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Crane lifting operation planning and lifted object spatial trajectory analysisOlearczyk, Jacek Unknown Date
No description available.
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Crane lifting operation planning and lifted object spatial trajectory analysisOlearczyk, Jacek 11 1900 (has links)
Compact facility designs and retro-fitting of facilities that involve heavy lifts are often performed in congested areas. Tight schedules increase the requirement to provide detailed heavy lift analysis. The planning of every aspect of a critical lift operation is essential. Managing the behavior and trajectory of the lifted object during the lift is often left to the field crew. The rigger signalman and the crane operator communicate by radio, or by hand signals, to maneuver the lifted object between obstructions. This thesis presents advancements in the development of mathematical algorithms for the lift object trajectory path and analysis. The proposed methodology is divided into smaller manageable phases to control the process and at the same time create independent modules. Each step of the lifted object movement was algebraically-digitally tracked, starting at the lifted object pick-point through an optimum path development to the objects final position or set-point. Parameters such as the minimum distance between the lifted object and passing obstructions and the minimum clearance between the lifted object and the crane boom envelope are some of the many predefined rules that were taken into account. Each step in the developed algorithm provides a short description, partial decision flowchart, and graphical interpretation of the problem, and some sections cover mathematical calculations of a defined path. The lifted objects spatial trajectory analysis and optimization are part of the complex assignment relating to the crane selection process. The proposed methodology is tested on a case study, which is also described in this thesis in order to illustrate the essential features of the proposed methodology. / Construction Engineering and Management
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Modeling Nondeterminism in Program Semantics using Lifted Binary MultirelationsSaladi, Srikanth 01 May 2007 (has links)
No description available.
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Worlds apart : Umwelt and the construction of sympathy in “The lifted veil” and MiddlemarchZhu, Lily Anne 08 October 2014 (has links)
This report modifies and re-envisions Jakob von Uexküll’s Umwelt theory as the “sympathetic umwelt,” in which sympathy is both the external object of desire and the internal means by which individual, subjective worlds are created. Through the application of this new paradigm to George Eliot’s “The Lifted Veil” and Middlemarch, this paper suggests that intersubjective relationships in the fictions she conceives are ephemeral illusions. Her early cognitive experiments and intellectual grappling with the nature of emotional connections culminates in the ambiguously defined concept of sympathy. Eliot’s focus on sympathy is not meant to reveal a solution to failures in human compassion and understanding, but to present it as the central problem – both in her own literature and in reality. / text
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三重管バーナに形成される浮き上がり火炎の挙動に関する研究YAMASHITA, Hiroshi, HAYASHI, Naoki, ISOBE, Yusuke, YAMAMOTO, Kazuhiro, 山下, 博史, 林, 直樹, 磯部, 佑介, 山本, 和弘 11 1900 (has links)
No description available.
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PIV/OH-PLIF同時計測によるスリットバーナの燃焼場の検討YAMASHITA, Hiroshi, HAYASHI, Naoki, YAMAMOTO, Kazuhiro, ITO, Yuki, OKU, Yohei, 山下, 博史, 林, 直樹, 山本, 和弘, 伊藤, 雄貴, 奥, 洋平 11 1900 (has links)
No description available.
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Lifted flame structure of coannular jet flames in a triple port burnerYamashita, Hiroshi, Hayashi, Naoki, Isobe, Yusuke, Kato, Shinya, Yamamoto, Kazuhiro January 2011 (has links)
No description available.
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多噴孔ノズルバーナの燃焼特性と燃焼排出物の評価SHANG, Hai, SUZUKI, Hiromu, YAMAMOTO, Kazuhiro, 商, 海, 鈴木, 祐夢, 山本, 和弘 06 1900 (has links)
No description available.
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LIFTED MULTIRELATIONS AND PROGRAM SEMANTICSSoudamini, Jidesh 21 November 2006 (has links)
No description available.
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Characterization of Lifted Flame Behavior in a Multi-Element Rocket CombustorAaron M Blacker (6613562) 14 May 2019 (has links)
<p> Lifted
non-premixed turbulent jet flames in the Transverse Instability Combustor (TIC)
have been analyzed using qualitative and quantitative methods. Lifted flames in
the TIC have been observed to stabilize about zero to five injector exit diameters
downstream of the dump plane into the chamber and exhibit pulsating, unsteady
burning. Anchored flames immediately begin reacting in the injector recess and
burn evenly in a uniform jet from the injector exit through the entire optically
accessible region. Statistically
significant, repeatable behavior lifted flames are observed. It is shown that the occurrence of lifted
flames is most likely for an injector configuration with close wall-spacing, second
greatest for a configuration with close middle-element spacing, and lowest for a
configuration with even element-spacing. For all configurations, of those
elements that have been observed to lift, the center element is most likely to
lift while the second element from the wall was likely. Flames at the wall elements
were never observed to lift. Evidence is shown to support that close injector element
spacing and stronger transverse pressure waves aid lateral heat transfer which
supports flame stability in the lifted position. It is hypothesized that the
stability of lifted flames is influenced by neighboring ignition sources, often
a neighboring anchored flame. It is also shown that instances of lifted flames
increase with the root-mean-squared magnitude of pressure fluctuation about its
mean (P’ RMS) up to a threshold, after which flames stabilize in the anchored recess
position.</p>
<p>Dynamic mode decomposition (DMD) and proper orthogonal decomposition (POD)
analyses of CH* chemiluminescence data is performed. It is found that lateral
ignition of the most upstream portion of lifted flames is dominated by the 1W
mode. Furthermore, it is shown that low-frequency high energy modes with spatial
layers resemble intensity-pulses, possibly attributable to ignition. These
modes are trademarks of CH* chemiluminescent intensity data of lifted flames.
It was also shown that the residence time in the chamber may be closely
associated with those low-frequency modes around 200 Hz. DMD and POD were
repeated for a downstream region on the center element, as well as a near-wall
element, highlighting differences between the lifted flame dynamics in all
three regions. </p>
<p>It is shown that lifted flames are best
characterized by their burning behavior and in rare cases may stabilize in the
recess, while still being “lifted”. Furthermore, it is shown that flame
position differentiation can extend into an initial period of highly stable combustor
operation. Dynamic mode decomposition is explored as potential method to understand
physical building blocks of proper orthogonal spatial layers. Non-visual indicators of lifted flames
within the high-frequency (HF) pressure signal are sought to seek a method that
allows for observation of lifted flames in optically inaccessible combustors, such
as those in industry. Some attributes of power-spectral diagrams and
cross-correlations of pressure signals are provided as potential indicators. </p>
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