6,125 research outputs found

    WRIGHT, AE

    No full text

    aE Journal 2015/2016: aE/INTECTURE innovating architecture

    No full text
    The graduation studio of Architectural Engineering focuses on the integration of (new) technology in architecture. For this purpose, the name aE/ INTECTURE® was devised, which will be developed further as a brand in the coming years. Students start with a technical fascination and translate this into an architectural concept, finally being able to implement this within the environment in a responsible way. ‘If technology is the answer, what is the question?‘ Under the guidance of a team of enthusiastic (guest) lecturers, students search for the dot on the horizon that is necessary for coming up with solutions that improve the quality of the built environment and make it more sustainable. In addition, either the ‘making‘ (make) or ‘the energy and material flow’ (flow) is used and applied as a basis in different contexts.Architectural Engineerin

    aE Journal 2017/2018: aE/Intecture innovating architecture

    No full text
    Driven by the need to think differently about resources, energy, power generation, the choice of materials, and user involvement, we see the built environment in a new perspective. The program, Architectural Engineering, seeks for innovative and inspiring architectural solutions for social and environmental issues throughout all scales.To achieve this, innovation of the architectural challenge is high on our agenda. Innovation is more than just a technical improvement. How do you implement new current issues in modern architecture? We anticipate new energy, materials, and circularity. We also use the current environment of the metropolis and the countryside. We add new buildings, strengthen existing stock, and work on new components of buildings. From high to low tech. From digital to traditional, looking carefully to the context.Architectural Engineerin

    Mammalian drug resistant mutants with multiple gene amplifications: Genes encoding the M1 component of ribonucleotide reductase, the M2 component of ribonucleotide reductase, ornithine decarboxylase, p5-8, the H-subunit of ferritin and the L-subunit of ferritin

    No full text
    PT: J; CR: ASHIHARA J, 1979, METHOD ENZYMOL, V58, P259 AZIZ N, 1986, NUCLEIC ACIDS RES, V14, P915 BEAUMONT C, 1987, J BIOL CHEM, V262, P10619 BEAUMONT C, 1989, J BIOL CHEM, V264, P7498 BIN N, 1976, NUCLEIC ACIDS RES, V3, P2303 BLAKE MS, 1984, ANAL BIOCHEM, V136, P175 BOLIN RW, 1982, CANCER, V50, P1683 BOMFORD AB, 1985, HEPATOLOGY, V5, P870 CASEY JL, 1988, P NATL ACAD SCI USA, V85, P1787 CHIRGWIN JM, 1979, BIOCHEMISTRY-US, V18, P5294 CHOY BK, 1988, CANCER RES, V48, P2029 CHOY BK, 1989, BIOCHEM BIOPH RES CO, V162, P1417 COCKING JM, 1987, SOMAT CELL MOLEC GEN, V13, P221 DEBATISSE M, 1986, MOL CELL BIOL, V6, P1776 DONOVAN PB, 1984, AM J HEMATOL, V17, P329 ENGSTROM PF, 1984, AM J CLIN ONCOL-CANC, V7, P313 ENGSTROM Y, 1984, EMBO J, V3, P863 ERIKSSON S, 1981, J BIOL CHEM, V256, P9436 FEINBERG AP, 1983, ANAL BIOCHEM, V132, P6 GRASLUND A, 1982, J BIOL CHEM, V257, P5711 HARDS RG, 1981, J CELL PHYSIOL, V106, P309 HOPPER S, 1972, J BIOL CHEM, V247, P3336 HURTA RAR, 1990, BIOCHEM BIOPH RES CO, V167, P258 KUHN LC, 1984, CELL, V39, P267 LAEMMLI UK, 1970, NATURE, V227, P680 LEIBOLD EA, 1984, J BIOL CHEM, V259, P4327 MADHUBALA R, 1987, FED PROC, V46, P2254 MCCLARTY GA, 1986, SOMAT CELL MOLEC GEN, V12, P121 MCCLARTY GA, 1987, BIOCHEMISTRY-US, V26, P8004 MCCLARTY GA, 1988, BIOCHEM BIOPH RES CO, V154, P975 MCCLARTY GA, 1988, BIOCHEMISTRY-US, V27, P7524 MCCLARTY GA, 1990, J BIOL CHEM, V265, P7539 MCDONALD CJ, 1981, PHARMACOL THERAPEUT, V14, P1 MURRAY MT, 1987, P NATL ACAD SCI USA, V84, P7438 PEGG AE, 1988, CANCER RES, V48, P759 PIVER MS, 1983, AM J OBSTET GYNECOL, V147, P803 POHJANPELTO P, 1985, MOL CELL BIOL, V5, P1385 ROUAULT TA, 1987, P NATL ACAD SCI USA, V84, P6335 SCHIMKE RT, 1984, CANCER RES, V44, P1735 SCHIMKE RT, 1988, J BIOL CHEM, V263, P5989 SRINIVASAN PR, 1987, J BIOL CHEM, V262, P12871 STARK GR, 1986, CANCER SURV, V5, P1 STARK GR, 1989, CELL, V57, P901 STEEPER JR, 1970, ANAL BIOCHEM, V34, P123 TAGGER AY, 1987, BIOCH CELL BIOL, V65, P925 TAGGER AY, 1988, INT J CANCER, V42, P760 THEIL EC, 1987, ANNU REV BIOCHEM, V56, P289 THELANDER L, 1980, J BIOL CHEM, V255, P7426 THELANDER L, 1986, MOL CELL BIOL, V6, P3433 THELANDER M, 1985, J BIOL CHEM, V260, P2737 THOMAS CE, 1986, J BIOL CHEM, V261, P13064 TOWBIN H, 1979, P NATL ACAD SCI USA, V76, P4350 WRIGHT JA, 1987, SOMAT CELL MOLEC GEN, V13, P155 WRIGHT JA, 1989, DRUG RESISTANCE MAMM, V1, P15 WRIGHT JA, 1989, INT ENCY PHARM THERA, V128, P89; NR: 55; TC: 25; J9: BIOCHIM BIOPHYS ACTA; PG: 8; GA: EH920Source type: Electronic(1

    Main motifs in the prose of the leftist author Kang Kyŏng-ae

    No full text
    The subject of this bachelor thesis is the life and work of the Korean writer Kang Kyǒng-ae, with a focus on her short prose. The aim of this thesis is an analysis of two works - Salt and Darkness - with attention to the context of the author's time. Nowadays, Kang Kyǒng-ae is considered a significant author of the 1930s and her works reflect the phenomenon of Korean emigrants in Manchuria. For a long time, leftist tendencies caused her prose to be neglected, which resulted in a considerably limited number of studies concerned with her work, in comparison to the number of studies about other writers. There are virtually no Czech studies of her work. The text of the thesis initially presents the timeframe of Kang's authorship and then analyzes select works of hers. The analysis of the works focuses on recurring motifs, which are put into a historical and social context. Keywords Kang Kyǒng-ae, Korean 1930s literature, leftist literature, Sogǔm, Ǒdu

    Example stimuli for "Bimodal distribution of performance in discriminating major/minor modes"

    No full text
    Auditory stimuli (fifty sound files in WAV format) used in the experiments reported in C Chubb, CA Dickson, T Dean, C Fagan, DS Mann, CE Wright, M Guan, AE Silva, PK Gregersen and E Kowalsky (2013), "Bimodal distribution of performance in discriminating major/minor modes," Journal of the Acoustical Society of America (in print). Included also one PowerPoint file for demonstration of all fifty sounds.Created and preserved digitally in .WAV format

    Biographical Romance, or The Wonders of ihe Life of An Émigrée of Choice: Fryderyk Járosy (1889–1960) – the Author of Unwritten Memoirs of Life Among the Polish Diaspora in London

    No full text
    English version. Original issue: “Archiwum Emigracji” 2009, no. 1 (10)https://apcz.umk.pl/AE/article/view/AE.2009.01

    Autour du Nepos d'Alburnus, Maior, Panes, fils de Bizo (AE, 20081167=AE, 2007, 1201) : petit-fils ou neveu

    No full text
    International audienceIn this article, the author studies again the inscription on a stone of a nepos from Alburnus Maior: Panes, son of Bizo (AE, 2008, 1167 = AE,2007, 1201). If the word nepos very often means « grandson », there are cases where it means « nephew ». The author pays special attention to the Latin kinship terminology in this inscription because names and lines are not Roman but peregrine. So, there is ambiguity as we cannot exactly know the relations between all these names. Now, between a grandfather and his grandson or an uncle and his nephew, there is the same number of generations. It is necessary for one to compare these to other inscriptions and words in addition to nepos (auia, auus, nurus, gener, pater, mater) or only with nepos in Rhenodanubian provinces (Raetia, Pannoniae, Moesiae, Dacia): these 67 inscriptions are in an appendix.The author concludes that the these two possibilities exist here

    Performance evaluation of the Fiber Bragg Grating (FBG) sensing device and comparison with piezoelectric sensors for AE detection

    No full text
    In-service structural health monitoring (SHM) of engineering structures has assumed a significant role in assessing their safety and integrity. As the most mature technique in fiber-optic field, Fiber Bragg Grating (FBG) sensors have emerged as a reliable, in situ and nondestructive tool for monitoring and diagnostics in large-scale structure. Main objectives of this work are to evaluate and compare the acoustic emission (AE) sensing characteristics simultaneously with FBG sensor array and piezoelectric (PZ) sensors. The pencil-lead-break (PLB) test, ball dropping test and the excitation from the PZ transducer are treated as the AE source which conducted on the platy and blocky structure respectively for acoustic wave. The source repeatability will be verified to choose the source with more stable performance. A commercial 4-channel FBG AE detection device was used to compare with the PZ sensor on the amplitude and frequency response which can indicate the sensitivity of the sensors. The low sensitivity and low sampling rate are the main issue for the engineering application of the FBG sensors. Besides, the sensitivity and directional dependence of the FBG sensor have been discussed. It shows that the encapsulation method of the FBG sensor will impact both of them significantly.</p

    Acoustic Emission as a Structural Health Monitoring (SHM) method for stay cables: Research into the possibilities of AE for stay cables of cable stayed bridges

    No full text
    The stay cables of the north bridge of the Galecopperbrug are reaching the end of their life span. Rijkswaterstaat, which is responsible for the bridges, needs a reliable Structural Health Monitoring (SHM) method to monitor the current state of the stay cables. At the moment, Rijkswaterstaat experiences issues with defining the state and the residual life span of the stay cables of the Galecopperbrug. This study focuses on the technique of Acoustic Emission (AE) for monitoring the stay cables of the Galecopperbrug. The main research question of this study was: “Is the AE-system used in a fracture-based assessment suitable for structural health monitoring of the stay cables of the Galecopperbrug?”. In this study the following methods were used to investigate the AE behaviour of stay cables: a literature study on previous research and the current knowledge of AE and the structural behaviour of cables was done, a full-scale and two verification experiments were performed to investigate the AE behaviour related to wire breaks and to investigate the accuracy of linear source location techniques, an analytical model of the stay cables was made to investigate the influence of different parameters to the capacity of the stay cables and to predict the stress distribution in the wires during the experiment and finally, a SCIA model of the Galecopperbrug was used to investigate the load bearing distribution of the Galecopperbrug. In this study, it was found that wire breaks inside (stay) cables will generate elastic stress waves which can be captured and recorded by AE sensors. Based on an experiment where multiple wire breaks occurred, it was shown that wire breaks can be identified with the help of AE techniques. However, the identification of wire breaks is mainly depending on the correct choice of sensor type. Based on the experiments and assumptions that were made in this study the R6I-AST type of sensors are more suitable for wire break detection and the R3I-AST sensors are more suitable for AE signals due to impacts. Based on the assumptions and the experiments performed in this study it can be concluded that AE can be used in a fracture-based assessment for SHM of the stay cables of the Galecopperbrug.Civil Engineering | Structural Engineerin
    corecore