson
1986-01-01
Gang edging with a dip-chain fed gang ripsaw produces gluing surfaces equal to those from a straight-line ripsaw in yellow-poplar (Liriodendron tulipifera) and red oak (Quercus rubra). Special care in gluing red oak was needed to get shear strengths equal to solid wood values. However, the strength comparisons between sawing methods showed no differences between gang...
Not Out of Control: Analysis of the Federal Disaster Spending Trend
2016-03-01
included heavy rain, excessive rainfall, tropical storms, hurricanes, flooding, coastal flooding, wind, straight line winds, high winds, tornadoes ...straight line winds, tornadoes , high winds, coastal flooding, soil saturation, and mud flow.174 Despite the high number of severe storm declarations over
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... items of tax preference are: (a) Excess investment interest, (b) The excess of accelerated depreciation on section 1250 property over straight line depreciation, (c) The excess of accelerated depreciation on section 1245 property subject to a net lease over straight line depreciation, (d) The excess of...
Automated detection of jet contrails using the AVHRR split window
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Engelstad, M.; Sengupta, S. K.; Lee, T.; Welch, R. M.
1992-01-01
This paper investigates the automated detection of jet contrails using data from the Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer. A preliminary algorithm subtracts the 11.8-micron image from the 10.8-micron image, creating a difference image on which contrails are enhanced. Then a three-stage algorithm searches the difference image for the nearly-straight line segments which characterize contrails. First, the algorithm searches for elevated, linear patterns called 'ridges'. Second, it applies a Hough transform to the detected ridges to locate nearly-straight lines. Third, the algorithm determines which of the nearly-straight lines are likely to be contrails. The paper applies this technique to several test scenes.
International Boundary Study. Series A. Limits in the Seas. Number 42, Straight Baselines: Ecuador.
1972-05-23
point a straight line to Puntilla de Santa Elena; (d) A straight line from Puntilla de Santa Elena in the direction of Cabo Blanco ( Peru ) to the...published by the U.S. Navy Oceanographic Office. 1. The seaward extension of the Colombia-Ecuador land boundary into Bahia Ancon de Sardinas is not...Comments 1-2 81 Closes Bahia Ancon de Sardinas, which is neither a historical nor juridical bay, by connecting Cabo Manglares, Colombia (1) and Punta Galera
Laser shock microforming of aluminum foil with fs laser
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Ye, Yunxia; Feng, Yayun; Xuan, Ting; Hua, Xijun; Hua, Yinqun
2014-12-01
Laser shock microforming of Aluminum(Al) foil through fs laser has been researched in this paper. The influences of confining layer, clamping method and impact times on induced dent depths were investigated experimentally. Microstructure of fs laser shock forming Al foil was observed through Transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Under the condition of tightly clamping, the dent depths increase with impact times and finally tend to saturating. Another new confining layer, the main component of which is polypropylene, was applied and the confining effect of it is better because of its higher impedance. TEM results show that dislocation is one of the main deformation mechanisms of fs laser shock forming Al foil. Specially, most of dislocations exist in the form of short and discrete dislocation lines. Parallel straight dislocation slip line also were observed. We analyzed that these unique dislocation arrangements are due to fs laser-induced ultra high strain rate.
The universal instability in general geometry
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Helander, P.; Plunk, G. G.
2015-09-15
The “universal” instability has recently been revived by Landreman et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 114, 095003 (2015)], who showed that it indeed exists in plasma geometries with straight (but sheared) magnetic field lines. Here, it is demonstrated analytically that this instability can be presented in more general sheared and toroidal geometries. In a torus, the universal instability is shown to be closely related to the trapped-electron mode, although the trapped-electron drive is usually dominant. However, this drive can be weakened or eliminated, as in the case in stellarators with the maximum-J property, leaving the parallel Landau resonance to drive amore » residual mode, which is identified as the universal instability.« less
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... feet) in the Canelo Hills. (ii) From there in a straight line eastward for approximately 10 miles, to...-northwestward for approximately 21 miles in a straight line to the summit of Granite Peak (7,413 feet) in the... Mount Wrightson (9,543 feet) in the Santa Rita Mountains. (2) Boundary Description—(i) From the starting...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-04-01
... feet) in the Canelo Hills. (ii) From there in a straight line eastward for approximately 10 miles, to...-northwestward for approximately 21 miles in a straight line to the summit of Granite Peak (7,413 feet) in the... Mount Wrightson (9,543 feet) in the Santa Rita Mountains. (2) Boundary Description—(i) From the starting...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-04-01
... Highway 29, then continuing in a straight line approximately .1 mile to the peak of the 320+ foot hill... direction in a straight line approximately 1.7 miles along Skellenger Lane, past its intersection with Conn... quadrangle map); (2) Then south along the center of the river bed approximately .4 miles to the point where...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-04-01
... feet) in the Canelo Hills. (ii) From there in a straight line eastward for approximately 10 miles, to...-northwestward for approximately 21 miles in a straight line to the summit of Granite Peak (7,413 feet) in the... Mount Wrightson (9,543 feet) in the Santa Rita Mountains. (2) Boundary Description—(i) From the starting...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-04-01
... feet) in the Canelo Hills. (ii) From there in a straight line eastward for approximately 10 miles, to...-northwestward for approximately 21 miles in a straight line to the summit of Granite Peak (7,413 feet) in the... Mount Wrightson (9,543 feet) in the Santa Rita Mountains. (2) Boundary Description—(i) From the starting...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-04-01
... feet) in the Canelo Hills. (ii) From there in a straight line eastward for approximately 10 miles, to...-northwestward for approximately 21 miles in a straight line to the summit of Granite Peak (7,413 feet) in the... Mount Wrightson (9,543 feet) in the Santa Rita Mountains. (2) Boundary Description—(i) From the starting...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-04-01
... Highway 29, then continuing in a straight line approximately .1 mile to the peak of the 320+ foot hill... direction in a straight line approximately 1.7 miles along Skellenger Lane, past its intersection with Conn... quadrangle map); (2) Then south along the center of the river bed approximately .4 miles to the point where...
Pre-School Students' Informal Acquisitions Regarding the Concepts of Point and Straight Line
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Orbay, Keziban; Develi, Mehmet Hikmet
2015-01-01
This study aimed to investigate the informal cognitive structures regarding "point" and "straight line"--two basic and undefined terms of geometry--in children registered in preschool--the previous step before in-class formal education process. The study was conducted with the participation of 50 children enrolled in nursery,…
Accurately estimating PSF with straight lines detected by Hough transform
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Wang, Ruichen; Xu, Liangpeng; Fan, Chunxiao; Li, Yong
2018-04-01
This paper presents an approach to estimating point spread function (PSF) from low resolution (LR) images. Existing techniques usually rely on accurate detection of ending points of the profile normal to edges. In practice however, it is often a great challenge to accurately localize profiles of edges from a LR image, which hence leads to a poor PSF estimation of the lens taking the LR image. For precisely estimating the PSF, this paper proposes firstly estimating a 1-D PSF kernel with straight lines, and then robustly obtaining the 2-D PSF from the 1-D kernel by least squares techniques and random sample consensus. Canny operator is applied to the LR image for obtaining edges and then Hough transform is utilized to extract straight lines of all orientations. Estimating 1-D PSF kernel with straight lines effectively alleviates the influence of the inaccurate edge detection on PSF estimation. The proposed method is investigated on both natural and synthetic images for estimating PSF. Experimental results show that the proposed method outperforms the state-ofthe- art and does not rely on accurate edge detection.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Wier, Timothy P.; Moser, Cameron S.; Grant, Jonathan F.; Riley, Scott C.; Robbins-Wamsley, Stephanie H.; First, Matthew R.; Drake, Lisa A.
2017-10-01
Both L-shaped ("L") and straight ("Straight") sample probes have been used to collect water samples from a main ballast line in land-based or shipboard verification testing of ballast water management systems (BWMS). A series of experiments was conducted to quantify and compare the sampling efficiencies of L and Straight sample probes. The findings from this research-that both L and Straight probes sample organisms with similar efficiencies-permit increased flexibility for positioning sample probes aboard ships.
The FFAG return loop for the CBETA Energy Recovery Linac
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Berg, J. S.
2017-04-28
The CBETA energy recovery linac uses a single xed eld alternating gradient (FFAG) beam line to return the beam for electron beams with four energies, ranging from 42 MeV to 150 MeV. To keep the beam line compact, the ends of the return line have a small radius of curvature, but the central part of the return line is straight. These are connected by transition lines that adiabatically change from one to the other. We rst describe the design or the arc cell. We then describe how a straight cell is created to be a good match to this arcmore » cell. We then describe the design of the transition line between them. The design process makes use of eld maps for the desired magnets. Because we switch magnet types as we move from the arc, through the transition, and into the straight, there are discrete jumps in the elds that degrade the adiabaticity of the transition, and we describe corrections to manage that.« less
Differences in apparent straightness of dot and line stimuli.
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Parlee, M. B.
1972-01-01
An investigation has been made of anisotropic responses to contoured and noncontoured stimuli to obtain an insight into the way these stimuli are processed. For this purpose, eight subjects judged the alignment of minimally contoured (3 dot) and contoured (line) stimuli. Stimuli, presented to each eye separately, vertically subtended either 8 or 32 deg visual angle and were located 10 deg left, center, or 10 deg right in the visual field. Location-dependent deviations from physical straightness were larger for dot stimuli than for lines. The results were the same for the two eyes. In a second experiment, subjects judged the alignment of stimuli composed of different densities of dots. Apparent straightness for these stimuli was the same as for lines. The results are discussed in terms of alternative mechanisms for analysis of contoured and minimally contoured stimuli.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-04-01
... mile to the 630-foot promontory in section 32, T. 20 S., R. 9 E.; (1) Then east southeasterly in a straight line approximately 0.6 mile to the 499-foot promontory in the southwest corner of section 33, T. 20 S., R. 9 E.; (2) Then east southeasterly in a straight line approximately 1.3 miles to the 847...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-04-01
... Valley Ford; (2) Then southeast in a straight line for approximately 22.0 miles to the peak of Barnabe Mountain (elevation 1466 feet); (3) Then southeast in a straight line for approximately 10.0 miles to the... approximately 5.8 miles to the confluence of San Rafael Creek and San Rafael Bay in San Rafael; (5) Then north...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-04-01
... mile to the 630-foot promontory in section 32, T. 20 S., R. 9 E.; (1) Then east southeasterly in a straight line approximately 0.6 mile to the 499-foot promontory in the southwest corner of section 33, T. 20 S., R. 9 E.; (2) Then east southeasterly in a straight line approximately 1.3 miles to the 847...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... mile to the 630-foot promontory in section 32, T. 20 S., R. 9 E.; (1) Then east southeasterly in a straight line approximately 0.6 mile to the 499-foot promontory in the southwest corner of section 33, T. 20 S., R. 9 E.; (2) Then east southeasterly in a straight line approximately 1.3 miles to the 847...
27 CFR 9.178 - Columbia Gorge.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-04-01
... Columbia River. From this point, the boundary line— (1) Goes 1.5 miles straight north along the R9E-R10E line to the northwest corner of section 19, T3N, R10E (Hood River Quadrangle); (2) Continues 2 miles... Quadrangle); (3) Goes 4.1 miles straight north along the section line, crossing onto the Northwestern Lake...
27 CFR 9.178 - Columbia Gorge.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-04-01
... Columbia River. From this point, the boundary line— (1) Goes 1.5 miles straight north along the R9E-R10E line to the northwest corner of section 19, T3N, R10E (Hood River Quadrangle); (2) Continues 2 miles... Quadrangle); (3) Goes 4.1 miles straight north along the section line, crossing onto the Northwestern Lake...
27 CFR 9.178 - Columbia Gorge.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-04-01
... Columbia River. From this point, the boundary line— (1) Goes 1.5 miles straight north along the R9E-R10E line to the northwest corner of section 19, T3N, R10E (Hood River Quadrangle); (2) Continues 2 miles... Quadrangle); (3) Goes 4.1 miles straight north along the section line, crossing onto the Northwestern Lake...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-04-01
... Valley Ford; (2) Then southeast in a straight line for approximately 22.0 miles to the peak of Barnabe Mountain (elevation 1466 feet); (3) Then southeast in a straight line for approximately 10.0 miles to the... approximately 5.8 miles to the confluence of San Rafael Creek and San Rafael Bay in San Rafael; (5) Then north...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-04-01
... Valley Ford; (2) Then southeast in a straight line for approximately 22.0 miles to the peak of Barnabe Mountain (elevation 1466 feet); (3) Then southeast in a straight line for approximately 10.0 miles to the... approximately 5.8 miles to the confluence of San Rafael Creek and San Rafael Bay in San Rafael; (5) Then north...
27 CFR 9.178 - Columbia Gorge.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-04-01
... Columbia River. From this point, the boundary line— (1) Goes 1.5 miles straight north along the R9E-R10E line to the northwest corner of section 19, T3N, R10E (Hood River Quadrangle); (2) Continues 2 miles... Quadrangle); (3) Goes 4.1 miles straight north along the section line, crossing onto the Northwestern Lake...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-04-01
... east-northeasterly in a straight line approximately 4.1 miles, onto the Inwood map, to the 1,786-foot... 2.1 miles to the 2,086-foot elevation point, section 15, T31N/R1W; then (3) Proceed north-northeasterly in a straight line approximately 0.7 mile to the marked 1,648-foot elevation point (which should...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-04-01
... mile to the 630-foot promontory in section 32, T. 20 S., R. 9 E.; (1) Then east southeasterly in a straight line approximately 0.6 mile to the 499-foot promontory in the southwest corner of section 33, T. 20 S., R. 9 E.; (2) Then east southeasterly in a straight line approximately 1.3 miles to the 847...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-04-01
... Valley Ford; (2) Then southeast in a straight line for approximately 22.0 miles to the peak of Barnabe Mountain (elevation 1466 feet); (3) Then southeast in a straight line for approximately 10.0 miles to the... approximately 5.8 miles to the confluence of San Rafael Creek and San Rafael Bay in San Rafael; (5) Then north...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-04-01
... mile to the 630-foot promontory in section 32, T. 20 S., R. 9 E.; (1) Then east southeasterly in a straight line approximately 0.6 mile to the 499-foot promontory in the southwest corner of section 33, T. 20 S., R. 9 E.; (2) Then east southeasterly in a straight line approximately 1.3 miles to the 847...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... Valley Ford; (2) Then southeast in a straight line for approximately 22.0 miles to the peak of Barnabe Mountain (elevation 1466 feet); (3) Then southeast in a straight line for approximately 10.0 miles to the... approximately 5.8 miles to the confluence of San Rafael Creek and San Rafael Bay in San Rafael; (5) Then north...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-04-01
... straight line approximately one mile to an unnamed pass with an elevation of 1485 feet, located on Soda Canyon Road; (3) Then easterly in a straight line approximately 0.5 miles to an unnamed peak of 2135 feet... miles to the highest point of an unnamed peak of 1268 feet elevation in section 12, T. 6 N., R. 4 W. on...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-04-01
... east-northeasterly in a straight line approximately 4.1 miles, onto the Inwood map, to the 1,786-foot... 2.1 miles to the 2,086-foot elevation point, section 15, T31N/R1W; then (3) Proceed north-northeasterly in a straight line approximately 0.7 mile to the marked 1,648-foot elevation point (which should...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-04-01
... straight line approximately one mile to an unnamed pass with an elevation of 1485 feet, located on Soda Canyon Road; (3) Then easterly in a straight line approximately 0.5 miles to an unnamed peak of 2135 feet... miles to the highest point of an unnamed peak of 1268 feet elevation in section 12, T. 6 N., R. 4 W. on...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-04-01
... straight line approximately one mile to an unnamed pass with an elevation of 1485 feet, located on Soda Canyon Road; (3) Then easterly in a straight line approximately 0.5 miles to an unnamed peak of 2135 feet... miles to the highest point of an unnamed peak of 1268 feet elevation in section 12, T. 6 N., R. 4 W. on...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-04-01
... straight line approximately one mile to an unnamed pass with an elevation of 1485 feet, located on Soda Canyon Road; (3) Then easterly in a straight line approximately 0.5 miles to an unnamed peak of 2135 feet... miles to the highest point of an unnamed peak of 1268 feet elevation in section 12, T. 6 N., R. 4 W. on...
Darcy Flow in a Wavy Channel Filled with a Porous Medium
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Gray, Donald D; Ogretim, Egemen; Bromhal, Grant S
2013-05-17
Flow in channels bounded by wavy or corrugated walls is of interest in both technological and geological contexts. This paper presents an analytical solution for the steady Darcy flow of an incompressible fluid through a homogeneous, isotropic porous medium filling a channel bounded by symmetric wavy walls. This packed channel may represent an idealized packed fracture, a situation which is of interest as a potential pathway for the leakage of carbon dioxide from a geological sequestration site. The channel walls change from parallel planes, to small amplitude sine waves, to large amplitude nonsinusoidal waves as certain parameters are increased. Themore » direction of gravity is arbitrary. A plot of piezometric head against distance in the direction of mean flow changes from a straight line for parallel planes to a series of steeply sloping sections in the reaches of small aperture alternating with nearly constant sections in the large aperture bulges. Expressions are given for the stream function, specific discharge, piezometric head, and pressure.« less
Neck Muscle Moment Arms Obtained In-Vivo from MRI: Effect of Curved and Straight Modeled Paths.
Suderman, Bethany L; Vasavada, Anita N
2017-08-01
Musculoskeletal models of the cervical spine commonly represent neck muscles with straight paths. However, straight lines do not best represent the natural curvature of muscle paths in the neck, because the paths are constrained by bone and soft tissue. The purpose of this study was to estimate moment arms of curved and straight neck muscle paths using different moment arm calculation methods: tendon excursion, geometric, and effective torque. Curved and straight muscle paths were defined for two subject-specific cervical spine models derived from in vivo magnetic resonance images (MRI). Modeling neck muscle paths with curvature provides significantly different moment arm estimates than straight paths for 10 of 15 neck muscles (p < 0.05, repeated measures two-way ANOVA). Moment arm estimates were also found to be significantly different among moment arm calculation methods for 11 of 15 neck muscles (p < 0.05, repeated measures two-way ANOVA). In particular, using straight lines to model muscle paths can lead to overestimating neck extension moment. However, moment arm methods for curved paths should be investigated further, as different methods of calculating moment arm can provide different estimates.
The frequency and level of sweep in mixed hardwood saw logs in the eastern United States
Peter Hamner; Marshall S. White; Philip A. Araman
2007-01-01
Hardwood sawmills traditionally saw logs in a manner that either orients sawlines parallel to the log central axis (straight sawing) or the log surface (allowing for taper). Sweep is characterized as uniform curvature along the entire length of a log. For logs with sweep, lumber yield losses from straight and taper sawing increase with increasing levels of sweep. Curve...
Setting the Record Straight. The Truth About Fad Diets.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Wheat Foods Council, Parker, CO.
The Setting the Record Straight information packet presents facts to set the record straight about nutrition and debunk fad diets. The kit features materials designed to communicate the importance of balanced eating. Materials include: a time line of fad diets; four reproducible fad diet book review handouts that show the misleading claims rampant…
Optical device fabrication using femtosecond laser processing with glass-hologram
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Suzuki, Jun'ichi; Arima, Yasunori; Tanaka, Shuhei
2011-03-01
Using femtosecond laser processing with glass-hologram, fabrication of 1cm-long straight waveguide and X-coupler is reported in this paper. We design and fabricate 4-level glass-hologram which generates 1cm-long straight line intensity. We fabricate 1cm-long waveguides inside fused silica at one shot exposure with the glass-hologram. We investigate the waveguide performance of near field pattern and propagation loss at wavelength of 1550nm. The near field pattern is almost circular shape. The propagation loss at 1550nm is estimated to be < 1.0 dB/cm. As an example of an optical device consisting of straight waveguides, we fabricate X-coupler or 2x2 coupler using straight line waveguides, and observe the output power ratio depending on crossing angle.
Practical Repair Method for Unilateral Cleft Lips: Straight-Line Advanced Release Technique.
Baek, Rong-Min; Choi, Jun-Ho; Kim, Baek-Kyu
2016-04-01
Straight-line closure repair of unilateral cleft lips was first introduced in the 1840s, and since then, many different techniques have been attempted for cleft repair. However, these methods have several disadvantages and are difficult to adopt. In this study, we describe our novel technique, known as Straight-Line Advanced Release Technique (StART), and its application in treating several cases of unilateral cleft lip. The preoperative design of the surgical method is drawn on the skin, the vermilion, and the oral mucosa. A total of 13 points are marked (points 0-12). The A flap, B flap, triangular flap, M (medial mucosal) flap, and L (lateral mucosal) flap are designed. After completion of the preoperative marking, the wide dissection is performed to separate the orbicularis oris muscle completely from the abnormally inserted bony structure and the enveloped skin-mucosal flap. The freed orbicularis oris muscle is then reconstructed with full width. After all planes of the lip wound are closed, a straight vertical skin suture line is achieved without any unnecessary transverse scar. Unilateral cleft lip repair using StART was conducted in 145 patients between 1993 and 2012. Cases of microform cleft lip were excluded. A total of 21 patients (14%) required a secondary operation on the lip after the first unilateral cheiloplasty. In all patients, satisfactory surgical outcomes were obtained with an indistinct straight-lined scar and a well-aligned lip contour. To acquire a natural and balanced shape in unilateral cleft lip repair, we recommend the novel StART.
Development of the auto-steering software and equipment technology (ASSET)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
McKay, Mark D.; Anderson, Matthew O.; Wadsworth, Derek C.
2003-09-01
The Idaho National Engineering and Environmental Laboratory (INEEL), through collaboration with INSAT Co., has developed a low cost robotic auto-steering system for parallel contour swathing. The capability to perform parallel contour swathing while minimizing "skip" and "overlap" is a necessity for cost-effective crop management within precision agriculture. Current methods for performing parallel contour swathing consist of using a Differential Global Position System (DGPS) coupled with a light bar system to prompt an operator where to steer. The complexity of operating heavy equipment, ensuring proper chemical mixture and application, and steering to a light bar indicator can be overwhelming to an operator. To simplify these tasks, an inexpensive robotic steering system has been developed and tested on several farming implements. This development leveraged research conducted by the INEEL and Utah State University. The INEEL-INSAT Auto-Steering Software and Equipment Technology provides the following: 1) the ability to drive in a straight line within +/- 2 feet while traveling at least 15 mph, 2) interfaces to a Real Time Kinematic (RTK) DGPS and sub-meter DGPS, 3) safety features such as Emergency-stop, steering wheel deactivation, computer watchdog deactivation, etc., and 4) a low-cost, field-ready system that is easily adapted to other systems.
Newton's Law: Not so Simple after All
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Robertson, William C.; Gallagher, Jeremiah; Miller, William
2004-01-01
One of the most basic concepts related to force and motion is Newton's first law, which essentially states, "An object at rest tends to remain at rest unless acted on by an unbalanced force. An object in motion in a straight line tends to remain in motion in a straight line unless acted upon by an unbalanced force." Judging by the time and space…
Magnetogate: Using an iPhone Magnetometer for Measuring Kinematic Variables
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Temiz, Burak Kagan; Yavuz, Ahmet
2016-01-01
This paper presents a method to measure the movement of an object from specific locations on a straight line using an iPhone's magnetometer. In this method, called "magnetogate," an iPhone is placed on a moving object (in this case a toy car) and small neodymium magnets are arranged at equal intervals on one side of a straight line. The…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Shultz, Harris S.; Shiflett, Ray C.
2008-01-01
Students were asked to find all possible values for A so that the points (1, 2), (5, A), and (A, 7) lie on a straight line. This problem suggests a generalization: Given (x, y), find all values of A so that the points (x, y), (5, A), and (A, 7) lie on a straight line. We find that this question about linear equations must be resolved using the…
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Zhong, Xianqiong; Yao, Na; Sheng, Jia'nan; Cheng, Ke
2018-02-01
Nonlinear evolutions of dark soliton pulses with initially constant frequency chirps are investigated numerically for different soliton orders and chirp parameters in different dispersion regimes of optical fibers. The results show interestingly that, in the normal dispersion regime, the evolution properties remain unchanged apart from their straight-line shifts of the temporal trajectories compared with the chirp-free case. While in the anomalous dispersion regime, the dark solitons can evolve to bright-dark soliton trains with a wide black soliton in the symmetric center. The longer the distance, the more the pulse number. The larger the soliton order, the more the pulse number at the same distance. Similarly, straight-line shift of the temporal trajectory of the bright-dark soliton trains will also appear. The shifting amount and direction depend on the absolute value and the sign of the chirp parameter, respectively. This result inspires people to generate bright-dark soliton trains by using ordinary passive optical fibers instead of fiber lasers. Besides, this work also provides us an alternative approach to guide the formed solitons or soliton trains to move their temporal trajectories along straight lines.
The structure of rotational discontinuities. [in solar wind
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Neugebauer, M.
1989-01-01
This study examines the structures of a set of rotational discontinuities detected in the solar wind by the ISEE-3 spacecraft. It is found that the complexity of the structure increases as the angle theta between the propagation vector k and the magnetic field decreases. For rotational discontinuities that propagate at a large angle to the field with an ion (left-hand) sense of rotation, the magnetic hodograms tend to be flattened, in agreement with prior numerical simulations. When theta is large, angular 'overshoots' are often observed at one or both ends of the discontinuity. When the propagation is nearly parallel to the field (when theta is small), many different types of structure are seen, ranging from straight lines, to S-shaped curves, to complex, disorganized shapes.
Rhodin, M; Roepstorff, L; French, A; Keegan, K G; Pfau, T; Egenvall, A
2016-05-01
Lungeing is commonly used as part of standard lameness examinations in horses. Knowledge of how lungeing influences motion symmetry in sound horses is needed. The aim of this study was to objectively evaluate the symmetry of vertical head and pelvic motion during lungeing in a large number of horses with symmetric motion during straight line evaluation. Cross-sectional prospective study. A pool of 201 riding horses, all functioning well and considered sound by their owners, were evaluated in trot on a straight line and during lungeing to the left and right. From this pool, horses with symmetric vertical head and pelvic movement during the straight line trot (n = 94) were retained for analysis. Vertical head and pelvic movements were measured with body mounted uniaxial accelerometers. Differences between vertical maximum and minimum head (HDmax, HDmin) and pelvic (PDmax, PDmin) heights between left and right forelimb and hindlimb stances were compared between straight line trot and lungeing in either direction. Vertical head and pelvic movements during lungeing were more asymmetric than during trot on a straight line. Common asymmetric patterns seen in the head were more upward movement during push-off of the outside forelimb and less downward movement during impact of the inside limb. Common asymmetric patterns seen in the pelvis were less upward movement during push-off of the outside hindlimb and less downward movement of the pelvis during impact of the inside hindlimb. Asymmetric patterns in one lunge direction were frequently not the same as in the opposite direction. Lungeing induces systematic asymmetries in vertical head and pelvic motion patterns in horses that may not be the same in both directions. These asymmetries may mask or mimic fore- or hindlimb lameness. © 2015 The Authors. Equine Veterinary Journal published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of EVJ Ltd.
Fluid Transient Analysis during Priming of Evacuated Line
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Bandyopadhyay, Alak; Majumdar, Alok K.; Holt, Kimberley
2017-01-01
Water hammer analysis in pipe lines, in particularly during priming into evacuated lines is important for the design of spacecraft and other in-space application. In the current study, a finite volume network flow analysis code is used for modeling three different geometrical configurations: the first two being straight pipe, one with atmospheric air and other with evacuated line, and the third case is a representation of a complex flow network system. The numerical results show very good agreement qualitatively and quantitatively with measured data available in the literature. The peak pressure and impact time in case of straight pipe priming in evacuated line shows excellent agreement.
Destruction of Invariant Surfaces and Magnetic Coordinates for Perturbed Magnetic Fields
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
S.R. Hudson
2003-11-20
Straight-field-line coordinates are constructed for nearly integrable magnetic fields. The coordinates are based on the robust, noble-irrational rotational-transform surfaces, whose existence is determined by an application of Greene's residue criterion. A simple method to locate these surfaces is described. Sequences of surfaces with rotational-transform converging to low order rationals maximize the region of straight-field-line coordinates.
Egenvall, Agneta; Haubro Andersen, Pia; Pfau, Thilo
2017-01-01
Recent studies evaluating horses in training and considered free from lameness by their owners have identified a large proportion of horses with motion asymmetries. However the prevalence, type and magnitude of asymmetries when trotting in a straight line or on the lunge have not been investigated. The aim of this study was to objectively investigate the presence of motion asymmetries in riding horses in training by identifying the side and quantifying the degree and type (impact, pushoff) of forelimb and hind limb asymmetries found during straight line trot and on the lunge. In a cross-sectional study, vertical head and pelvic movement symmetry was measured in 222 Warmblood type riding horses, all without perceived performance issues and considered free from lameness by their owners. Body-mounted uni-axial accelerometers were used and differences between maximum and minimum head (HDmax, HDmin) and pelvic (PDmax, PDmin) vertical displacement between left and right forelimb and hind limb stances were calculated during straight line trot and on the lunge. Previously reported symmetry thresholds were used. The thresholds for symmetry were exceeded in 161 horses for at least one variable while trotting in a straight line, HDmin (n = 58, mean 14.3 mm, SD 7.1), HDmax (n = 41, mean 12.7 mm, SD 5.5), PDmax (n = 87, mean 6.5 mm, SD 3.10), PDmin (n = 79, mean 5.7 mm, SD 2.1). Contralateral and ipsilateral concurrent forelimb and hind limb asymmetries were detected in 41 and 49 horses, respectively. There was a linear association between the straight line PDmin values and the values on the lunge with the lame limb to the inside of the circle. A large proportion (72.5%) of horses in training which were perceived as free from lameness by their owner showed movement asymmetries above previously reported asymmetry thresholds during straight line trot. It is not known to what extent these asymmetries are related to pain or to mechanical abnormalities. Therefore, one of the most important questions that must be addressed is how objective asymmetry scores can be translated into pain, orthopedic abnormality, or any type of unsoundness. PMID:28441406
Rhodin, Marie; Egenvall, Agneta; Haubro Andersen, Pia; Pfau, Thilo
2017-01-01
Recent studies evaluating horses in training and considered free from lameness by their owners have identified a large proportion of horses with motion asymmetries. However the prevalence, type and magnitude of asymmetries when trotting in a straight line or on the lunge have not been investigated. The aim of this study was to objectively investigate the presence of motion asymmetries in riding horses in training by identifying the side and quantifying the degree and type (impact, pushoff) of forelimb and hind limb asymmetries found during straight line trot and on the lunge. In a cross-sectional study, vertical head and pelvic movement symmetry was measured in 222 Warmblood type riding horses, all without perceived performance issues and considered free from lameness by their owners. Body-mounted uni-axial accelerometers were used and differences between maximum and minimum head (HDmax, HDmin) and pelvic (PDmax, PDmin) vertical displacement between left and right forelimb and hind limb stances were calculated during straight line trot and on the lunge. Previously reported symmetry thresholds were used. The thresholds for symmetry were exceeded in 161 horses for at least one variable while trotting in a straight line, HDmin (n = 58, mean 14.3 mm, SD 7.1), HDmax (n = 41, mean 12.7 mm, SD 5.5), PDmax (n = 87, mean 6.5 mm, SD 3.10), PDmin (n = 79, mean 5.7 mm, SD 2.1). Contralateral and ipsilateral concurrent forelimb and hind limb asymmetries were detected in 41 and 49 horses, respectively. There was a linear association between the straight line PDmin values and the values on the lunge with the lame limb to the inside of the circle. A large proportion (72.5%) of horses in training which were perceived as free from lameness by their owner showed movement asymmetries above previously reported asymmetry thresholds during straight line trot. It is not known to what extent these asymmetries are related to pain or to mechanical abnormalities. Therefore, one of the most important questions that must be addressed is how objective asymmetry scores can be translated into pain, orthopedic abnormality, or any type of unsoundness.
Straight scaling FFAG beam line
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Lagrange, J.-B.; Planche, T.; Yamakawa, E.; Uesugi, T.; Ishi, Y.; Kuriyama, Y.; Qin, B.; Okabe, K.; Mori, Y.
2012-11-01
Fixed field alternating gradient (FFAG) accelerators are recently subject to a strong revival. They are usually designed in a circular shape; however, it would be an asset to guide particles with no overall bend in this type of accelerator. An analytical development of a straight FFAG cell which keeps zero-chromaticity is presented here. A magnetic field law is thus obtained, called "straight scaling law", and an experiment has been conducted to confirm this zero-chromatic law. A straight scaling FFAG prototype has been designed and manufactured, and horizontal phase advances of two different energies are measured. Results are analyzed to clarify the straight scaling law.
7 CFR 1786.153 - Discounted present value.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-01-01
... 2 1-year. 2 3 2-year. 3 4 3-year. 4 5 (1) 5 6 5-year. 6 7 (2) 7 8 7-year. 8 9 (3) 9 10 (3) 10 11 10... Maturities computed as above. 3 A straight line interpolated rate between the 7-year rate and the 10-year rate. (See formula below) 4 A straight line interpolated rate between the 10-year note and the 20-year...
7 CFR 1786.153 - Discounted present value.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-01-01
... 2 1-year. 2 3 2-year. 3 4 3-year. 4 5 (1) 5 6 5-year. 6 7 (2) 7 8 7-year. 8 9 (3) 9 10 (3) 10 11 10... Maturities computed as above. 3 A straight line interpolated rate between the 7-year rate and the 10-year rate. (See formula below) 4 A straight line interpolated rate between the 10-year note and the 20-year...
A Closed-Form Error Model of Straight Lines for Improved Data Association and Sensor Fusing
2018-01-01
Linear regression is a basic tool in mobile robotics, since it enables accurate estimation of straight lines from range-bearing scans or in digital images, which is a prerequisite for reliable data association and sensor fusing in the context of feature-based SLAM. This paper discusses, extends and compares existing algorithms for line fitting applicable also in the case of strong covariances between the coordinates at each single data point, which must not be neglected if range-bearing sensors are used. Besides, in particular, the determination of the covariance matrix is considered, which is required for stochastic modeling. The main contribution is a new error model of straight lines in closed form for calculating quickly and reliably the covariance matrix dependent on just a few comprehensible and easily-obtainable parameters. The model can be applied widely in any case when a line is fitted from a number of distinct points also without a priori knowledge of the specific measurement noise. By means of extensive simulations, the performance and robustness of the new model in comparison to existing approaches is shown. PMID:29673205
Density profiles of the exclusive queuing process
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Arita, Chikashi; Schadschneider, Andreas
2012-12-01
The exclusive queuing process (EQP) incorporates the exclusion principle into classic queuing models. It is characterized by, in addition to the entrance probability α and exit probability β, a third parameter: the hopping probability p. The EQP can be interpreted as an exclusion process of variable system length. Its phase diagram in the parameter space (α,β) is divided into a convergent phase and a divergent phase by a critical line which consists of a curved part and a straight part. Here we extend previous studies of this phase diagram. We identify subphases in the divergent phase, which can be distinguished by means of the shape of the density profile, and determine the velocity of the system length growth. This is done for EQPs with different update rules (parallel, backward sequential and continuous time). We also investigate the dynamics of the system length and the number of customers on the critical line. They are diffusive or subdiffusive with non-universal exponents that also depend on the update rules.
Wave Breaking Induced Surface Wakes and Jets Observed during a Bora Event
2005-01-01
terrain contours (interval = 200 m) superposed. The approximate NCAR Electra and NOAA P-3 flight tracks are indicated by bold and dotted straight lines ...Hz data. The red curves correspond to the COAMPS simulated fields obtained by interpolating the 1-km grid data to the straight line through the...Alpine Experiment (ALPEX) in 1982 [Smith, 1987]. These studies suggested that the bora flow shares some common characteristics with downslope windstorms
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Hyer, Michael W.; Charette, Robert F.
1988-01-01
Further studies to determine the potential for using a curvilinear fiber format in the design of composite laminates are reported. The curvilinear format is in contrast to the current practice of having the fibers aligned parallel to each other and in a straight line. The problem of a plate with a central circular hole is used as a candidate problem for this study. The study concludes that for inplane tensile loading the curvilinear format is superior. The limited results to date on compression buckling loads indicate that the curvilinear designs are poorer in resistant buckling. However, for the curvilinear design of interest, the reduction in buckling load is minimal and so overall there is a gain in considering the curvilinear design.
Model based rib-cage unfolding for trauma CT
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
von Berg, Jens; Klinder, Tobias; Lorenz, Cristian
2018-03-01
A CT rib-cage unfolding method is proposed that does not require to determine rib centerlines but determines the visceral cavity surface by model base segmentation. Image intensities are sampled across this surface that is flattened using a model based 3D thin-plate-spline registration. An average rib centerline model projected onto this surface serves as a reference system for registration. The flattening registration is designed so that ribs similar to the centerline model are mapped onto parallel lines preserving their relative length. Ribs deviating from this model appear deviating from straight parallel ribs in the unfolded view, accordingly. As the mapping is continuous also the details in intercostal space and those adjacent to the ribs are rendered well. The most beneficial application area is Trauma CT where a fast detection of rib fractures is a crucial task. Specifically in trauma, automatic rib centerline detection may not be guaranteed due to fractures and dislocations. The application by visual assessment on the large public LIDC data base of lung CT proved general feasibility of this early work.
Malleable architecture generator for FPGA computing
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Gokhale, Maya; Kaba, James; Marks, Aaron; Kim, Jang
1996-10-01
The malleable architecture generator (MARGE) is a tool set that translates high-level parallel C to configuration bit streams for field-programmable logic based computing systems. MARGE creates an application-specific instruction set and generates the custom hardware components required to perform exactly those computations specified by the C program. In contrast to traditional fixed-instruction processors, MARGE's dynamic instruction set creation provides for efficient use of hardware resources. MARGE processes intermediate code in which each operation is annotated by the bit lengths of the operands. Each basic block (sequence of straight line code) is mapped into a single custom instruction which contains all the operations and logic inherent in the block. A synthesis phase maps the operations comprising the instructions into register transfer level structural components and control logic which have been optimized to exploit functional parallelism and function unit reuse. As a final stage, commercial technology-specific tools are used to generate configuration bit streams for the desired target hardware. Technology- specific pre-placed, pre-routed macro blocks are utilized to implement as much of the hardware as possible. MARGE currently supports the Xilinx-based Splash-2 reconfigurable accelerator and National Semiconductor's CLAy-based parallel accelerator, MAPA. The MARGE approach has been demonstrated on systolic applications such as DNA sequence comparison.
2013-09-01
on the possible threat of an electromagnetic pulse (EMP) and its potential consequences following the destructive “ derecho ” that hit Washington, DC...in 2012.19 Spanish for the word “straight,” a derecho is a term used to describe a widespread, long- lived, straight-line windstorm that is...emergency communications system and raised concern for future response. Both Hurricane Katrina and the Washington, DC, area derecho have subsequently
Program to analyze aquifer test data and check for validity with the jacob method
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Field, M.S.
1993-01-01
The Jacob straight-line method of aquifer analysis deals with the late-time data and small radius of the Theis type curve which plot as a straight line if the drawdown data are plotted on an arithmetic scale and the time data on a logarithmic (base 10) scale. Correct analysis with the Jacob method normally assumes that (1) the data lie on a straight line, (2) the value of the dimensionless time factor is less than 0.01, and (3) the site's hydrogeology conforms to the method's assumptions and limiting conditions. Items 1 and 2 are usually considered for the Jacob method, butmore » item 3 is often ignored, which can lead to incorrect calculations of aquifer parameters. A BASIC computer program was developed to analyze aquifer test data with the Jacob method to test the validity of its use. Aquifer test data are entered into the program and manipulated so that a slope and time intercept of the straight line drawn through the data (excluding early-time and late-time data) can be used to calculate transmissivity and storage coefficient. Late-time data are excluded to eliminate the effects of positive and negative boundaries. The time-drawdown data then are converted into dimensionless units to determine if the Jacob method's assumptions are valid for the hydrogeologic conditions under which the test was conducted.« less
Comparison of structural and least-squares lines for estimating geologic relations
Williams, G.P.; Troutman, B.M.
1990-01-01
Two different goals in fitting straight lines to data are to estimate a "true" linear relation (physical law) and to predict values of the dependent variable with the smallest possible error. Regarding the first goal, a Monte Carlo study indicated that the structural-analysis (SA) method of fitting straight lines to data is superior to the ordinary least-squares (OLS) method for estimating "true" straight-line relations. Number of data points, slope and intercept of the true relation, and variances of the errors associated with the independent (X) and dependent (Y) variables influence the degree of agreement. For example, differences between the two line-fitting methods decrease as error in X becomes small relative to error in Y. Regarding the second goal-predicting the dependent variable-OLS is better than SA. Again, the difference diminishes as X takes on less error relative to Y. With respect to estimation of slope and intercept and prediction of Y, agreement between Monte Carlo results and large-sample theory was very good for sample sizes of 100, and fair to good for sample sizes of 20. The procedures and error measures are illustrated with two geologic examples. ?? 1990 International Association for Mathematical Geology.
Earth Observations taken by the Expedition 15 Crew
2007-05-13
ISS015-E-07934 (13 May 2007) --- Mazatlan, Mexico is featured in this image photographed by an Expedition 15 crewmember on the International Space Station. Mazatlan is Mexico's largest port, situated on one of the best estuaries on Mexico's Pacific coast, illustrated well in this image. Docks and naval yards line the north side of the estuary. The city itself appears as a series of light-toned city blocks covering the center of the image. Mazatlan (population of 352,000 in 2005) is growing northward from the downtown peninsula, with tourist beaches backed by hotels, and a marina and golf courses just beyond. No city growth yet appears on the south side the estuary where farm lands can be seen. The famous Faro Lighthouse occupies the top of a steep island--now connected by a bridge to the mainland--at the mouth of the estuary (top center). The Faro Lighthouse is the second tallest in the world behind Gibraltar's. The wide, straight, almost vertical line of the railroad appears to bisect the picture. This image shows sea features well, primarily ocean swells coming in from the southwest, which appear as a series of parallel lines covering the entire sea surface in this view. An oil slick offshore of the tourist beaches appears as a dark line along the left side of the image.
Chambers, David W
2013-01-01
Rational human discourse is not as common as we imagine or as we would like it to be. Sometimes it is necessary to use fallacies and fabrication to get to the point we favor. This essay is an illustrated list of 33 handy tools for avoiding thinking straight.
Navy Nuclear Aircraft Carrier (CVN) Homeporting at Mayport: Background and Issues for Congress
2010-12-09
Release No. 233-09 of April 10, 2009, entitled “Quadrennial Defense Review To Determine Aircraft Carrier Homeporting In Mayport,” available online at...is the straight-line distance between the two locations, as calculated by the “How Fair Is It?” online distance calculator available at http...straight-line distance between the two locations, as calculated by the “How Fair Is It?” online distance calculator available at http://www.indo.com/cgi
Multidirectional Scanning Model, MUSCLE, to Vectorize Raster Images with Straight Lines
Karas, Ismail Rakip; Bayram, Bulent; Batuk, Fatmagul; Akay, Abdullah Emin; Baz, Ibrahim
2008-01-01
This paper presents a new model, MUSCLE (Multidirectional Scanning for Line Extraction), for automatic vectorization of raster images with straight lines. The algorithm of the model implements the line thinning and the simple neighborhood methods to perform vectorization. The model allows users to define specified criteria which are crucial for acquiring the vectorization process. In this model, various raster images can be vectorized such as township plans, maps, architectural drawings, and machine plans. The algorithm of the model was developed by implementing an appropriate computer programming and tested on a basic application. Results, verified by using two well known vectorization programs (WinTopo and Scan2CAD), indicated that the model can successfully vectorize the specified raster data quickly and accurately. PMID:27879843
Multidirectional Scanning Model, MUSCLE, to Vectorize Raster Images with Straight Lines.
Karas, Ismail Rakip; Bayram, Bulent; Batuk, Fatmagul; Akay, Abdullah Emin; Baz, Ibrahim
2008-04-15
This paper presents a new model, MUSCLE (Multidirectional Scanning for Line Extraction), for automatic vectorization of raster images with straight lines. The algorithm of the model implements the line thinning and the simple neighborhood methods to perform vectorization. The model allows users to define specified criteria which are crucial for acquiring the vectorization process. In this model, various raster images can be vectorized such as township plans, maps, architectural drawings, and machine plans. The algorithm of the model was developed by implementing an appropriate computer programming and tested on a basic application. Results, verified by using two well known vectorization programs (WinTopo and Scan2CAD), indicated that the model can successfully vectorize the specified raster data quickly and accurately.
Spudich, Paul A.; Chiou, Brian
2015-01-01
We present a two-dimensional system of generalized coordinates for use with geometrically complex fault ruptures that are neither straight nor continuous. The coordinates are a generalization of the conventional strike-normal and strike-parallel coordinates of a single straight fault. The presented conventions and formulations are applicable to a single curved trace, as well as multiple traces representing the rupture of branching faults or noncontiguous faults. An early application of our generalized system is in the second round of the Next Generation of Ground-Motion Attenuation Model project for the Western United States (NGA-West2), where they were used in the characterization of the hanging-wall effects. We further improve the NGA-West2 strike-parallel formulation for multiple rupture traces with a more intuitive definition of the nominal strike direction. We also derive an analytical expression for the gradient of the generalized strike-normal coordinate. The direction of this gradient may be used as the strike-normal direction in the study of polarization effects on ground motions.
Magnetogate: using an iPhone magnetometer for measuring kinematic variables
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Kağan Temiz, Burak; Yavuz, Ahmet
2016-01-01
This paper presents a method to measure the movement of an object from specific locations on a straight line using an iPhone’s magnetometer. In this method, called ‘magnetogate’, an iPhone is placed on a moving object (in this case a toy car) and small neodymium magnets are arranged at equal intervals on one side of a straight line. The magnetometer sensor of the iPhone is switched on and then the car starts moving. The iPhone’s magnetometer is stimulated throughout its movement along a straight line. A ‘sensor Kinetics’ application on the iPhone saves the magnetic stimulations and produces a graph of the changing magnetic field near the iPhone. At the end of motion, data from the magnetometer is interpreted and peaks on the graph are detected. Thus, position-time changes can be analysed and comments about the motion of the object can be made. The position, velocity and acceleration of the object can be easily measured with this method.
Technical design and system implementation of region-line primitive association framework
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Wang, Min; Xing, Jinjin; Wang, Jie; Lv, Guonian
2017-08-01
Apart from regions, image edge lines are an important information source, and they deserve more attention in object-based image analysis (OBIA) than they currently receive. In the region-line primitive association framework (RLPAF), we promote straight-edge lines as line primitives to achieve powerful OBIAs. Along with regions, straight lines become basic units for subsequent extraction and analysis of OBIA features. This study develops a new software system called remote-sensing knowledge finder (RSFinder) to implement RLPAF for engineering application purposes. This paper introduces the extended technical framework, a comprehensively designed feature set, key technology, and software implementation. To our knowledge, RSFinder is the world's first OBIA system based on two types of primitives, namely, regions and lines. It is fundamentally different from other well-known region-only-based OBIA systems, such as eCogntion and ENVI feature extraction module. This paper has important reference values for the development of similarly structured OBIA systems and line-involved extraction algorithms of remote sensing information.
Linear Titration Curves of Acids and Bases.
Joseph, N R
1959-05-29
The Henderson-Hasselbalch equation, by a simple transformation, becomes pH - pK = pA - pB, where pA and pB are the negative logarithms of acid and base concentrations. Sigmoid titration curves then reduce to straight lines; titration curves of polyelectrolytes, to families of straight lines. The method is applied to the titration of the dipeptide glycyl aminotricarballylic acid, with four titrable groups. Results are expressed as Cartesian and d'Ocagne nomograms. The latter is of a general form applicable to polyelectrolytes of any degree of complexity.
Navy Nuclear Aircraft Carrier (CVN) Homeporting at Mayport: Background and Issues for Congress
2012-02-21
Pacific Ocean. The figure of about 32 nautical miles is the straight-line distance between the two locations, as calculated by the “How Far Is It?” online ...itself. 9 This is the straight-line distance between the two locations, as calculated by the “How Far Is It?” online distance calculator, available at...Authorization Act (S. 3001/P.L. 110- 417) Section 2207 of the FY2009 defense authorization bill as passed by the House (H.R. 5658; H.Rept. 110-652 of May
The long-solved problem of the best-fit straight line: application to isotopic mixing lines
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Wehr, Richard; Saleska, Scott R.
2017-01-01
It has been almost 50 years since York published an exact and general solution for the best-fit straight line to independent points with normally distributed errors in both x and y. York's solution is highly cited in the geophysical literature but almost unknown outside of it, so that there has been no ebb in the tide of books and papers wrestling with the problem. Much of the post-1969 literature on straight-line fitting has sown confusion not merely by its content but by its very existence. The optimal least-squares fit is already known; the problem is already solved. Here we introduce the non-specialist reader to York's solution and demonstrate its application in the interesting case of the isotopic mixing line, an analytical tool widely used to determine the isotopic signature of trace gas sources for the study of biogeochemical cycles. The most commonly known linear regression methods - ordinary least-squares regression (OLS), geometric mean regression (GMR), and orthogonal distance regression (ODR) - have each been recommended as the best method for fitting isotopic mixing lines. In fact, OLS, GMR, and ODR are all special cases of York's solution that are valid only under particular measurement conditions, and those conditions do not hold in general for isotopic mixing lines. Using Monte Carlo simulations, we quantify the biases in OLS, GMR, and ODR under various conditions and show that York's general - and convenient - solution is always the least biased.
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Mutterperl, William
1944-01-01
A method of conformal transformation is developed that maps an airfoil into a straight line, the line being chosen as the extended chord line of the airfoil. The mapping is accomplished by operating directly with the airfoil ordinates. The absence of any preliminary transformation is found to shorten the work substantially over that of previous methods. Use is made of the superposition of solutions to obtain a rigorous counterpart of the approximate methods of thin-airfoils theory. The method is applied to the solution of the direct and inverse problems for arbitrary airfoils and pressure distributions. Numerical examples are given. Applications to more general types of regions, in particular to biplanes and to cascades of airfoils, are indicated. (author)
Apparatus and method for routing a transmission line through a downhole tool
Hall, David R.; Hall, Jr., H. Tracy; Pixton, David S.; Briscoe, Michael; Reynolds, Jay
2006-07-04
A method for routing a transmission line through a tool joint having a primary and secondary shoulder, a central bore, and a longitudinal axis, includes drilling a straight channel, at a positive, nominal angle with respect to the longitudinal axis, through the tool joint from the secondary shoulder to a point proximate the inside wall of the centtral bore. The method further includes milling back, from within the central bore, a second channel to merge with the straight channel, thereby forming a continuous channel from the secondary shoulder to the central bore. In selected embodiments, drilling is accomplished by gun-drilling the straight channel. In other embodiments, the method includes tilting the tool joint before drilling to produce the positive, nominal angle. In selected embodiments, the positive, nominal angle is less than or equal to 15 degrees.
Li, W; Thier, P; Wehrhahn, C
2000-02-01
We studied the effects of various patterns as contextual stimuli on human orientation discrimination, and on responses of neurons in V1 of alert monkeys. When a target line is presented along with various contextual stimuli (masks), human orientation discrimination is impaired. For most V1 neurons, responses elicited by a line in the receptive field (RF) center are suppressed by these contextual patterns. Orientation discrimination thresholds of human observers are elevated slightly when the target line is surrounded by orthogonal lines. For randomly oriented lines, thresholds are elevated further and even more so for lines parallel to the target. Correspondingly, responses of most V1 neurons to a line are suppressed. Although contextual lines inhibit the amplitude of orientation tuning functions of most V1 neurons, they do not systematically alter the tuning width. Elevation of human orientation discrimination thresholds decreases with increasing curvature of masking lines, so does the inhibition of V1 neuronal responses. A mask made of straight lines yields the strongest interference with human orientation discrimination and produces the strongest suppression of neuronal responses. Elevation of human orientation discrimination thresholds is highest when a mask covers only the immediate vicinity of the target line. Increasing the masking area results in less interference. On the contrary, suppression of neuronal responses in V1 increases with increasing mask size. Our data imply that contextual interference observed in human orientation discrimination is in part directly related to contextual inhibition of neuronal activity in V1. However, the finding that interference with orientation discrimination is weaker for larger masks suggests a figure-ground segregation process that is not located in V1.
Straight A's: Public Education Policy and Progress. Volume 12, Number 5
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Amos, Jason, Ed.
2012-01-01
"Straight A's: Public Education Policy and Progress" is a biweekly newsletter that focuses on education news and events both in Washington, DC and around the country. The following articles are included in this issue: (1) House Committee Passes Education Reform Legislation: On Party-Line Votes, Committee Passes Accountability and Teacher…
Building Bridges One Line at a Time
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Grigsby, Cathy Murray
2012-01-01
In this article, first-grade students were taught the different kinds of lines that were part of the construction of various bridges--the curved lines of the arches of stone bridges, straight lines connecting the cables of a suspension bridge, vertical lines, horizontal lines, and so on. They gained practice in drawing structures and in fine brush…
Powers, Michael H.; Burton, Bethany L.
2007-01-01
As part of a research effort directed by the New Mexico Environment Department to determine pre-mining water quality of the Red River at a molybdenum mining site in northern New Mexico, we used seismic refraction tomography to create subsurface compressional-wave velocity images along six lines that crossed the Straight Creek drainage and three that crossed the valley of Red River. Field work was performed in June 2002 (lines 1-4) and September 2003 (lines 5-9). We interpreted the images to determine depths to the water table and to the top of bedrock. Depths to water and bedrock in boreholes near the lines correlate well with our interpretations based on seismic data. In general, the images suggest that the alluvium in this area has a trapezoidal cross section. Using a U.S. Geological Survey digital elevation model grid of surface elevations of this region and the interpreted elevations to water table and bedrock obtained from the seismic data, we generated new models of the shape of the buried bedrock surface and the water table through surface interpolation and extrapolation. Then, using elevation differences between the two grids, we calculated volumes of dry and wet alluvium in the two drainages. The Red River alluvium is about 51 percent saturated, whereas the much smaller volume of alluvium in the tributary Straight Creek is only about 18 percent saturated. When combined with average ground-water velocity values, the information we present can be used to determine discharge of Straight Creek into Red River relative to the total discharge of Red River moving past Straight Creek. This information will contribute to more accurate models of ground-water flow, which are needed to determine the pre-mining water quality in the Red River.
Steering intermediate courses: desert ants combine information from various navigational routines.
Wehner, Rüdiger; Hoinville, Thierry; Cruse, Holk; Cheng, Ken
2016-07-01
A number of systems of navigation have been studied in some detail in insects. These include path integration, a system that keeps track of the straight-line distance and direction travelled on the current trip, the use of panoramic landmarks and scenery for orientation, and systematic searching. A traditional view is that only one navigational system is in operation at any one time, with different systems running in sequence depending on the context and conditions. We review selected data suggesting that often, different navigational cues (e.g., compass cues) and different systems of navigation are in operation simultaneously in desert ant navigation. The evidence suggests that all systems operate in parallel forming a heterarchical network. External and internal conditions determine the weights to be accorded to each cue and system. We also show that a model of independent modules feeding into a central summating device, the Navinet model, can in principle account for such data. No central executive processor is necessary aside from a weighted summation of the different cues and systems. Such a heterarchy of parallel systems all in operation represents a new view of insect navigation that has already been expressed informally by some authors.
Parallel deterministic neutronics with AMR in 3D
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Clouse, C.; Ferguson, J.; Hendrickson, C.
1997-12-31
AMTRAN, a three dimensional Sn neutronics code with adaptive mesh refinement (AMR) has been parallelized over spatial domains and energy groups and runs on the Meiko CS-2 with MPI message passing. Block refined AMR is used with linear finite element representations for the fluxes, which allows for a straight forward interpretation of fluxes at block interfaces with zoning differences. The load balancing algorithm assumes 8 spatial domains, which minimizes idle time among processors.
Some New Problems on Shells and Thin Structures
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Vlasov, V. S.
1949-01-01
Cylindrical shells of arbitrary section, reinforced by longitudinal and transverse members (stringers and ribs) are considered by us, for a sufficiently close spacing of the ribs, as in our previously published papers (references 1 end 2), as thin-walled orthotropic spatial systems at the cross-sections of which only axial (normal and shearing) forces can arise. The longitudinal bending and twisting moments, due to their weak effect on the stress state of the shell, are taken equal to zero. Along the longitudinal sections of the shell there may arise transverse forces in addition to the normal d shearing forces. Under the so-called static assumptions there is taken for the computation model of the shell a thin-walled spatial system consisting along its length (along a generator) of an infinite number of elementary strips capable of bending. Each of these strips is likened to a curved rod operating in each of its sections not only in tension (compression)but also in transverse bending and shear. The interaction between two adjoining transverse strips in the shell expresses itself in the transmission from one strip to the other of only the normal and shearing stresses. The static structure of the computation model here described is shown in figure 1, where the connections through which the normal and shearing stresses transmitted from one transverse strip to smother are indicated schematically by the rods located in the middle surface of the shell. In addition to the static hypothesis we introduce also geometric hypotheses. According to the latter the elongational deformations of the shell along lines parallel to the generator of its middle surface and the shear deformations in the middle surface, as ma+gitudes having . little effect on the state of the fundamental internal forces of the shell, are taken equal to zero. The deformations of the shell in our computational model are such that in the first place the lines of this surface perpendicular to the generator are inextensible at each point end in the second place the angles between the lines of principal curvature (the coordinate lines) which are straight before the deformation remain straight after the deformation.
PLOT3D- DRAWING THREE DIMENSIONAL SURFACES
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Canright, R. B.
1994-01-01
PLOT3D is a package of programs to draw three-dimensional surfaces of the form z = f(x,y). The function f and the boundary values for x and y are the input to PLOT3D. The surface thus defined may be drawn after arbitrary rotations. However, it is designed to draw only functions in rectangular coordinates expressed explicitly in the above form. It cannot, for example, draw a sphere. Output is by off-line incremental plotter or online microfilm recorder. This package, unlike other packages, will plot any function of the form z = f(x,y) and portrays continuous and bounded functions of two independent variables. With curve fitting; however, it can draw experimental data and pictures which cannot be expressed in the above form. The method used is division into a uniform rectangular grid of the given x and y ranges. The values of the supplied function at the grid points (x, y) are calculated and stored; this defines the surface. The surface is portrayed by connecting successive (y,z) points with straight-line segments for each x value on the grid and, in turn, connecting successive (x,z) points for each fixed y value on the grid. These lines are then projected by parallel projection onto the fixed yz-plane for plotting. This program has been implemented on the IBM 360/67 with on-line CDC microfilm recorder.
49 CFR 179.201-3 - Lined tanks.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-10-01
...-Pressure Tank Car Tanks (Classes DOT-111AW and 115AW) § 179.201-3 Lined tanks. (a) Rubber-lined tanks. (1) Each tank or each compartment thereof must be lined with acid-resistant rubber or other approved rubber... double thickness. The rubber lining must overlap at least 11/2 inches at all edges which must be straight...
49 CFR 179.201-3 - Lined tanks.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-10-01
...-Pressure Tank Car Tanks (Classes DOT-111AW and 115AW) § 179.201-3 Lined tanks. (a) Rubber-lined tanks. (1) Each tank or each compartment thereof must be lined with acid-resistant rubber or other approved rubber... double thickness. The rubber lining must overlap at least 11/2 inches at all edges which must be straight...
49 CFR 179.201-3 - Lined tanks.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-10-01
...-Pressure Tank Car Tanks (Classes DOT-111AW and 115AW) § 179.201-3 Lined tanks. (a) Rubber-lined tanks. (1) Each tank or each compartment thereof must be lined with acid-resistant rubber or other approved rubber... double thickness. The rubber lining must overlap at least 11/2 inches at all edges which must be straight...
49 CFR 179.201-3 - Lined tanks.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-10-01
...-Pressure Tank Car Tanks (Classes DOT-111AW and 115AW) § 179.201-3 Lined tanks. (a) Rubber-lined tanks. (1) Each tank or each compartment thereof must be lined with acid-resistant rubber or other approved rubber... double thickness. The rubber lining must overlap at least 11/2 inches at all edges which must be straight...
Minimum-fuel turning climbout and descent guidance of transport jets
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Neuman, F.; Kreindler, E.
1983-01-01
The complete flightpath optimization problem for minimum fuel consumption from takeoff to landing including the initial and final turns from and to the runway heading is solved. However, only the initial and final segments which contain the turns are treated, since the straight-line climbout, cruise, and descent problems have already been solved. The paths are derived by generating fields of extremals, using the necessary conditions of optimal control together with singular arcs and state constraints. Results show that the speed profiles for straight flight and turning flight are essentially identical except for the final horizontal accelerating or decelerating turns. The optimal turns require no abrupt maneuvers, and an approximation of the optimal turns could be easily integrated with present straight-line climb-cruise-descent fuel-optimization algorithms. Climbout at the optimal IAS rather than the 250-knot terminal-area speed limit would save 36 lb of fuel for the 727-100 aircraft.
Failure of the straight-line DCS boundary when extrapolated to the hypobaric realm.
Conkin, J; Van Liew, H D
1992-11-01
The lowest pressure (P2) to which a diver can ascend without developing decompression sickness (DCS) after becoming equilibrated at some higher pressure (P1) is described by a straight line with a negative y-intercept. We tested whether extrapolation of such a line also predicts safe decompression to altitude. We substituted tissue nitrogen pressure (P1N2) calculated for a compartment with a 360-min half-time for P1 values; this allows data from hypobaric exposures to be plotted on a P2 vs. P1N2 graph, even if the subject breathes oxygen before ascent. In literature sources, we found 40 reports of human exposures in hypobaric chambers that fell in the region of a P2 vs. P1N2 plot where the extrapolation from hyperbaric data predicted that the decompression should be free of DCS. Of 4,576 exposures, 785 persons suffered decompression sickness (17%), indicating that extrapolation of the diver line to altitude is not valid. Over the pressure range spanned by human hypobaric exposures and hyperbaric air exposures, the best separation between no DCS and DCS on a P2 vs. P1N2 plot seems to be a curve which approximates a straight line in the hyperbaric region but bends toward the origin in the hypobaric region.
Object-Based Dense Matching Method for Maintaining Structure Characteristics of Linear Buildings
Yan, Yiming; Qiu, Mingjie; Zhao, Chunhui; Wang, Liguo
2018-01-01
In this paper, we proposed a novel object-based dense matching method specially for the high-precision disparity map of building objects in urban areas, which can maintain accurate object structure characteristics. The proposed framework mainly includes three stages. Firstly, an improved edge line extraction method is proposed for the edge segments to fit closely to building outlines. Secondly, a fusion method is proposed for the outlines under the constraint of straight lines, which can maintain the building structural attribute with parallel or vertical edges, which is very useful for the dense matching method. Finally, we proposed an edge constraint and outline compensation (ECAOC) dense matching method to maintain building object structural characteristics in the disparity map. In the proposed method, the improved edge lines are used to optimize matching search scope and matching template window, and the high-precision building outlines are used to compensate the shape feature of building objects. Our method can greatly increase the matching accuracy of building objects in urban areas, especially at building edges. For the outline extraction experiments, our fusion method verifies the superiority and robustness on panchromatic images of different satellites and different resolutions. For the dense matching experiments, our ECOAC method shows great advantages for matching accuracy of building objects in urban areas compared with three other methods. PMID:29596393
STUDIES ON THE FORMATION AND IONIZATION OF THE COMPOUNDS OF CASEIN WITH ALKALI
Greenberg, David M.; Schmidt, Carl L. A.
1924-01-01
1. The results of conductivity experiments with alkali caseinate solutions are given and a graphical method of extrapolation, which gives a straight line, is described. The results of the conductivity experiments are shown to be in accord with the results of the previous transference experiments. 2. The change of conductivity of the alkali caseinate solutions with temperature is shown to follow a straight line relationship. 3. The high value of the mobility which was obtained for the casein ion and the high temperature gradient are discussed in relation to McBain's theory of colloidal electrolytes. PMID:19872136
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
...; and (2) Texarkana, Tex.; Ark.; Okla.; La., 1953, revised 1972. (c) Boundary. The Texoma viticultural... the Red River eastward along the Texas-Oklahoma State line, passes onto the Texarkana map, and... Texarkana map crosses the county line; then (4) Continues southwest in a straight line for approximately 13...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-04-01
...; and (2) Texarkana, Tex.; Ark.; Okla.; La., 1953, revised 1972. (c) Boundary. The Texoma viticultural... the Red River eastward along the Texas-Oklahoma State line, passes onto the Texarkana map, and... Texarkana map crosses the county line; then (4) Continues southwest in a straight line for approximately 13...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-04-01
...; and (2) Texarkana, Tex.; Ark.; Okla.; La., 1953, revised 1972. (c) Boundary. The Texoma viticultural... the Red River eastward along the Texas-Oklahoma State line, passes onto the Texarkana map, and... Texarkana map crosses the county line; then (4) Continues southwest in a straight line for approximately 13...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-04-01
...; and (2) Texarkana, Tex.; Ark.; Okla.; La., 1953, revised 1972. (c) Boundary. The Texoma viticultural... the Red River eastward along the Texas-Oklahoma State line, passes onto the Texarkana map, and... Texarkana map crosses the county line; then (4) Continues southwest in a straight line for approximately 13...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-04-01
...; and (2) Texarkana, Tex.; Ark.; Okla.; La., 1953, revised 1972. (c) Boundary. The Texoma viticultural... the Red River eastward along the Texas-Oklahoma State line, passes onto the Texarkana map, and... Texarkana map crosses the county line; then (4) Continues southwest in a straight line for approximately 13...
Ramli, Mohammad Firuz; Ibrahim, Shaharin; Sulaiman, Wan Nor Azmin; Aris, Ahmad Zaharin
2014-01-01
The existing knowledge regarding seawater intrusion and particularly upconing, in which both problems are linked to pumping, entirely relies on theoretical assumptions. Therefore, in this paper, an attempt is made to capture the effects of pumping on seawater intrusion and upconing using 2D resistivity measurement. For this work, two positions, one perpendicular and the other parallel to the sea, were chosen as profile line for resistivity measurement in the coastal area near the pumping wells of Kapas Island, Malaysia. Subsequently, water was pumped out of two pumping wells simultaneously for about five straight hours. Then, immediately after the pumping stopped, resistivity measurements were taken along the two stationed profile lines. This was followed by additional measurements after four and eight hours. The results showed an upconing with low resistivity of about 1–10 Ωm just beneath the pumping well along the first profile line that was taken just after the pumping stopped. The resistivity image also shows an intrusion of saline water (water enriched with diluted salt) from the sea coming towards the pumping well with resistivity values ranging between 10 and 25 Ωm. The subsequent measurements show the recovery of freshwater in the aquifer and how the saline water is gradually diluted or pushed out of the aquifer. Similarly the line parallel to the sea (L2) reveals almost the same result as the first line. However, in the second and third measurements, there were some significant variations which were contrary to the expectation that the freshwater may completely flush out the saline water from the aquifer. These two time series lines show that as the areas with the lowest resistivity (1 Ωm) shrink with time, the low resistivity (10 Ωm) tends to take over almost the entire area implying that the freshwater-saltwater equilibrium zone has already been altered. These results have clearly enhanced our current understanding and add more scientific weight to the theoretical assumptions on the effects of pumping on seawater intrusion and upconing. PMID:25574493
27 CFR 9.169 - Red Hills Lake County.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-04-01
...-foot contour line with the section 17 east boundary line, and continue for about 0.45 miles along the...-foot elevation line (Kelseyville Quadrangle); then (18) Proceed about 1.35 miles straight easterly to... 4, T12N, R7W, proceed approximately 0.1 miles due south along the common section line to its...
The long-solved problem of the best-fit straight line: Application to isotopic mixing lines
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Wehr, Richard; Saleska, Scott R.
It has been almost 50 years since York published an exact and general solution for the best-fit straight line to independent points with normally distributed errors in both x and y. York's solution is highly cited in the geophysical literature but almost unknown outside of it, so that there has been no ebb in the tide of books and papers wrestling with the problem. Much of the post-1969 literature on straight-line fitting has sown confusion not merely by its content but by its very existence. The optimal least-squares fit is already known; the problem is already solved. Here we introducemore » the non-specialist reader to York's solution and demonstrate its application in the interesting case of the isotopic mixing line, an analytical tool widely used to determine the isotopic signature of trace gas sources for the study of biogeochemical cycles. The most commonly known linear regression methods – ordinary least-squares regression (OLS), geometric mean regression (GMR), and orthogonal distance regression (ODR) – have each been recommended as the best method for fitting isotopic mixing lines. In fact, OLS, GMR, and ODR are all special cases of York's solution that are valid only under particular measurement conditions, and those conditions do not hold in general for isotopic mixing lines. Here, using Monte Carlo simulations, we quantify the biases in OLS, GMR, and ODR under various conditions and show that York's general – and convenient – solution is always the least biased.« less
The long-solved problem of the best-fit straight line: Application to isotopic mixing lines
Wehr, Richard; Saleska, Scott R.
2017-01-03
It has been almost 50 years since York published an exact and general solution for the best-fit straight line to independent points with normally distributed errors in both x and y. York's solution is highly cited in the geophysical literature but almost unknown outside of it, so that there has been no ebb in the tide of books and papers wrestling with the problem. Much of the post-1969 literature on straight-line fitting has sown confusion not merely by its content but by its very existence. The optimal least-squares fit is already known; the problem is already solved. Here we introducemore » the non-specialist reader to York's solution and demonstrate its application in the interesting case of the isotopic mixing line, an analytical tool widely used to determine the isotopic signature of trace gas sources for the study of biogeochemical cycles. The most commonly known linear regression methods – ordinary least-squares regression (OLS), geometric mean regression (GMR), and orthogonal distance regression (ODR) – have each been recommended as the best method for fitting isotopic mixing lines. In fact, OLS, GMR, and ODR are all special cases of York's solution that are valid only under particular measurement conditions, and those conditions do not hold in general for isotopic mixing lines. Here, using Monte Carlo simulations, we quantify the biases in OLS, GMR, and ODR under various conditions and show that York's general – and convenient – solution is always the least biased.« less
An approach to enhance pnetCDF performance in ...
Data intensive simulations are often limited by their I/O (input/output) performance, and "novel" techniques need to be developed in order to overcome this limitation. The software package pnetCDF (parallel network Common Data Form), which works with parallel file systems, was developed to address this issue by providing parallel I/O capability. This study examines the performance of an application-level data aggregation approach which performs data aggregation along either row or column dimension of MPI (Message Passing Interface) processes on a spatially decomposed domain, and then applies the pnetCDF parallel I/O paradigm. The test was done with three different domain sizes which represent small, moderately large, and large data domains, using a small-scale Community Multiscale Air Quality model (CMAQ) mock-up code. The examination includes comparing I/O performance with traditional serial I/O technique, straight application of pnetCDF, and the data aggregation along row and column dimension before applying pnetCDF. After the comparison, "optimal" I/O configurations of this application-level data aggregation approach were quantified. Data aggregation along the row dimension (pnetCDFcr) works better than along the column dimension (pnetCDFcc) although it may perform slightly worse than the straight pnetCDF method with a small number of processors. When the number of processors becomes larger, pnetCDFcr outperforms pnetCDF significantly. If the number of proces
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Hill, Peter; Shanahan, Brendan; Dudson, Ben
2017-04-01
We present a technique for handling Dirichlet boundary conditions with the Flux Coordinate Independent (FCI) parallel derivative operator with arbitrary-shaped material geometry in general 3D magnetic fields. The FCI method constructs a finite difference scheme for ∇∥ by following field lines between poloidal planes and interpolating within planes. Doing so removes the need for field-aligned coordinate systems that suffer from singularities in the metric tensor at null points in the magnetic field (or equivalently, when q → ∞). One cost of this method is that as the field lines are not on the mesh, they may leave the domain at any point between neighbouring planes, complicating the application of boundary conditions. The Leg Value Fill (LVF) boundary condition scheme presented here involves an extrapolation/interpolation of the boundary value onto the field line end point. The usual finite difference scheme can then be used unmodified. We implement the LVF scheme in BOUT++ and use the Method of Manufactured Solutions to verify the implementation in a rectangular domain, and show that it does not modify the error scaling of the finite difference scheme. The use of LVF for arbitrary wall geometry is outlined. We also demonstrate the feasibility of using the FCI approach in no n-axisymmetric configurations for a simple diffusion model in a "straight stellarator" magnetic field. A Gaussian blob diffuses along the field lines, tracing out flux surfaces. Dirichlet boundary conditions impose a last closed flux surface (LCFS) that confines the density. Including a poloidal limiter moves the LCFS to a smaller radius. The expected scaling of the numerical perpendicular diffusion, which is a consequence of the FCI method, in stellarator-like geometry is recovered. A novel technique for increasing the parallel resolution during post-processing, in order to reduce artefacts in visualisations, is described.
46 CFR Appendix A to Part 45 - Load Line Certificate Form
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-10-01
... registry Type of Ship: TYPE “A” TYPE “B” TYPE “B” with increased freeboard freeboard from deck line Midsummer MS Summer S Intermediate I Winter W load line above S Upper edge of line through center of diamond... salt water of the St. Lawrence River west of a straight line from Cap de Rosiers to West Point...
System for line drawings interpretation
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Boatto, L.; Consorti, Vincenzo; Del Buono, Monica; Eramo, Vincenzo; Esposito, Alessandra; Melcarne, F.; Meucci, Mario; Mosciatti, M.; Tucci, M.; Morelli, Arturo
1992-08-01
This paper describes an automatic system that extracts information from line drawings, in order to feed CAD or GIS systems. The line drawings that we analyze contain interconnected thin lines, dashed lines, text, and symbols. Characters and symbols may overlap with lines. Our approach is based on the properties of the run representation of a binary image that allow giving the image a graph structure. Using this graph structure, several algorithms have been designed to identify, directly in the raster image, straight segments, dashed lines, text, symbols, hatching lines, etc. Straight segments and dashed lines are converted into vectors, with high accuracy and good noise immunity. Characters and symbols are recognized by means of a recognizer, specifically developed for this application, designed to be insensitive to rotation and scaling. Subsequent processing steps include an `intelligent'' search through the graph in order to detect closed polygons, dashed lines, text strings, and other higher-level logical entities, followed by the identification of relationships (adjacency, inclusion, etc.) between them. Relationships are further translated into a formal description of the drawing. The output of the system can be used as input to a Geographic Information System package. The system is currently used by the Italian Land Register Authority to process cadastral maps.
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Bain, D. B.; Smith, C. E.; Holdeman, J. D.
1992-01-01
A CFD study was performed to analyze the mixing potential of opposed rows of staggered jets injected into confined crossflow in a rectangular duct. Three jet configurations were numerically tested: (1) straight (0 deg) slots; (2) perpendicular slanted (45 deg) slots angled in opposite directions on top and bottom walls; and (3) parallel slanted (45 deg) slots angled in the same direction on top and bottom walls. All three configurations were tested at slot spacing-to-duct height ratios (S/H) of 0.5, 0.75, and 1.0; a jet-to-mainstream momentum flux ratio (J) of 100; and a jet-to-mainstream mass flow ratio of 0.383. Each configuration had its best mixing performance at S/H of 0.75. Asymmetric flow patterns were expected and predicted for all slanted slot configurations. The parallel slanted slot configuration was the best overall configuration at x/H of 1.0 for S/H of 0.75.
The Dung Beetle Dance: An Orientation Behaviour?
Baird, Emily; Byrne, Marcus J.; Smolka, Jochen; Warrant, Eric J.; Dacke, Marie
2012-01-01
An interesting feature of dung beetle behaviour is that once they have formed a piece of dung into a ball, they roll it along a straight path away from the dung pile. This straight-line orientation ensures that the beetles depart along the most direct route, guaranteeing that they will not return to the intense competition (from other beetles) that occurs near the dung pile. Before rolling a new ball away from the dung pile, dung beetles perform a characteristic “dance,” in which they climb on top of the ball and rotate about their vertical axis. This dance behaviour can also be observed during the beetles' straight-line departure from the dung pile. The aim of the present study is to investigate the purpose of the dung beetle dance. To do this, we explored the circumstances that elicit dance behaviour in the diurnal ball-rolling dung beetle, Scarabaeus (Kheper) nigroaeneus. Our results reveal that dances are elicited when the beetles lose control of their ball or lose contact with it altogether. We also find that dances can be elicited by both active and passive deviations of course and by changes in visual cues alone. In light of these results, we hypothesise that the dung beetle dance is a visually mediated mechanism that facilitates straight-line orientation in ball-rolling dung beetles by allowing them to 1) establish a roll bearing and 2) return to this chosen bearing after experiencing a disturbance to the roll path. PMID:22279572
Darwich, Mhd Ayham; Albogha, Mhd Hassan; Abdelmajeed, Adnan; Darwich, Khaldoun
2016-04-01
The aim of this study was to compare the performances of 5 plating techniques for fixation of unilateral mandibular subcondylar fracture. Five titanium plating techniques for fixation of condylar fracture were analyzed using the finite element method. The modeled techniques were 1) 1 straight plate, 2) 2 parallel straight plates, 3) 2 angulated straight plates, 4) 1 trapezoidal plate, and 5) 1 square plate. Three-dimensional models were generated using patient-specific geometry for the mandible obtained from a computerized tomographic image of a healthy living man. Plates were designed and combined with the mandible and analyzed under a 500-N load. The single straight plate presented the most inferior performance; it presented maximum displacement and strain on cortical bone. The trapezoidal plate induced the least amount of strain on cortical bone and was best at resisting displacement. The trapezoidal plate is recommended for fixation of subcondylar fracture. Copyright © 2016 American Association of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Spray Cooling Trajectory Angle Impact Upon Heat Flux Using a Straight Finned Enhanced Surface
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Silk, Eric A.; Kim, Jungho; Kiger, Ken
2005-01-01
Experiments were conducted to study the effects of spray trajectory angles upon heat flux for flat and enhanced surface spray cooling. The surface enhancement consisted of straight fins machined on the top surface of a copper heater block. Spray cooling curves were obtained with the straight fin surface aligned both parallel (axial) and perpendicular (transverse) to the spray axis. Measurements were also obtained on a flat surface heater block for comparison purposes. Each copper block had a cross-sectional area of 2.0 sq cm. A 2x2 nozzle array was used with PF-5060 as the working fluid. Thermal performance data was obtained under nominally degassed (chamber pressure of 41.4 kPa) conditions. Results show that the maximum CHF in all cases was attained for a trajectory angle of 30' from the surface normal. Furthermore, trajectory angles applied to straight finned surfaces can have a critical heat flux (CHF) enhancement as much as 75% (heat flux value of 140 W/sq cm) relative to the vertical spray orientation for the analogous flat surface case under nominally degassed conditions.
Oculogravic illusion in response to straight-ahead acceleration of a CF-104 aircraft
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Graybiel, A.; Jennings, G. L.; Johnson, W. H.; Money, K. E.; Malcolm, R. E.
1979-01-01
Experimental subjects wore goggles that restricted monocular vision to a luminous line fixed relative to the head, and they were exposed on one occasion to a straight-ahead acceleration of an aircraft and on another occasion to a tilting chair. The magnitude of change of direction of the resultant acceleration was the same on both occasions, but the perceived movement of the luminous line from the two stimuli was very different. In response to the aircraft stimulus, the oculogravic illusion was experienced and the luminous line was perceived as tilting relative to the subject, in response to the tilting chair stimulus, the line was perceived as remaining fixed relative to the subject. It was concluded that the oculogravic illusion, as experienced in the aircraft (and previously in centrifuges), is a true illusion and not merely a fact of physics.
2003-04-15
of Albuquerque, New Mexico. . Since the system has “bottomed out” one could project a straight line northeastward (with little eastward movement of...in determining if forecast model guidance is “on track.” 14. 14. Subject Terms: CLOUDS, COMMA CLOUD, DRY LINE , GULF STRATUS, HEIGHT FALL CENTERS...4-40 Warm Fronts, Squall Lines and Mesocyclones
27 CFR 9.169 - Red Hills Lake County.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-04-01
...-foot contour line with the section 17 east boundary line, and continue for about 0.45 miles along the... continue straight north 0.25 miles on Wilkinson Road to its intersection with the 1,600-foot elevation line...-foot elevation line, section 19, T13N, R8W (Kelseyville Quadrangle); then (20) Proceed about 3.0 miles...
27 CFR 9.169 - Red Hills Lake County.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-04-01
...-foot contour line with the section 17 east boundary line, and continue for about 0.45 miles along the... continue straight north 0.25 miles on Wilkinson Road to its intersection with the 1,600-foot elevation line...-foot elevation line, section 19, T13N, R8W (Kelseyville Quadrangle); then (20) Proceed about 3.0 miles...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... beginning is the unnamed 3,063′ peak on the county line between San Benito and Monterey Counties in Township... Sections 32, 29, and 30 all in Township 14 S., Range 5 E., to the point at which the county line intersects the line between Sections 30 and 19 of said Township and Range. (3) Thence proceed in a straight line...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-04-01
... beginning is the unnamed 3,063′ peak on the county line between San Benito and Monterey Counties in Township... Sections 32, 29, and 30 all in Township 14 S., Range 5 E., to the point at which the county line intersects the line between Sections 30 and 19 of said Township and Range. (3) Thence proceed in a straight line...
Resonant behaviour of MHD waves on magnetic flux tubes. III - Effect of equilibrium flow
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Goossens, Marcel; Hollweg, Joseph V.; Sakurai, Takashi
1992-01-01
The Hollweg et al. (1990) analysis of MHD surface waves in a stationary equilibrium is extended. The conservation laws and jump conditions at Alfven and slow resonance points obtained by Sakurai et al. (1990) are generalized to include an equilibrium flow, and the assumption that the Eulerian perturbation of total pressure is constant is recovered as the special case of the conservation law for an equilibrium with straight magnetic field lines and flow along the magnetic field lines. It is shown that the conclusions formulated by Hollweg et al. are still valid for the straight cylindrical case. The effect of curvature is examined.
Trajectory planning and control of a 6 DOF manipulator with Stewart platform-based mechanism
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Nguyen, Charles C.; Antrazi, Sami
1990-01-01
The trajectory planning and control was studied of a robot manipulator that has 6 degrees of freedom and was designed based on the mechanism of the Stewart Platform. First the main components of the manipulator is described along with its operation. The solutions are briefly prescribed for the forward and inverse kinematics of the manipulator. After that, two trajectory planning schemes are developed using the manipulator inverse kinematics to track straight lines and circular paths. Finally experiments conducted to study the performance of the developed planning schemes in tracking a straight line and a circle are presented and discussed.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Kelly, Elizabeth J.; Dewart, Jean Marie; Deola, Regina
This report provides site-specific return level analyses for rain, snow, and straight-line wind extreme events. These analyses are in support of the 10-year review plan for the assessment of meteorological natural phenomena hazards at Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL). These analyses follow guidance from Department of Energy, DOE Standard, Natural Phenomena Hazards Analysis and Design Criteria for DOE Facilities (DOE-STD-1020-2012), Nuclear Regulatory Commission Standard Review Plan (NUREG-0800, 2007) and ANSI/ ANS-2.3-2011, Estimating Tornado, Hurricane, and Extreme Straight-Line Wind Characteristics at Nuclear Facility Sites. LANL precipitation and snow level data have been collected since 1910, although not all years are complete.more » In this report the results from the more recent data (1990–2014) are compared to those of past analyses and a 2004 National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration report. Given the many differences in the data sets used in these different analyses, the lack of statistically significant differences in return level estimates increases confidence in the data and in the modeling and analysis approach.« less
Normal probability plots with confidence.
Chantarangsi, Wanpen; Liu, Wei; Bretz, Frank; Kiatsupaibul, Seksan; Hayter, Anthony J; Wan, Fang
2015-01-01
Normal probability plots are widely used as a statistical tool for assessing whether an observed simple random sample is drawn from a normally distributed population. The users, however, have to judge subjectively, if no objective rule is provided, whether the plotted points fall close to a straight line. In this paper, we focus on how a normal probability plot can be augmented by intervals for all the points so that, if the population distribution is normal, then all the points should fall into the corresponding intervals simultaneously with probability 1-α. These simultaneous 1-α probability intervals provide therefore an objective mean to judge whether the plotted points fall close to the straight line: the plotted points fall close to the straight line if and only if all the points fall into the corresponding intervals. The powers of several normal probability plot based (graphical) tests and the most popular nongraphical Anderson-Darling and Shapiro-Wilk tests are compared by simulation. Based on this comparison, recommendations are given in Section 3 on which graphical tests should be used in what circumstances. An example is provided to illustrate the methods. © 2014 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.
Adaptive Control of Small Outboard-Powered Boats for Survey Applications
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
VanZwieten, T.S.; VanZwieten, J.H.; Fisher, A.D.
2009-01-01
Four autopilot controllers have been developed in this work that can both hold a desired heading and follow a straight line. These PID, adaptive PID, neuro-adaptive, and adaptive augmenting control algorithms have all been implemented into a numerical simulation of a 33-foot center console vessel with wind, waves, and current disturbances acting in the perpendicular (across-track) direction of the boat s desired trajectory. Each controller is tested for its ability to follow a desired heading in the presence of these disturbances and then to follow a straight line at two different throttle settings for the same disturbances. These controllers were tuned for an input thrust of 2000 N and all four controllers showed good performance with none of the controllers significantly outperforming the others when holding a constant heading and following a straight line at this engine thrust. Each controller was then tested for a reduced engine thrust of 1200 N per engine where each of the three adaptive controllers reduced heading error and across-track error by approximately 50% after a 300 second tuning period when compared to the fixed gain PID, showing that significant robustness to changes in throttle setting was gained by using an adaptive algorithm.
Continuum Gyrokinetic Simulations of Turbulence in a Helical Model SOL with NSTX-type parameters
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Hammett, G. W.; Shi, E. L.; Hakim, A.; Stoltzfus-Dueck, T.
2017-10-01
We have developed the Gkeyll code to carry out 3D2V full- F gyrokinetic simulations of electrostatic plasma turbulence in open-field-line geometries, using special versions of discontinuous-Galerkin algorithms to help with the computational challenges of the edge region. (Higher-order algorithms can also be helpful for exascale computing as they reduce the ratio of communications to computations.) Our first simulations with straight field lines were done for LAPD-type cases. Here we extend this to a helical model of an SOL plasma and show results for NSTX-type parameters. These simulations include the basic elements of a scrape-off layer: bad-curvature/interchange drive of instabilities, narrow sources to model plasma leaking from the core, and parallel losses with model sheath boundary conditions (our model allows currents to flow in and out of the walls). The formation of blobs is observed. By reducing the strength of the poloidal magnetic field, the heat flux at the divertor plate is observed to broaden. Supported by the Max-Planck/Princeton Center for Plasma Physics, the SciDAC Center for the Study of Plasma Microturbulence, and DOE Contract DE-AC02-09CH11466.
Multidimensional brain activity dictated by winner-take-all mechanisms.
Tozzi, Arturo; Peters, James F
2018-06-21
A novel demon-based architecture is introduced to elucidate brain functions such as pattern recognition during human perception and mental interpretation of visual scenes. Starting from the topological concepts of invariance and persistence, we introduce a Selfridge pandemonium variant of brain activity that takes into account a novel feature, namely, demons that recognize short straight-line segments, curved lines and scene shapes, such as shape interior, density and texture. Low-level representations of objects can be mapped to higher-level views (our mental interpretations): a series of transformations can be gradually applied to a pattern in a visual scene, without affecting its invariant properties. This makes it possible to construct a symbolic multi-dimensional representation of the environment. These representations can be projected continuously to an object that we have seen and continue to see, thanks to the mapping from shapes in our memory to shapes in Euclidean space. Although perceived shapes are 3-dimensional (plus time), the evaluation of shape features (volume, color, contour, closeness, texture, and so on) leads to n-dimensional brain landscapes. Here we discuss the advantages of our parallel, hierarchical model in pattern recognition, computer vision and biological nervous system's evolution. Copyright © 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... and Lammers Ferry Road, along the western boundary line of section 6, T3S/R5E. From the beginning... Western Pacific Railway line along the southern boundary line of section 6, T3S/R5E (Tracy map); then (2) Proceed 5.6 miles straight east along the Western Pacific Railway line and then along Linne Road to the...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-04-01
... section 10 for 0.3 mile to its intersection with the 2,520-foot contour line and a 90-degree turn in the... boundary line 0.3 mile to its intersection with the 2,600-foot contour line and a 90-degree turn in the WNF... Landing. From the beginning point, proceed straight east 1.6 miles along the northern boundary line of...
27 CFR 9.230 - Ballard Canyon.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-04-01
... straight line approximately 1.25 miles, crossing onto the Zaca Creek map, to the marked “Ball” 801-foot....45 miles, crossing onto the Solvang map, to a marked, unnamed 775-foot peak, T6N/R31W; then (6... the 400-foot contour line approximately 1.5 miles, to the contour line's first intersection with...
Line intersect sampling: Ell-shaped transects and multiple intersections
Timothy G. Gregoire; Harry T. Valentine
2003-01-01
The probability of selecting a population element under line intersect sampling depends on the width of the particle in the direction perpendicular to the transect, as is well known. The consequence of this when using ell-shaped transects rather than straight-line transects are explicated, and modifications that preserve design-unbiasedness of Kaiser's (1983)...
Responsiveness of Nigerian Students to Pictorial Depth Cues.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Evans, G. S.; Seddon, G. M.
1978-01-01
Three groups of Nigerian high school and college students were tested for response to four pictorial depth cues. Students had more difficulty with cues concerning the relative size of objects and the foreshortening of straight lines than with cues involving overlap of lines and distortion of the angles between lines. (Author/JEG)
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-04-01
... township line “T5N/T4N”; (2) Thence in a straight line in a northeast direction to Bench Mark (BM) 19... just south of Section 34, Township 6 North, Range 2 West; (5) Thence due west along the Napa/Solano...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... township line “T5N/T4N”; (2) Thence in a straight line in a northeast direction to Bench Mark (BM) 19... just south of Section 34, Township 6 North, Range 2 West; (5) Thence due west along the Napa/Solano...
Trajectory control of an articulated robot with a parallel drive arm based on splines under tension
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Yi, Seung-Jong
Today's industrial robots controlled by mini/micro computers are basically simple positioning devices. The positioning accuracy depends on the mathematical description of the robot configuration to place the end-effector at the desired position and orientation within the workspace and on following the specified path which requires the trajectory planner. In addition, the consideration of joint velocity, acceleration, and jerk trajectories are essential for trajectory planning of industrial robots to obtain smooth operation. The newly designed 6 DOF articulated robot with a parallel drive arm mechanism which permits the joint actuators to be placed in the same horizontal line to reduce the arm inertia and to increase load capacity and stiffness is selected. First, the forward kinematic and inverse kinematic problems are examined. The forward kinematic equations are successfully derived based on Denavit-Hartenberg notation with independent joint angle constraints. The inverse kinematic problems are solved using the arm-wrist partitioned approach with independent joint angle constraints. Three types of curve fitting methods used in trajectory planning, i.e., certain degree polynomial functions, cubic spline functions, and cubic spline functions under tension, are compared to select the best possible method to satisfy both smooth joint trajectories and positioning accuracy for a robot trajectory planner. Cubic spline functions under tension is the method selected for the new trajectory planner. This method is implemented for a 6 DOF articulated robot with a parallel drive arm mechanism to improve the smoothness of the joint trajectories and the positioning accuracy of the manipulator. Also, this approach is compared with existing trajectory planners, 4-3-4 polynomials and cubic spline functions, via circular arc motion simulations. The new trajectory planner using cubic spline functions under tension is implemented into the microprocessor based robot controller and motors to produce combined arc and straight-line motion. The simulation and experiment show interesting results by demonstrating smooth motion in both acceleration and jerk and significant improvements of positioning accuracy in trajectory planning.
Rapidity evolution of Wilson lines at the next-to-leading order
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Balitsky, Ian; Chirilli, Giovanni
2013-12-01
At high energies particles move very fast so the proper degrees of freedom for the fast gluons moving along the straight lines are Wilson-line operators - infinite gauge factors ordered along the line. In the framework of operator expansion in Wilson lines the energy dependence of the amplitudes is determined by the rapidity evolution of Wilson lines. We present the next-to-leading order hierarchy of the evolution equations for Wilson-line operators.
Comparison of Cyberware PX and PS 3D human head scanners
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Carson, Jeremy; Corner, Brian D.; Crockett, Eric; Li, Peng; Paquette, Steven
2008-02-01
A common limitation of laser line three-Dimensional (3D) scanners is the inability to scan objects with surfaces that are either parallel to the laser line or that self-occlude. Filling in missing areas adds some unwanted inaccuracy to the 3D model. Capturing the human head with a Cyberware PS Head Scanner is an example of obtaining a model where the incomplete areas are difficult to fill accurately. The PS scanner uses a single vertical laser line to illuminate the head and is unable to capture data at top of the head, where the line of sight is tangent to the surface, and under the chin, an area occluded by the chin when the subject looks straight forward. The Cyberware PX Scanner was developed to obtain this missing 3D head data. The PX scanner uses two cameras offset at different angles to provide a more detailed head scan that captures surfaces missed by the PS scanner. The PX scanner cameras also use new technology to obtain color maps that are of higher resolution than the PS Scanner. The two scanners were compared in terms of amount of surface captured (surface area and volume) and the quality of head measurements when compared to direct measurements obtained through standard anthropometry methods. Relative to the PS scanner, the PX head scans were more complete and provided the full set of head measurements, but actual measurement values, when available from both scanners, were about the same.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Asvadurov, Sergey; Coleman, Bernard D.
1999-07-01
In the theory of curvature driven diffusion along curves, the rate υ at which a planar curve C= C( t) advances along its normal vector is proportional to the second derivative of the curvature κ with respect to the curve’s arc-length parameter, s, i.e., υ( s, t)= Aκss( s, t). The curve is called invariant if it evolves without deformation or rotation; its motion is then a steady translation, and the angle θ= θ( s) from the direction of propagation of C to the tangent vector at s obeys the equation Aθ″‧(s)=V sin θ(s) in which V is the speed of propagation. When C is an infinite curve, this equation with V>0 implies that as s→+∞ or -∞, C either is asymptotic to a straight line parallel to the direction of propagation or spirals to a limit point with κ‧( s) approaching a non-zero constant. If C spirals to a point x+∞ as s increases to +∞, C may either spiral to a point x-∞ or be asymptotic to a line l- as s decreases to -∞. The curves that are asymptotic to lines both as s→+∞ and as s→-∞ differ by only similarity transformations and are such that l+= l- and have that line as an axis of symmetry. A discussion is given of properties that data of the form ( θ(0), θ‧(0), θ″(0)) must have to determine a curve asymptotic to a line for either large or small s.
... per day (fasting or pre-breakfast, pre-lunch, pre-dinner, and bedtime). The straight black line shows an A1C measurement of 7.0 percent. The blue line shows an example of how blood glucose test results might look from self-monitoring four times ...
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Cohen, S. C.
1980-01-01
A technique for fitting a straight line to a collection of data points is given. The relationships between the slopes and correlation coefficients, and between the corresponding standard deviations and correlation coefficient are given.
An unexplained three-dimensional percept emerging from a bundle of lines.
Altschuler, Eric L; Huang, Abigail E; Kim, Hee J; Battaglini, Luca; Roncato, Sergio
2017-10-01
Perceptual grouping has been extensively studied, but some areas are still unexplored-in particular, the figural organizations that emerge when bundles of intersecting lines are drawn. Here, we will describe some figural organizations that emerge after the superimposition of bundles of lines forming the profile of regular triangular waves. By manipulating the lines' jaggedness and junction geometry (regular or irregular X junction) we could generate the following organizations: (a) a grid, or a figural configuration in which both the lines and closed contours are perceived, (b) a figure-ground organization composed of figures separated by portions of the background, and (c) a corrugated surface appearing as a multifaceted polyhedral shell crossed by ridges and valleys. An experiment was conducted with the aim at testing the role of the good-continuation and closure Gestalt factors. Good continuation prevails when the lines are straight or close to straightness, but its role is questionable in the appearance of a corrugated surface. This perceptual organization occurs despite the violation of the good-continuation rule and consists of a structure of such complexity so as to challenge algorithms of computer vision and stimulate a deeper understanding of the perceptual interpretation of groups of lines.
Detection for flatness of large surface based on structured light
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
He, Wenyan; Cao, Xuedong; Long, Kuang; Peng, Zhang
2016-09-01
In order to get flatness of a large plane, this paper set up a measurement system, composed by Line Structured Light, imaging system, CCD, etc. Line Structured Light transmits parallel fringes at a proper angle onto the plane which is measured; the imaging system and CCD locate above the plane to catch the fringes. When the plane is perfect, CCD will catch straight fringes; however, the real plane is not perfect; according to the theory of projection, the fringes caught by CCD will be distorted by convex and concave. Extract the center of line fringes to obtain the distortion of the fringe, according to the functional relationship between the distortion of fringes and the height which is measured, then we will get flatness of the entire surface. Data from experiment approached the analysis of theory. In the simulation, the vertical resolution is 0.0075 mm per pixel when measuring a plane of 400mm×400mm, choosing the size of CCD 4096×4096, at the angle 85°. Helped by sub-pixel, the precision will get the level of submicron. There are two obvious advantages: method of surface sampling can increase the efficiency for auto-repairing of machines; considering the center of fringe is required mainly in this system, as a consequence, there is no serious demand for back light.
33 CFR 80.712 - Morris Island, SC to Hilton Head Island, SC.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-07-01
... Island. (d) A line drawn from the microwave antenna tower on Edisto Beach charted in approximate position..., SC to Hilton Head Island, SC. (a) A line drawn from the easternmost tip of Folley Island to the... Island. (b) A straight line drawn from the seaward tangent of Folly Island through Folly River Daybeacon...
33 CFR 80.712 - Morris Island, SC to Hilton Head Island, SC.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-07-01
... Island. (d) A line drawn from the microwave antenna tower on Edisto Beach charted in approximate position..., SC to Hilton Head Island, SC. (a) A line drawn from the easternmost tip of Folley Island to the... Island. (b) A straight line drawn from the seaward tangent of Folly Island through Folly River Daybeacon...
50 CFR 660.399 - EFH Conservation Areas off the Coast of California.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
.... The boundary of the Harris Point EFH Conservation Area is defined by the mean high water line and... commercial and recreational take of living marine resources is allowed, exists between the mean high water... Scorpion EFH Conservation Area is defined by the mean high water line and a straight line connecting all of...
50 CFR 660.79 - EFH Conservation Areas off the Coast of California.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-10-01
.... The boundary of the Harris Point EFH Conservation Area is defined by the mean high water line and... commercial and recreational take of living marine resources is allowed, exists between the mean high water... Scorpion EFH Conservation Area is defined by the mean high water line and a straight line connecting all of...
Devaere, Léa; Clausen, Sébastien; Álvaro, J. Javier; Peel, John S.; Vachard, Daniel
2014-01-01
More than 285 specimens of Conotheca subcurvata with three-dimensionally preserved digestive tracts were recovered from the Terreneuvian (early Cambrian) Heraultia Limestone of the northern Montagne Noire, southern France. They represent one of the oldest occurrences of such preserved guts. The newly discovered operculum of some complete specimens provides additional data allowing emendation of the species diagnosis. Infestation of the U-shaped digestive tracts by smooth uniseriate, branching to anastomosing filaments along with isolated botryoidal coccoids attests to their early, microbially mediated phosphatisation. Apart from taphonomic deformation, C. subcurvata exhibits three different configurations of the digestive tract: (1) anal tube and gut parallel, straight to slightly undulating; (2) anal tube straight and loosely folded gut; and (3) anal tube straight and gut straight with local zigzag folds. The arrangement of the digestive tracts and its correlation with the mean apertural diameter of the specimens are interpreted as ontogenetically dependent. The simple U-shaped gut, usually considered as characteristic of the Hyolithida, developed in earlier stages of C. subcurvata, whereas the more complex orthothecid type-3 only appears in largest specimens. This growth pattern suggests a distinct phylogenetic relationship between these two hyolith orders through heterochronic processes. PMID:24533118
Laan, Nick; de Bruin, Karla G.; Slenter, Denise; Wilhelm, Julie; Jermy, Mark; Bonn, Daniel
2015-01-01
Bloodstain Pattern Analysis is a forensic discipline in which, among others, the position of victims can be determined at crime scenes on which blood has been shed. To determine where the blood source was investigators use a straight-line approximation for the trajectory, ignoring effects of gravity and drag and thus overestimating the height of the source. We determined how accurately the location of the origin can be estimated when including gravity and drag into the trajectory reconstruction. We created eight bloodstain patterns at one meter distance from the wall. The origin’s location was determined for each pattern with: the straight-line approximation, our method including gravity, and our method including both gravity and drag. The latter two methods require the volume and impact velocity of each bloodstain, which we are able to determine with a 3D scanner and advanced fluid dynamics, respectively. We conclude that by including gravity and drag in the trajectory calculation, the origin’s location can be determined roughly four times more accurately than with the straight-line approximation. Our study enables investigators to determine if the victim was sitting or standing, or it might be possible to connect wounds on the body to specific patterns, which is important for crime scene reconstruction. PMID:26099070
Laan, Nick; de Bruin, Karla G; Slenter, Denise; Wilhelm, Julie; Jermy, Mark; Bonn, Daniel
2015-06-22
Bloodstain Pattern Analysis is a forensic discipline in which, among others, the position of victims can be determined at crime scenes on which blood has been shed. To determine where the blood source was investigators use a straight-line approximation for the trajectory, ignoring effects of gravity and drag and thus overestimating the height of the source. We determined how accurately the location of the origin can be estimated when including gravity and drag into the trajectory reconstruction. We created eight bloodstain patterns at one meter distance from the wall. The origin's location was determined for each pattern with: the straight-line approximation, our method including gravity, and our method including both gravity and drag. The latter two methods require the volume and impact velocity of each bloodstain, which we are able to determine with a 3D scanner and advanced fluid dynamics, respectively. We conclude that by including gravity and drag in the trajectory calculation, the origin's location can be determined roughly four times more accurately than with the straight-line approximation. Our study enables investigators to determine if the victim was sitting or standing, or it might be possible to connect wounds on the body to specific patterns, which is important for crime scene reconstruction.
Ho, Jeff C; Russel, Kory C; Davis, Jennifer
2014-03-01
Support is growing for the incorporation of fetching time and/or distance considerations in the definition of access to improved water supply used for global monitoring. Current efforts typically rely on self-reported distance and/or travel time data that have been shown to be unreliable. To date, however, there has been no head-to-head comparison of such indicators with other possible distance/time metrics. This study provides such a comparison. We examine the association between both straight-line distance and self-reported one-way travel time with measured route distances to water sources for 1,103 households in Nampula province, Mozambique. We find straight-line, or Euclidean, distance to be a good proxy for route distance (R(2) = 0.98), while self-reported travel time is a poor proxy (R(2) = 0.12). We also apply a variety of time- and distance-based indicators proposed in the literature to our sample data, finding that the share of households classified as having versus lacking access would differ by more than 70 percentage points depending on the particular indicator employed. This work highlights the importance of the ongoing debate regarding valid, reliable, and feasible strategies for monitoring progress in the provision of improved water supply services.
Nouri, N M; Mostafapour, K; Bahadori, R
2016-06-01
Hydrodynamic coefficients or hydrodynamic derivatives of autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs) play an important role in their development and maneuverability. The most popular way of estimating their coefficients is to implement captive model tests such as straight line tests and planar motion mechanism (PMM) tests in the towing tanks. This paper aims to develop an apparatus based on planar experiments of water tunnel in order to estimate hydrodynamic derivatives due to AUVs' acceleration and velocity. The capability of implementing straight line tests and PMM ones using mechanical oscillators located in the downstream flow of the model is considered in the design procedure of the system. The hydrodynamic derivatives that resulted from the acceleration and velocity of the AUV model were estimated using the apparatus that we developed. Static and dynamics test results were compared for the similar derivatives. The findings showed that the system provided the basis for conducting static tests, i.e., straight-line and dynamic tests that included pure pitch and pure heave. By conducting such tests in a water tunnel, we were able to eliminate errors related to the time limitation of the tests and the effects of surface waves in the towing tank on AUVs with applications in the deep sea.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Laan, Nick; de Bruin, Karla G.; Slenter, Denise; Wilhelm, Julie; Jermy, Mark; Bonn, Daniel
2015-06-01
Bloodstain Pattern Analysis is a forensic discipline in which, among others, the position of victims can be determined at crime scenes on which blood has been shed. To determine where the blood source was investigators use a straight-line approximation for the trajectory, ignoring effects of gravity and drag and thus overestimating the height of the source. We determined how accurately the location of the origin can be estimated when including gravity and drag into the trajectory reconstruction. We created eight bloodstain patterns at one meter distance from the wall. The origin’s location was determined for each pattern with: the straight-line approximation, our method including gravity, and our method including both gravity and drag. The latter two methods require the volume and impact velocity of each bloodstain, which we are able to determine with a 3D scanner and advanced fluid dynamics, respectively. We conclude that by including gravity and drag in the trajectory calculation, the origin’s location can be determined roughly four times more accurately than with the straight-line approximation. Our study enables investigators to determine if the victim was sitting or standing, or it might be possible to connect wounds on the body to specific patterns, which is important for crime scene reconstruction.
Using the Cycloid as an Introduction to Transformations of "E" and "B" Fields
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Frodyma, Marc; Le, My Phuong
2018-01-01
The transformations of electric and magnetic fields are usually introduced by viewing systems such as a long, straight current-carrying wire and a parallel plate capacitor in two different reference frames. These well-known examples show that magnetism is a necessary consequence of augmenting electrostatics with relativity. Because they require…
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-01-01
... Oriented. A term applied to Type 31 untied tobacco which denotes the arrangement of leaves in a straight and orderly manner. Oriented includes: (a) Any lot of baled tobacco in which the leaves are packed parallel to the length of the bale with the butts to the outside and the tips of the leaves overlapping...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-01-01
... Oriented. A term applied to Type 31 untied tobacco which denotes the arrangement of leaves in a straight and orderly manner. Oriented includes: (a) Any lot of baled tobacco in which the leaves are packed parallel to the length of the bale with the butts to the outside and the tips of the leaves overlapping...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-01-01
... Oriented. A term applied to Type 31 untied tobacco which denotes the arrangement of leaves in a straight and orderly manner. Oriented includes: (a) Any lot of baled tobacco in which the leaves are packed parallel to the length of the bale with the butts to the outside and the tips of the leaves overlapping...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-01-01
... Oriented. A term applied to Type 31 untied tobacco which denotes the arrangement of leaves in a straight and orderly manner. Oriented includes: (a) Any lot of baled tobacco in which the leaves are packed parallel to the length of the bale with the butts to the outside and the tips of the leaves overlapping...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-01-01
... Oriented. A term applied to Type 31 untied tobacco which denotes the arrangement of leaves in a straight and orderly manner. Oriented includes: (a) Any lot of baled tobacco in which the leaves are packed parallel to the length of the bale with the butts to the outside and the tips of the leaves overlapping...
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Setyawan, Indra; Budiyono, Slamet, Isnandar
2017-08-01
This research was a quasi-experimental research with 2 × 3 factorial design. It aimed to determine the learning model between Missouri Mathematics Project (MMP) and Teams Games Tournament (TGT) that gave the best achievement on mathematics subject viewed from emotional quotient. The population of this research were all of Junior High School students at the 8th grade in Surakarta City, Central Java, Indonesia in academic year 2016/2017 which applied KTSP curriculum. The sample was taken by using stratified cluster random sampling. The data were collected by using methods of documentation, emotional quotient questionnaires, and mathematics achievement test. Data analysis technique used two ways analysis of variance (ANOVA) with unequal cell. According to the research findings, it could be concluded that: (1) students' mathematics achievement which were taught by using MMP is as good as emotional quotient achievement which were taught by using TGT in straight-line equation material, (2) mathematics achievement of students with high emotional quotient is better than students with medium and low emotional quotient, and mathematics achievement of students with medium emotional quotient is as good as students with low emotional quotient in straight-line equation material, (3) in each learning model, mathematics achievement of students with high emotional quotient is better than students with medium and low emotional quotient, and mathematics achievement of students with medium emotional quotient is as good as students with low emotional quotient in straight-line equation material (4) in each category of high and medium emotional quotient, student's mathematics achievement which were taught by using MMP is better than student's mathematics achievement which were taught by using TGT and in low emotional quotient student's mathematics achievement which were taught by using MMP is as good as student's mathematics achievement which were taught by using TGT in straight-line equation material.
Crew Earth Observations (CEO) taken during Expedition 9
2004-06-07
ISS009-E-10382 (7 June 2004) --- Tucson, Arizona is featured in this image photographed by an Expedition 9 crewmember on the International Space Station (ISS). Tucson lies between the forested Catalina Mountains and the Tucson Mountains (dark reddish brown at left). The typical western North American cityscape is a pattern of regular north-south aligned rectangles outlined by major streets set one mile apart. Tucsons Randolph golf course is the large rectangular dark zone in the image center. The striking contrast between the golf course and its surroundings is due to dense grass cover maintained by frequent watering. The rectangular grid pattern disappears in the small streets of the original city center, situated along the Santa Cruz River (enters the view lower left and exits in the top left corner). Newer and less densely built-up neighborhoods in the foothills of the Catalina Mountains are designed to incorporate natural landscape features, and retain major washes with natural vegetation. This portion of the cityscape seen from space is consequently quite different from the main city grid. The foothills afford views of the city to the south and the mountains to the north and are major areas of development. Large white dots within the urban grid are the reflective rooftops of shopping malls. Tucson enjoys an important position along several major crossroads. Interstate highway I-10, which connects southern California to Florida, appears as a straight line running parallel with the Santa Cruz River northwest from Tucson in the direction of Phoenix. The I-10 traverses a well-marked alluvial fan that extends from the Santa Rita Mountains to the southeast (fine drainage pattern lower center) and exits the view lower right. Highway I-19 is the straight line (lower left) leading south from the city center, between the Santa Cruz River and rectangular spoil heaps of nearby copper mines. The I-19 connects Tucson with Nogales on the Mexican border.
Monte Carlo charged-particle tracking and energy deposition on a Lagrangian mesh.
Yuan, J; Moses, G A; McKenty, P W
2005-10-01
A Monte Carlo algorithm for alpha particle tracking and energy deposition on a cylindrical computational mesh in a Lagrangian hydrodynamics code used for inertial confinement fusion (ICF) simulations is presented. The straight line approximation is used to follow propagation of "Monte Carlo particles" which represent collections of alpha particles generated from thermonuclear deuterium-tritium (DT) reactions. Energy deposition in the plasma is modeled by the continuous slowing down approximation. The scheme addresses various aspects arising in the coupling of Monte Carlo tracking with Lagrangian hydrodynamics; such as non-orthogonal severely distorted mesh cells, particle relocation on the moving mesh and particle relocation after rezoning. A comparison with the flux-limited multi-group diffusion transport method is presented for a polar direct drive target design for the National Ignition Facility. Simulations show the Monte Carlo transport method predicts about earlier ignition than predicted by the diffusion method, and generates higher hot spot temperature. Nearly linear speed-up is achieved for multi-processor parallel simulations.
Users manual for program NYQUIST: Liquid rocket nyquist plots developed for use on a PC computer
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Armstrong, Wilbur C.
1992-06-01
The piping in a liquid rocket can assume complex configurations due to multiple tanks, multiple engines, and structures that must be piped around. The capability to handle some of these complex configurations have been incorporated into the NYQUIST code. The capability to modify the input on line has been implemented. The configurations allowed include multiple tanks, multiple engines, and the splitting of a pipe into unequal segments going to different (or the same) engines. This program will handle the following type elements: straight pipes, bends, inline accumulators, tuned stub accumulators, Helmholtz resonators, parallel resonators, pumps, split pipes, multiple tanks, and multiple engines. The code is too large to compile as one program using Microsoft FORTRAN 5; therefore, the code was broken into two segments: NYQUIST1.FOR and NYQUIST2.FOR. These are compiled separately and then linked together. The final run code is not too large (approximately equals 344,000 bytes).
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Nayfeh, A. H.; Kaiser, J. E.; Marshall, R. L.; Hurst, L. J.
1978-01-01
The performance of sound suppression techniques in ducts that produce refraction effects due to axial velocity gradients was evaluated. A computer code based on the method of multiple scales was used to calculate the influence of axial variations due to slow changes in the cross-sectional area as well as transverse gradients due to the wall boundary layers. An attempt was made to verify the analytical model through direct comparison of experimental and computational results and the analytical determination of the influence of axial gradients on optimum liner properties. However, the analytical studies were unable to examine the influence of non-parallel ducts on the optimum linear conditions. For liner properties not close to optimum, the analytical predictions and the experimental measurements were compared. The circumferential variations of pressure amplitudes and phases at several axial positions were examined in straight and variable-area ducts, hard-wall and lined sections with and without a mean flow. Reasonable agreement between the theoretical and experimental results was obtained.
Users manual for program NYQUIST: Liquid rocket nyquist plots developed for use on a PC computer
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Armstrong, Wilbur C.
1992-01-01
The piping in a liquid rocket can assume complex configurations due to multiple tanks, multiple engines, and structures that must be piped around. The capability to handle some of these complex configurations have been incorporated into the NYQUIST code. The capability to modify the input on line has been implemented. The configurations allowed include multiple tanks, multiple engines, and the splitting of a pipe into unequal segments going to different (or the same) engines. This program will handle the following type elements: straight pipes, bends, inline accumulators, tuned stub accumulators, Helmholtz resonators, parallel resonators, pumps, split pipes, multiple tanks, and multiple engines. The code is too large to compile as one program using Microsoft FORTRAN 5; therefore, the code was broken into two segments: NYQUIST1.FOR and NYQUIST2.FOR. These are compiled separately and then linked together. The final run code is not too large (approximately equals 344,000 bytes).
Experimental study of transport of a dimer on a vertically oscillating plate
Wang, Jiao; Liu, Caishan; Ma, Daolin
2014-01-01
It has recently been shown that a dimer, composed of two identical spheres rigidly connected by a rod, under harmonic vertical vibration can exhibit a self-ordered transport behaviour. In this case, the mass centre of the dimer will perform a circular orbit in the horizontal plane, or a straight line if confined between parallel walls. In order to validate the numerical discoveries, we experimentally investigate the temporal evolution of the dimer's motion in both two- and three-dimensional situations. A stereoscopic vision method with a pair of high-speed cameras is adopted to perform omnidirectional measurements. All the cases studied in our experiments are also simulated using an existing numerical model. The combined investigations detail the dimer's dynamics and clearly show that its transport behaviours originate from a series of combinations of different contact states. This series is critical to our understanding of the transport properties in the dimer's motion and related self-ordered phenomena in granular systems. PMID:25383029
Pentzien lays diagonal cross of Potomac for Columbia gas
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Klinger, O.
1976-05-01
One of the most unusual pipeline river crossings was completed last fall by Pentzien, Inc., for Columbia LNG Corp. on the Potomac River at Bryans Road, MD, 22 miles south of Washington, DC. Part of a line delivering regasified Algerian LNG to Virginia and Pennsylvania, this crossing would have been only 7896 ft straight across the river; however, to obtaining necessary country authorization without excessively delaying the project, the line was laid diagonally 19,500 ft across the river at a cost about two-thirds more than for a straight-line crossing. The concrete-coated 36-in.-diam pipe for the project was so heavy thatmore » each transport truck could handle only a single 40-ft length at a time. Laser beams on each side of the river were used to guide both the dredging and pipelaying operations.« less
Estimates of ocean wave heights and attenuation in sea ice using the SAR wave mode on Sentinel-1A
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Ardhuin, Fabrice; Collard, Fabrice; Chapron, Bertrand; Girard-Ardhuin, Fanny; Guitton, Gilles; Mouche, Alexis; Stopa, Justin E.
2015-04-01
Swell evolution from the open ocean into sea ice is poorly understood, in particular the amplitude attenuation expected from scattering and dissipation. New synthetic aperture radar (SAR) data from Sentinel-1A wave mode reveal intriguing patterns of bright oscillating lines shaped like instant noodles. We investigate cases in which the oscillations are in the azimuth direction, around a straight line in the range direction. This observation is interpreted as the distortion by the SAR processing of crests from a first swell, due to the presence of a second swell. Since deviations from a straight line should be proportional to the orbital velocity toward the satellite, swell height can be estimated, from 1.5 to 5 m in the present case. The evolution of this 13 s period swell across the ice pack is consistent with an exponential attenuation on a length scale of 200 km.
Estimates of ocean wave heights and attenuation in sea ice using the SAR wave mode on Sentinel-1A
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Ardhuin, Fabrice; Collard, Fabrice; Chapron, Bertrand; Girard-Ardhuin, Fanny; Guitton, Gilles; Mouche, Alexis; Stopa, Justin
2015-04-01
Swell evolution from the open ocean into sea ice is poorly understood, in particular the amplitude attenuation expected from scattering and dissipation. New synthetic aperture radar (SAR) data from Sentinel-1 wave mode reveal intriguing patterns of bright oscillating lines shaped like instant noodles. We investigate cases in which the oscillations are in the azimuth direction, around a straight line in the range direction. This observation is interpreted as the distortion by the SAR processing of crests from a first swell, due to the presence of a second swell. As deviations from a straight line should be proportional to the orbital velocity towards the satellite, swell height can be estimated, from 1.5 to 5 m in the present case. This evolution of this 13 s period swell across the ice pack is consistent with an exponential attenuation on a length scale of 200 km.
Methods of Fitting a Straight Line to Data: Examples in Water Resources
Hirsch, Robert M.; Gilroy, Edward J.
1984-01-01
Three methods of fitting straight lines to data are described and their purposes are discussed and contrasted in terms of their applicability in various water resources contexts. The three methods are ordinary least squares (OLS), least normal squares (LNS), and the line of organic correlation (OC). In all three methods the parameters are based on moment statistics of the data. When estimation of an individual value is the objective, OLS is the most appropriate. When estimation of many values is the objective and one wants the set of estimates to have the appropriate variance, then OC is most appropriate. When one wishes to describe the relationship between two variables and measurement error is unimportant, then OC is most appropriate. Where the error is important in descriptive problems or in calibration problems, then structural analysis techniques may be most appropriate. Finally, if the problem is one of describing some geographic trajectory, then LNS is most appropriate.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... in Township 21 South (T21S), Range 4 West (R4W) on the “Roseburg” map. (1) From the beginning point... range line R8W/R9W approximately 3.5 miles to its intersection with township line T22S/T23S; (4) Thence southeast approximately 8.5 miles along a straight line to the intersection of township line T23S/T24S with...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-04-01
... in Township 21 South (T21S), Range 4 West (R4W) on the “Roseburg” map. (1) From the beginning point... range line R8W/R9W approximately 3.5 miles to its intersection with township line T22S/T23S; (4) Thence southeast approximately 8.5 miles along a straight line to the intersection of township line T23S/T24S with...
The re-incarnation, re-interpretation and re-demise of the transition probability model.
Koch, A L
1999-05-28
There are two classes of models for the cell cycle that have both a deterministic and a stochastic part; they are the transition probability (TP) models and sloppy size control (SSC) models. The hallmark of the basic TP model are two graphs: the alpha and beta plots. The former is the semi-logarithmic plot of the percentage of cell divisions yet to occur, this results in a horizontal line segment at 100% corresponding to the deterministic phase and a straight line sloping tail corresponding to the stochastic part. The beta plot concerns the differences of the age-at-division of sisters (the beta curve) and gives a straight line parallel to the tail of the alpha curve. For the SC models the deterministic part is the time needed for the cell to accumulate a critical amount of some substance(s). The variable part differs in the various variants of the general model, but they do not give alpha and beta curves with linear tails as postulated by the TP model. This paper argues against TP and for an elaboration of SSC type of model. The main argument against TP is that it assumes that the probability of the transition from the stochastic phase is time invariant even though it is certain that the cells are growing and metabolizing throughout the cell cycle; a fact that should make the transition probability be variable. The SSC models presume that cell division is triggered by the cell's success in growing and not simply the result of elapsed time. The extended model proposed here to accommodate the predictions of the SSC to the straight tailed parts of the alpha and beta plots depends on the existence of a few percent of the cell in a growing culture that are not growing normally, these are growing much slower or are temporarily quiescent. The bulk of the cells, however, grow nearly exponentially. Evidence for a slow growing component comes from experimental analyses of population size distributions for a variety of cell types by the Collins-Richmond technique. These subpopulations existence is consistent with the new concept that there are a large class of rapidly reversible mutations occurring in many organisms and at many loci serving a large range of purposes to enable the cell to survive environmental challenges. These mutations yield special subpopulations of cells within a population. The reversible mutational changes, relevant to the elaboration of SSC models, produce slow-growing cells that are either very large or very small in size; these later revert to normal growth and division. The subpopulations, however, distort the population distribution in such a way as to fit better the exponential tails of the alpha and beta curves of the TP model.
Berkemeyer, Shoma
2010-07-01
Studies report on the association between obesity and oxidative stress, with and without additional diseases. Macrophages in adipocytes, and hypoxia in adipose tissue have been suggested to explain how obesity can relate to oxidative stress. The straight line hypothesis using the lactic acid trap construct has been put forward to explain how proton imbalance can relate to obesity. Proton imbalance has been also reported to associate with the production of reactive oxygen species by inhibition of mitochondrial energy production. This review brings together existing literature and concepts to explain how obesity can relate to oxidative stress via protons, uniquely for itself or, as often observed, in conglomeration of additional diseases. Copyright 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Collision-free motion of two robot arms in a common workspace
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Basta, Robert A.; Mehrotra, Rajiv; Varanasi, Murali R.
1987-01-01
Collision-free motion of two robot arms in a common workspace is investigated. A collision-free motion is obtained by detecting collisions along the preplanned trajectories using a sphere model for the wrist of each robot and then modifying the paths and/or trajectories of one or both robots to avoid the collision. Detecting and avoiding collisions are based on the premise that: preplanned trajectories of the robots follow a straight line; collisions are restricted to between the wrists of the two robots (which corresponds to the upper three links of PUMA manipulators); and collisions never occur between the beginning points or end points on the straight line paths. The collision detection algorithm is described and some approaches to collision avoidance are discussed.
A comparison of techniques for inversion of radio-ray phase data in presence of ray bending
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Wallio, H. A.; Grossi, M. D.
1972-01-01
Derivations are presented of the straight-line Abel transform and the seismological Herglotz-Wiechert transform (which takes ray bending into account) that are used in the reconstruction of refractivity profiles from radio-wave phase data. Profile inversion utilizing these approaches, performed in computer-simulated experiments, are compared for cases of positive, zero, and negative ray bending. For thin atmospheres and ionospheres, such as the Martian atmosphere and ionosphere, radio wave signals are shown to be inverted accurately with both methods. For dense media, such as the solar corona or the lower Venus atmosphere, the refractive recovered by the seismological Herglotz-Wiechert transform provide a significant improvement compared with the straight-line Abel transform.
Straight talk new approaches in healthcare. The outpatient market: protect important market share.
Broermann, Robert A; Kerner, Donald J; Walters, H Patrick; Hickman, Brett M
2003-10-27
Hospitals are facing competition from myriad freestanding players in the outpatient market. It's a fight hospitals can't afford to lose because they often use outpatient profits to cover losses in other service lines. Indeed about 60% of the average hospital's operating margin depends on outpatient revenues. In this session of Straight Talk, we examine how hospitals can build and finance outpatient services with physicians, increasing their competitiveness in increasingly competitive markets.
33 CFR 80.1142 - San Francisco Harbor, CA.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-07-01
... 33 Navigation and Navigable Waters 1 2012-07-01 2012-07-01 false San Francisco Harbor, CA. 80.1142 Section 80.1142 Navigation and Navigable Waters COAST GUARD, DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY INTERNATIONAL NAVIGATION RULES COLREGS DEMARCATION LINES Pacific Coast § 80.1142 San Francisco Harbor, CA. A straight line...
33 CFR 80.1142 - San Francisco Harbor, CA.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-07-01
... 33 Navigation and Navigable Waters 1 2010-07-01 2010-07-01 false San Francisco Harbor, CA. 80.1142 Section 80.1142 Navigation and Navigable Waters COAST GUARD, DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY INTERNATIONAL NAVIGATION RULES COLREGS DEMARCATION LINES Pacific Coast § 80.1142 San Francisco Harbor, CA. A straight line...
33 CFR 80.1142 - San Francisco Harbor, CA.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-07-01
... 33 Navigation and Navigable Waters 1 2011-07-01 2011-07-01 false San Francisco Harbor, CA. 80.1142 Section 80.1142 Navigation and Navigable Waters COAST GUARD, DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY INTERNATIONAL NAVIGATION RULES COLREGS DEMARCATION LINES Pacific Coast § 80.1142 San Francisco Harbor, CA. A straight line...
33 CFR 80.1142 - San Francisco Harbor, CA.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-07-01
... 33 Navigation and Navigable Waters 1 2014-07-01 2014-07-01 false San Francisco Harbor, CA. 80.1142 Section 80.1142 Navigation and Navigable Waters COAST GUARD, DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY INTERNATIONAL NAVIGATION RULES COLREGS DEMARCATION LINES Pacific Coast § 80.1142 San Francisco Harbor, CA. A straight line...
33 CFR 80.1142 - San Francisco Harbor, CA.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-07-01
... 33 Navigation and Navigable Waters 1 2013-07-01 2013-07-01 false San Francisco Harbor, CA. 80.1142 Section 80.1142 Navigation and Navigable Waters COAST GUARD, DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY INTERNATIONAL NAVIGATION RULES COLREGS DEMARCATION LINES Pacific Coast § 80.1142 San Francisco Harbor, CA. A straight line...
33 CFR 80.1430 - Kaneohe Bay, Oahu, HI.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-07-01
... 33 Navigation and Navigable Waters 1 2010-07-01 2010-07-01 false Kaneohe Bay, Oahu, HI. 80.1430 Section 80.1430 Navigation and Navigable Waters COAST GUARD, DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY INTERNATIONAL NAVIGATION RULES COLREGS DEMARCATION LINES Pacific Islands § 80.1430 Kaneohe Bay, Oahu, HI. A straight line...
Perceived relative attractiveness of facial profiles with varying degrees of skeletal anomalies.
Hönn, Mirjam; Dietz, Klaus; Godt, Arnim; Göz, Gernot
2005-05-01
The objective of this study was to answer the following questions: Are profiles of Class I patients perceived as more attractive than profiles of Class II or Class III patients in Germany today? How pronounced must a skeletal malocclusion be to be perceived as less attractive? Are there differences in perception between dentists and laypersons? For the present study we examined seven patients with skeletal Class I, orthognathic maxillae and mandibles, and straight average faces (ideal biometric face as defined by A. M. Schwarz). Using the Onyx Ceph software, their profile lines were modified to reflect three different Class II profile variants and three different Class III profile variants. The 49 profiles thus obtained were assigned to two groups. Group 1 comprised the seven straight average faces and the first part of the retrognathic and prognathic profile variants. Group 2 comprised the same seven straight average faces and the remaining retrognathic and prognathic profile variants. Both groups of faces were scored by 130 laypersons and 126 dentists. Both groups of observers perceived the seven straight average faces similarly both in the first and second (subsequent) scoring rounds. The straight average face was perceived as most attractive by laypersons (mean, 5.48; 95% confidence interval (CI:) 5.33-5.60) and dentists (mean, 5.44; 95% CI, 5.28-5.50) alike, followed by the mildest variant of the retrognathic face (laypersons, mean, 4.85; 95% CI, 4.68-5.01; dentists, mean, 4.98; 95% CI, 4.81-5.10). Dentists differentiated more clearly by degree of skeletal malocclusion than did laypersons. Both groups alike perceived the extreme variant of the prognathic and retrognathic profile lines as the least attractive. Grouping the subjects by gender yielded only minor differences in perception. The straight average face is perceived as most attractive by representative German populations today. Dentists make clearer gradual distinctions in their perceptions than do laypersons.
76 FR 38718 - Indiana Disaster #IN-00037
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2011-07-01
.../23/2011. Incident: Severe Storms, Tornadoes, Straight-line Winds, and Flooding. Incident Period: 04..., Spencer, Starke, Sullivan, Switzerland, Vanderburgh, Warrick, Washington. The Interest Rates are: Percent...
Evolution of allowable stresses in shear for lumber
Robert L. Ethington; William L. Galligan; Henry M. Montrey; Alan D. Freas
1979-01-01
This paper surveys research leading to allowable shear stress parallel to grain for lumber. In early flexure tests of lumber, some pieces failed in shear. The estimated shear stress at time of failure was generally lower than shear strength measured on small, clear, straight-grained specimens. This and other engineering observations gave rise to adjustments that...
The Subunit Principle in Scar Face Revision.
Elshahat, Ahmed; Lashin, Riham
2017-06-01
Facial scaring is considered one of the most difficult cosmetic problems for any plastic surgeon to solve. The condition is more difficult if the direction of the scar is not parallel to relaxed skin tension lines. Attempts to manage this difficult situation included revisions using geometric designs, Z plasties or W plasties to camouflage the straight line visible scaring. The use of long-lasting resorbable sutures was tried too. Recently, the use of botulinum toxin during revision improved the results. Fractional CO2 lasers, microfat grafts, and platelet-rich plasma were added to the armamentarium. The scar is least visible if placed in the junction between the facial subunits. The aim of this study is to investigate the use of the subunit principle to improve the results of scar revision. Four patients were included in this study. Tissue expansion of the intact part of the subunit allowed shifting the scar to the junction between the affected subunit and the adjacent one. Tissue expansion, delivery of the expanders, and advancement of the flaps were successful in all patients. The fact that this is a 2-stage procedure and sacrifices some of the intact skin from the affected facial subunit, makes this technique reserved to patients with ugly facial scars who are ambitious to improve their appearance.
27 CFR 9.213 - Snipes Mountain.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-04-01
... beginning point, proceed south along the eastern boundary of section 34 for less than 0.1 mile to its intersection with the 750-foot elevation line, T10N, R22E; then (2) Proceed along the 750-foot elevation line... boundary of section 27, T10N, R21E; then (4) Proceed north in a straight line for less than 0.1 mile to the...
27 CFR 9.213 - Snipes Mountain.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-04-01
... beginning point, proceed south along the eastern boundary of section 34 for less than 0.1 mile to its intersection with the 750-foot elevation line, T10N, R22E; then (2) Proceed along the 750-foot elevation line... boundary of section 27, T10N, R21E; then (4) Proceed north in a straight line for less than 0.1 mile to the...
27 CFR 9.213 - Snipes Mountain.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-04-01
... beginning point, proceed south along the eastern boundary of section 34 for less than 0.1 mile to its intersection with the 750-foot elevation line, T10N, R22E; then (2) Proceed along the 750-foot elevation line... boundary of section 27, T10N, R21E; then (4) Proceed north in a straight line for less than 0.1 mile to the...
27 CFR 9.213 - Snipes Mountain.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... beginning point, proceed south along the eastern boundary of section 34 for less than 0.1 mile to its intersection with the 750-foot elevation line, T10N, R22E; then (2) Proceed along the 750-foot elevation line... boundary of section 27, T10N, R21E; then (4) Proceed north in a straight line for less than 0.1 mile to the...
27 CFR 9.213 - Snipes Mountain.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-04-01
... beginning point, proceed south along the eastern boundary of section 34 for less than 0.1 mile to its intersection with the 750-foot elevation line, T10N, R22E; then (2) Proceed along the 750-foot elevation line... boundary of section 27, T10N, R21E; then (4) Proceed north in a straight line for less than 0.1 mile to the...
75 FR 45679 - Oklahoma Disaster #OK-00043
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2010-08-03
.../26/2010. Incident: Severe Storms, Tornadoes, Straight-line Winds, and Flooding. Incident Period: 06...: Primary Counties: Beaver, Cimarron, Lincoln, Logan, Major, Oklahoma, Texas. The Interest Rates are...
Nematic liquid crystals on sinusoidal channels: the zigzag instability.
Silvestre, Nuno M; Romero-Enrique, Jose M; Telo da Gama, Margarida M
2017-01-11
Substrates which are chemically or topographically patterned induce a variety of liquid crystal textures. The response of the liquid crystal to competing surface orientations, typical of patterned substrates, is determined by the anisotropy of the elastic constants and the interplay of the relevant lengths scales, such as the correlation length and the surface geometrical parameters. Transitions between different textures, usually with different symmetries, may occur under a wide range of conditions. We use the Landau-de Gennes free energy to investigate the texture of nematics in sinusoidal channels with parallel anchoring bounded by nematic-air interfaces that favour perpendicular (hometropic) anchoring. In micron size channels 5CB was observed to exhibit a non-trivial texture characterized by a disclination line, within the channel, which is broken into a zigzag pattern. Our calculations reveal that when the elastic anisotropy of the nematic does not favour twist distortions the defect is a straight disclination line that runs along the channel, which breaks into a zigzag pattern with a characteristic period, when the twist elastic constant becomes sufficiently small when compared to the splay and bend constants. The transition occurs through a twist instability that drives the defect line to rotate from its original position. The interplay between the energetically favourable twist distortions that induce the defect rotation and the liquid crystal anchoring at the surfaces leads to the zigzag pattern. We investigate in detail the dependence of the periodicity of the zigzag pattern on the geometrical parameters of the sinusoidal channels, which in line with the experimental results is found to be non-linear.
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Smith, C. W.
1997-01-01
The present study was undertaken in order to develop test methods and procedures for measuring the variation of the stress intensity factor through the thickness in bimaterial specimens containing cracks within and parallel to the bond line using the frozen stress photoelastic method. Since stress freezing materials are incompressible above critical temperature, and since thick plates are to be employed which tend to produce a state of plane strain near the crack tip, the interface near tip fracture equations reduce to the classic form for homogeneous materials. Moreover, zero thickness interfaces do not exist when materials are bonded together. It was decided early on that it would be important to insure a uniform straight and accurate crack tip region through the thickness of the body to reduce scatter in the SIF distribution through the thickness. It was also observed that rubberlike materials which were desired to be modeled exhibited significant tip blunting prior to crack extension and that some blunting of the tip would provide a more realistic model. It should be noted that, in normal stress freezing photoelastic work, it is considered good practice to avoid utilizing data near bond lines in photoelastic models due to the bond line stresses which inevitably develop when two parts are bonded together. Thus, the present study involves certain exploratory aspects in deviating from standard practice in stress freezing work. With the above ideas in mind, several different test methods were investigated and are described in the following sections and appendices. The geometry selected for the program was a thick, edge cracked specimen containing a bond line.
Line-drawing algorithms for parallel machines
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Pang, Alex T.
1990-01-01
The fact that conventional line-drawing algorithms, when applied directly on parallel machines, can lead to very inefficient codes is addressed. It is suggested that instead of modifying an existing algorithm for a parallel machine, a more efficient implementation can be produced by going back to the invariants in the definition. Popular line-drawing algorithms are compared with two alternatives; distance to a line (a point is on the line if sufficiently close to it) and intersection with a line (a point on the line if an intersection point). For massively parallel single-instruction-multiple-data (SIMD) machines (with thousands of processors and up), the alternatives provide viable line-drawing algorithms. Because of the pixel-per-processor mapping, their performance is independent of the line length and orientation.
Ratan Murty, N. Apurva
2016-01-01
We have no difficulty seeing a straight line drawn on a paper even when the paper is bent, but this inference is in fact nontrivial. Doing so requires either matching local features or representing the pattern after factoring out the surface shape. Here we show that single neurons in the monkey inferior temporal (IT) cortex show invariant responses to patterns across rigid and nonrigid changes of surfaces. We recorded neuronal responses to stimuli in which the pattern and the surrounding surface were varied independently. In a subset of neurons, we found pattern-surface interactions that produced similar responses to stimuli across congruent pattern and surface transformations. These interactions produced systematic shifts in curvature tuning of patterns when overlaid on convex and flat surfaces. Our results show that surfaces are factored out of patterns by single neurons, thereby enabling complex perceptual inferences. NEW & NOTEWORTHY We have no difficulty seeing a straight line on a curved piece of paper, but in fact, doing so requires decoupling the shape of the surface from the pattern itself. Here we report a novel form of invariance in the visual cortex: single neurons in monkey inferior temporal cortex respond similarly to congruent transformations of patterns and surfaces, in effect decoupling patterns from the surface on which they are overlaid. PMID:27733595
Intrinsic electrical properties of LuFe2O4
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Lafuerza, Sara; García, Joaquín; Subías, Gloria; Blasco, Javier; Conder, Kazimierz; Pomjakushina, Ekaterina
2013-08-01
We here revisit the electrical properties of LuFe2O4, compound candidate for exhibiting multiferroicity. Measurements of dc electrical resistivity as a function of temperature, electric-field polarization measurements at low temperatures with and without magnetic field, and complex impedance as a function of both frequency and temperature were carried out in a LuFe2O4 single crystal, perpendicular and parallel to the hexagonal c axis, and in several ceramic polycrystalline samples. Resistivity measurements reveal that this material is a highly anisotropic semiconductor, being about two orders of magnitude more resistive along the c axis. The temperature dependence of the resistivity indicates a change in the conduction mechanism at TCO ≈ 320 K from thermal activation above TCO to variable range hopping below TCO. The resistivity values at room temperature are relatively small and are below 5000 Ω cm for all samples but we carried out polarization measurements at sufficiently low temperatures, showing that electric-field polarization curves are a straight line as expected for a paraelectric or antiferroelectric material. Furthermore, no differences are found in the polarization curves when a magnetic field is applied either parallel or perpendicular to the electric field. The analysis of the complex impedance data corroborates that the claimed colossal dielectric constant is a spurious effect mainly derived from the capacitance of the electrical contacts. Therefore, our data unequivocally evidence that LuFe2O4 is not ferroelectric.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-04-01
... miles generally northwest along the meandering 500-foot elevation line to section 18, T4S/R6E, where the... point, proceed 0.4 mile generally southeast along the Delta-Mendota Canal to its intersection with the...) Proceed 5.6 miles straight east along the Western Pacific Railway line and then along Linne Road to the...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-04-01
... miles generally northwest along the meandering 500-foot elevation line to section 18, T4S/R6E, where the... point, proceed 0.4 mile generally southeast along the Delta-Mendota Canal to its intersection with the...) Proceed 5.6 miles straight east along the Western Pacific Railway line and then along Linne Road to the...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-04-01
... miles generally northwest along the meandering 500-foot elevation line to section 18, T4S/R6E, where the... point, proceed 0.4 mile generally southeast along the Delta-Mendota Canal to its intersection with the...) Proceed 5.6 miles straight east along the Western Pacific Railway line and then along Linne Road to the...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-04-01
... miles generally northwest along the meandering 500-foot elevation line to section 18, T4S/R6E, where the... point, proceed 0.4 mile generally southeast along the Delta-Mendota Canal to its intersection with the...) Proceed 5.6 miles straight east along the Western Pacific Railway line and then along Linne Road to the...
Controller Requirements for Uncoupled Aircraft Motion. Volume 1
1984-09-01
the nose down to the run-in line, followed by roll- out into a straight line dive. Well learned precognitive maneuvers do not nvolve much psychomotor...This is initially a precognitive transient track- ing maneuver, fo’llowed by maintaining a constant, safe g level until a desired ra e of climb- is
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... southeast portion of Section 21, Township 14 South, Range 6 East. (1) From the beginning point, the boundary... Township 14 South, Range 6 East, Section 21; (2) Thence in a straight line to the southwest portion of Section 28, Township 14 South, Range 6 East, where the 1400-foot contour line intersects the south border...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-04-01
... southeast portion of Section 21, Township 14 South, Range 6 East. (1) From the beginning point, the boundary... Township 14 South, Range 6 East, Section 21; (2) Thence in a straight line to the southwest portion of Section 28, Township 14 South, Range 6 East, where the 1400-foot contour line intersects the south border...
Feature-based registration of historical aerial images by Area Minimization
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Nagarajan, Sudhagar; Schenk, Toni
2016-06-01
The registration of historical images plays a significant role in assessing changes in land topography over time. By comparing historical aerial images with recent data, geometric changes that have taken place over the years can be quantified. However, the lack of ground control information and precise camera parameters has limited scientists' ability to reliably incorporate historical images into change detection studies. Other limitations include the methods of determining identical points between recent and historical images, which has proven to be a cumbersome task due to continuous land cover changes. Our research demonstrates a method of registering historical images using Time Invariant Line (TIL) features. TIL features are different representations of the same line features in multi-temporal data without explicit point-to-point or straight line-to-straight line correspondence. We successfully determined the exterior orientation of historical images by minimizing the area formed between corresponding TIL features in recent and historical images. We then tested the feasibility of the approach with synthetic and real data and analyzed the results. Based on our analysis, this method shows promise for long-term 3D change detection studies.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Trell, Erik; Edeagu, Samuel; Animalu, Alexander
2017-01-01
From a brief recapitulation of the foundational works of Marius Sophus Lie and Herrmann Günther Grassmann, and including missing African links, a rhapsodic survey is made of the straight line of extension and existence that runs as the very fibre of generation and creation throughout Nature's all utterances, which must therefore ultimately be the web of Reality itself of which the Arts and Sciences are interpreters on equal explorer terms. Assuming their direct approach, the straight line and its archaic and algebraic and artistic bearings and convolutions have been followed towards their inner reaches, which earlier resulted in a retrieval of the baryon and meson elementary particles and now equally straightforward the electron geodesics and the organic build of the periodic system of the elements.
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Kizhner, Semion; Hunter, Stanley D.; Hanu, Andrei R.; Sheets, Teresa B.
2016-01-01
Richard O. Duda and Peter E. Hart of Stanford Research Institute in [1] described the recurring problem in computer image processing as the detection of straight lines in digitized images. The problem is to detect the presence of groups of collinear or almost collinear figure points. It is clear that the problem can be solved to any desired degree of accuracy by testing the lines formed by all pairs of points. However, the computation required for n=NxM points image is approximately proportional to n2 or O(n2), becoming prohibitive for large images or when data processing cadence time is in milliseconds. Rosenfeld in [2] described an ingenious method due to Hough [3] for replacing the original problem of finding collinear points by a mathematically equivalent problem of finding concurrent lines. This method involves transforming each of the figure points into a straight line in a parameter space. Hough chose to use the familiar slope-intercept parameters, and thus his parameter space was the two-dimensional slope-intercept plane. A parallel Hough transform running on multi-core processors was elaborated in [4]. There are many other proposed methods of solving a similar problem, such as sampling-up-the-ramp algorithm (SUTR) [5] and algorithms involving artificial swarm intelligence techniques [6]. However, all state-of-the-art algorithms lack in real time performance. Namely, they are slow for large images that require performance cadence of a few dozens of milliseconds (50ms). This problem arises in spaceflight applications such as near real-time analysis of gamma ray measurements contaminated by overwhelming amount of traces of cosmic rays (CR). Future spaceflight instruments such as the Advanced Energetic Pair Telescope instrument (AdEPT) [7-9] for cosmos gamma ray survey employ large detector readout planes registering multitudes of cosmic ray interference events and sparse science gamma ray event traces' projections. The AdEPT science of interest is in the gamma ray events and the problem is to detect and reject the much more voluminous cosmic ray projections, so that the remaining science data can be telemetered to the ground over the constrained communication link. The state-of-the-art in cosmic rays detection and rejection does not provide an adequate computational solution. This paper presents a novel approach to the AdEPT on-board data processing burdened with the CR detection top pole bottleneck problem. This paper is introducing the data processing object, demonstrates object segmentation and distribution for processing among many processing elements (PEs) and presents solution algorithm for the processing bottleneck - the CR-Algorithm. The algorithm is based on the a priori knowledge that a CR pierces the entire instrument pressure vessel. This phenomenon is also the basis for a straightforward CR simulator, allowing the CR-Algorithm performance testing. Parallel processing of the readout image's (2(N+M) - 4) peripheral voxels is detecting all CRs, resulting in O(n) computational complexity. This algorithm near real-time performance is making AdEPT class spaceflight instruments feasible.
1993-01-01
while using a sterile glass slide, held parallel to the monolayer, as a MATERIALS AND METHODS straight edge. Cultures were photographed using phase...contrastmicrosoyo tonoa~r movng ofi I spheria mi rocr rie bed ntI h CEILL CELIL CONTACT AND DIFFU SION 23 and cytokeratin 8 antibodies (refer to Figs. 4a
Rigid indented cylindrical cathode for X-ray tube
Hudgens, Claude R.
1985-01-01
A cathode assembly for a vacuum tube includes a wire filament, a straight bular anode parallel to and surrounding the wire filament, and insulating spacers for rigidly fastening the filament with respect to the anode, and with one side of the anode indented or flattened such that only one portion of the anode is heated to emitting temperatures by the filament.
Activity Demands During Multi-Directional Team Sports: A Systematic Review.
Taylor, Jeffrey B; Wright, Alexis A; Dischiavi, Steven L; Townsend, M Allison; Marmon, Adam R
2017-12-01
Late-stage rehabilitation programs often incorporate 'sport-specific' demands, but may not optimally simulate the in-game volume or intensity of such activities as sprinting, cutting, jumping, and lateral movement. The aim of this review was to characterize, quantify, and compare straight-line running and multi-directional demands during sport competition. A systematic review of PubMed, CINAHL, SPORTDiscus, and Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials databases was conducted. Studies that reported time-motion analysis data on straight-line running, accelerations/decelerations, activity changes, jumping, cutting, or lateral movement over the course of an entire competition in a multi-directional sport (soccer, basketball, lacrosse, handball, field hockey, futsal, volleyball) were included. Data was organized based on sport, age level, and sex and descriptive statistics of the frequency, intensity, time, and volume of the characteristics of running and multi-directional demands were extracted from each study. Eighty-one studies were included in the review (n = 47 soccer, n = 11 basketball, n = 9 handball, n = 7 field hockey, n = 3 futsal, n = 4 volleyball). Variability of sport demand data was found across sports, sexes, and age levels. Specifically, soccer and field hockey demanded the most volume of running, while basketball required the highest ratio of high-intensity running to sprinting. Athletes change activity between 500 and 3000 times over the course of a competition, or once every 2-4 s. Studies of soccer reported the most frequent cutting (up to 800 per game), while studies of basketball reported the highest frequency of lateral movement (up to 450 per game). Basketball (42-56 per game), handball (up to 90 per game), and volleyball (up to 35 per game) were found to require the most jumping. These data may provide an incomplete view of an athlete's straight-line running load, considering that only competition and not practice data was provided. Considerable variability exists in the demands of straight-line running and multi-directional demands across sports, competition levels, and sexes, indicating the need for sports medicine clinicians to design future rehabilitation programs with improved specificity (including the type of activity and dosage) to these demands.
Two-dimensional compressible flow in centrifugal compressors with straight blades
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Stanitz, John D; Ellis, Gaylord O
1950-01-01
Six numerical examples are presented for steady, two-dimensional, compressible, nonviscous flow in centrifugal compressors with thin straight blades, the center lines of which generate the surface of a right circular cone when rotated about the axis of the compressor. A seventh example is presented for incompressible flow. The solutions were obtained in a region of the compressors, including the impeller tip, that was considered to be unaffected by the diffuser vanes or by the impeller-inlet configuration. Each solution applies to radial and mixed flow compressors with various cone angles but with the same angle between blades on the conic flow surface. The solution also apply to radial and mixed flow turbines with the rotation and the flow direction reversed. The effects of variations in the following parameters were investigated: (1) flow rate, (2) impeller-tip speed, (3) variation of passage height with radius, and (4) angle between blades on conic flow surface. The numerical results are presented in plots of the streamlines and constant Mach number lines. Correlation equations are developed whereby the flow conditions in any impeller with straight blades can be determined (in the region investigated by this analysis) for all operating conditions.
Preliminary test results from a telescope of Hughes pixel arrays at FNAL
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Jernigan, J.G.; Arens, J.; Vezie, D.
1992-09-01
In December of 1991 three silicon hybrid pixel detectors each having 2.56 [times] 2.56 pixels 30 [mu]m square, made by the Hughes Aircraft Company, were placed in a high energy muon beam at the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory. Straight tracks were recorded in these detectors at angles to the normal to the plane of the silicon ranging from 0 to 45[degrees]. In this note, preliminary results are presented on the straight through tracks, i.e., those passing through the telescope at normal incidence. Pulse height data, signal-to-noise data, and preliminary straight line fits to the data resulting in residual distributions aremore » presented. Preliminary calculations show spatial resolution of less than 5 [mu]m in two dimensions.« less
Preliminary test results from a telescope of Hughes pixel arrays at FNAL
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Jernigan, J.G.; Arens, J.; Vezie, D.
1992-09-01
In December of 1991 three silicon hybrid pixel detectors each having 2.56 {times} 2.56 pixels 30 {mu}m square, made by the Hughes Aircraft Company, were placed in a high energy muon beam at the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory. Straight tracks were recorded in these detectors at angles to the normal to the plane of the silicon ranging from 0 to 45{degrees}. In this note, preliminary results are presented on the straight through tracks, i.e., those passing through the telescope at normal incidence. Pulse height data, signal-to-noise data, and preliminary straight line fits to the data resulting in residual distributions aremore » presented. Preliminary calculations show spatial resolution of less than 5 {mu}m in two dimensions.« less
27 CFR 9.186 - Niagara Escarpment.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-04-01
... Road, then north on Kayner Road 0.65 mile to its junction with the 600-foot contour line; then (12...) Proceed north along the east bank of the Niagara River about 0.6 mile to the northern boundary of the... about 0.8 mile to the park's northeast corner, and continue east in a straight line a short distance to...
27 CFR 9.178 - Columbia Gorge.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... Quadrangle, Washington—Oregon, 1994; (6) Brown Creek Quadrangle, Oregon, 1994; (7) Ketchum Reservoir... straight south on the R12E-R13E line, crossing onto the Brown Creek map, to its intersection with the T1N-T1S Base Line at the southeast corner of section 36 (Brown Creek Quadrangle); (19) Continues 6.1 miles...
Modeling the size-density relationship in direct-seeded slash pine stands
Quang V. Cao; Thomas J. Dean; V. Clark Baldwin
2000-01-01
The relationship between quadratic mean diameter and tree density appeared curvilinear on a logâlog scale, based on data from direct-seeded slash pine (Pinus elliotti var. elliotti Engelm.) stands. The self-thinning trajectory followed a straight line for high tree density levels and then turned away from this line as tree density...
75 FR 45648 - Oklahoma; Major Disaster and Related Determinations
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2010-08-03
... areas of the State of Oklahoma resulting from severe storms, tornadoes, straight-line winds, and..., Logan, Major, Oklahoma, and Texas Counties for Public Assistance. All counties within the State of...
2012-08-29
The straight lines in Curiosity zigzag track marks are Morse code for JPL. The footprint is an important reference mark that the rover can use to drive more precisely via a system called visual odometry.
76 FR 44028 - Indiana; Major Disaster and Related Determinations
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2011-07-22
..., and straight line winds occurring on April 19, 2011, and April 22 to May 2, 2011, and flooding..., Starke, Sullivan, Switzerland, Vanderburgh, Warrick, and Washington Counties for Public Assistance. All...
Li, J. C.; Diamond, P. H.
2017-03-23
Here, negative compressibility ITG turbulence in a linear plasma device (CSDX) can induce a negative viscosity increment. However, even with this negative increment, we show that the total axial viscosity remains positive definite, i.e. no intrinsic axial flow can be generated by pure ITG turbulence in a straight magnetic field. This differs from the case of electron drift wave (EDW) turbulence, where the total viscosity can turn negative, at least transiently. When the flow gradient is steepened by any drive mechanism, so that the parallel shear flow instability (PSFI) exceeds the ITG drive, the flow profile saturates at a level close to the value above which PSFI becomes dominant. This saturated flow gradient exceeds the PSFI linear threshold, and grows withmore » $$\
Zahed Zahedani, SM; Oshagh, M; Momeni Danaei, Sh; Roeinpeikar, SMM
2013-01-01
Statement of Problem: One of the major outcomes of orthodontic treatment is the apical root resorption of teeth moved during the treatment. Identifying the possible risk factors, are necessary for every orthodontist. Purpose: The aim of this study was to compare the rate of apical root resorption after fixed orthodontic treatment with standard edgewise and straight wire (MBT) method, and also to evaluate other factors effecting the rate of root resorption in orthodontic treatments. Materials and Method: In this study, parallel periapical radiographs of 127 patients imaging a total of 737 individual teeth, were collected. A total of 76 patients were treated by standard edgewise and 51 patients by straight wire method. The periapical radiographs were scanned and then the percentage of root resorption was calculated by Photoshop software. The data were analyzed by Paired-Samples t-test and the Generalized Linear Model adopting the SPSS 15.0. Results: In patients treated with straight wire method (MBT), mean root resorption was 18.26% compared to 14.82% in patients treated with standard edgewise technique (p< .05). Male patients had higher rate of root resorption,statistically significant (p< .05). Age at onset of treatment, duration of treatment, type of dental occlusion, premolar extractions and the use of intermaxillary elastics had no significant effect on the root resorption in this study. Conclusion: Having more root resorption in the straight wire method and less in the standard edgewise technique can be attributed to more root movement in pre-adjusted MBT technique due to the brackets employed in this method. PMID:24724131
Zahed Zahedani, Sm; Oshagh, M; Momeni Danaei, Sh; Roeinpeikar, Smm
2013-09-01
One of the major outcomes of orthodontic treatment is the apical root resorption of teeth moved during the treatment. Identifying the possible risk factors, are necessary for every orthodontist. The aim of this study was to compare the rate of apical root resorption after fixed orthodontic treatment with standard edgewise and straight wire (MBT) method, and also to evaluate other factors effecting the rate of root resorption in orthodontic treatments. In this study, parallel periapical radiographs of 127 patients imaging a total of 737 individual teeth, were collected. A total of 76 patients were treated by standard edgewise and 51 patients by straight wire method. The periapical radiographs were scanned and then the percentage of root resorption was calculated by Photoshop software. The data were analyzed by Paired-Samples t-test and the Generalized Linear Model adopting the SPSS 15.0. In patients treated with straight wire method (MBT), mean root resorption was 18.26% compared to 14.82% in patients treated with standard edgewise technique (p< .05). Male patients had higher rate of root resorption,statistically significant (p< .05). Age at onset of treatment, duration of treatment, type of dental occlusion, premolar extractions and the use of intermaxillary elastics had no significant effect on the root resorption in this study. Having more root resorption in the straight wire method and less in the standard edgewise technique can be attributed to more root movement in pre-adjusted MBT technique due to the brackets employed in this method.
Calculation of nanodrop profile from fluid density distribution.
Berim, Gersh O; Ruckenstein, Eli
2016-05-01
Two approaches are examined, which can be used to determine the drop profile from the fluid density distributions (FDDs) obtained on the basis of microscopic theories. For simplicity, only two-dimensional (cylindrical, or axisymmetrical) distributions are examined and it is assumed that the fluid is either in contact with a smooth solid or separated from the smooth solid by a lubricating liquid film. The first approach is based on the sharp-kink interface approximation in which the density of the liquid inside and the density of the vapor outside the drop are constant with the exception of the surface layer of the drop where the density is different from the above ones. In this case, the drop profile was calculated by minimizing the total potential energy of the system. The second approach is based on a nonuniform FDD obtained either by the density functional theory or molecular dynamics simulations. To determine the drop profile from such an FDD, which does not contain sharp interfaces, three procedures can be used. In the first two procedures, P1 and P2, the one-dimensional FDDs along straight lines which are parallel to the surface of the solid are extracted from the two-dimensional FDD. Each of those one-dimensional FDDs has a vapor-liquid interface at which the fluid density changes from vapor-like to liquid-like values. Procedure P1 uses the locations of the equimolar dividing surfaces for the one-dimensional FDDs as points of the drop profile. Procedure P2 is based on the assumption that the fluid density is constant on the surface of the drop, that density being selected either arbitrarily or as a fluid density at the location of the equimolar dividing surface for one of the one-dimensional FDDs employed in procedure P1. In the third procedure, P3, which is suggested for the first time in this paper, the one-dimensional FDDs are taken along the straight lines passing through a selected point inside the drop (radial line). Then, the drop profile is calculated like in procedure P1. It is shown, that procedure P3 provides a drop profile which is more reasonable than the other ones. Relationship of the discussed procedures to those used in image analysis is briefly discussed. Copyright © 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Optimal placement of a brachioplasty scar: a survey evaluation.
Samra, Salem; Samra, Fares; Liu, Yuen-Jong; Sawh-Martinez, Rajendra; Persing, John
2013-10-01
Brachioplasty has become a popular procedure to rejuvenate the upper arm, with its frequency increasing proportionately to the popularity of surgical weight loss procedures. The major complication of the procedure is undesirable, visible scarring. An ongoing, unresolved debate in the brachioplasty literature is the optimal placement of the brachioplasty scar. Some authors advocate a medially based incision along the bicipital groove, whereas others prefer to leave the scar posteriorly in the brachial sulcus. In addition, some advocate a sinusoidal scar over a straight-line closure. This study attempts to resolve the question of where and how to place the scar based on population surveys. Photographs were taken of a model with her arm progressively abducted at the shoulder to a level of 90 degrees, with the elbow progressively flexed to 90 degrees and the arm externally rotated. Anterior and posterior views were included. Using Photoshop, a brachioplasty scar was digitally created and placed on the arm first medially in the bicipital groove, then posteriorly in the brachial sulcus. Straight-line scars and sinusoidal scars were also compared in each position. Before creating a computer-generated image of the scars, the scar lines were marked with a marking pen to ensure they could be followed with movement of the model's arm. An online survey was then created and distributed and included multiple variables: position of the scar, length of scar vs residual deformity, and acceptability based on phase of scar in time (early vs late result). The scale was numerical from 1 to 5, with 1 being a very objectionable scar and 5 being a very acceptable scar. The survey was disseminated among the general public, plastic surgeons, and patients in the Yale Cosmetic Surgery Resident Clinic who were either seen in consultation for brachioplasty or who underwent the procedure. Electronic surveys were distributed to and completed by the general public (n = 117), local plastic surgery residents and attendings (n = 10), and patients who had undergone or were seen in consultation for brachioplasty (n = 9). Among all participants, in the chronic phase, a medial straight scar received an average rating of 4.00, a posterior straight scar received an average rating of 3.14, a posterior sinusoidal scar received an average rating of 2.61, and a medial sinusoidal scar received an average rating of 2.03. Across age groups, gender, plastic surgeons, and patients, the medially based straight brachioplasty scar is more acceptable than the posteriorly based straight scar (4.00 vs 3.14, P < 0.001). If the scar shape is made sinusoidal, a posteriorly based scar is favored over a medial one (2.61 vs 2.03, P < 0.001), yet this is still not as aesthetically pleasing as a medial straight scar (4.00 vs 2.61, P < 0.001). Furthermore, survey participants accepted a longer scar over a residual deformity (58.8% vs 41.2%). Based on the preferences of the populations surveyed, we conclude that the medially based straight scar is the most aesthetically acceptable option when performing a brachioplasty.
Gaussian-Beam/Physical-Optics Design Of Beam Waveguide
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Veruttipong, Watt; Chen, Jacqueline C.; Bathker, Dan A.
1993-01-01
In iterative method of designing wideband beam-waveguide feed for paraboloidal-reflector antenna, Gaussian-beam approximation alternated with more nearly exact physical-optics analysis of diffraction. Includes curved and straight reflectors guiding radiation from feed horn to subreflector. For iterative design calculations, curved mirrors mathematically modeled as thin lenses. Each distance Li is combined length of two straight-line segments intersecting at one of flat mirrors. Method useful for designing beam-waveguide reflectors or mirrors required to have diameters approximately less than 30 wavelengths at one or more intended operating frequencies.
27 CFR 9.214 - Haw River Valley.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-04-01
... significance. (b) Approved maps. The two United States Geological Survey 1:100,000-scale metric topographic... boundary line with Lynch Creek, southeast of Corbett and the Corbett Ridge, and then proceed in a straight...
27 CFR 9.138 - Benmore Valley.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-04-01
....” (b) Approved Maps. The appropriate maps for determining the boundaries of the Benmore Valley... northeast in a straight line to the easternmost peak of an unnamed ridge with four peaks in the center of...
27 CFR 9.138 - Benmore Valley.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
....” (b) Approved Maps. The appropriate maps for determining the boundaries of the Benmore Valley... northeast in a straight line to the easternmost peak of an unnamed ridge with four peaks in the center of...
27 CFR 9.78 - Ohio River Valley.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-04-01
... Valley.” (b) Approved maps. The approved maps for determining the boundary of the Ohio River Valley... boundary proceeds in a straight line westerly to the town of Dry Ridge in Grant County, Kentucky...
76 FR 33805 - Tennessee Disaster Number TN-00055
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2011-06-09
... State of Tennessee (FEMA-1979-DR), dated 05/09/2011. Incident: Severe Storms, Tornadoes, Straight-line, Winds, and Flooding. Incident Period: 04/19/2011 and continuing. Effective Date: 06/01/2011. Physical...
76 FR 72020 - Missouri Disaster #MO-00051
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2011-11-21
... Administrative declaration of a disaster for the State of Missouri dated 11/09/2011. Incident: Severe storms, straight line winds, tornadoes and flooding. Incident Period: 06/26/2011 through 06/27/2011. Effective Date...
76 FR 32983 - Tennessee; Major Disaster and Related Determinations
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2011-06-07
... areas of the State of Tennessee resulting from severe storms, tornadoes, straight line winds, and... program in the designated areas, Hazard Mitigation throughout the State, and any other forms of assistance...
76 FR 32984 - Mississippi; Major Disaster and Related Determinations
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2011-06-07
... certain areas of the State of Mississippi resulting from severe storms, tornadoes, straight- line winds..., and any other forms of assistance under the Stafford Act that you deem appropriate subject to...
Venter, Anre; Maxwell, Scott E; Bolig, Erika
2002-06-01
Adding a pretest as a covariate to a randomized posttest-only design increases statistical power, as does the addition of intermediate time points to a randomized pretest-posttest design. Although typically 5 waves of data are required in this instance to produce meaningful gains in power, a 3-wave intensive design allows the evaluation of the straight-line growth model and may reduce the effect of missing data. The authors identify the statistically most powerful method of data analysis in the 3-wave intensive design. If straight-line growth is assumed, the pretest-posttest slope must assume fairly extreme values for the intermediate time point to increase power beyond the standard analysis of covariance on the posttest with the pretest as covariate, ignoring the intermediate time point.
Da Costa, M J; Colson, G; Frost, T J; Halley, J; Pesti, G M
2017-07-01
The objective of this analysis was to evaluate the effects of raising broilers under sex separate and straight-run conditions for 2 broiler genetic lines. One-day-old Ross 308 and Ross 708 chicks (n = 1,344) were sex separated and placed in 48 pens according to rearing type: sex separate (28 males or 28 females) or straight-run (14 males + 14 females). There were 3 dietary phases: starter (zero to 17 d), grower (17 to 32 d), and finisher (32 to 48 d). Bird individual BW and group feed intakes were measured at 12, 17, 25, 32, 42, and 48 d to evaluate performance. At 33, 43, and 49 d 4 birds per pen (straight-run pens 2 males + 2 females) were sampled for carcass yield evaluation. Data were analyzed using linear and non-linear regression in order to estimate feed intake and cut-up weights at 3 separate market weights (1,700, 2,700, and 3,700 g). Returns over feed cost were estimated for a 1.8 million broiler complex for each rearing system and under 9 feed/meat price scenarios. Overall, rearing birds that were sex separated resulted in extra income that ranged from ${\\$}$48,824 to ${\\$}$330,300 per week, depending on the market targeted and feed and meat price scenarios. Sex separation was shown to be especially important in disadvantageous scenarios in which feed prices were high. Gains from sex separation were markedly higher for the Ross 708 than for the Ross 308 broilers. Bird variability also was evaluated at the 3 separate market ages under narrow ranges of BW that were targeted. Straight-run birds decreased the number of birds present in the desired range. Depending on market weight, straight-run rearing resulted in 9.1 to 16.6% fewer birds than sex separate rearing to meet marketing goals. It was concluded that sex separation can result in increased company profitability and have possible beneficial effects at the processing plant due to increased bird uniformity. © 2017 Poultry Science Association Inc.
High-Resolution Dual-Comb Spectroscopy with Ultra-Low Noise Frequency Combs
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Hänsel, Wolfgang; Giunta, Michele; Beha, Katja; Perry, Adam J.; Holzwarth, R.
2017-06-01
Dual-comb spectroscopy is a powerful tool for fast broad-band spectroscopy due to the parallel interrogation of thousands of spectral lines. Here we report on the spectroscopic analysis of acetylene vapor in a pressurized gas cell using two ultra-low noise frequency combs with a repetition rate around 250 MHz. Optical referencing to a high-finesse cavity yields a sub-Hertz stability of all individual comb lines (including the virtual comb lines between 0 Hz and the carrier) and permits one to pick a small difference of repetition rate for the two frequency combs on the order of 300 Hz, thus representing an optical spectrum of 100 THz (˜3300 \\wn) within half the free spectral range (125 MHz). The transmission signal is derived straight from a photodetector and recorded with a high-resolution spectrum analyzer or digitized with a computer-controlled AD converter. The figure to the right shows a schematic of the experimental setup which is all fiber-coupled with polarization-maintaining fiber except for the spectroscopic cell. The graph on the lower right reveals a portion of the recorded radio-frequency spectrum which has been scaled to the optical domain. The location of the measured absorption coincides well with data taken from the HITRAN data base. Due to the intrinsic linewidth of all contributing comb lines, each sampling point in the transmission graph corresponds to the probing at an optical frequency with sub-Hertz resolution. This resolution is maintained in coherent wavelength conversion processes such as difference-frequency generation (DFG), sum-frequency generation (SFG) or non-linear broadening (self-phase modulation), and is therefore easily transferred to a wide spectral range from the mid infrared up to the visible spectrum.
Relation Between Roughness of Interface and Adherence of Porcelain Enamel to Steel
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Richmond, J C; Moore, D G; Kirkpatrick, H B; Harrison, W N
1954-01-01
Porcelain-enamel ground coats were prepared and applied under conditions that gave various degrees of adherence between enamel and a low-carbon steel (enameling iron). The variations in adherence were produced by (a) varying the amount of cobalt-oxide addition in the frit, (b) varying the type of metallic-oxide addition in the frit, keeping the amount constant at 0.8 weight percent, (c) varying the surface treatment of the metal before application of the enamel, by pickling, sandblasting, and polishing, and (d) varying the time of firing of the enamel containing 0.8 percent of cobalt oxide. Specimens of each enamel were given the standard adherence test of the Porcelain Enamel Institute. Metallographic sections were made on which the roughness of interface was evaluated by counting the number of anchor points (undercuts) per centimeter of specimen length and also by measuring the length of the interface and expressing results as the ratio of this length to the length of a straight line parallel to the over-all direction of the interface.
Analysis of select facial and dental esthetic parameters.
Nold, Sarah L; Horvath, Sebastian D; Stampf, Susanne; Blatz, Markus B
2014-01-01
This clinical study examined objective smile parameters in the natural anterior dentition. Standardized intraoral and extraoral photographs were taken of 106 Caucasian adults (54 women, 52 men) with a healthy dentition. The following parameters were analyzed: correlation of dental and facial midline, upper lip position and curvature, relationship of the maxillary anterior incisal curve with lower lip, number of teeth displayed in a smile, distance between maxillary anterior teeth and lower lip, slope of tooth, and lip arc. The simple frequency distribution of measured variables revealed an average smile with coinciding dental and facial midlines, an average smile line, and a straight upper lip curvature. With an average smile, the maxillary anterior teeth did not touch the lower lip, teeth were displayed up to the second premolar, and the maxillary anterior incisal curve was parallel to the lower lip. Oval was the most prevalent tooth form. A slope of 9 degrees was detected for the mean tooth arc and 13 degrees for the mean lip arc. The outcomes of this clinical study provide a quantifiable frame for esthetic evaluation, treatment planning, and restoration fabrication.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Pradillo, Gerardo; Heintz, Aneesh; Vlahovska, Petia
2017-11-01
The spontaneous rotation of a sphere in an applied uniform DC electric field (Quincke effect) has been utilized to engineer self-propelled particles: if the sphere is initially resting on a surface, it rolls. The Quincke rollers have been widely used as a model system to study collective behavior in ``active'' suspensions. If the applied field is DC, an isolated Quincke roller follows a straight line trajectory. In this talk, we discuss the design of a Quincke roller that executes a random-walk-like behavior. We utilize AC field - upon reversal of the field direction a fluctuation in the axis of rotation (which is degenerate in the plane perpendicular to the field and parallel to the surface) introduces randomness in the direction of motion. The MSD of an isolated Quincke walker depends on frequency, amplitude, and waveform of the electric field. Experiment and theory are compared. We also investigate the collective behavior of Quincke walkers,the transport of inert particles in a bath of Quincke walkers, and the spontaneous motion of a drop containing Quincke active particle. supported by NSF Grant CBET 1437545.
Linear excitation of the trapped waves by an incident wave
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Postacioglu, Nazmi; Sinan Özeren, M.
2016-04-01
The excitation of the trapped waves by coastal events such as landslides has been extensively studied. The events in the open sea have in general larger magnitude. However the incident waves produced by these events in the open sea can only excite the the trapped waves through no linearity if the isobaths are straight lines that are in parallel with the coastline. We will show that the imperfections of the coastline can couple the incident and trapped waves using only linear processes. The Coriolis force is neglected in this work . Accordingly the trapped waves are consequence of uneven bathimetry. In the bathimetry we consider, the sea is divided into zones of constant depth and the boundaries between the zones are a family of hyperbolas. The boundary conditions between the zones will lead to an integral equation for the source distribution on the boundaries. The solution will contain both radiating and trapped waves. The trapped waves pose a serious threat for the coastal communities as they can travel long distances along the coastline without losing their energy through geometrical spreading.
Shift-, rotation-, and scale-invariant shape recognition system using an optical Hough transform
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Schmid, Volker R.; Bader, Gerhard; Lueder, Ernst H.
1998-02-01
We present a hybrid shape recognition system with an optical Hough transform processor. The features of the Hough space offer a separate cancellation of distortions caused by translations and rotations. Scale invariance is also provided by suitable normalization. The proposed system extends the capabilities of Hough transform based detection from only straight lines to areas bounded by edges. A very compact optical design is achieved by a microlens array processor accepting incoherent light as direct optical input and realizing the computationally expensive connections massively parallel. Our newly developed algorithm extracts rotation and translation invariant normalized patterns of bright spots on a 2D grid. A neural network classifier maps the 2D features via a nonlinear hidden layer onto the classification output vector. We propose initialization of the connection weights according to regions of activity specifically assigned to each neuron in the hidden layer using a competitive network. The presented system is designed for industry inspection applications. Presently we have demonstrated detection of six different machined parts in real-time. Our method yields very promising detection results of more than 96% correctly classified parts.
Development of a high resolution interstellar dust engineering model - overview of the project
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Sterken, V. J.; Strub, P.; Soja, R. H.; Srama, R.; Krüger, H.; Grün, E.
2013-09-01
Beyond 3 AU heliocentric distance, the flow of interstellar dust through the solar system is a dominant component of the total dust population. The modulation of this flux with the solar cycle and the position in the solar system has been predicted by theoretical studies since the seventies. The modulation was proven to exist by matching dust trajectory simulations with real spacecraft data from Ulysses in 1998. The modulations were further analyzed and studies in detail in 2012. The current ESA interplanetary meteoroid model IMEM includes an interstellar dust component, but this component was modelled only with straight line trajectories through the solar system. For the new ESA IMEX model, a high-resolution interstellar dust component is implemented separately from a dust streams module. The dust streams module focuses on dust in streams that was released from comets (cf. Abstract R. Soja). Parallel processing techniques are used to improve computation time (cf. Abstract P. Strub). The goal is to make predictions for the interstellar dust flux as close to the Sun as 1 AU or closer, for future space mission design.
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Woronowicz, Michael S.
2016-01-01
Analytical expressions for column number density (CND) are developed for optical line of sight paths through a variety of steady free molecule point source models including directionally-constrained effusion (Mach number M = 0) and flow from a sonic orifice (M 1). Sonic orifice solutions are approximate, developed using a fair simulacrum fitted to the free molecule solution. Expressions are also developed for a spherically-symmetric thermal expansion (M = 0). CND solutions are found for the most general paths relative to these sources and briefly explored. It is determined that the maximum CND from a distant location through directed effusion and sonic orifice cases occurs along the path parallel to the source plane that intersects the plume axis. For the effusive case this value is exactly twice the CND found along the ray originating from that point of intersection and extending to infinity along the plumes axis. For sonic plumes this ratio is reduced to about 43. For high Mach number cases the maximum CND will be found along the axial centerline path.
Automated solar module assembly line
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Bycer, M.
1980-01-01
The solar module assembly machine which Kulicke and Soffa delivered under this contract is a cell tabbing and stringing machine, and capable of handling a variety of cells and assembling strings up to 4 feet long which then can be placed into a module array up to 2 feet by 4 feet in a series of parallel arrangement, and in a straight or interdigitated array format. The machine cycle is 5 seconds per solar cell. This machine is primarily adapted to 3 inch diameter round cells with two tabs between cells. Pulsed heat is used as the bond technique for solar cell interconnects. The solar module assembly machine unloads solar cells from a cassette, automatically orients them, applies flux and solders interconnect ribbons onto the cells. It then inverts the tabbed cells, connects them into cell strings, and delivers them into a module array format using a track mounted vacuum lance, from which they are taken to test and cleaning benches prior to final encapsulation into finished solar modules. Throughout the machine the solar cell is handled very carefully, and any contact with the collector side of the cell is avoided or minimized.
A Comparison of Best Fit Lines for Data with Outliers
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Glaister, P.
2005-01-01
Three techniques for determining a straight line fit to data are compared. The methods are applied to a range of datasets containing one or more outliers, and to a specific example from the field of chemistry. For the method which is the most resistant to the presence of outliers, a Microsoft Excel spreadsheet, as well as two Matlab routines, are…
On the barn owl's visual pre-attack behavior: I. Structure of head movements and motion patterns.
Ohayon, Shay; van der Willigen, Robert F; Wagner, Hermann; Katsman, Igor; Rivlin, Ehud
2006-09-01
Barn owls exhibit a rich repertoire of head movements before taking off for prey capture. These movements occur mainly at light levels that allow for the visual detection of prey. To investigate these movements and their functional relevance, we filmed the pre-attack behavior of barn owls. Off-line image analysis enabled reconstruction of all six degrees of freedom of head movements. Three categories of head movements were observed: fixations, head translations and head rotations. The observed rotations contained a translational component. Head rotations did not follow Listing's law, but could be well described by a second-order surface, which indicated that they are in close agreement with Donder's law. Head translations did not contain any significant rotational components. Translations were further segmented into straight-line and curved paths. Translations along an axis perpendicular to the line of sight were similar to peering movements observed in other animals. We suggest that these basic motion elements (fixations, head rotations, translations along a straight line, and translation along a curved trajectory) may be combined to form longer and more complex behavior. We speculate that these head movements mainly underlie estimation of distance during prey capture.
78 FR 72919 - Illinois; Major Disaster and Related Determinations
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2013-12-04
..., straight-line winds, and tornadoes on November 17, 2013, is of sufficient severity and magnitude to warrant... Needs Assistance will be limited to 75 percent of the total eligible costs. Further, you are authorized...
77 FR 60003 - New Jersey Disaster #NJ-00031
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2012-10-01
... Administrative declaration of a disaster for the State of New Jersey dated 09/21/2012. Incident: Severe Storms and significant Straight-line Winds. Incident Period: 06/30/2012. Effective Date: 09/21/2012. Physical...
76 FR 32982 - Alabama; Major Disaster and Related Determinations
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2011-06-07
... certain areas of the State of Alabama resulting from severe storms, tornadoes, straight-line winds, and... throughout the State, and any other forms of assistance under the Stafford Act that you deem appropriate...
76 FR 32985 - Georgia; Major Disaster and Related Determinations
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2011-06-07
... certain areas of the State of Georgia resulting from severe storms, tornadoes, straight line winds, and... State, and any other forms of assistance under the Stafford Act that you deem appropriate subject to...
76 FR 78342 - Proposed Collection; Comment Request for Notice 2011-65
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2011-12-16
... housing relief needed as a result of the devastation caused by severe storms, tornadoes, straight-line... information on respondents, including through the use of automated collection techniques or other forms of...
75 FR 68848 - North Carolina Disaster Number NC-00030
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2010-11-09
...), dated 10/14/2010. Incident: Severe Storms, Flooding, and Straight-line Winds associated with remnants of Tropical Storm Nicole. Incident Period: 09/27/2010 through 10/01/2010. DATES: Effective Date: 11/01/2010...
40 CFR 86.125-94 - Methane analyzer calibration.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-07-01
.... Additional calibration points may be generated. For each range calibrated, if the deviation from a least-squares best-fit straight line is 2 percent or less of the value at each data point, concentration values...
40 CFR 86.125-94 - Methane analyzer calibration.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-07-01
.... Additional calibration points may be generated. For each range calibrated, if the deviation from a least-squares best-fit straight line is 2 percent or less of the value at each data point, concentration values...
40 CFR 86.125-94 - Methane analyzer calibration.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-07-01
.... Additional calibration points may be generated. For each range calibrated, if the deviation from a least-squares best-fit straight line is 2 percent or less of the value at each data point, concentration values...
Wettability Patterning for Enhanced Dropwise Condensation
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Ghosh, Aritra; Ganguly, Ranjan; Megaridis, Constantine
2014-11-01
Dropwise condensation (DwC), in order to be sustainable, requires removal of the condensate droplets. This removal is frequently facilitated by gravity. The rate of DwC heat transfer depends strongly on the maximum departing droplet diameter. Based on wettability patterning, we present a facile technique designed to control the maximum droplet size in DwC within vapor/air atmospheres, and demonstrate how this approach can be used to enhance the corresponding heat transfer rate. We examine various hydrophilic-superhydrophilic patterns, which, respectively sustain DwC and filmwise (FwC) condensation on the substrate. The fabrication method does notemploy any hydrophobizing agent. By juxtaposing parallel lines of hydrophilic (CA ~ 78°) and superhydrophilic (CA ~ 0°) regions on the condensing surface, we create alternating domains of DwC and FwC. The average droplet size on the DwC domain is reduced by ~ 60% compared to the theoretical maximum, which corresponds to the line width. We compare heat transfer rate between unpatternend DwC surfaces and patterned DwC surfaces. Even after sacrificing 40% of condensing area, we achieve up to 20% improvement in condensate collection rate using an interdigitated superhydrophilic pattern, inspired by the vein network of plant leaves. The bioinspired interdigitated pattern is found to outperform the straight hydrophilic-superhydrophilic pattern, particularly under higher vapor loadings in an air/vapor ambient atmosphere. NSF STTR Grant 1331817 via NBD Nano.
Beam-smiling in bent-Laue monochromators
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Ren, B.; Dilmanian, F. A.; Chapman, L. D.; Wu, X. Y.; Zhong, Z.; Ivanov, I.; Thomlinson, W. C.; Huang, X.
1997-07-01
When a wide fan-shaped x-ray beam is diffracted by a bent crystal in the Laue geometry, the profile of the diffracted beam generally does not appear as a straight line, but as a line with its ends curved up or curved down. This effect, referred to as "beam-smiling", has been a major obstacle in developing bent-Laue crystal monochromators for medical applications of synchrotron x-ray. We modeled a cylindrically bent crystal using the Finite Element Analysis (FEA) method, and we carried out experiments at the National Synchrotron Light Source and Cornell High Energy Synchrotron Source. Our studies show that, while beam-smiling exists in most of the crystal's area because of anticlastic bending effects, there is a region parallel to the bending axis of the crystal where the diffracted beam is "smile-free". By applying asymmetrical bending, this smile-free region can be shifted vertically away from the geometric center of the crystal, as desired. This leads to a novel method of compensating for beam-smiling. We will discuss the method of "differential bending" for smile removal, beam-smiling in the Cauchios and the polychromatic geometry, and the implications of the method on developing single- and double-bent Laue monochromators. The experimental results will be discussed, concentrating on specific beam-smiling observation and removal as applied to the new monochromator of the Multiple Energy Computed Tomography [MECT] project of the Medical Department, Brookhaven National Laboratory.
Assessment of the Old Red Rock Indian Line Sycamore Tree, Lake Red Rock, Marion County, Iowa
1992-01-01
miles, when reduced to a straight line , from the junction of the White Breast and Des Moines (Stiles 1911:4). George W. Harrison was instructed to...AD-A255 372 Assessment of the Old Red Rock Indian Line Sycamore Tree, Lake Red Rock, Marion County, Iowa DACW25-92-M-0414 by Leah D. Rogers Project...portion of tree 22 9. Map showing location of Red Rock line within treaty cession area of 23 1842 10. Portion of 1844 map showing incorrect placement of
A compositional reservoir simulator on distributed memory parallel computers
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Rame, M.; Delshad, M.
1995-12-31
This paper presents the application of distributed memory parallel computes to field scale reservoir simulations using a parallel version of UTCHEM, The University of Texas Chemical Flooding Simulator. The model is a general purpose highly vectorized chemical compositional simulator that can simulate a wide range of displacement processes at both field and laboratory scales. The original simulator was modified to run on both distributed memory parallel machines (Intel iPSC/960 and Delta, Connection Machine 5, Kendall Square 1 and 2, and CRAY T3D) and a cluster of workstations. A domain decomposition approach has been taken towards parallelization of the code. Amore » portion of the discrete reservoir model is assigned to each processor by a set-up routine that attempts a data layout as even as possible from the load-balance standpoint. Each of these subdomains is extended so that data can be shared between adjacent processors for stencil computation. The added routines that make parallel execution possible are written in a modular fashion that makes the porting to new parallel platforms straight forward. Results of the distributed memory computing performance of Parallel simulator are presented for field scale applications such as tracer flood and polymer flood. A comparison of the wall-clock times for same problems on a vector supercomputer is also presented.« less
NJDOT Transportation Data User Survey
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2010-02-01
The New Jersey Straight Line Diagrams (SLD) is the main reference for the State's centerline roadway inventory. SLD was initially designed as a planning tool, but it has become a standard information platform for many other purposes within and outsid...
77 FR 64033 - Establishment of the Ancient Lakes of Columbia Valley Viticultural Area
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2012-10-18
...., Washington--Grant County, 1965; (10) Vantage, Washington, 1965, photorevised 1978; (11) Ginkgo, Washington...) Proceed west in a straight line along the section boundaries for approximately 7.9 miles, onto the Vantage...
26 CFR 1.167(e)-1 - Change in method.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... percent of the straight line rate, or any change in the interest factor used in connection with a compound interest or sinking fund method, will constitute a change in method of depreciation. Any request for a...
GPS/DR Error Estimation for Autonomous Vehicle Localization.
Lee, Byung-Hyun; Song, Jong-Hwa; Im, Jun-Hyuck; Im, Sung-Hyuck; Heo, Moon-Beom; Jee, Gyu-In
2015-08-21
Autonomous vehicles require highly reliable navigation capabilities. For example, a lane-following method cannot be applied in an intersection without lanes, and since typical lane detection is performed using a straight-line model, errors can occur when the lateral distance is estimated in curved sections due to a model mismatch. Therefore, this paper proposes a localization method that uses GPS/DR error estimation based on a lane detection method with curved lane models, stop line detection, and curve matching in order to improve the performance during waypoint following procedures. The advantage of using the proposed method is that position information can be provided for autonomous driving through intersections, in sections with sharp curves, and in curved sections following a straight section. The proposed method was applied in autonomous vehicles at an experimental site to evaluate its performance, and the results indicate that the positioning achieved accuracy at the sub-meter level.
Mobile robot motion estimation using Hough transform
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Aldoshkin, D. N.; Yamskikh, T. N.; Tsarev, R. Yu
2018-05-01
This paper proposes an algorithm for estimation of mobile robot motion. The geometry of surrounding space is described with range scans (samples of distance measurements) taken by the mobile robot’s range sensors. A similar sample of space geometry in any arbitrary preceding moment of time or the environment map can be used as a reference. The suggested algorithm is invariant to isotropic scaling of samples or map that allows using samples measured in different units and maps made at different scales. The algorithm is based on Hough transform: it maps from measurement space to a straight-line parameters space. In the straight-line parameters, space the problems of estimating rotation, scaling and translation are solved separately breaking down a problem of estimating mobile robot localization into three smaller independent problems. The specific feature of the algorithm presented is its robustness to noise and outliers inherited from Hough transform. The prototype of the system of mobile robot orientation is described.
GPS/DR Error Estimation for Autonomous Vehicle Localization
Lee, Byung-Hyun; Song, Jong-Hwa; Im, Jun-Hyuck; Im, Sung-Hyuck; Heo, Moon-Beom; Jee, Gyu-In
2015-01-01
Autonomous vehicles require highly reliable navigation capabilities. For example, a lane-following method cannot be applied in an intersection without lanes, and since typical lane detection is performed using a straight-line model, errors can occur when the lateral distance is estimated in curved sections due to a model mismatch. Therefore, this paper proposes a localization method that uses GPS/DR error estimation based on a lane detection method with curved lane models, stop line detection, and curve matching in order to improve the performance during waypoint following procedures. The advantage of using the proposed method is that position information can be provided for autonomous driving through intersections, in sections with sharp curves, and in curved sections following a straight section. The proposed method was applied in autonomous vehicles at an experimental site to evaluate its performance, and the results indicate that the positioning achieved accuracy at the sub-meter level. PMID:26307997
Using Wannier functions to improve solid band gap predictions in density functional theory
Ma, Jie; Wang, Lin-Wang
2016-04-26
Enforcing a straight-line condition of the total energy upon removal/addition of fractional electrons on eigen states has been successfully applied to atoms and molecules for calculating ionization potentials and electron affinities, but fails for solids due to the extended nature of the eigen orbitals. Here we have extended the straight-line condition to the removal/addition of fractional electrons on Wannier functions constructed within the occupied/unoccupied subspaces. It removes the self-interaction energies of those Wannier functions, and yields accurate band gaps for solids compared to experiments. It does not have any adjustable parameters and the computational cost is at the DFT level.more » This method can also work for molecules, providing eigen energies in good agreement with experimental ionization potentials and electron affinities. Our approach can be viewed as an alternative approach of the standard LDA+U procedure.« less
Oddo, Calogero Maria; Beccai, Lucia; Wessberg, Johan; Wasling, Helena Backlund; Mattioli, Fabio; Carrozza, Maria Chiara
2011-01-01
The influence of fingerprints and their curvature in tactile sensing performance is investigated by comparative analysis of different design parameters in a biomimetic artificial fingertip, having straight or curved fingerprints. The strength in the encoding of the principal spatial period of ridged tactile stimuli (gratings) is evaluated by indenting and sliding the surfaces at controlled normal contact force and tangential sliding velocity, as a function of fingertip rotation along the indentation axis. Curved fingerprints guaranteed higher directional isotropy than straight fingerprints in the encoding of the principal frequency resulting from the ratio between the sliding velocity and the spatial periodicity of the grating. In parallel, human microneurography experiments were performed and a selection of results is included in this work in order to support the significance of the biorobotic study with the artificial tactile system.
Global solutions to the electrodynamic two-body problem on a straight line
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Bauer, G.; Deckert, D.-A.; Dürr, D.; Hinrichs, G.
2017-06-01
The classical electrodynamic two-body problem has been a long standing open problem in mathematics. For motion constrained to the straight line, the interaction is similar to that of the two-body problem of classical gravitation. The additional complication is the presence of unbounded state-dependent delays in the Coulomb forces due to the finiteness of the speed of light. This circumstance renders the notion of local solutions meaningless, and therefore, straightforward ODE techniques cannot be applied. Here, we study the time-symmetric case, i.e., the Fokker-Schwarzschild-Tetrode (FST) equations, comprising both advanced and retarded delays. We extend the technique developed in Deckert and Hinrichs (J Differ Equ 260:6900-6929, 2016), where existence of FST solutions was proven on the half line, to ensure global existence—a result that had been obtained by Bauer (Ein Existenzsatz für die Wheeler-Feynman-Elektrodynamik, Herbert Utz Verlag, München, 1997). Due to the novel technique, the presented proof is shorter and more transparent but also relies on the idea to employ asymptotic data to characterize solutions.
Observation and parametrization of wave attenuation through the MIZ
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Ardhuin, F.; Stopa, J.; Dumont, D.; Sévigny, C.; Collard, F.; Boutin, G.
2016-02-01
Swell evolution from the open ocean into sea ice is poorly understood, in particular the amplitude attenuation expected from scattering and dissipation. New synthetic aperture radar (SAR) data from Sentinel-1 wave mode reveal intriguing patterns of bright oscillating lines shaped like instant noodles. We investigate cases in which the oscillations are in the azimuth direction, around a straight line in the range direction. This observation is interpreted as the distortion by the SAR processing of crests from a first swell, due to the presence of a second swell. Since deviations from a straight line should be proportional to the orbital velocity towards the satellite, swell height can be estimated. The intensity of the backscatter modulation with a single swell can also be used to retrieve swell height as it is found that the constructive velocity bunching is very sensitive to wave height. Using a novel algorithm to invert the wave directional spectrum, we investigate several cases of attenuation in the Arctic and southern ocean. On this basis we have adjusted an empirical wave-ice dissipation source term in the WAVEWATCH III model.
1980-12-01
distributions of Figs. 3 and 4 may be fitted quit, accurately by broken straight lines. If we had plotted the differential distributions directly...collection process. These fluctuations are smoothed by replacing the actual differential distribution by the derivative of the fitted broken-line lognormal...for each interval T. The constants in the distribution for each broken section of the lognormal approximations are found by fitting lines to the curve
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Yohanasari, R. H.; Utari; Purnama, B.
2017-11-01
In this paper, we studied the magneto-impedance effect in multilayered [Ni80Fe20/Cu]N with variation in the number of parallel-line on Cu PCB substrate. The method used in this research is the electrodeposition at a room temperature with Pt as an electrode. The results show that the magneto-impedance ratio increases with the increase in the number of parallel-line on Cu PCB. The maximum magneto-impedance ratio obtained in Cu PCB substrate which four parallel lines were 4.5%. Likewise, frequency variation, the magneto-impedance ratio increases with increasing frequency.
Wu, Zhenlong; Chen, Yu; Wang, Moran; Chung, Aram J
2016-02-07
Fluid inertia which has conventionally been neglected in microfluidics has been gaining much attention for particle and cell manipulation because inertia-based methods inherently provide simple, passive, precise and high-throughput characteristics. Particularly, the inertial approach has been applied to blood separation for various biomedical research studies mainly using spiral microchannels. For higher throughput, parallelization is essential; however, it is difficult to realize using spiral channels because of their large two dimensional layouts. In this work, we present a novel inertial platform for continuous sheathless particle and blood cell separation in straight microchannels containing microstructures. Microstructures within straight channels exert secondary flows to manipulate particle positions similar to Dean flow in curved channels but with higher controllability. Through a balance between inertial lift force and microstructure-induced secondary flow, we deterministically position microspheres and cells based on their sizes to be separated downstream. Using our inertial platform, we successfully sorted microparticles and fractionized blood cells with high separation efficiencies, high purities and high throughputs. The inertial separation platform developed here can be operated to process diluted blood with a throughput of 10.8 mL min(-1)via radially arrayed single channels with one inlet and two rings of outlets.
... happens when the light-sensitive cells in the macula slowly break down. Your gradually lose your central vision. A common early symptom is that straight lines appear crooked. Regular comprehensive eye exams can detect macular degeneration before the disease causes vision loss. Treatment can ...
27 CFR 9.138 - Benmore Valley.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-04-01
... 1960, (photoinspected 1975); and (2) “Purdys Gardens, CA,” 7.5 Minute Series, edition of 1958.... 11 W., on the “Purdys Gardens, CA” U.S.G.S. map: (1) Then southwest in a straight line to the point...
27 CFR 9.138 - Benmore Valley.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-04-01
... 1960, (photoinspected 1975); and (2) “Purdys Gardens, CA,” 7.5 Minute Series, edition of 1958.... 11 W., on the “Purdys Gardens, CA” U.S.G.S. map: (1) Then southwest in a straight line to the point...
27 CFR 9.138 - Benmore Valley.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-04-01
... 1960, (photoinspected 1975); and (2) “Purdys Gardens, CA,” 7.5 Minute Series, edition of 1958.... 11 W., on the “Purdys Gardens, CA” U.S.G.S. map: (1) Then southwest in a straight line to the point...
Centripetal Force on an Overhead Projector.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Rheam, Harry
1995-01-01
Describes two simple demonstrations of an object moving in a straight line tangent to the circle if centripetal force is removed. Demonstrations use a pie plate and petri dish with ball bearings to illustrate the phenomena on an overhead projector. (LZ)
5 CFR 532.241 - Analysis of usable wage survey data.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-01-01
... the straight-line, least squares regression formula: Y=a+bx, where Y is the hourly rate, x is grade, a... least 10 unweighed matches and for each nonappropriated fund job having at least 5 unweighed matches...
5 CFR 532.241 - Analysis of usable wage survey data.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-01-01
... the straight-line, least squares regression formula: Y=a+bx, where Y is the hourly rate, x is grade, a... least 10 unweighed matches and for each nonappropriated fund job having at least 5 unweighed matches...
5 CFR 532.241 - Analysis of usable wage survey data.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-01-01
... the straight-line, least squares regression formula: Y=a+bx, where Y is the hourly rate, x is grade, a... least 10 unweighed matches and for each nonappropriated fund job having at least 5 unweighed matches...
5 CFR 532.241 - Analysis of usable wage survey data.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-01-01
... the straight-line, least squares regression formula: Y=a+bx, where Y is the hourly rate, x is grade, a... least 10 unweighed matches and for each nonappropriated fund job having at least 5 unweighed matches...
Mendez-Villanueva, Alberto; Palazzi, Dino; Ahmaidi, Saïd
2016-01-01
Purpose The aims of this study were to 1) compare the metabolic power demand of straight-line and change of direction (COD) sprints including 45° or 90°-turns, and 2) examine the relation between estimated metabolic demands and muscular activity throughout the 3 phases of COD-sprints. Methods Twelve highly-trained soccer players performed one 25-m and three 20-m sprints, either in straight-line or with one 45°- or 90°-COD. Sprints were monitored with 2 synchronized 100-Hz laser guns to assess players’ velocities before, during and after the COD. Acceleration and deceleration were derived from changes in speed over time. Metabolic power was estimated based on di Prampero’s approach (2005). Electromyography amplitude (RMS) of 2 lower limb muscles was measured. The expected energy expenditure during time-adjusted straight-line sprints (matching COD sprints time) was also calculated. Results Locomotor-dependant metabolic demand was largely lower with COD (90°, 142.1±13.5 J.kg-1) compared with time-adjusted (effect size, ES = -3.0; 193.2±18.6 J.kg-1) and non-adjusted straight-line sprints (ES = -1.7; 168.4±15.3 J.kg-1). Metabolic power requirement was angle-dependent, moderately lower for 90°-COD vs. 45°-COD sprint (ES = -1.0; 149.5±10.4 J.kg-1). Conversely, the RMS was slightly- (45°, ES = +0.5; +2.1%, 90% confidence limits (±3.6) for vastus lateralis muscle (VL)) to-largely (90°, ES = +1.6; +6.1 (3.3%) for VL) greater for COD-sprints. Metabolic power/RMS ratio was 2 to 4 times lower during deceleration than acceleration phases. Conclusion Present results show that COD-sprints are largely less metabolically demanding than linear sprints. This may be related to the very low metabolic demand associated with the deceleration phase during COD-sprints that may not be compensated by the increased requirement of the reacceleration phase. These results also highlight the dissociation between metabolic and muscle activity demands during COD-sprints, which questions the use of metabolic power as a single measure of running load in soccer. PMID:26930649
Map Projection Induced Variations in Locations of Polygon Geofence Edges
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Neeley, Paula; Narkawicz, Anthony
2017-01-01
This Paper under-estimates answers to the following question under various constraints: If a geofencing algorithm uses a map projection to determine whether a position is inside/outside a polygon region, how far outside/inside the polygon can the point be and the algorithm determine that it is inside/outside (the opposite and therefore incorrect answer)? Geofencing systems for unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) often model stay-in and stay-out regions using 2D polygons with minimum and maximum altitudes. The vertices of the polygons are typically input as latitude-longitude pairs, and the edges as paths between adjacent vertices. There are numerous ways to generate these paths, resulting in numerous potential locations for the edges of stay-in and stay-out regions. These paths may be geodesics on a spherical model of the earth or geodesics on the WGS84 reference ellipsoid. In geofencing applications that use map projections, these paths are inverse images of straight lines in the projected plane. This projected plane may be a projection of a spherical earth model onto a tangent plane, called an orthographic projection. Alternatively, it may be a projection where the straight lines in the projected plane correspond to straight lines in the latitudelongitude coordinate system, also called a Plate Carr´ee projection. This paper estimates distances between different edge paths and an oracle path, which is a geodesic on either the spherical earth or the WGS84 ellipsoidal earth. This paper therefore estimates how far apart different edge paths can be rather than comparing their path lengths, which are not considered. Rather, the comparision is between the actual locations of the edges between vertices. For edges drawn using orthographic projections, this maximum distance increases as the distance from the polygon vertices to the projection point increases. For edges drawn using Plate Carr´ee projections, this maximum distance increases as the vertices become further from the equator. Distances between geodesics on a spherical earth and a WGS84 ellipsoidal earth are also analyzed, using the WGS84 ellipsoid as the oracle. Bounds on the 2D distance between a straight line and a great circle path, in an orthographically projected plane rather than on the surface of the earth, have been formally verified in the PVS theorem prover, meaning that they are mathematically correct in the absence of floating point errors.
33 CFR 110.212 - Newport Bay Harbor, Calif.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-07-01
... grounds—(1) Temporary Anchorage C-1. Southeast of a line parallel to and 170 feet from the pierhead line at the east end of Lido Isle; north of a line parallel to and 250 feet north of a line bearing 268... line 120 feet in length bearing 203° from the point of the pierhead line off the west end of Harbor...
33 CFR 110.212 - Newport Bay Harbor, Calif.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-07-01
... grounds—(1) Temporary Anchorage C-1. Southeast of a line parallel to and 170 feet from the pierhead line at the east end of Lido Isle; north of a line parallel to and 250 feet north of a line bearing 268... line 120 feet in length bearing 203° from the point of the pierhead line off the west end of Harbor...
Prism adaptation and neck muscle vibration in healthy individuals: are two methods better than one?
Guinet, M; Michel, C
2013-12-19
Studies involving therapeutic combinations reveal an important benefit in the rehabilitation of neglect patients when compared to single therapies. In light of these observations our present work examines, in healthy individuals, sensorimotor and cognitive after-effects of prism adaptation and neck muscle vibration applied individually or simultaneously. We explored sensorimotor after-effects on visuo-manual open-loop pointing, visual and proprioceptive straight-ahead estimations. We assessed cognitive after-effects on the line bisection task. Fifty-four healthy participants were divided into six groups designated according to the exposure procedure used with each: 'Prism' (P) group; 'Vibration with a sensation of body rotation' (Vb) group; 'Vibration with a move illusion of the LED' (Vl) group; 'Association with a sensation of body rotation' (Ab) group; 'Association with a move illusion of the LED' (Al) group; and 'Control' (C) group. The main findings showed that prism adaptation applied alone or combined with vibration showed significant adaptation in visuo-manual open-loop pointing, visual straight-ahead and proprioceptive straight-ahead. Vibration alone produced significant after-effects on proprioceptive straight-ahead estimation in the Vl group. Furthermore all groups (except C group) showed a rightward neglect-like bias in line bisection following the training procedure. This is the first demonstration of cognitive after-effects following neck muscle vibration in healthy individuals. The simultaneous application of both methods did not produce significant greater after-effects than prism adaptation alone in both sensorimotor and cognitive tasks. These results are discussed in terms of transfer of sensorimotor plasticity to spatial cognition in healthy individuals. Copyright © 2013 IBRO. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
School Science Review, 1982
1982-01-01
Discusses dice model of exponential radionuclide decay; glancing and collinear perfectly elastic collisions; digital capacitance meter; use of top pan balance in physics; microcomputer calculation of gradient of straight line (includes complete Commodore PET computer program); Fresnel lenses; low-voltage radiant heater; Wheatssone's bridge used as…
Peter Hamner; Marshall S. White; Philip A. Araman
2006-01-01
Curve sawing is a primary log breakdown process that incorporates gang-saw technology to allow two-sided cants from logs with sweep to be cut parallel to the log surface or log axis. Since curve-sawn logs with sweep are cut along the grain, the potential for producing high quality straight-grain lumber and cants increases, and strength, stiffness, and dimensional...
Oddo, Calogero Maria; Beccai, Lucia; Wessberg, Johan; Wasling, Helena Backlund; Mattioli, Fabio; Carrozza, Maria Chiara
2011-01-01
The influence of fingerprints and their curvature in tactile sensing performance is investigated by comparative analysis of different design parameters in a biomimetic artificial fingertip, having straight or curved fingerprints. The strength in the encoding of the principal spatial period of ridged tactile stimuli (gratings) is evaluated by indenting and sliding the surfaces at controlled normal contact force and tangential sliding velocity, as a function of fingertip rotation along the indentation axis. Curved fingerprints guaranteed higher directional isotropy than straight fingerprints in the encoding of the principal frequency resulting from the ratio between the sliding velocity and the spatial periodicity of the grating. In parallel, human microneurography experiments were performed and a selection of results is included in this work in order to support the significance of the biorobotic study with the artificial tactile system. PMID:22163915
Da Costa, M J; Zaragoza-Santacruz, S; Frost, T J; Halley, J; Pesti, G M
2017-08-01
The objective of this experiment was to evaluate the effects of raising broilers under sex separate and straight-run conditions for 2 broiler strains. Day-old Ross 308 and Ross 708 chicks (n = 1,344) were separated by sex and placed in 48 pens according to the rearing type: sex separate (28 males or 28 females) or straight-run (14 males + 14 females). There were 3 dietary phases: starter (zero to 17 d), grower (17 to 32 d), and finisher (32 to 48 d). Birds' individual BW and feed intakes were measured at 12, 17, 25, 32, 42, and 48 d to evaluate performance. At 33, 43, and 49 d, 4 birds per pen were sampled for carcass yield evaluation. Additionally, from 06:00 to 06:30, 13:00 to 13:30, and 22:00 to 22:30, video records were taken to assess behavior at 45 days. Data were analyzed as CRD with a 2 × 3 factorial arrangement of treatments over time. Throughout the experiment Ross 308 were heavier than the 708, and after 17 d, male pens had the heavier birds, followed by straight-run and then females. Straight-run pens had higher BW CV in comparison with sex separate pens. Sex separate male BW was negatively impacted from 17 to 32 days. On the other hand, females raised sex separate were heavier than females raised straight-run with lower CV from 25 to 41 days. Post 25 d, FCR was the lowest in male pens whereas feed intake was the highest for these pens after 17 days. Overall, males had total carcass cut-up weights higher than straight-run and females at the 3 processing times. The Ross 708 had higher white meat yields, whereas 308 had higher yields for dark meat. Feeding behavior results were not consistent over time. However, from 13:00 to 13:30, birds in female pens spent more time eating, followed by straight-run and then males. In conclusion, raising females in a straight-run system negatively impacted performance and CV, whereas males benefited from straight-run rearing, with the differences being possibly related to feeder space competition. © 2017 Poultry Science Association Inc.
Force Tests of the Boeing XB-47 Full-Scale Empennage in the Ames 40- by 80-Foot Wind Tunnel
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Hunton, Lynn W.
1947-01-01
A wind-tunnel investigation of the Boeing XB-47 full-scale empennage was conducted to provide, prior to flight tests, data required on the effectiveness of the elevator and rudder. The XB-47 airplane is a jet-propelled medium bomber having wing and tail surfaces swept back 35 degrees. The investigation included tests of the effectiveness of the elevator with normal straight sides, with a buldged trailing edge, and with a modified hinge-line gap and tests of the effectiveness of the rudder with a normal straight-sided tab and with a bulged tab.
Related Rates and the Speed of Light.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Althoen, S. C.; Weidner, J. F.
1985-01-01
Standard calculus textbooks often include a related rates problem involving light cast onto a straight line by a revolving light source. Mathematical aspects to these problems (both in the solution and in the method by which that solution is obtained) are examined. (JN)
DISTANT GOAL ORIENTATION IN BIRDS.
homing to a Bowling Green , Ohio loft. Pigeons with one eye surgically removed were able to home. Helicopter tracking is suitable and efficient for...the observation of pigeon navigation behavior. The homeward path varies considerably from the straight line path, sudden attitude changes occur, very
Effect of prostatic fluid on the quality of fresh and frozen-thawed canine epididymal spermatozoa.
Korochkina, E; Johannisson, A; Goodla, Lavanya; Morrell, J M; Axner, E
2014-12-01
Canine epididymal spermatozoa have a low freeze-tolerance ability compared with ejaculated spermatozoa, which could arise from the absence of prostatic fluid (PF). Therefore, the purpose of this work was to elucidate the influence of PF on the quality of canine epididymal sperm before and after freezing. Caudae epididymides were retrieved from eight dogs after routine castration. Spermatozoa were released by slicing the tissue and were extended in either Tris solution or PF before freezing. Frozen sperm samples were thawed at 70 °C for 8 seconds in a waterbath. Sperm concentration, motility using computer-assisted sperm analysis, morphology, plasma membrane, acrosome and chromatin integrity were assessed in the fresh sperm samples (after 20 minutes incubation) and at 0 and 4 hours after thawing. Progressive motility, distance straight line, distance average path, average path velocity, curvilinear velocity, straight line velocity, straightness, linearity, wobble, and beat cross frequency were significantly increased after extraction into PF. There was a higher proportion of spermatozoa with DNA damage in the PF treatment group at 4 hours after thawing than in the Tris treatment group (15.8% vs. 6.7%, P < 0.05). These results suggest that the addition of PF to canine spermatozoa activates sperm motility in fresh spermatozoa but has a negative effect on chromatin integrity after freezing-thawing. Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Use of a Multiwavelength Pyrometer in Several Elevated Temperature Aerospace Applications
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Ng, Daniel; Fralick, Gustave
2001-01-01
A multiwavelength pyrometer was developed for applications unique to aerospace environments. It was shown to be a useful and versatile technique for measuring temperature, even when the emissivity is unknown. It has also been used to measure the surface temperatures of ceramic zircomia thermal barrier coatings and alumina. The close agreement between pyrometer and thin film thermocouple temperatures provided an independent check. Other applications of the multiwavelength pyrometer are simultaneous surface and bulk temperature measurements of a transparent material, and combustion gas temperature measurement using a special probe interfaced to the multiwavelength pyrometer via an optical fiber. The multiwavelength pyrometer determined temperature by transforming the radiation spectrum in a broad wavelength region to produce a straight line (in a certain spectral region), whose intercept in the vertical axis gives the temperature. Implicit in a two-color pyrometer is the assumption of wavelength independent emissivity. Though the two data points of a two-color pyrometer similarly processed would result immediately in a similar straight line to give the unknown temperature, the two-color pyrometer lacks the greater data redundancy of the multiwavelength pyrometer, which enables it to do so with improved accuracy. It also confirms that emissivity is indeed wavelength independent, as evidenced by a multitude of the data lying on a simple straight line. The multiwavelength pyrometer was also used to study the optical transmission properties of a nanostructured material from which a quadratic exponential functional frequency dependence of its spectral transmission was determined. Finally, by operating the multiwavelength pyrometer in a very wide field of view mode, the surface temperature distribution of a large hot surface was obtained through measurement of just a single radiation spectrum.
Validation of travel times to hospital estimated by GIS.
Haynes, Robin; Jones, Andrew P; Sauerzapf, Violet; Zhao, Hongxin
2006-09-19
An increasing number of studies use GIS estimates of car travel times to health services, without presenting any evidence that the estimates are representative of real travel times. This investigation compared GIS estimates of travel times with the actual times reported by a sample of 475 cancer patients who had travelled by car to attend clinics at eight hospitals in the North of England. Car travel times were estimated by GIS using the shortest road route between home address and hospital and average speed assumptions. These estimates were compared with reported journey times and straight line distances using graphical, correlation and regression techniques. There was a moderately strong association between reported times and estimated travel times (r = 0.856). Reported travel times were similarly related to straight line distances. Altogether, 50% of travel time estimates were within five minutes of the time reported by respondents, 77% were within ten minutes and 90% were within fifteen minutes. The distribution of over- and under-estimates was symmetrical, but estimated times tended to be longer than reported times with increasing distance from hospital. Almost all respondents rounded their travel time to the nearest five or ten minutes. The reason for many cases of reported journey times exceeding the estimated times was confirmed by respondents' comments as traffic congestion. GIS estimates of car travel times were moderately close approximations to reported times. GIS travel time estimates may be superior to reported travel times for modelling purposes because reported times contain errors and can reflect unusual circumstances. Comparison with reported times did not suggest that estimated times were a more sensitive measure than straight line distance.
2015-01-01
This study determined the physical fitness, match-activity profiles and physiological responses of representative tag football players and examined the relationship between physical fitness and the match-activity profile. Microtechnology devices and heart rate (HR) chest straps were used to determine the match-activity profiles of sixteen tag football players for five matches during the 2014 Australian National Championships. The relationships between lower body muscular power, straight line running speed and Yo-Yo intermittent recovery test level 2 (Yo-Yo IR2) and the match-activity profile were examined using Pearson’s correlation coefficients. Outside players had greater lower body muscular power (ES = 0.98) and straight line running speed (ES = 1.03–1.18) than inside players, and also covered greater very high-speed running (VHSR) distance/min (ES = 0.67) and reached higher peak running speeds (ES = 0.95) during matches. Inside and outside players performed a similar number of repeated high-intensity effort (RHIE) bouts and reported similar mean and maximum efforts per RHIE bout. However, there were differences between playing positions for mean and maximal RHIE effort durations (ES = 0.69–1.15) and mean RHIE bout recovery (ES = 0.56). Inside and outside players also reported small to moderate differences (ES = 0.43–0.80) for times spent in each HR zone. There were a number of moderate to very large correlations between physical fitness measures and match-activity profile variables. This study found lower body muscular power, straight line running speed and Yo-Yo IR2 to be related to the match-activities of representative tag football players, although differences between inside and outside players suggest that athlete testing and training practices should be modified for different playing positions. PMID:26642320
Shell, Courtney E; Segal, Ava D; Klute, Glenn K; Neptune, Richard R
2017-11-01
Little evidence exists regarding how prosthesis design characteristics affect performance in tasks that challenge mediolateral balance such as turning. This study assesses the influence of prosthetic foot stiffness on amputee walking mechanics and balance control during a continuous turning task. Three-dimensional kinematic and kinetic data were collected from eight unilateral transtibial amputees as they walked overground at self-selected speed clockwise and counterclockwise around a 1-meter circle and along a straight line. Subjects performed the walking tasks wearing three different ankle-foot prostheses that spanned a range of sagittal- and coronal-plane stiffness levels. A decrease in stiffness increased residual ankle dorsiflexion (10-13°), caused smaller adaptations (<5°) in proximal joint angles, decreased residual and increased intact limb body support, increased residual limb propulsion and increased intact limb braking for all tasks. While changes in sagittal-plane joint work due to decreased stiffness were generally consistent across tasks, effects on coronal-plane hip work were task-dependent. When the residual limb was on the inside of the turn and during straight-line walking, coronal-plane hip work increased and coronal-plane peak-to-peak range of whole-body angular momentum decreased with decreased stiffness. Changes in sagittal-plane kinematics and kinetics were similar to those previously observed in straight-line walking. Mediolateral balance improved with decreased stiffness, but adaptations in coronal-plane angles, work and ground reaction force impulses were less systematic than those in sagittal-plane measures. Effects of stiffness varied with the residual limb inside versus outside the turn, which suggests that actively adjusting stiffness to turn direction may be beneficial. Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Silva, Bruno Pereira; Jiménez-Castellanos, Emilio; Finkel, Sivan; Macias, Inmaculada Redondo; Chu, Stephen J
2017-04-01
Facial asymmetries in features such as lip commissure and interpupillary plane canting have been described as common conditions affecting smile esthetics. When presented with these asymmetries, the clinician must choose the reference line with which to orient the transverse occlusal plane of the planned dental restorations. The purpose of the online survey described in this study was to determine lay preferences regarding the transverse occlusal plane orientation in faces that display a cant of the commissure line viewed from the frontal perspective. From a digitally created symmetrical facial model with the transverse occlusal plane and commissure line parallel to the interpupillary line (horizontal) and a model constructed in a previous study (control), a new facial model was created with 3 degrees of cant of the commissure line. Three digital tooth mountings were designed with different transverse occlusal plane orientations: parallel to the interpupillary line (A), parallel to the commissure line (B), and the mean angulation plane formed between the interpupillary and commissure line (C), resulting in a total of 4 images. All images, including the control, were organized into 6 pairs and evaluated by 247 selected laypersons through an online Web site survey. Each participant was asked to choose the more attractive face from each of the 6 pairs of images. The control image was preferred by 72.9% to 74.5% of the participants compared with the other 3 images, all of which represented a commissure line cant. Among the 3 pairs which represent a commissure line cant, 59.1% to 61.1% preferred a transverse plane of occlusion cant (B and C) compared with a plane of occlusion parallel to the interpupillary, line and 61.1% preferred a plane of occlusion parallel to the commissure line (B) compared with the mean angulation plane (C). Laypeople prefer faces with a commissure line and transverse occlusal plane parallel to the horizontal plane or horizon. When faces present a commissure line cant, laypeople prefer a transverse occlusal plane with a similar and coincident cant. Copyright © 2016 Editorial Council for the Journal of Prosthetic Dentistry. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
THz and sub-THz (MMW)-over-Fiber Data Links and Radar Technology
2016-12-05
propagation loss in free-space or transmission line, and their inherent straight-line path of propagation affects connections and synchronization between the...effort is to realize photonic-network compatible wireless data link at data rate up to 100 Gbit/s, and to explore a real-time MMW radar imaging system...global village at terabit rate, hopefully wirelessly. Unfortunately, such high-volume data transmission over air consumes radio bandwidth—lots of it
THz and sub THz (MMW)-over-Fiber Data Links and Radar Technology
2016-11-30
propagation loss in free-space or transmission line, and their inherent straight-line path of propagation affects connections and synchronization between the...effort is to realize photonic-network compatible wireless data link at data rate up to 100 Gbit/s, and to explore a real-time MMW radar imaging system...global village at terabit rate, hopefully wirelessly. Unfortunately, such high-volume data transmission over air consumes radio bandwidth—lots of it
1986-11-01
V2 + V 2 2 We can formulate the general weighted resampling formulas by giving an inter - polation formula and a sampling formula. Specifically...tessellation grids. 4.1. One-dimensional Adaptive Pyramid We suggest an interest operator based on the local " busyness " of the data. It has been observed...that in human perception a line with higher " busyness " seems longer than a straight line segment [6], as in Figure 7. Here, we will use a smoothed
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Leamy, Michael J.; Springer, Adam C.
In this research we report parallel implementation of a Cellular Automata-based simulation tool for computing elastodynamic response on complex, two-dimensional domains. Elastodynamic simulation using Cellular Automata (CA) has recently been presented as an alternative, inherently object-oriented technique for accurately and efficiently computing linear and nonlinear wave propagation in arbitrarily-shaped geometries. The local, autonomous nature of the method should lead to straight-forward and efficient parallelization. We address this notion on symmetric multiprocessor (SMP) hardware using a Java-based object-oriented CA code implementing triangular state machines (i.e., automata) and the MPI bindings written in Java (MPJ Express). We use MPJ Express to reconfigure our existing CA code to distribute a domain's automata to cores present on a dual quad-core shared-memory system (eight total processors). We note that this message passing parallelization strategy is directly applicable to computer clustered computing, which will be the focus of follow-on research. Results on the shared memory platform indicate nearly-ideal, linear speed-up. We conclude that the CA-based elastodynamic simulator is easily configured to run in parallel, and yields excellent speed-up on SMP hardware.
A real-time visual inspection method of fastening bolts in freight car operation
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Nan, Guo; Yao, JunEn
2015-10-01
A real-time inspection of the key components is necessary for ensuring safe operation of freight car. While traditional inspection depends on the trained human inspectors, which is time-consuming and lower efficient. With the development of machine vision, vision-based inspection methods get more railway on-spot applications. The cross rod end fastening bolts are important components on both sides of the train body that fixing locking plates together with the freight car main structure. In our experiment, we get the images containing fastening bolt components, and accurately locate the locking plate position using a linear Support Vector Machine (SVM) locating model trained with Histograms of Oriented Gradients (HOG) features. Then we extract the straight line segment using the Line Segment Detector (LSD) and encoding them in a range, which constitute a straight line segment dataset. Lastly we determine the locking plate's working state by the linear pattern. The experiment result shows that the localization accurate rate is over 99%, the fault detection rate is over 95%, and the module implementation time is 2f/s. The overall performance can completely meet the practical railway safety assurance application.
Using the Cycloid as an Introduction to Transformations of E and B Fields
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Frodyma, Marc; Le, My Phuong
2018-05-01
The transformations of electric and magnetic fields are usually introduced by viewing systems such as a long, straight current-carrying wire and a parallel plate capacitor in two different reference frames. These well-known examples show that magnetism is a necessary consequence of augmenting electrostatics with relativity. Because they require the full apparatus of Lorentz contraction and Lorentz transformation of forces, they are often postponed until the upper-division undergraduate electrodynamics course.
Parallel Vision Algorithm Design and Implementation 1988 End of Year Report
1989-08-01
as a local operation, the provided C code used raster order processing to speed up execution time. This made it impossible to implement the code using...Apply, which does not allow the programmer to take advantage of raster order processing . Therefore, the 5x5 median filter algorithm was a straight...possible to exploit raster- order processing in W2, giving greater efficiency. The first advantage is the reason that connected components and the Hough
47 CFR 15.31 - Measurement standards.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-10-01
..., such as perimeter protection systems, carrier current systems, and systems employing a “leaky” coaxial cable as an antenna, measurements for verification or for obtaining a grant of equipment authorization... interconnecting cables as determined by the boundary defined by an imaginary straight line periphery describing a...
Adjustable knife cuts honeycomb material to specified depth
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Rauschl, J. A.
1966-01-01
Calibrated, adjustable knife cuts aluminum honeycomb or other soft materials to a desired depth. The frame of the device accommodates standard commercial blades. Since the blade is always visible to the operator, the device can be used on any straight or irregular layout line.
Three Perspectives on Teaching Least Squares
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Scariano, Stephen M.; Calzada, Maria
2004-01-01
The method of Least Squares is the most widely used technique for fitting a straight line to data, and it is typically discussed in several undergraduate courses. This article focuses on three developmentally different approaches for solving the Least Squares problem that are suitable for classroom exposition.
78 FR 45283 - Missouri Disaster #MO-00066
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2013-07-26
... 07/18/2013. Incident: Severe Storms, Straight-line Winds, Tornadoes, and Flooding. Incident Period: 05/29/2013 through 06/10/2013. Effective Date: 07/18/2013. Physical Loan Application Deadline Date: 09/16/2013. Economic Injury (EIDL) Loan Application Deadline Date: 04/18/2014. ADDRESSES: Submit...
Theoretical limit of spatial resolution in diffuse optical tomography using a perturbation model
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Konovalov, A B; Vlasov, V V
2014-03-28
We have assessed the limit of spatial resolution of timedomain diffuse optical tomography (DOT) based on a perturbation reconstruction model. From the viewpoint of the structure reconstruction accuracy, three different approaches to solving the inverse DOT problem are compared. The first approach involves reconstruction of diffuse tomograms from straight lines, the second – from average curvilinear trajectories of photons and the third – from total banana-shaped distributions of photon trajectories. In order to obtain estimates of resolution, we have derived analytical expressions for the point spread function and modulation transfer function, as well as have performed a numerical experiment onmore » reconstruction of rectangular scattering objects with circular absorbing inhomogeneities. It is shown that in passing from reconstruction from straight lines to reconstruction using distributions of photon trajectories we can improve resolution by almost an order of magnitude and exceed the accuracy of reconstruction of multi-step algorithms used in DOT. (optical tomography)« less
Period Variation in BW Vulpeculae (Abstract)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Cowall, D. E.; Odell, A. P.
2018-06-01
(Abstract only) BW Vulpeculae (BW Vul) has the largest amplitude of the beta Cephei stars. An observing campaign on this star using the AAVSOnetÃs Bright Star Monitor (BSM) telescopes was begun in December of 2015 and has yielded 66 nights of observations to date. A period analysis will be presented using the BSM data set in combination with unpublished data from the Lowell Observatory. Over almost 80 years of observations, BW Vul has closely followed a parabolic ephemeris (period increasing by 2.4 seconds/century) plus a light-travel-time effect. This parabola with excursions on either side also could be viewed as a sequence of straight lines (constant period) with abrupt period increases. The first paradigm predicted a necessary change in slope around 2004, which did not occur. Instead, the period decreased abruptly in 2009. That maximum occurred 250 minutes early compared to the first paradigm, and about 25 minutes early compared to the straight-line paradigm from 1982ñ2009.
Mechanically robust microfluidics and bulk wave acoustics to sort microparticles
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Dauson, Erin R.; Gregory, Kelvin B.; Greve, David W.; Healy, Gregory P.; Oppenheim, Irving J.
2016-04-01
Sorting microparticles (or cells, or bacteria) is significant for scientific, medical and industrial purposes. Research groups have used lithium niobate SAW devices to produce standing waves, and then to align microparticles at the node lines in polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS, silicone) microfluidic channels. The "tilted angle" (skewed) configuration is a recent breakthrough producing particle trajectories that cross multiple node lines, making it practical to sort particles. However, lithium niobate wafers and PDMS microfluidic channels are not mechanically robust. We demonstrate "tilted angle" microparticle sorting in novel devices that are robust, rapidly prototyped, and manufacturable. We form our microfluidic system in a rigid polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA, acrylic) prism, sandwiched by lead-zirconium-titanate (PZT) wafers, operating in through-thickness mode with inertial backing, that produce standing bulk waves. The overall configuration is compact and mechanically robust, and actuating PZT wafers in through-thickness mode is highly efficient. Moving to this novel configuration introduced new acoustics questions involving internal reflections, but we show experimental images confirming the intended nodal geometry. Microparticles in "tilted angle" devices display undulating trajectories, where deviation from the straight path increases with particle diameter and with excitation voltage to create the mechanism by which particles are sorted. We show a simplified analytical model by which a "phase space" is constructed to characterize effective particle sorting, and we compare our experimental data to the predictions from that simplified model; precise correlation is not expected and is not observed, but the important physical trends from the model are paralleled in the measured particle trajectories.
Anti-parallel versus Component Reconnection at the Earth Magnetopause
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Trattner, K. J.; Burch, J. L.; Ergun, R.; Eriksson, S.; Fuselier, S. A.; Gomez, R. G.; Giles, B. L.; Steven, P. M.; Strangeway, R. J.; Wilder, F. D.
2017-12-01
Magnetic reconnection at the Earth's magnetopause is discussed and has been observed as anti-parallel and component reconnection. While anti-parallel reconnection occurs between magnetic field lines of (ideally) exactly opposite polarity, component reconnection (also known as the tilted X-line model) predicts the location of the reconnection line to be anchored at the sub-solar point and extend continuously along the dayside magnetopause, while the ratio of the IMF By/Bz component determines the tilt of the X-line relative to the equatorial plane.A reconnection location prediction model known as the Maximum Magnetic Shear Model combines these two scenarios. The model predicts that during dominant IMF By conditions, magnetic reconnection occurs along an extended line across the dayside magnetopause but generally not through the sub-solar point (as predicted in the original tilted X-line model). Rather, the line follows the ridge of maximum magnetic shear across the dayside magnetopause. In contrast, for dominant IMF Bz (155° < tan-1(By/Bz) < 205°) or dominant Bx (|Bx|/B > 0.7) conditions, the reconnection location bifurcates and traces to high-latitudes, in close agreement with the anti-parallel reconnection scenario, and does not cross the dayside magnetopause as a single tilted reconnection line. Using observations from the Magnetospheric MultiScale missions during a magnetopause crossing when the IMF rotated from an dominate IMF BZ to a dominant IMF BY field we will investigate when the transition between the anti-parallel and tilted X-line scenarios occurs.
Russell, Thomas P.; Hong, Sung Woo; Lee, Doug Hyun; Park, Soojin; Xu, Ting
2015-10-13
A block copolymer film having a line pattern with a high degree of long-range order is formed by a method that includes forming a block copolymer film on a substrate surface with parallel facets, and annealing the block copolymer film to form an annealed block copolymer film having linear microdomains parallel to the substrate surface and orthogonal to the parallel facets of the substrate. The line-patterned block copolymer films are useful for the fabrication of magnetic storage media, polarizing devices, and arrays of nanowires.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Russell, Thomas P.; Hong, Sung Woo; Lee, Dong Hyun
A block copolymer film having a line pattern with a high degree of long-range order is formed by a method that includes forming a block copolymer film on a substrate surface with parallel facets, and annealing the block copolymer film to form an annealed block copolymer film having linear microdomains parallel to the substrate surface and orthogonal to the parallel facets of the substrate. The line-patterned block copolymer films are useful for the fabrication of magnetic storage media, polarizing devices, and arrays of nanowires.
Collective behaviour of dislocations in a finite medium
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Kooiman, M.; Hütter, M.; Geers, M. G. D.
2014-04-01
We derive the grand-canonical partition function of straight and parallel dislocation lines without making a priori assumptions on the temperature regime. Such a systematic derivation for dislocations has, to the best of our knowledge, not been carried out before, and several conflicting assumptions on the free energy of dislocations have been made in the literature. Dislocations have gained interest as they are the carriers of plastic deformation in crystalline materials and solid polymers, and they constitute a prototype system for two-dimensional Coulomb particles. Our microscopic starting level is the description of dislocations as used in the discrete dislocation dynamics (DDD) framework. The macroscopic level of interest is characterized by the temperature, the boundary deformation and the dislocation density profile. By integrating over state space, we obtain a field theoretic partition function, which is a functional integral of the Boltzmann weight over an auxiliary field. The Hamiltonian consists of a term quadratic in the field and an exponential of this field. The partition function is strongly non-local, and reduces in special cases to the sine-Gordon model. Moreover, we determine implicit expressions for the response functions and the dominant scaling regime for metals, namely the low-temperature regime.
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Woronowicz, Michael
2016-01-01
Analytical expressions for column number density (CND) are developed for optical line of sight paths through a variety of steady free molecule point source models including directionally-constrained effusion (Mach number M = 0) and flow from a sonic orifice (M = 1). Sonic orifice solutions are approximate, developed using a fair simulacrum fitted to the free molecule solution. Expressions are also developed for a spherically-symmetric thermal expansion (M = 0). CND solutions are found for the most general paths relative to these sources and briefly explored. It is determined that the maximum CND from a distant location through directed effusion and sonic orifice cases occurs along the path parallel to the source plane that intersects the plume axis. For the effusive case this value is exactly twice the CND found along the ray originating from that point of intersection and extending to infinity along the plume's axis. For sonic plumes this ratio is reduced to about 4/3. For high Mach number cases the maximum CND will be found along the axial centerline path. Keywords: column number density, plume flows, outgassing, free molecule flow.
Ficanha, Evandro M; Ribeiro, Guilherme A; Knop, Lauren; Rastgaar, Mo
2017-07-01
This paper describes the methods and experiment protocols for estimation of the human ankle impedance during turning and straight line walking. The ankle impedance of two human subjects during the stance phase of walking in both dorsiflexion plantarflexion (DP) and inversion eversion (IE) were estimated. The impedance was estimated about 8 axes of rotations of the human ankle combining different amounts of DP and IE rotations, and differentiating among positive and negative rotations at 5 instants of the stance length (SL). Specifically, the impedance was estimated at 10%, 30%, 50%, 70% and 90% of the SL. The ankle impedance showed great variability across time, and across the axes of rotation, with consistent larger stiffness and damping in DP than IE. When comparing straight walking and turning, the main differences were in damping at 50%, 70%, and 90% of the SL with an increase in damping at all axes of rotation during turning.
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Horne, A. P.
1966-01-01
Parallel horizontal line raster is used for precision timing of events occurring less than 500 microseconds apart for observation of hypervelocity phenomena. The raster uses a staircase vertical deflection and eliminates ambiguities in reading timing of pulses close to the end of each line.
Using Time-Series Regression to Predict Academic Library Circulations.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Brooks, Terrence A.
1984-01-01
Four methods were used to forecast monthly circulation totals in 15 midwestern academic libraries: dummy time-series regression, lagged time-series regression, simple average (straight-line forecasting), monthly average (naive forecasting). In tests of forecasting accuracy, dummy regression method and monthly mean method exhibited smallest average…
Naive vs. Sophisticated Methods of Forecasting Public Library Circulations.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Brooks, Terrence A.
1984-01-01
Two sophisticated--autoregressive integrated moving average (ARIMA), straight-line regression--and two naive--simple average, monthly average--forecasting techniques were used to forecast monthly circulation totals of 34 public libraries. Comparisons of forecasts and actual totals revealed that ARIMA and monthly average methods had smallest mean…
Calibrating Reach Distance to Visual Targets
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Mon-Williams, Mark; Bingham, Geoffrey P.
2007-01-01
The authors investigated the calibration of reach distance by gradually distorting the haptic feedback obtained when participants grasped visible target objects. The authors found that the modified relationship between visually specified distance and reach distance could be captured by a straight-line mapping function. Thus, the relation could be…
EXAMINATION - ASTRONAUT CARPENTER - SCHOOL OF AVIATION MEDICINE - PENSACOLA, FL
1961-12-07
S61-04571 (1961) --- Astronaut M. Scott Carpenter's balance mechanism performance is tested as he walks a straight line by putting one foot directly in front of the other. He is performing this test at the School of Aviation Medicine, Pensicola, Florida. Photo credit: NASA
40 CFR 89.320 - Carbon monoxide analyzer calibration.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-07-01
... introduction into service and annually thereafter, the NDIR carbon monoxide analyzer shall be checked for... to its introduction into service, after any maintenance which could alter calibration, and every two... engineering practice. For each range calibrated, if the deviation from a least-squares best-fit straight line...
Explorations in Statistics: Correlation
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Curran-Everett, Douglas
2010-01-01
Learning about statistics is a lot like learning about science: the learning is more meaningful if you can actively explore. This sixth installment of "Explorations in Statistics" explores correlation, a familiar technique that estimates the magnitude of a straight-line relationship between two variables. Correlation is meaningful only when the…
2013-01-01
Background Recently there has been growing interest in how neighbourhood features, such as the provision of local facilities and amenities, influence residents’ health and well-being. Prior research has measured amenity provision through subjective measures (surveying residents’ perceptions) or objective (GIS mapping of distance) methods. The latter may provide a more accurate measure of physical access, but residents may not use local amenities if they do not perceive them as ‘local’. We believe both subjective and objective measures should be explored, and use West Central Scotland data to investigate correspondence between residents’ subjective assessments of how well-placed they are for everyday amenities (food stores, primary and secondary schools, libraries, pharmacies, public recreation), and objective GIS-modelled measures, and examine correspondence by various sub-groups. Methods ArcMap was used to map the postal locations of ‘Transport, Health and Well-being 2010 Study’ respondents (n = 1760), and the six amenities, and the presence/absence of each of them within various straight-line and network buffers around respondents’ homes was recorded. SPSS was used to investigate whether objective presence of an amenity within a specified buffer was perceived by a respondent as being well-placed for that amenity. Kappa statistics were used to test agreement between measures for all respondents, and by sex, age, social class, area deprivation, car ownership, dog ownership, walking in the local area, and years lived in current home. Results In general, there was poor agreement (Kappa <0.20) between perceptions of being well-placed for each facility and objective presence, within 800 m and 1000 m straight-line and network buffers, with the exception of pharmacies (at 1000 m straight-line) (Kappa: 0.21). Results varied between respondent sub-groups, with some showing better agreement than others. Amongst sub-groups, at 800 m straight-line buffers, the highest correspondence between subjective and objective measures was for pharmacies and primary schools, and at 1000 m, for pharmacies, primary schools and libraries. For road network buffers under 1000 m, agreement was generally poor. Conclusion Respondents did not necessarily regard themselves as well-placed for specific amenities when these amenities were present within specified boundaries around their homes, with some exceptions; the picture is not clear-cut with varying findings between different amenities, buffers, and sub-groups. PMID:23651734
Off-shell amplitudes as boundary integrals of analytically continued Wilson line slope
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Kotko, P.; Serino, M.; Stasto, A. M.
2016-08-01
One of the methods to calculate tree-level multi-gluon scattering amplitudes is to use the Berends-Giele recursion relation involving off-shell currents or off-shell amplitudes, if working in the light cone gauge. As shown in recent works using the light-front perturbation theory, solutions to these recursions naturally collapse into gauge invariant and gauge-dependent components, at least for some helicity configurations. In this work, we show that such structure is helicity independent and emerges from analytic properties of matrix elements of Wilson line operators, where the slope of the straight gauge path is shifted in a certain complex direction. This is similar to the procedure leading to the Britto-Cachazo-Feng-Witten (BCFW) recursion, however we apply a complex shift to the Wilson line slope instead of the external momenta. While in the original BCFW procedure the boundary integrals over the complex shift vanish for certain deformations, here they are non-zero and are equal to the off-shell amplitudes. The main result can thus be summarized as follows: we derive a decomposition of a helicity-fixed off-shell current into gauge invariant component given by a matrix element of a straight Wilson line plus a reminder given by a sum of products of gauge invariant and gauge dependent quantities. We give several examples realizing this relation, including the five-point next-to-MHV helicity configuration.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Wendel, D. E.; Olson, D. K.; Hesse, M.; Karimabadi, H.; Daughton, W. S.
2013-12-01
We investigate the distribution of parallel electric fields and their relationship to the location and rate of magnetic reconnection of a large particle-in-cell simulation of 3D turbulent magnetic reconnection with open boundary conditions. The simulation's guide field geometry inhibits the formation of topological features such as separators and null points. Therefore, we derive the location of potential changes in magnetic connectivity by finding the field lines that experience a large relative change between their endpoints, i.e., the quasi-separatrix layer. We find a correspondence between the locus of changes in magnetic connectivity, or the quasi-separatrix layer, and the map of large gradients in the integrated parallel electric field (or quasi-potential). Furthermore, we compare the distribution of parallel electric fields along field lines with the reconnection rate. We find the reconnection rate is controlled by only the low-amplitude, zeroth and first-order trends in the parallel electric field, while the contribution from high amplitude parallel fluctuations, such as electron holes, is negligible. The results impact the determination of reconnection sites within models of 3D turbulent reconnection as well as the inference of reconnection rates from in situ spacecraft measurements. It is difficult through direct observation to isolate the locus of the reconnection parallel electric field amidst the large amplitude fluctuations. However, we demonstrate that a positive slope of the partial sum of the parallel electric field along the field line as a function of field line length indicates where reconnection is occurring along the field line.
METAL SPRAYER FOR USE IN VACUUM OR INERT ATMOSPHERE
Monroe, R.E.
1958-10-14
A metal sprayer is described for use in a vacuum or inert atmosphere with a straight line wire feed and variable electrode contact angle. This apparatus comprises two wires which are fed through straight tubes of two mechanisms positioned on opposite sides of a central tube to which an inert gas is fed. The two mechanisms and the wires being fed constitute electrodes to which electrical current is supplied so that the wires are melted by the electric are formed at their contacting region and sprayed by the gas supplied by the central tube. This apparatus is designed specifically to apply a zirconium coating to uranium in an inert atmosphere and without the use of an oxidizing flame.
Tannamala, Pavan Kumar; Pulagam, Mahesh; Pottem, Srinivas R; Swapna, B
2012-04-01
The purpose of this study was to compare the sagittal condylar angles set in the Hanau articulator by use of a method of obtaining an intraoral protrusive record to those angles found using a panoramic radiographic image. Ten patients, free of signs and symptoms of temporomandibular disorder and with intact dentition were selected. The dental stone casts of the subjects were mounted on a Hanau articulator with a springbow and poly(vinyl siloxane) interocclusal records. For all patients, the protrusive records were obtained when the mandible moved forward by approximately 6 mm. All procedures for recording, mounting, and setting were done in the same session. The condylar guidance angles obtained were tabulated. A panoramic radiographic image of each patient was made with the Frankfurt horizontal plane parallel to the floor of the mouth. Tracings of the radiographic images were made. The horizontal reference line was marked by joining the orbitale and porion. The most superior and most inferior points of the curvatures were identified. These two lines were connected by a straight line representing the mean curvature line. Angles made by the intersection of the mean curvature line and the horizontal reference line were measured. The results were subjected to statistical analysis with a significance level of p < 0.05. The radiographic values were on average 4° greater than the values obtained by protrusive interocclusal record method. The mean condylar guidance angle between the right and left side by both the methods was not statistically significant. The comparison of mean condylar guidance angles between the right side of the protrusive record method and the right side of the panoramic radiographic method and the left side of the protrusive record method and the left side of the panoramic radiographic method (p= 0.071 and p= 0.057, respectively) were not statistically significant. Within the limitations of this study, it was concluded that the protrusive condylar guidance angles obtained by panoramic radiograph may be used in programming semi-adjustable articulators. © 2012 by the American College of Prosthodontists.
Scan line graphics generation on the massively parallel processor
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Dorband, John E.
1988-01-01
Described here is how researchers implemented a scan line graphics generation algorithm on the Massively Parallel Processor (MPP). Pixels are computed in parallel and their results are applied to the Z buffer in large groups. To perform pixel value calculations, facilitate load balancing across the processors and apply the results to the Z buffer efficiently in parallel requires special virtual routing (sort computation) techniques developed by the author especially for use on single-instruction multiple-data (SIMD) architectures.
Striepe, Meg I; Tolman, Deborah L
2003-12-01
Little attention has been given to how femininity and masculinity ideologies impact sexual-identity development. Differentiating violations of conventional femininity and masculinity ideologies as part of an overt process of sexual-identity development in sexual-minority adolescents suggested the possibility of a parallel process among heterosexual adolescents. Based on feminist theory and analysis of heterosexual adolescents narratives about relationships, the importance of negotiating femininity and masculinity ideologies as part of sexual-identity development for all adolescents is described.
Finger vein recognition using local line binary pattern.
Rosdi, Bakhtiar Affendi; Shing, Chai Wuh; Suandi, Shahrel Azmin
2011-01-01
In this paper, a personal verification method using finger vein is presented. Finger vein can be considered more secured compared to other hands based biometric traits such as fingerprint and palm print because the features are inside the human body. In the proposed method, a new texture descriptor called local line binary pattern (LLBP) is utilized as feature extraction technique. The neighbourhood shape in LLBP is a straight line, unlike in local binary pattern (LBP) which is a square shape. Experimental results show that the proposed method using LLBP has better performance than the previous methods using LBP and local derivative pattern (LDP).
Dielectric constants of soils at microwave frequencies-2
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Wang, J.; Schmugge, T.; Williams, D.
1978-01-01
The dielectric constants of several soil samples were measured at frequencies of 5 and 19 GHz using the infinite transmission line method. The results of these measurements are presented and discussed with respect to soil types and texture structures. A comparison is made with other measurements at 1.4 GHz. At all three frequencies, the dependence of dielectric constant on soil moisture can be approximated by two straight lines. At low moisture, the slope is less than at high moisture level. The intersection of the two lines is believed to be a function of soil texture.
Flight-path estimation in passive low-altitude flight by visual cues
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Grunwald, Arthur J.; Kohn, S.
1993-01-01
A series of experiments was conducted, in which subjects had to estimate the flight path while passively being flown in straight or in curved motion over several types of nominally flat, textured terrain. Three computer-generated terrain types were investigated: (1) a random 'pole' field, (2) a flat field consisting of random rectangular patches, and (3) a field of random parallelepipeds. Experimental parameters were the velocity-to-height (V/h) ratio, the viewing distance, and the terrain type. Furthermore, the effect of obscuring parts of the visual field was investigated. Assumptions were made about the basic visual-field information by analyzing the pattern of line-of-sight (LOS) rate vectors in the visual field. The experimental results support these assumptions and show that, for both a straight as well as a curved flight path, the estimation accuracy and estimation times improve with the V/h ratio. Error scores for the curved flight path are found to be about 3 deg in visual angle higher than for the straight flight path, and the sensitivity to the V/h ratio is found to be considerably larger. For the straight motion, the flight path could be estimated successfully from local areas in the far field. Curved flight-path estimates have to rely on the entire LOS rate pattern.
Trajectories of Listeria-type motility in two dimensions
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Wen, Fu-Lai; Leung, Kwan-tai; Chen, Hsuan-Yi
2012-12-01
Force generated by actin polymerization is essential in cell motility and the locomotion of organelles or bacteria such as Listeria monocytogenes. Both in vivo and in vitro experiments on actin-based motility have observed geometrical trajectories including straight lines, circles, S-shaped curves, and translating figure eights. This paper reports a phenomenological model of an actin-propelled disk in two dimensions that generates geometrical trajectories. Our model shows that when the evolutions of actin density and force per filament on the disk are strongly coupled to the disk self-rotation, it is possible for a straight trajectory to lose its stability. When the instability is due to a pitchfork bifurcation, the resulting trajectory is a circle; a straight trajectory can also lose stability through a Hopf bifurcation, and the resulting trajectory is an S-shaped curve. We also show that a half-coated disk, which mimics the distribution of functionalized proteins in Listeria, also undergoes similar symmetry-breaking bifurcations when the straight trajectory loses stability. For both a fully coated disk and a half-coated disk, when the trajectory is an S-shaped curve, the angular frequency of the disk self-rotation is different from that of the disk trajectory. However, for circular trajectories, these angular frequencies are different for a fully coated disk but the same for a half-coated disk.
Office Skills: What Are the Effects of a Composition Emphasis during Two Semesters of Typewriting?
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Gades, Robert E.; Dougal, Barbara
1979-01-01
A study which compared the composition approach of typewriting instruction with the traditional approach found no significant difference in typewriting speed after one year of instruction. Students trained with the composition approach showed significantly fewer errors on straight-line timings. (LRA)
46 CFR 382.3 - Determination of fair and reasonable rate.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-10-01
... capitalized improvements, shall be depreciated on a straight-line basis over a 20-year economic life, except... equal installments over the economic life of the vessels as determined in accordance with paragraph (b... that the vessel's constructed net book value, less outstanding constructed principal, is equity. The...
46 CFR 382.3 - Determination of fair and reasonable rate.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-10-01
... capitalized improvements, shall be depreciated on a straight-line basis over a 20-year economic life, except... equal installments over the economic life of the vessels as determined in accordance with paragraph (b... that the vessel's constructed net book value, less outstanding constructed principal, is equity. The...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-04-01
... proceeds in a southwesterly direction in a straight line approximately 1.7 miles along Skellenger Lane... miles to the point where an unnamed stream drains into the Napa River from the west; (3) Then along the... Southern Pacific Railroad Track; (4) Then southeasterly along said railroad track 1,650 feet to a point...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-10-01
... paragraph (c) of this section, the head shall rotate in reference to the pendulum's longitudinal centerline... the straight line distance between (1) the position relative to the pendulum arm of the head center of gravity at time zero, and (2) the position relative to the pendulum arm of the head center of gravity at...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-10-01
... paragraph (c) of this section, the head shall rotate in reference to the pendulum's longitudinal centerline... the straight line distance between (1) the position relative to the pendulum arm of the head center of gravity at time zero, and (2) the position relative to the pendulum arm of the head center of gravity at...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-10-01
... paragraph (c) of this section, the head shall rotate in reference to the pendulum's longitudinal centerline... the straight line distance between (1) the position relative to the pendulum arm of the head center of gravity at time zero, and (2) the position relative to the pendulum arm of the head center of gravity at...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
... paragraph (c) of this section, the head shall rotate in reference to the pendulum's longitudinal centerline... the straight line distance between (1) the position relative to the pendulum arm of the head center of gravity at time zero, and (2) the position relative to the pendulum arm of the head center of gravity at...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-10-01
... paragraph (c) of this section, the head shall rotate in reference to the pendulum's longitudinal centerline... the straight line distance between (1) the position relative to the pendulum arm of the head center of gravity at time zero, and (2) the position relative to the pendulum arm of the head center of gravity at...
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Fogarty, Ian; Geelan, David
2013-01-01
Students in 4 Canadian high school physics classes completed instructional sequences in two key physics topics related to motion--Straight Line Motion and Newton's First Law. Different sequences of laboratory investigation, teacher explanation (lecture) and the use of computer-based scientific visualizations (animations and simulations) were…
48 CFR 9904.406-61 - Interpretation.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
... ACCOUNTING STANDARDS COST ACCOUNTING STANDARDS 9904.406-61 Interpretation. (a) Questions have arisen as to... categories of costs that have been included in the past and may be considered in the future as restructuring... restructuring costs shall not exceed five years. The straight-line method of amortization should normally be...
Semi Inextensional Post Buckling Analysis of Annular Plates,
1981-09-01
too. These methods have their advantages in accuracy but suffer from the drawback of being difficult to use for overall design data or for the...The fact that the high postbuckling curve of the plate approaches a straight line was observed eperimentally [81, [10], where the use of the two
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-10-01
..., Baker, Howland, and Jarvis Islands, Johnston Atoll, Kingman Reef, and Palmyra Atoll, is defined as...″ 0°28′39″ N. (d) Johnston Atoll. The Johnston Atoll unit of the Monument includes the waters and submerged and emergent lands around Johnston Atoll within an area defined by straight lines connecting the...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-10-01
..., Baker, Howland, and Jarvis Islands, Johnston Atoll, Kingman Reef, and Palmyra Atoll, is defined as...″ 0°28′39″ N. (d) Johnston Atoll. The Johnston Atoll unit of the Monument includes the waters and submerged and emergent lands around Johnston Atoll within an area defined by straight lines connecting the...
26 CFR 1.167(b)-1 - Straight line method.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... estimated useful life of the property. The allowance for depreciation for the taxable year is determined by... reasonable allowance for depreciation for any property which is subject to depreciation under section 167 and... or other basis less salaries Useful life (years) Depreciation allowable 1954 1955 1956 1954: Asset A...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... Lehigh River in the city of Jim Thorpe; then (8) Proceed east-northeasterly in a straight line to the... along Interstate 80 through Stroudsburg to the west bank of the Delaware River; then (15) Proceed south (downstream) along the west bank of the Delaware River, and, crossing onto the Northampton County map...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-10-01
... average terrain elevation at the coast station antenna to the water level at the ship location. If average... antenna site elevation, the obstruction elevation and the height of the ship station on rectangular... the horizontal scale. Then draw a straight line between the antenna and the ship. (c) If a hill...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-10-01
... average terrain elevation at the coast station antenna to the water level at the ship location. If average... antenna site elevation, the obstruction elevation and the height of the ship station on rectangular... the horizontal scale. Then draw a straight line between the antenna and the ship. (c) If a hill...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-10-01
... average terrain elevation at the coast station antenna to the water level at the ship location. If average... antenna site elevation, the obstruction elevation and the height of the ship station on rectangular... the horizontal scale. Then draw a straight line between the antenna and the ship. (c) If a hill...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-10-01
... average terrain elevation at the coast station antenna to the water level at the ship location. If average... antenna site elevation, the obstruction elevation and the height of the ship station on rectangular... the horizontal scale. Then draw a straight line between the antenna and the ship. (c) If a hill...
40 CFR 89.322 - Carbon dioxide analyzer calibration.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-07-01
... Test Equipment Provisions § 89.322 Carbon dioxide analyzer calibration. (a) Prior to its introduction... requirements of paragraph (a)(3) of this section. Proceed as follows: (1) Follow good engineering practices for... engineering practice. For each range calibrated, if the deviation from a least-squares best-fit straight line...
40 CFR 85.2114 - Basis of certification.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-07-01
... calculated using the least squares straight line method, in accordance with § 86.088-28(a). The deterioration... requirements of this paragraph for at least the part's useful life mileage interval. (i) If an original... the aftermarket parts that accumulated at least its useful life mileage during the aging process under...
40 CFR 85.2114 - Basis of certification.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-07-01
... calculated using the least squares straight line method, in accordance with § 86.088-28(a). The deterioration... requirements of this paragraph for at least the part's useful life mileage interval. (i) If an original... the aftermarket parts that accumulated at least its useful life mileage during the aging process under...
40 CFR 85.2114 - Basis of certification.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-07-01
... calculated using the least squares straight line method, in accordance with § 86.088-28(a). The deterioration... requirements of this paragraph for at least the part's useful life mileage interval. (i) If an original... the aftermarket parts that accumulated at least its useful life mileage during the aging process under...
40 CFR 85.2114 - Basis of certification.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-07-01
... calculated using the least squares straight line method, in accordance with § 86.088-28(a). The deterioration... requirements of this paragraph for at least the part's useful life mileage interval. (i) If an original... the aftermarket parts that accumulated at least its useful life mileage during the aging process under...
86. Round Meadow Creek Viaduct. This steel girder bridge, built ...
86. Round Meadow Creek Viaduct. This steel girder bridge, built in 1939, has a reinforced concrete deck and piers. It is an example of a major in-line, or straight, viaduct over a deep ravine. - Blue Ridge Parkway, Between Shenandoah National Park & Great Smoky Mountains, Asheville, Buncombe County, NC
40 CFR 89.319 - Hydrocarbon analyzer calibration.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-07-01
... each range calibrated, if the deviation from a least-squares best-fit straight line is 2 percent or... ±0.3 percent of full scale on the zero, the best-fit non-linear equation which represents the data to within these limits shall be used to determine concentration. (d) Oxygen interference optimization...
40 CFR 89.319 - Hydrocarbon analyzer calibration.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-07-01
... each range calibrated, if the deviation from a least-squares best-fit straight line is 2 percent or... ±0.3 percent of full scale on the zero, the best-fit non-linear equation which represents the data to within these limits shall be used to determine concentration. (d) Oxygen interference optimization...
40 CFR 89.319 - Hydrocarbon analyzer calibration.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-07-01
... each range calibrated, if the deviation from a least-squares best-fit straight line is 2 percent or... ±0.3 percent of full scale on the zero, the best-fit non-linear equation which represents the data to within these limits shall be used to determine concentration. (d) Oxygen interference optimization...
40 CFR 89.320 - Carbon monoxide analyzer calibration.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-07-01
... monoxide as described in this section. (b) Initial and periodic interference check. Prior to its... engineering practice. For each range calibrated, if the deviation from a least-squares best-fit straight line... range. If the deviation exceeds these limits, the best-fit non-linear equation which represents the data...
40 CFR 89.320 - Carbon monoxide analyzer calibration.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-07-01
... monoxide as described in this section. (b) Initial and periodic interference check. Prior to its... engineering practice. For each range calibrated, if the deviation from a least-squares best-fit straight line... range. If the deviation exceeds these limits, the best-fit non-linear equation which represents the data...
40 CFR 89.320 - Carbon monoxide analyzer calibration.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-07-01
... monoxide as described in this section. (b) Initial and periodic interference check. Prior to its... engineering practice. For each range calibrated, if the deviation from a least-squares best-fit straight line... range. If the deviation exceeds these limits, the best-fit non-linear equation which represents the data...
40 CFR 89.320 - Carbon monoxide analyzer calibration.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-07-01
... monoxide as described in this section. (b) Initial and periodic interference check. Prior to its... engineering practice. For each range calibrated, if the deviation from a least-squares best-fit straight line... range. If the deviation exceeds these limits, the best-fit non-linear equation which represents the data...
75 FR 25815 - Disadvantaged Business Enterprise: Program Improvements
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2010-05-10
... extent, the purpose of the three-year goal submission interval. We anticipate that this approach would be... approaches to making inflationary adjustments. The Department seeks comment on whether the straight-line CPI approach used in the NPRM is appropriate, or whether there are other approaches or techniques that would be...
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Thomson, Ian
2010-01-01
Archimedes, the famous Greek mathematician, lived from 287 BCE until approximately 212 BCE. He thought that the figure of two semi-circles on a straight line enclosed by a larger semi-circle resembled a shoemaker's knife. Archimedes called this figure an "arbelos" since arbelos is the Greek word for a shoemaker's knife. The author describes the…
46 CFR 115.900 - Applicability.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-10-01
... International Convention for Safety of Life at Sea, 1974, as Amended (SOLAS) § 115.900 Applicability. (a) Except... applicable requirements of the International Convention for Safety of Life at Sea, 1974, as Amended (SOLAS... solely navigating the Great Lakes and the St. Lawrence River as far east as a straight line drawn from...
46 CFR 115.900 - Applicability.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-10-01
... International Convention for Safety of Life at Sea, 1974, as Amended (SOLAS) § 115.900 Applicability. (a) Except... applicable requirements of the International Convention for Safety of Life at Sea, 1974, as Amended (SOLAS... solely navigating the Great Lakes and the St. Lawrence River as far east as a straight line drawn from...
46 CFR 115.900 - Applicability.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-10-01
... International Convention for Safety of Life at Sea, 1974, as Amended (SOLAS) § 115.900 Applicability. (a) Except... applicable requirements of the International Convention for Safety of Life at Sea, 1974, as Amended (SOLAS... solely navigating the Great Lakes and the St. Lawrence River as far east as a straight line drawn from...
46 CFR 115.900 - Applicability.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-10-01
... International Convention for Safety of Life at Sea, 1974, as Amended (SOLAS) § 115.900 Applicability. (a) Except... applicable requirements of the International Convention for Safety of Life at Sea, 1974, as Amended (SOLAS... solely navigating the Great Lakes and the St. Lawrence River as far east as a straight line drawn from...
Food Service: How and What to Plan.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Buchanan, Robert D.
1962-01-01
The effectiveness of food service facilities will be greatly enhanced by--(1) developing operating policies early in the design stage, (2) translating menus and recipes into space, time, amounts, and equipment, (3) arranging kitchen functions and work centers into straight line flow, and (4) evaluation. Operating policies and procedures must be…
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Vinogradov, E. A.; Gridin, S. A.; Golovanov, V. I.; Danilenko, A. A.; Bulatov, E. D.
1989-01-01
A system capable of focusing monochromatic microwave radiation with a spherical or planar wavefront into a straight line segment is designed. The system consists of zone elements made with numerically controlled machine tools. The study of the image obtained revealed that the width of the formed local segment is close to the diffraction limit.
Investigation of the line arrangement of 2D resistivity surveys for 3D inversion*
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Inoue, Keisuke; Nakazato, Hiroomi; Takeuchi, Mutsuo; Sugimoto, Yoshihiro; Kim, Hee Joon; Yoshisako, Hiroshi; Konno, Michiaki; Shoda, Daisuke
2018-03-01
We have conducted numerical and field experiments to investigate the applicability of electrode configurations and line layouts commonly used for two-dimensional (2D) resistivity surveys to 3D inversion. We examined three kinds of electrode configurations and two types of line arrangements, for 16 resistivity models of a conductive body in a homogeneous half-space. The results of the numerical experiment revealed that the parallel-line arrangement was effective in identifying the approximate location of the conductive body. The orthogonal-line arrangement was optimal for identifying a target body near the line intersection. As a result, we propose that parallel lines are useful to highlight areas of particular interest where further detailed work with an intersecting line could be carried out. In the field experiment, 2D resistivity data were measured on a loam layer with a backfilled pit. The reconstructed resistivity image derived from parallel-line data showed a low-resistivity portion near the backfilled pit. When an orthogonal line was added to the parallel lines, the newly estimated location of the backfilled pit coincided well with the actual location. In a further field application, we collected several 2D resistivity datasets in the Nojima Fault area in Awaji Island. The 3D inversion of these datasets provided a resistivity distribution corresponding to the geological structure. In particular, the Nojima Fault was imaged as the western boundary of a low-resistivity belt, from only two orthogonal lines.
Cai, Xi; Han, Guang; Song, Xin; Wang, Jinkuan
2017-11-01
single-camera-based gait monitoring is unobtrusive, inexpensive, and easy-to-use to monitor daily gait of seniors in their homes. However, most studies require subjects to walk perpendicularly to camera's optical axis or along some specified routes, which limits its application in elderly home monitoring. To build unconstrained monitoring environments, we propose a method to measure step length symmetry ratio (a useful gait parameter representing gait symmetry without significant relationship with age) from unconstrained straight walking using a single camera, without strict restrictions on walking directions or routes. according to projective geometry theory, we first develop a calculation formula of step length ratio for the case of unconstrained straight-line walking. Then, to adapt to general cases, we propose to modify noncollinear footprints, and accordingly provide general procedure for step length ratio extraction from unconstrained straight walking. Our method achieves a mean absolute percentage error (MAPE) of 1.9547% for 15 subjects' normal and abnormal side-view gaits, and also obtains satisfactory MAPEs for non-side-view gaits (2.4026% for 45°-view gaits and 3.9721% for 30°-view gaits). The performance is much better than a well-established monocular gait measurement system suitable only for side-view gaits with a MAPE of 3.5538%. Independently of walking directions, our method can accurately estimate step length ratios from unconstrained straight walking. This demonstrates our method is applicable for elders' daily gait monitoring to provide valuable information for elderly health care, such as abnormal gait recognition, fall risk assessment, etc. single-camera-based gait monitoring is unobtrusive, inexpensive, and easy-to-use to monitor daily gait of seniors in their homes. However, most studies require subjects to walk perpendicularly to camera's optical axis or along some specified routes, which limits its application in elderly home monitoring. To build unconstrained monitoring environments, we propose a method to measure step length symmetry ratio (a useful gait parameter representing gait symmetry without significant relationship with age) from unconstrained straight walking using a single camera, without strict restrictions on walking directions or routes. according to projective geometry theory, we first develop a calculation formula of step length ratio for the case of unconstrained straight-line walking. Then, to adapt to general cases, we propose to modify noncollinear footprints, and accordingly provide general procedure for step length ratio extraction from unconstrained straight walking. Our method achieves a mean absolute percentage error (MAPE) of 1.9547% for 15 subjects' normal and abnormal side-view gaits, and also obtains satisfactory MAPEs for non-side-view gaits (2.4026% for 45°-view gaits and 3.9721% for 30°-view gaits). The performance is much better than a well-established monocular gait measurement system suitable only for side-view gaits with a MAPE of 3.5538%. Independently of walking directions, our method can accurately estimate step length ratios from unconstrained straight walking. This demonstrates our method is applicable for elders' daily gait monitoring to provide valuable information for elderly health care, such as abnormal gait recognition, fall risk assessment, etc.
Autonomous Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Rendezvous for Automated Aerial Refueling
2007-03-01
represents a straight line segment. It can be seen that there are ten possible combinations of arcs and line segments (RSR, RSL, LSR, LSL, LRL, RLR , SLR...SRL, RLS, and LRS). However, L. E. Dubins proved that only these six sequences are possibly optimal: RSR, RSL, LSR, LSL, LRL, and RLR [Dubins 1957...From Figure 2-5 and Figure 2-6, it can be seen that the last two cases, RLR and LRL can only be optimal when the initial point and the terminal
Flood Plain Information Brandywine Creek, New Castle County, Delaware.
1973-07-01
The Brandywine’s course through Delaware is fairly straight and cuts through a valley of rugged terrain. The adjacent land slopes that comprise its...varies sharply in 3 distinct reaches. The upper reach from the State Line to Rockland Road falls 15.5 feet at a slope of 4.9 feet per mile. The middle...Mileage Above Drainage Area Location Mouth Tributary Total sq. Mi. sq. mi. Pennsy lvania-Del aware State Line 10.55 ... 299.9 Confluence with Beaver
TRISTEN/FRAM II Cruise Report, East Arctic, April 1980.
1981-04-13
is not readily accessible by air from Alaska. The Eurasia Basin contains the Arctic Midoceanic Ridge, which extends in a straight line for 2000 km...13 6 Bottom Refraction - Shot- Lines Overlain on FRAM II Positions 14 7 Waterfall Display of Successive Spectral Estimates of Single...Northeast leg of the array was oriented 341T and the NW leg 304 ’T. After a windstorm and flow break-up on 16 April, hydrophones 11 and 12 and 21-24 were
1981-01-01
straight line. Those that are larger than might be expected by chance will deviate i.oticeably from the line. Wilk and Gnanadesikan (1964; also see Roy... Gnanadesikan , and Srivasta, 1971, Chapter VIII; also see Simon, 1977a, pp 151-158 for a general description of the procedure) describe how to use a...by Wilk and Gnanadesikan is rather involved and is explained in matrix algebra terms, it is described b-low along with an example to facilitate its
1991-11-01
publication. APPROVED: a LEE A. UVANNI Project Engineer FOR THE COMMANDER: GARRY W. BARRINGER Technical Director Intelligence & Reconnaissance...f Od1cAtl nd ir-’bm a UNl tofU~rtaw ."t Pu’ o scrxr± ing twra fa revrl r Jt,= seagrg d un zla souLces gahwtW" r T , iUm rm , rruk4 c adiwvctws coa w...1990j matches straight lines extracted from an image with model lines r projected to the image plane using an assumed location of the camera. This
Pfau, T; Jennings, C; Mitchell, H; Olsen, E; Walker, A; Egenvall, A; Tröster, S; Weller, R; Rhodin, M
2016-01-01
Lungeing is often part of the clinical lameness examination. The difference in movement symmetry, which is a commonly employed lameness measure, has not been quantified between surfaces. To compare head and pelvic movement symmetry between surfaces and reins during lungeing. Quantitative gait analysis in 23 horses considered sound by their owners. Twenty-three horses were assessed in-hand and on the lunge on both reins on hard and soft surfaces with inertial sensors. Seven movement symmetry parameters were quantified and used to establish 2 groups, namely symmetrical (n = 9) and forelimb-lame horses (n = 14), based on values from straight-line assessment. Movement symmetry values for left rein measurements were side corrected to allow comparison of the amount of movement symmetry between reins. A mixed model (P<0.05) was used to study effects on movement symmetry of surface (hard/soft) and rein (inside/outside with respect to movement symmetry on the straight). In forelimb-lame horses, surface and rein were identified as significantly affecting all head movement symmetry measures (rein, all P<0.0001; surface, all P<0.042). In the symmetrical group, no significant influence of surface or rein was identified for head movement symmetry (rein, all P>0.245; surface, all P>0.073). No significant influence of surface or rein was identified for any of the pelvic movement symmetry measures in either group. While more symmetrical horses showed a consistent amount of movement symmetry across surfaces/reins, horses objectively quantified as lame on the straight showed decreased movement symmetry during lungeing, in particular with the lame limb on the inside of a hard circle. The variation within group questions straight-line movement symmetry as a sole measure of lameness without quantification of movement symmetry on the lunge, ideally on hard and soft surfaces to evaluate differences between reins and surfaces. In future, thresholds for lungeing need to be determined using simultaneous visual and objective assessment. © 2014 EVJ Ltd.
Incidents between Straight-ahead Cyclists and Right-turning Motor Vehicles at Signalised Junctions.
Buch, Thomas Skallebæk; Jensen, Søren Underlien
2017-08-01
Accidents between right-turning motor vehicles and straight-ahead cyclists are one of the most common accident types leading to cyclist injuries at signalised junctions in Denmark. A before-after safety evaluation of applying staggered stop lines in 189 arms at 123 signalised junctions is presented. The evaluation accounts for long-term accident trends and changes in motor vehicle traffic volumes. Applying staggered stop lines gives no decline in accidents between right-turning motor vehicles and straight-ahead cyclists. However, there is a statistical tendency to a decline of these right-turn accidents involving heavy vehicles. There are several questions about factors leading to right-turn accidents that cannot be answered by recorded accident data. A study of conflicting behaviour focuses on factors leading to conflicts. Video observations have been carried out in 10 arms at signalised junctions. A total of 45 situations with conflicting behaviour between right-turning motor vehicles and straight-ahead cyclists have been investigated and compared to a reference group of simultaneous arrivals. The relative risk is lowest when both parties stop on red before entering the junction. Upon simultaneous arrival of both parties at a green light, the relative risk is highest. Cyclists tend to have a higher relative risk of being involved in conflicts if they; a) ride through on yellow, b) have a time distance of at least 2seconds to other cyclists, c) wear a black jacket, and/or d) arrive at the junction at a speed of at least 25km/h. Much less can be said about the motor vehicles or their drivers on the basis of these video observations, but motor vehicles stopping in the cycle crossing in order to yield to pedestrians or cyclists have a higher relative risk of being involved in conflicts. Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Performance of a superconducting magnet system operated in the Super Omega Muon beam line at J-PARC
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Makida, Yasuhiro; Ikedo, Yutaka; Ogitsu, Toru
A superconducting magnet system, which is composed of an 8 m long solenoid for transportation and 12 short solenoids for focusing, has been developed for Muon Science Establishment facility of J-PARC. The transport solenoid is composed of a 6 m straight section connected to a 45 degree curved section at each end. Muons of various momenta and of both electric charges are transported through the solenoid inner bore with an effective diameter of 0.3 m, where 2 T magnetic field is induced. There are 12 focusing solenoids with an effective bore diameter of 0.6 m and a length of 0.35more » m arranged on a straight line at suitable intervals. The maximum central field of each focusing solenoid is 0.66 T. All solenoid coils are cooled by GM cryocoolers through their own conductions. The magnet system has been installed into the beam line in the summer of 2012, and its performance has been checked. Beam commissioning has been carried out since October 2012. During beam operation, temperature rise over 6 K in the transport solenoid due to a nuclear heating from the muon production target is observed at beam intensity of about 300 kW.« less
Modeling and experimental characterization of electromigration in interconnect trees
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Thompson, C. V.; Hau-Riege, S. P.; Andleigh, V. K.
1999-11-01
Most modeling and experimental characterization of interconnect reliability is focussed on simple straight lines terminating at pads or vias. However, laid-out integrated circuits often have interconnects with junctions and wide-to-narrow transitions. In carrying out circuit-level reliability assessments it is important to be able to assess the reliability of these more complex shapes, generally referred to as `trees.' An interconnect tree consists of continuously connected high-conductivity metal within one layer of metallization. Trees terminate at diffusion barriers at vias and contacts, and, in the general case, can have more than one terminating branch when they include junctions. We have extended the understanding of `immortality' demonstrated and analyzed for straight stud-to-stud lines, to trees of arbitrary complexity. This leads to a hierarchical approach for identifying immortal trees for specific circuit layouts and models for operation. To complete a circuit-level-reliability analysis, it is also necessary to estimate the lifetimes of the mortal trees. We have developed simulation tools that allow modeling of stress evolution and failure in arbitrarily complex trees. We are testing our models and simulations through comparisons with experiments on simple trees, such as lines broken into two segments with different currents in each segment. Models, simulations and early experimental results on the reliability of interconnect trees are shown to be consistent.
ICRF heating in a straight, helically symmetric stellarator
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Jaeger, E.F.; Weitzner, H.; Batchelor, D.B.
1987-07-01
Experimental observations of direct ion cyclotron resonant frequency (ICRF) heating at fundamental ion cyclotron resonance on the L-2 stellarator have stimulated interest in the theoretical basis for such heating. In this paper, global solutions for the ICRF wave fields in a helically symmetric, straight stellarator are calculated in the cold plasma limit. The component of the wave electric field parallel to B-vector is assumed zero. Helical symmetry allows Fourier decomposition in the longitudinal (z) direction. The two remaining partial differential equations in tau and phi identical to THETA - hz (h is the helical pitch) are solved by finite differencing.more » Energy absorption and antenna impedance are calculated from an ad hoc collision model. Results for parameters typical of the L-2 and Advanced Toroidal Facility (ATF) stellarators show that direct resonant absorption of the fundamental ion cyclotron resonance occurs mainly near the plasma edge. The magnitude of the absorption is about half that for minority heating at the two-ion hybrid resonance.« less
Kim, Dae Shik; Emerson, Robert Wall; Naghshineh, Koorosh; Pliskow, Jay; Myers, Kyle
2012-05-01
This study examined the effect of adding an artificially generated alert sound to a quiet vehicle on its detectability and localizability with 15 visually impaired adults. When starting from a stationary position, the hybrid electric vehicle with an alert sound was significantly more quickly and reliably detected than either the identical vehicle without such added sound or the comparable internal combustion engine vehicle. However, no significant difference was found between the vehicles in respect to how accurately the participants could discriminate the path of a given vehicle (straight vs. right turn). These results suggest that adding an artificial sound to a hybrid electric vehicle may help reduce delay in street crossing initiation by a blind pedestrian, but the benefit of such alert sound may not be obvious in determining whether the vehicle in his near parallel lane proceeds straight through the intersection or turns right in front of him.
Kim, Dae Shik; Emerson, Robert Wall; Naghshineh, Koorosh; Pliskow, Jay; Myers, Kyle
2012-01-01
This study examined the effect of adding an artificially generated alert sound to a quiet vehicle on its detectability and localizability with 15 visually impaired adults. When starting from a stationary position, the hybrid electric vehicle with an alert sound was significantly more quickly and reliably detected than either the identical vehicle without such added sound or the comparable internal combustion engine vehicle. However, no significant difference was found between the vehicles in respect to how accurately the participants could discriminate the path of a given vehicle (straight vs. right turn). These results suggest that adding an artificial sound to a hybrid electric vehicle may help reduce delay in street crossing initiation by a blind pedestrian, but the benefit of such alert sound may not be obvious in determining whether the vehicle in his near parallel lane proceeds straight through the intersection or turns right in front of him. PMID:22707841
Shielded transient self-interaction of a bunch entering a circle from a straight path
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Li, R.; Bohn, C.L.; Bisognano, J.J.
1997-08-01
Recent developments in electron-gun and injector technologies enable production of short (mm-length), high-charge (nC-regime) bunches. In this parameter regime, the curvature effect on the bunch self-interaction, by way of coherent synchrotron radiation (CSR) and space-charge forces as the beam traverses magnet bends, may cause serious emittance degradation. In this paper, the authors study an electron bunch orbiting between two infinite, parallel conducting plates. The bunch moves on a trajectory from a straight path to a circular orbit and begins radiating. Transient effects, arising from CSR and space-charge forces generated from source particles both on the bend and on the straightmore » path prior to the bend, are analyzed using Lienard-Wiechert fields, and their overall net effect is obtained. The influence of the plates on the transients is contrasted to their shielding of the steady-state radiated power. Results for emittance degradation induced by this self-interaction are also presented.« less
A unifying model for planform straightness of ripples and dunes in air and water
Rubin, David M.
2012-01-01
Geologists, physicists, and mathematicians have studied ripples and dunes for more than a century, but despite considerable effort, no general model has been proposed to explain perhaps the most fundamental property of their morphology: why are some bedforms straight, continuous, parallel, and uniform in planform geometry (i.e. two-dimensional) whereas others are irregular (three-dimensional)? Here we argue that physical coupling along the crest of a bedform is required to produce straight crests and that along-crest flow and sand transport provide effective physical mechanisms for that coupling. Ripples and dunes with the straightest and most continuous crests include longitudinal and oblique dunes in unidirectional flows, wave ripples, dunes in reversing flows, wind ripples, and ripples migrating along a slope. At first glance, these bedforms appear quite different (ripples and dunes; air and water; transverse, oblique, and longitudinal orientations relative to the net sand-transport direction), but they all have one property in common: a process that increases the amount of along-crest sand transport (that lengthens and straightens their crests) relative to the across-crest transport (that makes them migrate and take the more typical and more three-dimensional planform geometry). In unidirectional flows that produce straight bedforms, along-crest transport of sand is caused by along-crest flow (non-transverse bedform orientation), gravitational transport along an inclined crest, or ballistic splash in air. Bedforms in reversing flows tend to be straighter than their unidirectional counterparts, because reverse transport across the bedform crest reduces the net across-crest transport (that causes the more typical irregular geometry) relative to the along-crest transport (that smoothes and straightens planform geometry).
VIEW OF PARALLEL LINE OF LARGE BORE HOLES IN NORTHERN ...
VIEW OF PARALLEL LINE OF LARGE BORE HOLES IN NORTHERN QUARRY AREA, FACING NORTHEAST - Granite Hill Plantation, Quarry No. 2, South side of State Route 16, 1.3 miles northeast east of Sparta, Sparta, Hancock County, GA
Astronaut Scott Carpenter tests balance mechanism performance
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
1961-01-01
Astronaut M. Scott Carpenter's balance mechanism performance is tested by his walking on a narrow board in his bare feet. He is performing this test at the School of Aviation Medicine, Pensicola, Florida (04570); Carpenter walks a straight line by putting one foot directly in front of the other to test his balance (04571).
Construction of Mathematical Definitions: An Epistemological and Didactical Study
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Ouvrier-Buffet, Cecile
2004-01-01
The definition-construction process is central to mathematics. The aim of this paper is to propose a few Situations of Definition-Construction (called SDC) and to study them. Our main objectives are to describe the definition-construction process and to design SDC for classroom. A SDC on "discrete straight line" and its mathematical and…
Calculus, Radio Dials and the Straight-Line Frequency Variable Capacitor
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Boyadzhiev, Khristo N.
2010-01-01
Most often radio dials of analogue radios are not uniformly graded; the frequencies are cramped on the left side or on the right side. This makes tuning more difficult. Why are dials made this way? We shall see here that simple calculus can help understand this problem and solve it. (Contains 7 figures.)
78 FR 59045 - Missouri; Major Disaster and Related Determinations
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2013-09-25
..., straight-line winds, and flooding during the period of August 2-14, 2013, is of sufficient severity and... limited to 75 percent of the total eligible costs. Federal funds provided under the Stafford Act for Public Assistance also will be limited to 75 percent of the total eligible costs, with the exception of...
78 FR 67383 - Kansas; Major Disaster and Related Determinations
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2013-11-12
..., straight-line winds, tornadoes, and flooding during the period of July 22 to August 16, 2013, is of... Hazard Mitigation will be limited to 75 percent of the total eligible costs. Federal funds provided under the Stafford Act for Public Assistance also will be limited to 75 percent of the total eligible costs...
75 FR 51837 - Tennessee; Amendment No. 11 to Notice of a Major Disaster Declaration
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2010-08-23
... Supplemental Appropriations Act, 2010, Public Law 111-212, FEMA is amending the cost-sharing arrangement... of Tennessee due to the damage resulting from severe storms, flooding, straight-line winds, and... declaration are authorized at 90 percent of total eligible costs. (The following Catalog of Federal Domestic...
50 CFR 223.207 - Approved TEDs.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-10-01
... wet or dry. Any such measurement will be of the stretched mesh size. (a) Hard TEDs. Hard TEDs are TEDs.... The resultant escape opening with a webbing flap must have a stretched mesh circumference of no less... used when making the side cuts. The sum of the straight-line base measurement and the stretched...
50 CFR 223.207 - Approved TEDs.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-10-01
... wet or dry. Any such measurement will be of the stretched mesh size. (a) Hard TEDs. Hard TEDs are TEDs.... The resultant escape opening with a webbing flap must have a stretched mesh circumference of no less... used when making the side cuts. The sum of the straight-line base measurement and the stretched...
50 CFR 223.207 - Approved TEDs.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-10-01
... wet or dry. Any such measurement will be of the stretched mesh size. (a) Hard TEDs. Hard TEDs are TEDs.... The resultant escape opening with a webbing flap must have a stretched mesh circumference of no less... used when making the side cuts. The sum of the straight-line base measurement and the stretched...
John Dewey on Listening and Friendship in School and Society
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Waks, Leonard J.
2011-01-01
In this essay, Leonard Waks examines John Dewey's account of listening, drawing on Dewey's writings to establish a direct connection in his work between listening and democracy. Waks devotes the first part of the essay to explaining Dewey's distinction between one-way or straight-line listening and transactional listening-in-conversation, and to…
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Reister, D.B.
This paper uses the Pontryagin maximum principle to find time optimal paths for a constant speed unicycle. The time optimal paths consist of sequences of arcs of circles and straight lines. The maximum principle introduced concepts (dual variables, bang-bang solutions, singular solutions, and transversality conditions) that provide important insight into the nature of the time optimal paths. 10 refs., 6 figs.
Linearization: Students Forget the Operating Point
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Roubal, J.; Husek, P.; Stecha, J.
2010-01-01
Linearization is a standard part of modeling and control design theory for a class of nonlinear dynamical systems taught in basic undergraduate courses. Although linearization is a straight-line methodology, it is not applied correctly by many students since they often forget to keep the operating point in mind. This paper explains the topic and…
Reconstruction of flux coordinates from discretized magnetic field maps
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Predebon, I.; Momo, B.; Suzuki, Y.; Auriemma, F.
2018-04-01
We provide a simple method to build a straight field-line coordinate system from discretized (Poincaré) magnetic field maps. The method is suitable for any plasma domain with nested flux surfaces, including magnetic islands. Illustrative examples are shown for tokamak, heliotron, and reversed-field-pinch plasmas with m = 1 islands.
40 CFR Appendix A to Subpart E of... - Cost-Effectiveness Analysis Guidelines
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-07-01
... of the resources which are attributable to the waste treatment management system or to one of its... end of the planning period. In this case, salvage value shall be estimated using straight line..., commercial and institutional sources, shall be based upon one of the following methods: (a) Preferred method...
40 CFR Appendix A to Subpart E of... - Cost-Effectiveness Analysis Guidelines
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-07-01
... of the resources which are attributable to the waste treatment management system or to one of its... end of the planning period. In this case, salvage value shall be estimated using straight line..., commercial and institutional sources, shall be based upon one of the following methods: (a) Preferred method...
40 CFR Appendix A to Subpart E of... - Cost-Effectiveness Analysis Guidelines
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-07-01
... of the resources which are attributable to the waste treatment management system or to one of its... end of the planning period. In this case, salvage value shall be estimated using straight line..., commercial and institutional sources, shall be based upon one of the following methods: (a) Preferred method...
40 CFR Appendix A to Subpart E of... - Cost-Effectiveness Analysis Guidelines
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-07-01
... of the resources which are attributable to the waste treatment management system or to one of its... end of the planning period. In this case, salvage value shall be estimated using straight line..., commercial and institutional sources, shall be based upon one of the following methods: (a) Preferred method...
40 CFR Appendix A to Subpart E of... - Cost-Effectiveness Analysis Guidelines
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-07-01
... of the resources which are attributable to the waste treatment management system or to one of its... end of the planning period. In this case, salvage value shall be estimated using straight line..., commercial and institutional sources, shall be based upon one of the following methods: (a) Preferred method...
40 CFR 89.324 - Calibration of other equipment.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-07-01
... and operation. Adjust the analyzer to optimize performance. (2) Zero the methane analyzer with zero...-fit straight line is 2 percent or less of the value at each non-zero data point and within ± 0.3 percent of full scale on the zero, concentration values may be calculated by use of a single calibration...
40 CFR 89.324 - Calibration of other equipment.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-07-01
... and operation. Adjust the analyzer to optimize performance. (2) Zero the methane analyzer with zero...-fit straight line is 2 percent or less of the value at each non-zero data point and within ± 0.3 percent of full scale on the zero, concentration values may be calculated by use of a single calibration...
40 CFR 89.324 - Calibration of other equipment.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-07-01
... and operation. Adjust the analyzer to optimize performance. (2) Zero the methane analyzer with zero...-fit straight line is 2 percent or less of the value at each non-zero data point and within ± 0.3 percent of full scale on the zero, concentration values may be calculated by use of a single calibration...
40 CFR 89.324 - Calibration of other equipment.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-07-01
... and operation. Adjust the analyzer to optimize performance. (2) Zero the methane analyzer with zero...-fit straight line is 2 percent or less of the value at each non-zero data point and within ± 0.3 percent of full scale on the zero, concentration values may be calculated by use of a single calibration...
Comprehension for What? Preparing Students for Their Meaningful Future
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Conley, Mark W.; Wise, Antoinette
2011-01-01
Researchers, policymakers, and educators face a daunting task these days concerning literacy education for the here and now and literacy for the future. Even though one clings to the romantic notion that education provides the building blocks in a straight line to a meaningful future, the reality is that mixed goals and instructional messages…
40 CFR 86.1324-84 - Carbon dioxide analyzer calibration.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-07-01
... calibrated, if the deviation from a least-squares best-fit straight line is within ±2 percent or less of the... exceeds these limits, then the best-fit non-linear equation which represents the data within these limits shall be used to determine concentration values. (d) The initial and periodic interference, system check...
40 CFR 91.316 - Hydrocarbon analyzer calibration.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-07-01
... deviation from a least-squares best-fit straight line is two percent or less of the value at each data point... exceeds two percent at any point, use the best-fit non-linear equation which represents the data to within two percent of each test point to determine concentration. (d) Oxygen interference optimization...
40 CFR 89.322 - Carbon dioxide analyzer calibration.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-07-01
... engineering practice. For each range calibrated, if the deviation from a least-squares best-fit straight line... range. If the deviation exceeds these limits, the best-fit non-linear equation which represents the data... interference, system check, and calibration test procedures specified in 40 CFR part 1065 may be used in lieu...
40 CFR 90.316 - Hydrocarbon analyzer calibration.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-07-01
... from a least-squares best-fit straight line is two percent or less of the value at each data point... exceeds two percent at any point, use the best-fit non-linear equation which represents the data to within two percent of each test point to determine concentration. (d) Oxygen interference optimization. Prior...
40 CFR 86.123-78 - Oxides of nitrogen analyzer calibration.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-07-01
...-squares best-fit straight line is 2 percent or less of the value at each data point, concentration values... percent at any point, the best-fit non-linear equation which represents the data to within 2 percent of... may be necessary to clean the analyzer frequently to prevent interference with NOX measurements (see...
40 CFR 86.123-78 - Oxides of nitrogen analyzer calibration.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-07-01
...-squares best-fit straight line is 2 percent or less of the value at each data point, concentration values... percent at any point, the best-fit non-linear equation which represents the data to within 2 percent of... may be necessary to clean the analyzer frequently to prevent interference with NOX measurements (see...
40 CFR 86.123-78 - Oxides of nitrogen analyzer calibration.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-07-01
...-squares best-fit straight line is 2 percent or less of the value at each data point, concentration values... percent at any point, the best-fit non-linear equation which represents the data to within 2 percent of... may be necessary to clean the analyzer frequently to prevent interference with NOX measurements (see...
40 CFR 86.1324-84 - Carbon dioxide analyzer calibration.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-07-01
... calibrated, if the deviation from a least-squares best-fit straight line is within ±2 percent or less of the... exceeds these limits, then the best-fit non-linear equation which represents the data within these limits shall be used to determine concentration values. (d) The initial and periodic interference, system check...
40 CFR 90.316 - Hydrocarbon analyzer calibration.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-07-01
... from a least-squares best-fit straight line is two percent or less of the value at each data point... exceeds two percent at any point, use the best-fit non-linear equation which represents the data to within two percent of each test point to determine concentration. (d) Oxygen interference optimization. Prior...
40 CFR 90.316 - Hydrocarbon analyzer calibration.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-07-01
... from a least-squares best-fit straight line is two percent or less of the value at each data point... exceeds two percent at any point, use the best-fit non-linear equation which represents the data to within two percent of each test point to determine concentration. (d) Oxygen interference optimization. Prior...
40 CFR 86.1324-84 - Carbon dioxide analyzer calibration.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-07-01
... calibrated, if the deviation from a least-squares best-fit straight line is within ±2 percent or less of the... exceeds these limits, then the best-fit non-linear equation which represents the data within these limits shall be used to determine concentration values. (d) The initial and periodic interference, system check...
40 CFR 89.322 - Carbon dioxide analyzer calibration.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-07-01
... engineering practice. For each range calibrated, if the deviation from a least-squares best-fit straight line... range. If the deviation exceeds these limits, the best-fit non-linear equation which represents the data... interference, system check, and calibration test procedures specified in 40 CFR part 1065 may be used in lieu...
40 CFR 91.316 - Hydrocarbon analyzer calibration.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-07-01
... deviation from a least-squares best-fit straight line is two percent or less of the value at each data point... exceeds two percent at any point, use the best-fit non-linear equation which represents the data to within two percent of each test point to determine concentration. (d) Oxygen interference optimization...
40 CFR 90.318 - Oxides of nitrogen analyzer calibration.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-07-01
... chemiluminescent oxides of nitrogen analyzer as described in this section. (b) Initial and Periodic Interference...-squares best-fit straight line is two percent or less of the value at each data point, calculate... at any point, use the best-fit non-linear equation which represents the data to within two percent of...
40 CFR 91.318 - Oxides of nitrogen analyzer calibration.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-07-01
... nitrogen analyzer as described in this section. (b) Initial and periodic interference. Prior to its...-squares best-fit straight line is two percent or less of the value at each data point, concentration... two percent at any point, use the best-fit non-linear equation which represents the data to within two...
40 CFR 90.318 - Oxides of nitrogen analyzer calibration.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-07-01
... chemiluminescent oxides of nitrogen analyzer as described in this section. (b) Initial and Periodic Interference...-squares best-fit straight line is two percent or less of the value at each data point, calculate... at any point, use the best-fit non-linear equation which represents the data to within two percent of...
40 CFR 91.318 - Oxides of nitrogen analyzer calibration.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-07-01
... nitrogen analyzer as described in this section. (b) Initial and periodic interference. Prior to its...-squares best-fit straight line is two percent or less of the value at each data point, concentration... two percent at any point, use the best-fit non-linear equation which represents the data to within two...
40 CFR 86.1323-84 - Oxides of nitrogen analyzer calibration.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-07-01
... calibrated, if the deviation from a least-squares best-fit straight line is within ±2 percent of the value at... exceeds these limits, then the best-fit non-linear equation which represents the data within these limits shall be used to determine concentration values. (c) The initial and periodic interference, system check...
40 CFR 86.1323-84 - Oxides of nitrogen analyzer calibration.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-07-01
... calibrated, if the deviation from a least-squares best-fit straight line is within ±2 percent of the value at... exceeds these limits, then the best-fit non-linear equation which represents the data within these limits shall be used to determine concentration values. (c) The initial and periodic interference, system check...
40 CFR 89.322 - Carbon dioxide analyzer calibration.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-07-01
... engineering practice. For each range calibrated, if the deviation from a least-squares best-fit straight line... range. If the deviation exceeds these limits, the best-fit non-linear equation which represents the data... interference, system check, and calibration test procedures specified in 40 CFR part 1065 may be used in lieu...