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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

Very steep spectrum radio sources and clusters of galaxies

Laycock, S. C. January 1987 (has links)
The topics covered in this dissertation are all areas of study involving observations at low radio frequencies. There are three main subject areas: a study of the twin-tailed radio galaxy 3C3.1; a study of both an old and a new sample of radio sources that exhibit very steep radio spectra at low frequency; the design and construction of a new radio telescope operating at low radio frequency together with the making of a new radio source survey. 3C3.1 has been studied by other authors but new high angular resolution, high sensitivity observations at low radio frequency have allowed further progress to be made in understanding the behaviour of this source. It has been thought that 3C3.1 type sources would be responsible for most (if not all) of the very steep spectrum radio sources. 3C3.1 is relatively close, hence easy to study. A model has been developed which explains the previously not understood brightness distribution along the long luminous jets. In order to quantify the predicted behaviour more precisely a set of simple numerical simulations was performed. Very steep spectrum radio sources are by their nature easier to detect at low radio frequencies. In the past, it has been shown that most, if not all, very steep spectrum sources are associated with clusters of galaxies. Both optical and further radio observations of a sample of sources prepared by the author, and a sample prepared by other workers were undertaken. The optical observations of high sensitivity have greatly strengthened the hypothesis that all of such sources are indeed associated with clusters of galaxies. The radio observations, both performed at high and low radio frequencies, have shown that such sources seem to have in general evolved from conventional sources with both 'tailed' and 'double' radio structure. A serious limitation for further work at low radio frequencies is the availibility of high sensitivity, high resolution instruments. A twenty five element interferometer with a one mile baseline operating at 38 MHz was designed and constructed. This allowed an appraisal of the operating conditions at such low frequency. A deep radio survey of the north pole was performed and a new sample of very steep spectrum constructed.
2

Waves and particles upstream of the earth's bow shock

Blanco-Cano, Xochitl Guillermina January 1995 (has links)
No description available.
3

Induction of Visible Mutations in Mormoniella by Use of Low Frequency Ultrasonic Energy

Grubbs, Steven C. 08 1900 (has links)
Low-frequency ultrasonic energy was utilized in an attempt to induce visible mutations in the parasitoid wasp Mormoniella vitripennis. This study demonstrates that low frequency ultrasound may be used as an effective mutagenic agent in this organism, and suggests that it may have applications to other genetic systems.
4

Low frequency seismic signals lead to hydrocarbon indication and monitoring tool

Alsalim, Mohammed Saad January 1900 (has links)
Master of Science / Department of Geology / Abdelmoneam Raef / Recently, South Rub’ al-Khali Company Limited (SRAK) acquired a preliminary survey in the Saudi’s oil producing area to develop a feasible new hydrocarbon indication and monitoring (I & M) device using low frequency seismic signals. Based on broadband seismometer data, the new Hydrocarbon I & M might predict the possibility of a hydrocarbon basin underneath by way of evaluating the received spectra for an additional energy shell between 2.0-6.0 Hz. Such a study is also referred to as hydrocarbon microtremor analysis and recently some contracting geophysical service companies offer such studies. This report will concentrate on the hydrocarbon microtremor analysis of synchronized signal of one frequency and an extra re-determination possibly at a separate location. The paper reports on several critical likely misconceptions and examines repeatability of hydrocarbon microtremors. This work indicates that signal generated by manmade operations can yield same tremor as that assumed for hydrocarbon reservoirs. Equally important, the presence of surface waves generated by anthropogenic signal indicates frequency limits ranging from 1 to 10 Hertz as a result of isolated surface waves. The difficulty of isolating any presumed hydrocarbon related tremors from ambient noise hamper efforts of understanding and applying microseism signals to hydrocarbon exploration and monitoring. Repeatability study by Peter, H. & Sascha, B. (2008) raised questions regarding the source of hydrocarbon microtremors. For improved chances of isolating the implied hydrocarbon microtremors from manmade tremors and near-surface impacts, the data require precise recording based on three metrics, frequencies above 3 Hz should be conserved, highly sensitive seismometers should be engaged, and the data registering time should be enough to register ‘tremor-free’ readings.
5

Piezoelectric Artificial Kelp: Experimentally Validated Parameter Optimization of a Quasi-Static, Flow-Driven Energy Harvester

Pankonien, Alexander Morgan 2011 August 1900 (has links)
Piezoelectric energy harvesting is the process of taking an external mechanical input and converting it directly into electrical energy via the piezoelectric effect. To determine the power created by a piezoelectric energy harvester, a specific application with defined input and design constraints must first be chosen. The following thesis established a concept design of a hydrokinetic energy harvesting system, the piezoelectric artificial kelp (PAK), which uses piezoelectric materials to harvest coastal ocean waves while having a beneficial impact on the surrounding environment. The harvester design mimics the configuration of sea-kelp, a naturally occurring plant that anchors to the ocean floor and extends into the water column. Underwater currents caused by wave-action result in periodic oscillations in the kelp. In order to determine the average power generated by this design concept, predictive tools were devised that allowed for the determination of the optimized average power produced by the piezoelectric energy harvester. For a stiff energy harvester, the linear differential equations were analytically solved to find an equation for the average power generated as a function of design parameters. These equations were used to compare the effect on power output of the design configuration and piezoelectric material choice between a piezopolymer (PVDF) and a piezoceramic (PZT). The homogeneous bimorph was found to have the optimal design configuration and it was shown that a harvester constructed using PVDF would produce approximately 1.6 times as much power as one using PZT. For a flexible energy harvester, an iterative nonlinear solution technique using an assumed polynomial solution for the local curvature of the energy harvester was used to verify and extend the analytic solutions to large deflections. An energy harvester was built using off-the-shelf piezoelectric elements and tested in a wave tank facility to validate experimentally the voltage and average power predicted by the analytical solution. The iterative code showed the PAK harvester to produce volumetric power on the order of other energy harvesting concepts (17.8 micro [mu]W/cm³). Also, a full-scale PAK harvester approximately ten meters long in typical wave conditions was found to produce approximately one watt of power.
6

Low-frequency Disturbance Injection for Active Islanding Detection of Multiple Electronically-interfaced Distributed Generation Units

Hernandez Gonzalez, Guillermo 24 July 2013 (has links)
This thesis proposes and evaluates the application of a low-frequency disturbance injection, as an active islanding detection method, in a microgrid with multiple electronically-interfaced Distributed Generation (DG) units. Each DG unit is interfaced to the microgrid through a two-level Voltage-Sourced Converter (VSC). The low-frequency disturbance signal for islanding detection is injected through the q-axis control of each VSC unit. The low-frequency signal is at 1 Hz with an amplitude of up to 2.5 % of the rated VA of the VSC unit and augments the reference signal of the q-axis control. The effectiveness of the low-frequency injection for islanding detection is examined under two distinct VSC control scenarios. In the first scenario, each VSC only injects pre-determined real- and reactive-power components in the system and does not participate in frequency/voltage control. In the second scenario, the VSC controls are also equipped with frequency/real-power and voltage/reactive-power droop characteristics and thus share power and participate in frequency and voltage control of the microgrid, specifically in the islanded mode. The investigations reported in this thesis show that the proposed islanding detection method can effectively detect an islanding event under both VSC control strategies, subject to the conditions that UL and/or IEEE anti-islanding standards impose. The studies show that an islanding event can be detected within 536 ms subsequent to the instant of islanding. As part of this thesis, an eigen analysis software tool has been developed that can systematically investigate the impact of low-frequency disturbance injection on the small-signal stability and dynamic performance of the microgrid, prior and subsequent to an islanding event. This thesis concludes that the low-frequency disturbance injection-based method can be successfully applied to a multi-DG system, since (i) islanding detection is achieved within applicable standards requirements by all DG units in the system, and (ii) the low-frequency disturbance injection signal has no noticeable impact on the dynamics nor the small-signal stability of the system if its magnitude is kept below a pre specified limit.
7

Low-frequency Disturbance Injection for Active Islanding Detection of Multiple Electronically-interfaced Distributed Generation Units

Hernandez Gonzalez, Guillermo 24 July 2013 (has links)
This thesis proposes and evaluates the application of a low-frequency disturbance injection, as an active islanding detection method, in a microgrid with multiple electronically-interfaced Distributed Generation (DG) units. Each DG unit is interfaced to the microgrid through a two-level Voltage-Sourced Converter (VSC). The low-frequency disturbance signal for islanding detection is injected through the q-axis control of each VSC unit. The low-frequency signal is at 1 Hz with an amplitude of up to 2.5 % of the rated VA of the VSC unit and augments the reference signal of the q-axis control. The effectiveness of the low-frequency injection for islanding detection is examined under two distinct VSC control scenarios. In the first scenario, each VSC only injects pre-determined real- and reactive-power components in the system and does not participate in frequency/voltage control. In the second scenario, the VSC controls are also equipped with frequency/real-power and voltage/reactive-power droop characteristics and thus share power and participate in frequency and voltage control of the microgrid, specifically in the islanded mode. The investigations reported in this thesis show that the proposed islanding detection method can effectively detect an islanding event under both VSC control strategies, subject to the conditions that UL and/or IEEE anti-islanding standards impose. The studies show that an islanding event can be detected within 536 ms subsequent to the instant of islanding. As part of this thesis, an eigen analysis software tool has been developed that can systematically investigate the impact of low-frequency disturbance injection on the small-signal stability and dynamic performance of the microgrid, prior and subsequent to an islanding event. This thesis concludes that the low-frequency disturbance injection-based method can be successfully applied to a multi-DG system, since (i) islanding detection is achieved within applicable standards requirements by all DG units in the system, and (ii) the low-frequency disturbance injection signal has no noticeable impact on the dynamics nor the small-signal stability of the system if its magnitude is kept below a pre specified limit.
8

Ultra Low Frequency Digital Analyzer: Design and Construction

Braithwaite, David John 05 1900 (has links)
<p> This thesis describes the development of an ultra low frequency digital analyzer from mathematical concepts and error characteristics set out in a publication^2 co-authored by the supervisor. The development is carried to the actual construction of a practical, economical, operating instrument, capable of giving information leading directly to the mean square value and the approximate amplitude probability distribution for ultra low frequency waveforms, both periodic and non-periodic. The final detailed design is described and justified, and the error characteristics derived in the above mentioned publication are interpreted for the design. No further development of principles or error characteristics is undertaken.</p> / Thesis / Master of Engineering (MEngr)
9

A novel dielectric technique for monitoring the lyophilisation of globular proteins

Suherman, Phe Man January 2001 (has links)
No description available.
10

Edge and interfacial vibration of a thin elasic cylindrical panel

Arulchandran, Victor January 2013 (has links)
Free vibrations of a thin elastic circular cylindrical panel localized near the rectilinear edge, propagating along the edge and decaying in its circumferential direction, are investigated in the framework of the two-dimensional equations in the Kircho↵-Love theory of shells. At first the panel is assumed to be infinite longitudinally and semi-infinite along its length of curvature (of course not realistically possible), followed by the assumption that the panel is then finite along its length of curvature and fixed and free conditions are imposed on the second resulting boundary. Using the comprehensive asymptotic analysis detailed in Kaplunov et al. (1998) “Dynamics of Thin Walled Elastic Bodies”, leading order asymptotic solutions are derived for three types of localized vibration, they are bending, extensional, and super-low frequency. Explicit representation of the exact solutions cannot be obtained due to the degree of complexity of the solving equations and relevant boundary conditions, however, computational methods are used to find exact numerical solutions and graphs. Parameters, particularly panel thickness, wavelength, poisson’s ratio, and circumferential panel length, are varied, and their e↵ects on vibration analyzed. This analysis is further extended to investigate localized vibration on the interface (perfect bond) of two cylindrical panels joined at their respective rectilinear edges, propagating along the interface and decaying in the circumferential direction away from the interface. An earlier, similar, localized vibration problem presented in Kaplunov et al. (1999) “Free Localized Vibrations of a Semi-Infinite Cylindrical Shell” and Kaplunov and Wilde (2002) “Free Interfacial Vibrations in Cylindrical Shells” is replicated for comparison with all cases. The asymptotics are similar, however in this problem the numerics highlight the stronger e↵ect of curvature on the decay of the super-low frequency vibrations, and to some extent on the leading order bending vibration.

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