1,497 research outputs found

    Go Away Jake

    No full text
    Song sung and accompanied on guitar by R.D. Houston and recorded by John Harrod in Pendleton County, Kentucky

    Big Eared Mule

    No full text
    Fiddle tune played by Calvin Sorrell with guitar accompaniment by R.D. Houston and recorded by John Harrod in Pendleton County, Kentucky

    Solution of the problem of composite charge using R.D.38

    No full text
    In this paper the author has solved the problem of internal ballistics of composite charge using 'R.D.38' method which is based upon the usual isothermal approximation. A linear law of burning has been assumed

    Author index

    No full text
    The articles have been scanned in colour with a HP Scanjet 5590; 300dpi. Adobe Acrobat XI Pro was used to OCR the text and also for the merging and conversion to the final presentation PDF-format.This is a continuation of the "Author and Subject Index to the Onderstepoort Journal of Veterinary Science and Animal Industry (1933- l950)" and the "Onderstepoort Journal of Veterinary Research (1951 - 1968)" which appeared in June 1969 and covers the period 1969 to 1973, i.e. Volumes 36 to 40. As from 1974 (Volume 41) it is intended to furnish an Author and Subject Index in Number 4 of each volume covering all four numbers for that particular year

    Noise due to unsteady flow past trailing edges

    No full text
    This paper presents two-dimensional direct numerical simulations (DNS) of noise generated at trailing edges (TE) with zero thickness. The simulations are conducted specifying either no-slip or slip walls in order to investigate viscous effects. In both cases, small amplitude disturbances are introduced close to the inflow boundary that serve as pressure disturbances at the TE. DNS data reveals that the unsteady Kutta condition is not satisfied, irrespective of the wall boundary condition. However, it appears that the validity of the unsteady Kutta condition is not essential for making an accurate prediction of the far field noise. The far field pressure is predicted as a function of the surface pressure difference using a 2-D modification of Amiet's classical theory, and compared with the far field pressure computed directly. Directivity plots provide evidence that the presence of boundary layers and noise generated by an unsteady wake in the no-slip cases lead to smearing of individual lobes, and that the downstream pointing lobes in no-slip wall cases are probably due to nonlinear noise generation in the wake. The simulations are conducted using a high-order accurate numerical method which is free of upwinding, artificial dissipation or any form of explicit filtering, and employs a novel boundary treatment

    Characteristic distribution and scale interaction of turbulence in a boundary layer

    No full text
    This work revisits the concept of turbulent boundary layers from a novel perspective on scale transfer. Turbulence production and dissipation together with the energy budgets are analyzed in the velocity gradient invariant phase space. In combination with filtering, the mechanism of scale coupling is investigated and illustrated for different characteristic flow topologies. The understanding of the scale coupling is important to model turbulence. Turbulence models describe the complex interaction of the scales of motion in a simplified form. The essential task of turbulence modeling is to capture the coupling of the modeled and unmodeled scales as well as the evolution of the modeled scales within the unmodeled flow. This work characterizes the scale coupling by focusing on the interfaces between modeled and unmodeled flow such as production and dissipation. The mechanisms that govern the evolution of the modeled quantities are investigated for their core properties and universal features. Direct numerical simulation (DNS) is carried out to obtain data of a compressible zero pressure-gradient flat plate turbulent boundary layer flow. This flow topology allows to unveil the effect of a wall on the coupling of scales and evolution of turbulence

    Learning from One's Mistakes

    No full text
    Created by R.D. Lee for the Royal Statistics Society, this article describes an exercise, which highlights the effect of sampling without replacement in small populations, and leads to consideration of the relative importance of sample and population size when examining standard error. The author provides a number of exercises, an explanation of statistical errors and the importance of sample size. This is a brief, yet fine resource for those in the field of statistics

    Advances in Near-surface Seismology and Ground-penetrating Radar

    No full text
    Advances in Near-surface Seismology and Ground-penetrating Radar (SEG Geophysical Developments Series No. 15) is a collection of original papers by renowned and respected authors from around the world. Technologies used in the application of near-surface seismology and ground-penetrating radar have seen significant advances in the last several years. Both methods have benefited from new processing tools, increased computer speeds, and an expanded variety of applications. This book, divided into four sections ? ?Reviews,? ?Methodology,? ?Integrative Approaches,? and ?Case Studies? ? captures the most significant cutting-edge issues in active areas of research, unveiling truly pertinent studies that address fundamental applied problems. This collection of manuscripts grew from a core group of papers presented at a postconvention workshop, ?Advances in Near-surface Seismology and Ground-penetrating Radar,? held during the 2009 SEG Annual Meeting in Houston, Texas. This is the first cooperative publication effort between the near-surface communities of SEG, AGU, and EEGS. It will appeal to a large and diverse audience that includes researchers and practitioners inside and outside the near-surface geophysics community

    Mad to be Normal: Thoughts on Psychiatrist R.D Laing and Connections to Liberation Psychology

    No full text
    This article uses the film Mad to be Normal, about R.D. Laing, as an opening into the liberation psychology approaches of Martin-Baro. Examples from the author\u27s own clinical practice as well as personal experiences from life in a Catholic Worker community are  included

    R.D. Laing's language of experience

    No full text
    The radical psychiatrist R.D. Laing (1927-1989) was an accomplished author with an extensive philosophical knowledge that informed his ideas on reading, writing, and interpretation. Laing argues that psychiatry should be modeled on skilful textual exegesis rather than scientific explanation. The exegesis of a psychotic’s words and actions is difficult, he infers, because the impoverishment of our experience cuts us off from the sense that lies within seeming madness. Like philosophers such as Edmund Husserl, Laing therefore criticizes the way in which the natural sciences have invalidated subjective experience. He consequently employs a rhetoric designed to disclose with renewed vigor its complexity, variety and reality. Laing fails, however, to find an alternative to scientific reason: "experience", in his weakest work, is an irrational realm of mystical and self-validating certainty that closely parallels Heidegger’s later accounts of "Being"
    corecore