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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

A uniform theory of diffraction approach to determine endfire glide slope performance in the presence of ground plane irregularities

Gordon, Matthew D. January 1994 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Ohio University, November, 1994. / Title from PDF t.p.
2

An airport glide-path system, using flush-mounted, traveling-wave runway antennas /

McFarland, Richard Herbert January 1962 (has links)
No description available.
3

Development of a near-zone computer model for investigation of feasibility of ground checking the capture-effect glide slope

D'Estaintot, Thierry Langlois. January 1984 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Ohio University, June, 1984. / Title from PDF t.p.
4

Design of an image radiation monitor for ILS glide slope in the presence of snow

Marcum, Frank. January 1995 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Ohio University, August, 1995. / Title from PDF t.p.
5

Analysis, design and fabrication of a frangible tower for use with sideband reference glide slope systems

Johnson, Matthew H. January 1996 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Ohio University, August, 1996. / Title from PDF t.p.
6

En route speed optimization for continuous descent arrival

Lowther, Marcus Benjamin. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (M. S.)--Aerospace Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, 2008. / Committee Chair: Clarke, John-Paul; Committee Member: Barnes, Earl; Committee Member: Pritchett, Amy
7

Measuring Glide Reflection Symmetry in Human Movements

January 2017 (has links)
abstract: Many studies on human walking pattern assume that adult gait is characterized by bilateral symmetrical behavior. It is well understood that maintaining symmetry in walking patterns increases energetic eciency. We present a framework to provide a quantitative assessment of human walking patterns, especially assessments related to symmetric and asymmetric gait patterns purely based on glide reflection. A Gliding symmetry score is calculated from the data obtained from Motion Capture(MoCap) system. Six primary joints (Shoulder, Elbow, Palm, Hip, Knee, Foot) are considered for this study. Two dierent abnormalities were chosen and studied carefully. All the two gaits were mimicked in controlled environment. The framework proposed clearly showed that it could distinguish the abnormal gaits from the ordinary walking patterns. This framework can be widely used by the doctors and physical therapists for kinematics analysis, bio-mechanics, motion capture research, sports medicine and physical therapy, including human gait analysis and injury rehabilitation. / Dissertation/Thesis / Masters Thesis Electrical Engineering 2017
8

Yod Variation in Australian English : A Sociolinguistic Investigation

Kazemi, Ruholla January 2015 (has links)
In various post-consonantal environments, the palatal glide /j/ has been subject to variation and change since the late 17th century. Retention, coalescence, and deletion of the glide respectively account for various pronunciations of the word due [dju:], [dʒu:], and [du:] in different dialects of English. Research in this area has often focused on internal motivations. However, the external motivations that regulate the practice of glide variants in the speech of different segments of communities have been a relatively recent area of investigation. Among other dialects, Australian English is one of the major varieties that has not been formally assessed in this area. Hence, the aim of this thesis has been to investigate possible associations between the glide variants and their emergence in the speech of 48 speakers of Australian English. The audio data for this study were 12 tokens pronounced by the speakers in wordlist, sentences, and a story, and were extracted from the AusTalk Corpus (Burnham, Cox et al., 2011). The results for separate analysis of social variables seem to indicate that the spread of different glide variants in the speech of speakers are mainly conditioned by age. The combination of the social variables shows that glide retention is most frequent in the speech of higher educated old individuals. By contrast, glide deletion seems to be almost non-existent in their speech while more frequent in the pronunciations of the young. Overall, glide coalescence is the most present and has the strongest stylistic consistency in the speech of individuals. Further details and possible reasons behind these observations are discussed in the work that follows.
9

An In Vitro comparison of three different techniques to create a glide path prior to nickel titanium rotary instrumentation

Cassim, Imran January 2013 (has links)
The preparation of a glide path prior to the use of rotary nickel titanium instrumentation reduces torsional stress and the risk of rotary nickel titanium instrument separation. The objective of this in vitro study was to evaluate 3 different glide path preparation techniques in respect of:  Percentage change of curvature from original canal anatomy; and  The occurrence of aberrations in canal anatomy (ledging, zipping and elbows). One hundred and twenty S-shaped Endo-Training-Blocks were selected. The canals were injected with India ink dye. The blocks were indexed with 3 bur marks and placed into a template before pre-instrumentation images were acquired digitally. The blocks were randomly divided into four groups of thirty each. Glide paths were prepared by a single operator with stainless steel hand K-files only, up to ISO size 20 (group 1, control), stainless steel hand K-files in the M4 reciprocating hand-piece up to ISO size 20 (group 2), hand K-files to ISO size 10 then NiTi rotary PathFiles (group 3) and hand K-files to ISO size 10 then NiTi rotary X-Plorer files (group 4). After glide path preparation the blocks were replaced into the template and post-instrumentation images were digitally acquired. Percentage change of curvature from original canal anatomy: Pre-instrumentation and post-instrumentation images were imported into Rhinoceros software to determine the end points of the canal curves and calculate the percentage change of canal curvature for the radii of apical and coronal curves. The data was collected and tabulated. Differences in canal curvature modification were statistically analysed with respect to logarithmic transformed change from baseline using ANCOVA (p<0.001) with logarithmic transformed pre-instrumentation values as covariate. After establishing preparation differences, both for change from baseline (pre-instrumentation) for apical and coronal curves, specific differences were tested using Fisher’s LSD for pairwise comparisons. Prepared groups differed significantly (p<0.001) and in particular, group 1 (Hand K-files) (control) and group 2 xiii (Hand K-files in M4 Safety reciprocating hand piece) differed significantly from all the other groups while group 3 (Hand K-files and PathFiles) and group 4 (Hand K-files and X-Plorer files) did not differ significantly. Group 3 (Hand K-files and PathFiles) and group4 (Hand K-files and X-Plorer files) were also superior to group1 (Hand K-files) (control) and group2 (Hand K-files in M4 Safety reciprocating hand piece). The occurrence of aberrations in canal anatomy (ledging, zipping and elbows): Pre-instrumentation and post-instrumentation images were superimposed using Adobe Photoshop software. The images were imported into a PowerPoint presentation and examined by three different blinded clinicians independently, for the presence of aberrations. There were no differences between the examiners in their assessment of the images. The data was collected and tabulated. The incidence of canal aberrations was analysed using Fisher’s exact test (p<0.05). The groups differed significantly regarding the number of aberrations (p=0.005). In particular, group 1 (control) (Hand K-files) and group 2 (Hand K-files in the M4 reciprocating hand piece) did not differ statistically (p=0.254; 20% and 6.67%). However group 2 (hand K-files in the M4 reciprocating hand piece) also did not differ significantly from group 3 (Hand K-files and PathFiles) and Group 4 (Hand K-files and X-Plorer files) (p=0.326). There were no aberrations detected in the rotary NiTi groups (group 3 and group 4). / Dissertation (MSc)--University of Pretoria, 2013. / gm2014 / Odontology / unrestricted
10

UTD terrain reflection model with application to ILS glide slope

Ungvichian, Vichate January 1981 (has links)
No description available.

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