• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 250
  • 83
  • 62
  • 52
  • 14
  • 10
  • 9
  • 7
  • 6
  • 6
  • 6
  • 6
  • 5
  • 3
  • 3
  • Tagged with
  • 615
  • 96
  • 85
  • 68
  • 60
  • 53
  • 52
  • 47
  • 46
  • 41
  • 40
  • 39
  • 39
  • 38
  • 36
  • 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.
141

Stable Coexistence of Three Species in Competition

Carlsson, Linnéa January 2009 (has links)
<p>This report consider a system describing three competing species with populations <em>x</em>, <em>y</em> and <em>z</em>. Sufficient conditions for every positive equilibrium to be asymptotically stable have been found. First it is shown that conditions on the pairwise competitive interaction between the populations are needed. Actually, these conditions are equivalent to asymptotic stability for any two-dimensional competing system of the three species. It is also shown that these alone are not enough, and that a condition on the competitive interaction between all three populations is also needed. If all conditions are fulfilled, each population will survive on a long-term basis and there will be a stable coexistence.</p>
142

Validation of MobileMe : a psychophysiological recording system – from a motion sickness perspective

Almqvist, Ulf, Sjörs, Anna January 2006 (has links)
<p>MobileMe is a recently developed system for monitoring and recording physiological variables. It is wireless, and can therefore be suitable for field research, for example when measuring motion sickness symptoms.</p><p>The aim of this thesis was to conclude whether the MobileMe recording system was valid for research studies. A validation study, consisting of two parts and including 10 subjects, was performed. The first part was a laboratory study, where data from MobileMe and a reference equipment were compared. A field study was also performed, onboard a combat boat, to determine the equipment’s validity in uncontrolled environments. Furthermore, the field study included an investigation of motion sickness symptoms, and provided data for evaluation of motion sickness rating scales.</p><p>Statistical results from the laboratory study, and results from evaluation of data from the field study, showed that MobileMe was valid in both controlled and uncontrolled environments.</p>
143

Constitutive Modelling of High Strength Steel

Larsson, Rikard January 2007 (has links)
<p>This report is a review on aspects of constitutive modelling of high strength steels. Aspects that have been presented are basic crystallography of steel, martensite transformation, thermodynamics and plasticity from a phenomenological point of view. The phenomenon called mechanical twinning is reviewed and the properties of a new material type called TWIP-steel have been briefly presented. Focus has been given on phenomenological models and methods, but an overview over multiscale methods has also been given.</p>
144

New Blind Constant Modulus Sliding Windows GSC-RLS Algorithm for DS-CDMA Receiver with Min/Max Criterion

Luo, Yin-chen 30 August 2007 (has links)
The code division multiple access (CDMA) system implemented by the direct-sequence (DS) spread spectrum (SS) technique is one of the most promising multiplexing technologies for the wireless communications services. The SS communication adopts a technique of using much wider bandwidth necessary to transmit the information over the channel, and has been proposed for third generation broadband wireless access. The capacity and performance of the DS-CDMA system are mainly limited by the multiple access interference (MAI) and the inter-symbol-interference (ISI) caused by the multipath-fading channel. To circumvent the above-mentioned problems many adaptive multiuser detectors, for instance the minimum mean square error (MMSE) and the minimum output energy (MOE) criteria, subject to certain constraints, have been proposed. Since the LCMV criterion is the linearly constrained (LC) version of MOE, it is high sensitivity to the channel mismatch caused by the unreliable estimation. In order to deal with this problem, the LC constant modulus (LCCM) criterion was considered to avoid capturing the interfering user instead of the desired user when the power of interfering user is much higher than the desired user. In this thesis, based on the Min/Max criterion we propose a novel blind LCCM recursive least-square (RLS) algorithm, with the generalized side-lobe canceller (GSC) structure, named as the CM GSC-RLS algorithm, to effectively alleviate the effect of MAI and ISI for DS-CDMA receiver, for time-varying channel. Due to the variation of channel at the receiver, the desired user amplitude or power is not available and has to be estimated. To solve this problem, we propose a simple scheme to estimate the parameter of constant modulus, adaptively, associated with the CM GSC-RLS algorithm. With the new proposed algorithm, the amplitude variation of desired user, due to changing characteristics of channel, can be tracked, effectively. Thus, better performance achievement, in terms of output signal-to-interference-plus-noise ratio (SINR) and bit error rate (BER), over the conventional GSC-RLS algorithms can be expected.
145

Criterion-referenced measurement for educational evaluation and selection

Wikström, Christina January 2005 (has links)
In recent years, Sweden has adopted a criterion-referenced grading system, where the grade outcome is used for several purposes, but foremost for educational evaluation on student- and school levels as well as for selection to higher education. This thesis investigates the consequences of using criterion-referenced measurement for both educational evaluation and selection purposes. The thesis comprises an introduction and four papers that empirically investigate school grades and grading practices in Swedish upper secondary schools. The first paper investigates the effect of school competition on the school grades. The analysis focuses on how students in schools with and without competition are ranked, based on their grades and SweSAT scores. The results show that schools that are exposed to competition tend to grade their students higher than other schools. This effect is found to be related to the use of grades as quality indicators for the schools, which means that schools that compete for their students tend to be more lenient, hence inflating the grades. The second paper investigates grade averages over a six-year period, starting with the first cohort who graduated from upper secondary school with a GPA based on criterion-referenced grades. The results show that grades have increased every year since the new grading system was introduced, which cannot be explained by improved performances, selection effects or strategic course choices. The conclusion is that the increasing pressure for high grading has led to grade inflation over time. The third paper investigates if grading practices are related to school size. The study is based on a similar model as paper I, but with data from graduates over a six-year period, and with school size as the main focus. The results show small but significant size effects, suggesting that the smallest schools (&lt;300 students) are higher grading than other schools, and that the largest schools (&gt;1000 students) are lower grading than other schools. This is assumed to be an effect of varying assessment practices, in combination with external and internal pressure for high grading. The fourth and final paper investigates if grading practices differ among upper secondary programmes, and how the course compositions in the programmes affect how students are ranked in the process of selection to higher education. The results show that students in vocationally oriented programmes are higher graded than other students, and also favoured by their programmes’ course compositions, which have a positive effect on their competitive strength in the selection to higher education. In the introductory part of the thesis, these results are discussed from the perspective of a theoretical framework, with special attention to validity issues in a broad perspective. The conclusion is that the criterion-referenced grades, both in terms of being used for educational evaluation, and as an instrument for selection to higher education, are wanting both in reliability and in validity. This is related to the conflicting purposes of the instruments, in combination with few control mechanisms, which affects how grades are interpreted and used, hence leading to consequences for students, schools and society in general.
146

Stable Coexistence of Three Species in Competition

Carlsson, Linnéa January 2009 (has links)
This report consider a system describing three competing species with populations x, y and z. Sufficient conditions for every positive equilibrium to be asymptotically stable have been found. First it is shown that conditions on the pairwise competitive interaction between the populations are needed. Actually, these conditions are equivalent to asymptotic stability for any two-dimensional competing system of the three species. It is also shown that these alone are not enough, and that a condition on the competitive interaction between all three populations is also needed. If all conditions are fulfilled, each population will survive on a long-term basis and there will be a stable coexistence.
147

Wind turbine blade modeling - setting out from experimental data

Kleinknecht, Mathias, Fernández Álvarez, Alfredo January 2013 (has links)
Complex systems can be divided into simpler substructures. Determining the properties of each subcomponent by experimental procedures is practical and can serve to verify or calibrate finite element models. In this work, an existing model of a wind turbine blade was improved by use of experimental data. Such a blade is a subpart of a complete wind turbine. For calibration purpose, several material tests were made in order to determine the stiffness and mass properties. Later on, vibration tests of the blades were conducted and compared with simulation results of the improved model. Geometry variability within sets of blades was also studied. The blade twist angles and the center of gravity positions were found to vary moderately, which accounts for differences in blades’ dynamic behavior. Correlations between experimental data and analytical model results were very high for the first eight modeshapes. That is, according to the Model Assurance Criterion the calibrated model achieves a high-quality representation of reality. However, torsional modes in the computer model occur at a higher frequency than the experimental ones. Substructuring of the turbine allows the blades to be modeled and validated independently of the other substructures and can later be incorporated into a complete model of the turbine.
148

Determining equation of state binary interaction parameters using K- and L-points

Mushrif, Samir Hemant 01 November 2004
The knowledge of the phase behaviour of heavy oils and bitumen is important in order to understand the phenomenon of coke formation. Computation of their phase behaviour, using an equation of state, faces problems due to their complex composition. Hence n-alkane binaries of polyaromatic hydrocarbons are used to approximate the phase behaviour of heavy oils and bitumen. Appropriate values of binary interaction parameters are required for an equation of state to predict the correct phase behaviour of these model binary fluids. This thesis deals with fitting of the binary interaction parameter for the Peng-Robinson equation of state using landmarks in the binary phase space such as K- and L-points. A K- or an L-point is a point in the phase space where two phases become critical in the presence of another phase in equilibrium. An algorithm to calculate K- and L-points using an equation of state was developed. The variation of calculated K- and L-points with respect to the binary interaction parameter was studied and the results were compared with the experimental data in the literature. The interaction parameter was then fitted using the best match of experimental results with the computed ones. The binary interaction parameter fitted using a K- or an L-point was then used to predict the P-T projection of the binary system in phase space. Also, the qualitative effect of the binary interaction parameter on the P-T projection was studied. A numerical and thermodynamic study of the algorithm was done. Numerical issues like the initial guesses, convergence criterion and numerical techniques were studied and the thermodynamic constraints in the generalization of the algorithm are discussed. It was observed that the binary interaction parameter not only affects the location of K- and L-points in the phase space but also affects the calculation procedure of K- and L-points. Along with the propane binaries of polyaromatic hydrocarbons, K- and L-points were also calculated for systems like methane binaries of higher n-alkanes and the ethane + ethanol binary. In the case of the ethane + ethanol system, K- and L-points, matching the experimental results were calculated with different values of the binary interaction parameter. But the Peng-Robinson equation of state was unable to predict the correct type of phase behaviour using any value of the binary interaction parameter. The Peng-Robinson equation of state was able to predict the correct type of phase behaviour with the binary interaction parameter, fitted using K- and/or L-points for methane + n-alkane systems. The systems studied were the methane binaries of n-pentane, n-hexane and n-heptane. For the propane binaries of polyaromatic hydrocarbons, no value of the binary interaction parameter was able to predict the K-point with a good accuracy. The binary interaction parameter which gave the best possible results for a K-point failed to predict the correct type of phase behaviour. The binary interaction parameter fitted using the P-T projection enabled the Peng-Robinson equation of state to give a qualitative match for the high pressure complex phase behaviour of these systems. Solid phase equilibria were not taken into consideration.
149

Validation of MobileMe : a psychophysiological recording system – from a motion sickness perspective

Almqvist, Ulf, Sjörs, Anna January 2006 (has links)
MobileMe is a recently developed system for monitoring and recording physiological variables. It is wireless, and can therefore be suitable for field research, for example when measuring motion sickness symptoms. The aim of this thesis was to conclude whether the MobileMe recording system was valid for research studies. A validation study, consisting of two parts and including 10 subjects, was performed. The first part was a laboratory study, where data from MobileMe and a reference equipment were compared. A field study was also performed, onboard a combat boat, to determine the equipment’s validity in uncontrolled environments. Furthermore, the field study included an investigation of motion sickness symptoms, and provided data for evaluation of motion sickness rating scales. Statistical results from the laboratory study, and results from evaluation of data from the field study, showed that MobileMe was valid in both controlled and uncontrolled environments.
150

Optimal design of a composite wing structure for a flying-wing aircraft subject to multi-constraint

Xu, Rongxin. 01 1900 (has links)
This thesis presents a research project and results of design and optimization of a composite wing structure for a large aircraft in flying wing configuration. The design process started from conceptual design and preliminary design, which includes initial sizing and stressing followed by numerical modelling and analysis of the wing structure. The research was then focused on the minimum weight optimization of the /composite wing structure /subject to multiple design /constraints. The modelling, analysis and optimization process has been performed by using the NASTRAN code. The methodology and technique not only make the modelling in high accuracy, but also keep the whole process within one commercial package for practical application. The example aircraft, called FW-11, is a 250-seat commercial airliner of flying wing configuration designed through our MSc students Group Design Project (GDP) in Cranfield University. Started from conceptual design in the GDP, a high-aspect-ratio and large sweepback angle flying wing configuration has been adopted. During the GDP, the author was responsible for the structural layout design and material selection. Composite material has been chosen as the preferable material for both the inner and outer wing components. Based on the derivation of structural design data in the conceptual phase, the author continued with the preliminary design of the outer wing airframe and then focused on the optimization of the composite wing structure. Cont/d.

Page generated in 0.0601 seconds