2,073 research outputs found
Photograph of a bust of the author Tasma
Photograph of a bust of the author Tasma (Jessie Catherine Couvreur). Pencilled on verso of photo 'Tasma - enlargement of an original lent to H.M. Green? by Mrs Erdos, a neice of Tasma
Isogeometric analysis for multi-patch structured Kirchhoff–Love shells
We present an isogeometric method for Kirchhoff–Love shell analysis of shell structures with geometries composed of multiple patches and which possibly possess extraordinary vertices, i.e. vertices with a valency different to four. The proposed isogeometric shell discretisation is based on the one hand on the approximation of the mid-surface by a particular class of multi-patch surfaces, called analysis-suitable G1 (Collin et al., 2016), and on the other hand on the use of the globally C1-smooth isogeometric multi-patch spline space (Farahat et al., 2023). We use our developed technique within an isogeometric Kirchhoff–Love shell formulation (Kiendl et al., 2009) to study linear and non-linear shell problems on multi-patch structures. Thereby, the numerical results show the great potential of our method for efficient shell analysis of geometrically complex multi-patch structures which cannot be modelled without the use of extraordinary vertices.Funding Information: The authors wish to thank the anonymous reviewers for their comments that helped to improve the paper. A. Farahat and M. Kapl have been supported by the Austrian Science Fund (FWF) through the project P 33023-N. H.M. Verhelst is grateful for the funding from Delft University of Technology. J. Kiendl has received funding from the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program (grant agreement No 864482). Additionally, the authors are grateful for the support from the developers of the Geometry + Simulation Modules, in particular from A. Mantzaflaris (Inria Sophia Antipolis-Méditerranée). Funding Information: The authors wish to thank the anonymous reviewers for their comments that helped to improve the paper. A. Farahat and M. Kapl have been supported by the Austrian Science Fund (FWF) through the project P 33023-N . H.M. Verhelst is grateful for the funding from Delft University of Technology . J. Kiendl has received funding from the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program (grant agreement No 864482 ). Additionally, the authors are grateful for the support from the developers of the Geometry + Simulation Modules, in particular from A. Mantzaflaris (Inria Sophia Antipolis-Méditerranée).Numerical AnalysisShip Hydromechanics and Structure
Samuel H.M. Byers; Poet; Author; Diplomat; Oskaloosa; Iowa; Mahaska County; Iowa
This is a photograph taken of Samuel H.M. Byers at the onset of the Civil War in 1861. Byers served in the Union Army during the Civil War and gained a great deal of inspiration for his poetic writing during the war. Byers's most famous work is a poem entitled "Sherman's March to the Sea" recapping events that took place during this famous piece of American history. Byers is also credited with writing the state song of Iowa, played to the melody of "O, Christmas Tree". After gaining fame and fortune from his writing, Byers pursued a career in diplomacy, serving in the U.S. Consulate in Switzerland and Italy. Byers then came back to the U.S., living out the remainder of his days in Los Angeles, California. Byers died in 1933, at the age 95
L'Image Du Buddha Dans L'Art Lao
Text and photos of Buddha images in LaosL'Image Du Buddha Dans L'Art Lao. Vientiane: H.M. Demain, 197
Thermally-enhanced oil recovery from stranded fields: Synergy potential for geothermal and oil exploitation
Accepted author manuscriptReservoir EngineeringApplied Geolog
Cure of codfish and herrings; Extracts for a work on the cure of codfish and herring
Useful Hints on the Cure of Codfish and HerringsAt head of title: Official; "(Extracts from), reprinted, by permission, by H.M. inspectors for Irish Fisheries", "... having obtained the permission from Newfoundland Fisheries Commission ..." --page
Trustworthy 100-Year Digital Objects: Durable Encoding for When It's Too Late to Ask
How can an author store digital information so that it will be reliably intelligible, even years later when he is no longer available to answer questions? Methods that might work are not good enough; what is preserved today should be reliably intelligible whenever someone wants it. Prior proposals fail because they generally confound saved data with irrelevant details of today’s information technology—details that are difficult to define, extract, and save completely and accurately.
We use a virtual machine to represent and eventually to render any data whatsoever. We focus on a case of intermediate difficulty—an executable procedure—and identify a variant for every other data type.
This solution might be more elaborate than needed to render some text, image, audio, or video data. Simple data can be preserved as representations using well-known standards. We sketch practical methods for files ranging from simple structures to those containing computer programs, treating simple cases here and deferring complex cases for future work. Enough of the complete solution is known to enable practical aggressive preservation programs today.
Questioning the Borders of Contemporary US Fiction: H.M. Naqvi’s “Home Boy”, 9/11 and the American Novel
This essay investigates the margins of twentieth-century American novel in the light of the increasingly deterritorialized status of US culture and literature – a literature whose borders need to be reconfigured not only in terms of reception, but of creation as well. In particular, the essay focuses on the Pakistani-born author H.M. Naqvi and his first novel, Home Boy (2009) – part immigrant narrative, part Bildungsroman, part 9/11 novel. Rooting Home Boy deep in the American grain and at the same time investigating the construction of Otherness through the protagonist’s “inoutsider” status and perspective, Naqvi explores the potential and the limits of what can be considered as “performative Americaness,” defined not by genealogic or geographical belonging, but by cultural and literary affiliations in the politically and socially unstable scenario of the post-national worl
Chemical lecture notes : Taken from Prof. C.O. Curtman's lectures at the St. Louis college of pharmacy /
Cover title: Curtman's lecture notes. H.M. Whelpley.Mode of access: Internet
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