• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 168
  • 64
  • 27
  • 25
  • 13
  • 4
  • 4
  • 3
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • Tagged with
  • 371
  • 99
  • 98
  • 44
  • 38
  • 35
  • 32
  • 30
  • 27
  • 27
  • 25
  • 25
  • 24
  • 24
  • 23
  • 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.
151

Rigidez de solitons gradiente / Rigidity of gradient solitons

Rondinelle Marcolino Batista 08 July 2010 (has links)
Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento CientÃfico e TecnolÃgico / Nosso objetivo nesse trabalho à apresentar um teorema que caracteriza os solitons gradiente rÃgidos para caso nÃo compacto. Como aplicaÃÃo provaremos que os solitons gradiente homogÃneos sÃo rÃgidos e apresentaremos um exemplar de soliton de Ricci que nÃo pode ser gradiente. / Our goal in this work is to present a theorem which characterizes the gradient solitons rigid for non-compact case. As an application we prove that the homogeneous gradient solitons are rigid and provide an example of the Ricci soliton can not be gradient.
152

Detalhando a solução unidimensional do método OQA com função coeficiente de redução constante aplicado ao transporte escalar interfacial turbulento / Detailing the onedimensional solution of RSW\'s method considering a constant reduction function applied to the turbulent interfacial scalar transport

Bruno Batista Gonçalves 14 March 2014 (has links)
A adequada quantificação do transporte interfacial de escalares em escoamentos turbulentos é de interesse prático para os processos industriais e para a gestão dos problemas ambientais. O fenômeno é matematicamente complexo devido ao uso de equações governantes estatísticas não lineares e não fechadas. Neste estudo, analisam-se detalhes do método de Ondas Quadradas Aleatórias (OQA), o qual fornece uma quantificação estatística que permite fechar as equações e obter um perfil normalizado da grandeza de interesse para a transferência unidimensional turbulenta de escalares, que, num caso idealizado, depende de apenas dois parâmetros adimensionais, A e k (neste caso, k representa um coeficiente de transferência e A depende da interação entre os fenômenos de transporte molecular e turbulento). Simulações numéricas foram realizadas no intuito de se verificar a influência das derivadas de ordem superior para a função normalizada de concentração. A sensibilidade do modelo e a análise de aspectos intrínsecos ao mesmo foram também realizadas. Importante análise das condições de contorno empregadas foi desenvolvida com a inserção de um contorno adicional, com base física, no seio líquido. Como os estudos iniciais tinham se concentrado em exemplos de transferência de massa, uma extensão para o caso de transporte de calor foi considerada. Os resultados obtidos reproduzem o comportamento dos dados experimentais observados na literatura. / The adequate quantification of interfacial scalar transport in turbulent flows is of practical interest for industrial processes and in environmental problems. The phenomenon is mathematically complex due to the use of unclosed nonlinear statistical equations. In this study, we analyze details of the method of Random Square Waves (RSW), which provides a statistical quantification that allows closing the set of equations and getting the normalized scalar profile of the one-dimensional turbulent scalar variable, which, in an idealized case, depends on only two nondimensional parameters, k and A (in this case, k represents a transfer coefficient and A depends on the interaction between the molecular and turbulent transports). Numerical simulations were performed in order to verify the influence of the higher order of derivatives over the normalized concentration function. The sensitivity of the model to the relevant parameters and the analysis of its intrinsic parameters were also performed. An important aspect is the analysis of the boundary conditions, for which an additional condition was proposed and employed in the bulk liquid (with based on physical grounds). Because the initial studies have focused on examples of mass transfer, an extension to the case of heat transport was here considered. The results reproduce the behavior of experimental data reported in the literature.
153

Energy efficiency improvement of a squirrel-cage induction motor through the control strategy

Khoury, Gabriel 16 January 2018 (has links) (PDF)
Energy efficiency optimization of electric machines is an important research field and is part of the objectives of several international projects such as the European Commission Climate and Energy package which has set itself a 20% energy savings target by 2020, and was extended for 2030 with higher targets. Therefore, this thesis proposes an efficiency optimization method of the Induction Machine (IM) through the variation of the control parameters. To achieve this goal, the flux in the airgap is modified according to an optimal flux table computed off-line for all possible operating points. The flux table is calculated with the best possible accuracy through an improved dynamic model of the IM, developed in these works. The latter avoids the main drawback of the classic dynamic model, by considering the effect of core losses. The core loss model established by Bertotti is used. It depends on the frequency and the amplitude of the magnetic field. The losses are then represented by a variable resistor, continuously evaluated according to the operating point. The established optimal flux table is a function of the operating conditions in terms of torque and speed. Indeed, the results show that the flux can be optimized for torque values less than about half the rated torque, and that this threshold is influenced by the speed. The proposed optimization method is simulated, then tested for the scalar control and the field-oriented control, in order to show the genericity of the proposed approach. The validation is carried on an experimental test bench for two 5.5 kW induction motors of different efficiency standards (IE2 and IE3). The results obtained show the reduction of the losses in the motor, thus an improvement of the overall efficiency while preserving a satisfactory dynamic behavior. Consequently, the optimization of the energy efficiency is validated for the two control structures and for the two studied motors. In addition to the validation of the simulation results, the proposed approach is compared to existing methods to assess its effectiveness
154

Flot de Yamabe avec courbure scalaire prescrite / Yamabe flow with prescribed scalar curvature

Amacha, Inas 30 November 2017 (has links)
Cette thèse est consacrée à l'étude d'une famille des flots géométriques associés au problème de la courbure scalaire prescrite sur une variété riemannienne compacte. Plus précisément, si on désigne par (M,g0) une variété riemannienne compacte de dimension n≥3, et si F∈C∞ (M) est une fonction donnée, le problème de la courbure scalaire prescrite consiste à trouver une métrique g conforme à g0 telle que F soit sa courbure scalaire. Ce problème est équivalent à la résolution de l'EDP suivante :-4 (n-1)/(n-2) ∆u+R0 u=Fu((n+2)/(n-2 )) , u>0 , (E), Où R0 est la courbure scalaire de la métrique initiale g0 et ∆ est le laplacien associé à g0. Il s'agit d'une équation elliptique non-linéaire dont la difficulté principale provient du terme u((n+2)/(n-2 )). Hormis le cas de la sphère standard Sn , tous les travaux consacrés à l'étude de l'équation (E) sont basés sur la méthode variationnelle. Dans cette thèse, on développe une autre approche basée sur l'étude d'une famille de flots géométriques qui permet, entre autres, de résoudre l'équation (E). La question dépend bien entendu de la métrique initiale g0 et en particulier du signe de sa courbure scalaire R0. Les flots introduits sont des flots de gradient associés à deux fonctionnelles distinctes dépendant du signe de R0. La première partie de cette thèse est consacrée au cas R0<0 et dans la deuxième partie on traite le cas R0>0. Dans les deux cas, on démontre l'existence globale du flot et on étudie son comportement asymptotique à l'infini. / This thesis is devoted to the study of a family of geometric flows associated with the prescribed scalar curvature problem. More precisely, if we denote by (M,g0) a compact riemannian manifold with dimension n≥3, and if F∈C∞ (M) is a given function, the prescribed scalar curvature problem consists of finding a conformal metric g to g0 such that F is its scalar curvature. This problem is equivalent to the resolution of the following PDE : -4 (n-1)/(n-2) ∆u+R0 u=Fu((n+2)/(n-2 )) , u>0 , (E), Where R0 is the scalar curvature of the initial metric g0 and ∆ is the laplacian associated with g0.It is a nonlinear elliptic equation, whose the main difficulty comes from the term u((n+2)/(n-2 )). Apart from the case of the standard sphere Sn all the works that study the equation (E) are based on the variational method. In this thesis, we develop another approach based on the study of a family of geometric flows which allows to solve equation (E).The flows introduced are gradient flows associated with two distinct functional functions depending on the sign of R0.The first part of this thesis is devoted to the case R0<0 and in the second part we treat the case R0>0. In both cases, our aim is to proof the global existence of the flow and study its asymptotic behavior at infinity.
155

Comparison and Tracking Methods for Interactive Visualization of Topological Structures in Scalar Fields

Saikia, Himangshu January 2017 (has links)
Scalar fields occur quite commonly in several application areas in both static and time-dependent forms. Hence a proper visualization of scalar fieldsneeds to be equipped with tools to extract and focus on important features of the data. Similarity detection and pattern search techniques in scalar fields present a useful way of visualizing important features in the data. This is done by isolating these features and visualizing them independently or show all similar patterns that arise from a given search pattern. Topological features are ideal for this purpose of isolating meaningful patterns in the data set and creating intuitive feature descriptors. The Merge Tree is one such topological feature which has characteristics ideally suited for this purpose. Subtrees of merge trees segment the data into hierarchical regions which are topologically defined. This kind of feature-based segmentation is more intelligent than pure data based segmentations involving windows or bounding volumes. In this thesis, we explore several different techniques using subtrees of merge trees as features in scalar field data. Firstly, we begin with a discussion on static scalar fields and devise techniques to compare features - topologically segmented regions given by the subtrees of the merge tree - against each other. Second, we delve into time-dependent scalar fields and extend the idea of feature comparison to spatio-temporal features. In this process, we also come up with a novel approach to track features in time-dependent data considering the entire global network of likely feature associations between consecutive time steps.The highlight of this thesis is the interactivity that is enabled using these feature-based techniques by the real-time computation speed of our algorithms. Our techniques are implemented in an open-source visualization framework Inviwo and are published in several peer-reviewed conferences and journals. / <p>QC 20171020</p>
156

Sommes connexes généralisées pour des problèmes issus de la géométrie / Somme connesse generalizzate per problemi della geometria / Generalized connected sums for problems issued from the geometry

Mazzieri, Lorenzo 24 January 2008 (has links)
Ces deux dernières décennies, les techniques de somme connexe essentiellement basées sur des outils d'analyse ont permis de faire des progrès importants dans la compréhension de nombreux problèmes non linéaires issus de la géométrie (étude des métriques à courbure scalaire constante en géométrie Riemannienne, métriques auto-duales, métrique ayant des groupes d'holonomie spéciaux, métriques extrémales en géométrie Kaehlerienne, équations de Yang-Mills, étude des surfaces minimales et des surfaces à courbure moyenne constante, métriques d'Einstein, etc.). Ces techniques se sont avérées être un outil puissant pour démontrer l'existence de solutions à des problèmes hautement non linéaires. Si les techniques permettant d'effectuer des sommes connexes en des points isolés sont bien comprises et fréquemment utilisées, les techniques permettant d'effectuer des sommes connexes le long de sous-variétés ne sont pas encore bien maîtrisées. Le principal objectif de cette thèse est de combler (partiellement) cette lacune en développant de telles techniques applicables dans le cadre de l'étude des métriques à courbure scalaire constante et aussi dans le cadre de l'étude des équations de comptabilité d'Einstein en relativité générale / These last two decades the connected sum techniques, essentially based on analytical tools, are revealed to be a powerful instrument to understand solutions of several nonlinear problem issued from the geometry (constant scalar curvature metrics in Riemannian geometry, self-dual metrics, metrics with special holonomy group, extremal Kaehler metrics, Yang-Mills equations, minimal and constant mean curvature surfaces, Einstein metrics, etc.). Even tough the techniques which allows one to consider the connected sum at points for solutions of nonlinear PDE's are frequently used and deeply understood, the analogous techniques for connected sums along sub-manifolds have not been mastered yet. The main purpose of this thesis is to (partially) plug this gap by developing such techniques in the context of the constant scalar curvature metrics and the Einstein constraint equations in general relativity
157

A study of spherical solutions in chameleon scalar-tensor theories

Mohapi, Neo January 2014 (has links)
The equivalence principle has proven to be central to theories of gravity, with General Relativity being the simplest and most elegant theory to embody the principle. Most alternative theories of gravity struggle to satisfy the principle and still be distinct from GR. Extensions of cosmological and quantum theories question the irrefutably of the equivalence at every scale. The possibility of an equivalence principle violation at galactic scales would be an exciting prospect. In this thesis, we will carefully examine the equivalence principle through the study of chameleon scalar-tensor theories, this will include solutions for hypothetical stars known as boson stars. Such theories find varied application, especially in cosmology, where they model dark energy and inflation. The AWE hypothesis, is an instance of this. It is a nonuniversally coupled model in which violations of the equivalence principle on galactic scales may be apparent. We investigate spherically symmetric and static solutions within the framework of this theory. The constraints obtained from galactic rotation curves results in values of the couplings that show no significant violation of the equivalence principle or values consistent with a theory of dark energy
158

Flame turbulence interaction in premixed turbulent combustion

Ahmed, Umair January 2014 (has links)
No description available.
159

Analyzing the Multiscalar Production of Borders Through the Various Degrees of State Membership in Canada

Zaman, Farah January 2017 (has links)
There has been great scholarly interest in examining the management, proliferation, and dynamic articulations of borders through an actor-network lens in recent years. In tracing the networks of Mohamed Harkat, the irregular arrival of a particular group of Tamil migrants, and Deepan Budlakoti, I demonstrate how the border is a fluid entity composed of socio-technical actors dispersed across time and space capable of producing varying degrees of membership statuses. In exploring the cases of these non-citizens, this thesis aims to understand what each of these multi-level networks tells us about the notion of borders and bordering practices alike. This study contributes to the expanding literature that situates the border as a fluid and malleable entity that is made up of interwoven socio-technical practices, discourses, symbols, institutions, and networks through which power is dispersed and the binary distinctions between membership and non-membership increasingly become layered concepts.
160

Selected papers on colorimetric theory and colour modeling

Oulton, David January 2010 (has links)
The annotated papers that are submitted as part of this thesis consider the phenomenon of colour at the fundamental, technical, and application levels, and they were written and published by Oulton between 1990 and 2009. The papers disclose significant insights by the author into colorimetric modeling theory and report aspects of the author's work that have led to commercially successful practical applications. The academic significance of these papers is evident in their citation record; their practical value is shown by a number of successful industrial collaboration programmes, and through the award of national prizes for innovation by the Worshipful Company of Dyers, and the Society of Dyers and Colorists. The published research primarily concerns digital devices that either capture or reproduce coloured images. For example, the research problem of how to calibrate the colour on computer CRT screens, which was thought at the time to be intractable, was reported by Oulton in paper 1 to be solved at the two to three significant figure level of colorimetric accuracy. This world leading level of accuracy was subsequently confirmed using a comprehensive data set in paper 7, and has been exploited internationally in commercial computer aided design and colour communication systems by Textile Computer Systems Ltd and Datacolor Inc. Further research problems resolved by Oulton in the presented papers include how to predict the colorimetric sensitivity of dye recipes; how to design, test, and fine-tune the spectral response of digital cameras; and how the individual customers in a shop can be tracked automatically to reveal their buying behavior, using coloured CCTV images.The challenge to the standard CIE colorimetric model posed by the results of Dr W.A. Thornton was analyzed and satisfactorily explained by Oulton in papers 2, 3 and 4. It is also shown that Thornton's results do not in any way compromise either the practice of colorimetry based on the CIE Standard Observer, or the validity of its quantifying data sets. It is also additionally shown under the annotation of paper 4 presented here, that the success of the CIE colorimetric model has a clearly demonstrable theoretical basis.In all but one of the presented papers the convention is maintained that the standard CIE XYZ co-ordinate model should be used as the reference basis, when modeling the properties of colour and quantifying its uses. The final paper to be published (and presented here as paper 4) challenges this convention and demonstrates that a context free and formally defined alternative reference basis may be used in colorimetric modeling with significant advantage. It is also shown in paper 4 that under the specified axioms, any cross dependency that is potentially non linear can in principle be resolved into its component scalar and additive relationships, and that the causes of scalar non linearity may be characterized independently from the causes of linearly additive cross dependency. The result is a widely applicable analytical and experimental design method for resolving complex cross dependent relationships in general and in particular, for resolving those between the spectral visual stimuli and the psychophysical response to them.

Page generated in 0.0557 seconds