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  • Engineering  (3)
  • Engineering General  (3)
  • Technology Utilization and Surface Transportation  (3)
  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Chichester : Wiley-Blackwell
    Communications in Numerical Methods in Engineering 9 (1993), S. 483-488 
    ISSN: 1069-8299
    Keywords: Engineering ; Engineering General
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Mathematics , Technology
    Notes: In this paper a new method has been presented to determine the optimum number of knots for cubic splines. The knot-finding process is based on the numerical integration of the input curve. The number and the location of the knots is determined automatically. The method has been applied to a test case and the performance has been compared with two other existing methods. It is shown that fewer knots are retained for the portions of the curve having small curvature whereas a larger number of knots is retained for highly curved portions. The computer time required by our method depends only upon the number of points in the input curve and does not depend upon the shape of the curve or the desired accuracy.
    Additional Material: 3 Ill.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Chichester [u.a.] : Wiley-Blackwell
    International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering 36 (1993), S. 2851-2860 
    ISSN: 0029-5981
    Keywords: Engineering ; Engineering General
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Mathematics , Technology
    Notes: In this paper we describe a numerical method to determine adjustable parameters in a mathematical model using experimental data. This is basically an improvement over our earlier method which was based on the idea that the area under the experimental curve must be equal to the integral of the function used. The improvement used is the addition of an area correction factor which estimates the necessary difference that must exist between the numerically evaluated and the true area. This correction surprisingly eliminates the use of integral with the result that the two areas being equalized are both numerically evaluated, one using the experimental data points and the other using the fitted function values. It is shown that the application of the area correction factor significantly improves the accuracy of the adjusted parameters. The method has been compared with the well-known method of least squares for few selected cases involving variety of functions. It is seen that our method shows convergence for a wider range of initial guesses as compared to the method of least squares. The superiority of our method becomes evident when more than two non-linear parameters are involved.
    Additional Material: 8 Ill.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    New York, NY [u.a.] : Wiley-Blackwell
    Communications in Applied Numerical Methods 7 (1991), S. 259-263 
    ISSN: 0748-8025
    Keywords: Engineering ; Engineering General
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Mathematics , Technology
    Notes: A numerical technique is presented to determine the unknown parameters in a given relationship using the experimental data. In this technique we formulate the required number of independent relationships by integration applied to various parts of the data along with the criterion of the least-squares error with respect to one parameter. The results for two sample systems, one with two parameters and the other with three parameters, are presented. Comparison with the published work shows that the proposed method is less sensitive to the inaccuracies in the experimental data and generates a better fit than the existing methods such as the ordinary least-squares technique. The method can easily be extended to systems with any number of parameters.
    Additional Material: 2 Tab.
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2019-07-12
    Description: A phased-array system comprised of custom-made and commercially available microelectromechanical system (MEMS) silicon microphones and custom ancillary hardware has been developed for use in aeroacoustic testing in hard-walled and acoustically treated wind tunnels. Recent advances in the areas of multi-channel signal processing and beam forming have driven the construction of phased arrays containing ever-greater numbers of microphones. Traditional obstacles to this trend have been posed by (1) the high costs of conventional condenser microphones, associated cabling, and support electronics and (2) the difficulty of mounting conventional microphones in the precise locations required for high-density arrays. The present development overcomes these obstacles. One of the hallmarks of the new system is a series of fabricated platforms on which multiple microphones can be mounted. These mounting platforms, consisting of flexible polyimide circuit-board material (see left side of figure), include all the necessary microphone power and signal interconnects. A single bus line connects all microphones to a common power supply, while the signal lines terminate in one or more data buses on the sides of the circuit board. To minimize cross talk between array channels, ground lines are interposed as shields between all the data bus signal lines. The MEMS microphones are electrically connected to the boards via solder pads that are built into the printed wiring. These flexible circuit boards share many characteristics with their traditional rigid counterparts, but can be manufactured much thinner, as small as 0.1 millimeter, and much lighter with boards weighing as much as 75 percent less than traditional rigid ones. For a typical hard-walled wind-tunnel installation, the flexible printed-circuit board is bonded to the tunnel wall and covered with a face sheet that contains precise cutouts for the microphones. Once the face sheet is mounted, a smooth surface is established over the entire array due to the flush mounting of all microphones (see right side of figure). The face sheet is made from a continuous glass-woven-fabric base impregnated with an epoxy resin binder. This material offers a combination of high mechanical strength and low dielectric loss, making it suitable for withstanding the harsh test section environment present in many wind tunnels, while at the same time protecting the underlying polyimide board. Customized signal-conditioning hardware consisting of line drivers and antialiasing filters are coupled with the array. The line drivers are constructed using low-supply-current, high-gain-bandwidth operational amplifiers designed to transmit the microphone signals several dozen feet from the array to external acquisition hardware. The anti-alias filters consist of individual Chebyshev low-pass filters (one for each microphone channel) housed on small printed-circuit boards mounted on one or more motherboards. The mother/daughter board design results in a modular system, which is easy to debug and service and which enables the filter characteristics to be changed by swapping daughter boards with ones containing different filter parameters. The filter outputs are passed to commercially- available acquisition hardware to digitize and store the conditioned microphone signals. Wind-tunnel testing of the new MEMS microphone polyimide mounting system shows that the array performance is comparable to that of traditional arrays, but with significantly less cost of construction.
    Keywords: Technology Utilization and Surface Transportation
    Type: LAR-17171-1 , NASA Tech Briefs, February 2007; 7
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2019-07-12
    Description: The use of piezoelectric devices has become widespread since Pierre and Jacques Curie discovered the piezoelectric effect in 1880. Examples of current applications of piezoelectric devices include ultrasonic transducers, micro-positioning devices, buzzers, strain sensors, and clocks. The invention of such lightweight, relatively inexpensive piezoceramic-fiber-composite actuators as macro fiber composite (MFC) actuators has made it possible to obtain strains and displacements greater than those that could be generated by prior actuators based on monolithic piezoceramic sheet materials. MFC actuators are flat, flexible actuators designed for bonding to structures to apply or detect strains. Bonding multiple layers of MFC actuators together could increase force capability, but not strain or displacement capability. Cylindrical piezoelectric fiber composite (CPFC) actuators have been invented as alternatives to MFC actuators for applications in which greater forces and/or strains or displacements may be required. In essence, a CPFC actuator is an MFC or other piezoceramic fiber composite actuator fabricated in a cylindrical instead of its conventional flat shape. Cylindrical is used here in the general sense, encompassing shapes that can have circular, elliptical, rectangular or other cross-sectional shapes in the planes perpendicular to their longitudinal axes.
    Keywords: Technology Utilization and Surface Transportation
    Type: LAR-17168-1 , NASA Tech Briefs, January 2008; 24-25
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2019-07-12
    Description: An innovative method has been developed for acquiring fluid-level measurements. This method eliminates the need for the fluid-level sensor to have a physical connection to a power source or to data acquisition equipment. The complete system consists of a lightweight, thin-film magnetic-field-response fluid-level sensor (see Figure 1) and a magnetic field response recorder that was described in Magnetic-Field-Response Measurement-Acquisition System (LAR-16908-1), NASA Tech Briefs, Vol. 30, No. 6 (June 2006), page 28. The sensor circuit is a capacitor connected to an inductor. The response recorder powers the sensor using a series of oscillating magnetic fields. Once electrically active, the sensor responds with its own harmonic magnetic field. The sensor will oscillate at its resonant electrical frequency, which is dependent upon the capacitance and inductance values of the circuit.
    Keywords: Technology Utilization and Surface Transportation
    Type: LAR-16614-1 , NASA Tech Briefs, April 2008; 6-7
    Format: application/pdf
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