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  • Cambridge University Press
  • Copernicus
  • Wiley-Blackwell
  • 2000-2004  (2,490)
  • 1985-1989
  • 1955-1959
  • 2000  (2,490)
Collection
Years
  • 2000-2004  (2,490)
  • 1985-1989
  • 1955-1959
Year
  • 1
    Unknown
    Cambridge, U.K ; New York : Cambridge University Press
    Ideas in context  
    Keywords: Durkheim, Emile,, 1858-1917. ; Durkheim, Émile,, 1858-1917, Et le réalisme. ; Realism. ; Réalisme. ; Sociologie, Histoire. ; Sociologie, Méthodologie. ; Sociology, History. ; Sociology, Methodology.
    Notes: The reform that contained all other reforms -- The subtlety of things -- The perfection of personality -- A l'e;cole des choses -- The yoke of necessity
    Pages: xi, 324 p.
    ISBN: 0-511-00732-9
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  • 2
    Unknown
    New York : Cambridge University Press
    Keywords: Catholic Church, France, History, 17th century. ; Église catholique, France, Histoire, 17e siècle. ; France, Church history, 17th century. ; France, Civilisation, 17e siècle. ; France, Civilization, 17th century. ; France, Histoire religieuse, 17e siècle. ; Christianisme et civilisation, France, Histoire, 17e siècle. ; Christianity and culture, France, History, 17th century.
    Pages: ix, 334 p.
    ISBN: 0-585-03975-5
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  • 3
    Unknown
    Cambridge ; New York : Cambridge University Press
    Cambridge studies in historical geography  
    Keywords: Bloch, Marc Léopold Benjamin,, 1886-1944. ; Historical geography. ; Social sciences and history.
    Pages: xii, 258 p.
    ISBN: 0-511-00026-X
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  • 4
    Unknown
    New York : Cambridge University Press
    Cambridge studies in population, economy, and society in past time  
    Keywords: Italy, History, 1922-1945. ; Italy, Population policy, History. ; Italy, Population, History.
    Pages: xvii, 281 p.
    ISBN: 0-585-13104-X
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  • 5
    Unknown
    Cambridge, U.K ; New York, NY : Cambridge University Press
    Keywords: Historical sociology, Methodology. ; Historical sociology, Research, Methodology. ; Knowledge, Sociology of.
    Pages: xii, 316 p.
    ISBN: 0-511-00731-0
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  • 6
    Unknown
    Cambridge, U.K ; New York : Cambridge University Press
    Keywords: Anthropologie, Histoire. ; Anthropologie, Philosophie. ; Anthropology, History. ; Anthropology, Philosophy.
    Pages: xii, 243 p.
    ISBN: 0-511-01616-6
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  • 7
    Keywords: Netherlands, Statistics, Vital. ; Netherlands, Economic conditions. ; Netherlands, History, 19th century. ; Netherlands, History, 20th century. ; Netherlands, Population, History. ; Netherlands, Social conditions. ; Demography, Netherlands, History.
    Pages: xv, 399 p.
    ISBN: 0-511-01933-5
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  • 8
    Unknown
    Cambridge ; New York : Cambridge University Press
    Keywords: Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm,, Freiherr von,, 1646-1716. ; Metaphysics.
    Pages: x, 307 p.
    ISBN: 0-511-00910-0
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  • 9
    Unknown
    Cambridge ; New York : Cambridge University Press
    Keywords: Action theory. ; Sociology, Philosophy.
    Pages: vii, 199 p.
    ISBN: 0-511-00268-8
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  • 10
    Unknown
    Cambridge, UK ; New York, NY : Cambridge University Press
    Cambridge cultural social studies  
    Keywords: Attitude (Psychology) ; Attitude (Psychology), Poland. ; Post-communism, Poland. ; Trust. ; Trust, Political aspects. ; Trust, Political aspects, Poland. ; Trust, Poland.
    Pages: xii, 214 p.
    ISBN: 0-511-01160-1
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  • 11
    Unknown
    Cambridge, U.K ; New York : Cambridge University Press
    Cambridge studies in population, economy, and society in past time  
    Keywords: England, Moral conditions, History. ; England, Social conditions. ; Deviant behavior, England, History. ; Justice, Administration of, England, History. ; Social control, England, History.
    Pages: xviii, 289 p.
    ISBN: 0-511-00285-8
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  • 12
    Unknown
    Cambridge [England] ; New York : Cambridge University Press
    Cambridge monographs on mechanics  
    Keywords: Combustion engineering. ; Turbulence.
    Pages: xvi, 304 p.
    ISBN: 0-511-01927-0
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  • 13
    Unknown
    Cambridge, U.K ; New York : Cambridge University Press
    Keywords: Papua New Guinea, Social conditions. ; Wewak (Papouasie-Nouvelle-Guinée), Conditions sociales. ; Wewak (Papua New Guinea), Social conditions. ; Classes sociales, Papouasie-Nouvelle-Guinée, Wewak. ; Social classes, Papua New Guinea. ; Social classes, Papua New Guinea, Wewak.
    Pages: x, 179 p.
    ISBN: 0-511-01640-9
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  • 14
    Unknown
    Cambridge, UK ; New York, NY : Cambridge University Press
    Keywords: Athens (Greece), History. ; CIVILIZAÇÃO GREGA (POLÍTICA), larpcal ; DEMOCRACIA, GRÉCIA., larpcal ; Deception, Greece, Athens. ; Democracy, Greece, Athens.
    Pages: viii, 336 p.
    ISBN: 0-511-06625-2
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  • 15
    Unknown
    Cambridge, UK ; New York : Cambridge University Press
    Cambridge studies in early modern British history  
    Keywords: England, Social conditions, 16th century. ; England, Social conditions, 17th century. ; Counterfeits and counterfeiting, Social aspects, England. ; Crimen, Inglaterra, Historia. ; Crime, England, History. ; Criminal justice, Administration of, Social aspects, England. ; Criminalité, Angleterre, Histoire. ; Murder, Social aspects, England. ; Witchcraft, Social aspects, England.
    Notes: Mentalities from crime -- The social meaning of witchcraft, 1560-1680 -- Witches in society and culture, 1680-1750 -- The problem of coiners and the law -- Towards a solution? Coining state and people -- Crimes of blood and their representation -- Murder: police, prosecution and proof -- A transition from belief to certainty?
    Pages: xiii, 377 p.
    ISBN: 0-511-00875-9
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  • 16
    Unknown
    Cambridge [England] ; New York : Cambridge University Press
    Keywords: Great Britain, Ethnic relations, History, 17th century. ; Great Britain, Ethnic relations, History, 18th century. ; Celts, Great Britain, History. ; Constitutional history, Great Britain. ; Ethnic groups, Great Britain, History. ; Ethnicity, Great Britain, History. ; Group identity, Great Britain, History. ; Mythology, British. ; National characteristics, British, History. ; Nationalism, Great Britain, History.
    Pages: viii, 302 p.
    ISBN: 0-511-00140-1
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  • 17
    Unknown
    Cambridge ; New York : Cambridge University Press
    Keywords: Biosensing Techniques. ; Biosensors. ; Chemoreceptors. ; Chemoreceptors.
    Pages: x, 211 p.
    ISBN: 0-511-00725-6
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  • 18
    Unknown
    Cambridge, U.K ; New York : Cambridge University Press
    Keywords: Philosophie de l'esprit. ; Philosophy of mind.
    Notes: Introduction -- Minds, bodies and people -- Mental states -- Mental content -- Sensation and appearance -- Perception -- Thought and language -- Human rationality and artificial intelligence -- Action, intention and will -- Personal identity and self-knowledge
    Pages: xiii, 318 p.
    ISBN: 0-511-04054-7
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  • 19
    Unknown
    New York, NY, USA : Cambridge University Press
    Keywords: Social history, Medieval, 500-1500. ; Spiritual life, Christianity, History of doctrines, Middle Ages, 600-1500. ; Vie spirituelle, Christianisme, Histoire des doctrines, 600-1500 (Moyen Âge) ; Bible., N.T., Criticism, interpretation, etc., History, Middle Ages, 600-1500. ; Bible., N.T., Criticism, interpretation, etc, History, Middle Ages, 600-1500.
    Notes: The interpretation of Mary and Martha -- The ideal of the imitation of Christ -- The orders of society
    Pages: xix, 423 p.
    ISBN: 0-585-03970-4
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  • 20
    Unknown
    Cambridge, U.K ; New York : Cambridge University Press
    Key themes in ancient history  
    Keywords: Aliments, Approvisionnement, Grèce, Histoire. ; Aliments, Approvisionnement, Rome. ; Civilisation ancienne. ; Civilization, Classical. ; Food habits, Greece, History, To 1500. ; Food habits, Rome. ; Food supply, Greece, History, To 1500. ; Food supply, Rome. ; Habitudes alimentaires, Grèce, Histoire. ; Habitudes alimentaires, Rome.
    Pages: xiv, 175 p.
    ISBN: 0-511-06622-8
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  • 21
    Unknown
    Cambridge ; New York : Cambridge University Press
    Cambridge cultural social studies  
    Keywords: United States, Race relations. ; African American press. ; African Americans and mass media. ; African Americans in mass media. ; Mass media and race relations, United States. ; Mass media, Social aspects, United States.
    Notes: Race, media, and multiple publics -- Historicizing the public spheres: New York, Los Angeles, Chicago -- Watts uprisings of 1965 -- Rodney King beating -- Rodney King 1992
    Pages: xii, 189 p.
    ISBN: 0-511-01120-2
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  • 22
    Publication Date: 2000-01-01
    Print ISSN: 0033-8222
    Electronic ISSN: 1945-5755
    Topics: Archaeology , Energy, Environment Protection, Nuclear Power Engineering , Geosciences
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  • 23
    Publication Date: 2000-01-01
    Print ISSN: 0033-8222
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  • 24
    Publication Date: 2000-01-01
    Description: New LaboratoryA new laboratory has opened in Miami, Florida. Ronald Hatfield and Darden Hood are the Directors of BIOCAMS International, which provides “AMS dating designed exclusively for art, antiques, and materials of potential commercial value”. See http:/www.biocams.com/ for details.
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  • 25
    Publication Date: 2000-01-01
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  • 26
    Publication Date: 2000-01-01
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  • 27
    Publication Date: 2000-01-01
    Description: With an elaborate accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) technique radiocarbon measurements have been performed with aerosol carbon filtered from high alpine snow samples gathered consecutively at the high-altitude research station Sonnblick (3106 m, Eastern Alps, Austria) during a snow storm in April 1997. The concentration of the water-insoluble carbonaceous material in the molten snow was on the average 310 μg C/L and the total sample amounts for analysis were in the range of 35 μg to 60 μg C. Using a special background correction procedure tested on similar amounts of an urban particulate standard sample the accuracy of the corrected and normalized 14C/12C isotopic ratios of the snow aerosol samples was in the order of 4% to 14% of the measured ratios. The water-insoluble carbonaceous material of five samples from Mt. Sonnblick exhibited a weighted mean of 74 pMC (percent Modern Carbon) with a range of 64 pMC to 88 pMC. Thus, it appears that about 64% of non-soluble carbon in high alpine snow from Sonnblick was of biogenic origin. The temporal variations of the 14C/12C isotopic ratios of the snow aerosol samples were statistically significant, suggesting alterations in the contribution of specific aerosol sources.
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  • 28
    Publication Date: 2000-01-01
    Description: Fossilized Siberian mammoth remains are important indicators of environmental change in the Late Pleistocene. The NSF-Arizona AMS Laboratory radiocarbon results on amino acid separations compare well with mammoth bone collagen from the same specimens treated by HCl and dated by beta counting (the Russian Academy Geological Institute Radiocarbon Laboratory). Neither laboratory was aware of the other's dates for these comparisons. The results coincide very closely (a difference of 50–800 yr), and demonstrate that AMS dating provides a very good perspective for applications of past mammoth population studies.
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  • 29
    Publication Date: 2000-01-01
    Description: Practical effects of the volumetric or weight ratio of scintillator solution to sample benzene in liquid scintillation spectrometry were examined here for radiocarbon dating. It is concluded, using a LKB-Wallac Quantulus™ 1220 and Teflon™-copper 3 mL vials with scintillator of toluene-based PPO and POPOP, that solutions containing the same concentrations of the same ratio, 1.3 or more, of scintillator solution to sample benzene show the same cpm/g and the same channel value of external standard spectrum, irrespective of different gross volumes of solutions. The addition of scintillator solution reduces background in 0.5 mL or so of benzene, and results in an appreciably enlarged figure of merit.
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  • 30
    Publication Date: 2000-01-01
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  • 31
    Publication Date: 2000-01-01
    Description: In this paper, we review the production of radiocarbon and other radionuclides in extraterrestrial materials. This radioactivity can be produced by the effects of solar and galactic cosmic rays on solid material in space. In addition, direct implantation at the lunar surface of 14C and other radionuclides can occur. The level of 14C and other radionuclides in a meteorite can be used to determine its residence time on the Earth's surface, or “terrestrial age”. 14C provides the best tool for estimating terrestrial ages of meteorites collected in desert environments. Age control allows us to understand the time constraints on processes by which meteorites are weathered, as well as mean storage times. Third, we discuss the use of the difference in 14C/12C ratio of organic material and carbonates produced on other planetary objects and terrestrial material. These differences can be used to assess the importance of distinguishing primary material formed on the parent body from secondary alteration of meteoritic material after it lands on the earth.
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  • 32
    Publication Date: 2000-01-01
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  • 33
    Publication Date: 2000-01-01
    Description: In this short article, we summarize some milestones in the 50-yr-long development of natural 14C measurement. In the light of this appraisal we presume to hazard some personal opinions and forecasts as to where best opportunities might lie for future gains from the continued investment in applied 14C science. The technique and the journal are one and the same in this regard.
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  • 34
    Publication Date: 2000-01-01
    Description: We have generated a high-resolution coral Δ14C record from the southwest subtropical Pacific spanning the last 50 yr. Prebomb (1950–1956) Δ14C values average −52%. Values begin to increase in 1957, reaching a maximum in the early 1970s, about 10 yr after the atmospheric peak. There is a consistent 10–15% seasonal cycle whose relationship with vertical mixing evolves as a consequence of the penetration of the bomb transient into subsurface waters. Comparison of this record with that simulated in an ocean general circulation model highlights the difficulty in modeling vertical exchange processes.
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  • 35
    Publication Date: 2000-01-01
    Description: The radiocarbon timescale has been calibrated by dendrochronology back to 11.8 ka cal BP, and extended to 14.8 ka cal BP using laminated marine sediments from the Cariaco Basin. Extension to nearly 23.5 ka cal BP is based on comparison between 14C and U-Th ages of corals. Recently, attempts to further extend the calibration curve to 〉40 kyr are based on laminated sediments from Lake Suigetsu, Japan, foraminifera in North Atlantic sediments, South African cave deposits, tufa from Spain, and stalagmites from the Bahamas. Here we compare these records with a new comparison curve obtained by 234U-230Th ages of aragonite deposited at Lake Lisan (the last Glacial Dead Sea). This comparison reveals broad agreement for the time interval of 20–32 ka cal BP, but the data diverge over other intervals. All records agree that Δ14C values range between ∼250–450‰ at 20–32 ka cal BP. For ages 〉32 ka cal BP, the Lake Suigetsu data indicate low Δ14C values of less than 200‰ and small shifts. The other records broadly agree that Δ14C values range between ∼250 and 600‰ at 32–39 ka cal BP. At ∼42 ka cal BP, the North Atlantic calibration shows low Δ14C values, while the corals, Lisan aragonites, and the Spanish tufa indicate a large deviations of 700–900‰. This age is slightly younger than recent estimates of the timing of the Laschamp Geomagnetic Event, and are consistent with increased 14C production during this event.
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  • 36
    Publication Date: 2000-01-01
    Description: This paper presents radiocarbon dates of terrestrial macrofossils from Lakes Gościąż and Perespilno, Poland. These data agree very well with most of the German pine calibration curve. In the Late Glacial, they generally agree with the data from Lake Suigetsu, Japan, and indicate constant or even increasing 14C age between 12.9 and 12.7 ka BP, rapid decline of 14C age around 12.6 ka BP, and a long plateau 10,400 14C BP around 12 ka BP. Correlation with corals and data from the Cariaco basin seems to support the concept of site-speficic, constant values of reservoir correction, in contradiction to those introduced in the INTCAL98 calibration. Around the Allerød/Younger Dryas boundary our data strongly disagree with those from the Cariaco basin, which reflects large discrepancy between calendar chronologies at that period. The older sequence from Lake Perespilno indicates two periods of rapid decline in 14C age, around 14.2 and 13.9 ka BP.
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  • 37
    Publication Date: 2000-01-01
    Description: During the last decade, several radiocarbon-dated varve chronologies have been produced. The main goal at first was the extension of the 14C calibration curve beyond 10,000 BP. This paper aims to discuss varve chronologies of Soppensee and Holzmaar Lakes. Although both chronologies encountered problems, high-resolution 14C dating and relative varve time have been obtained for events during the Late Glacial.
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  • 38
    Publication Date: 2000-01-01
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  • 39
    Publication Date: 2000-01-01
    Description: Mammoth and mastodont sites containing broken or cut bones are not rare in the New World, but their meanings are ambiguous. Studies of recent African elephant bone sites indicate that certain processes in nature create bone modifications that are identical to the end-effects of human actions such as butchering. In designing a rational and efficient approach to the radiometric dating of fossil proboscidean sites, caution and skepticism should enter into interpretations of modified materials.
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  • 40
    Publication Date: 2000-01-01
    Description: For the majority of dating laboratories and their respective user communities, the journal Radiocarbon is no longer regarded as the medium for primary publication of radiocarbon measurements. In compliance with editorial policy, the emphasis has long since moved towards the publication of research papers on technological enhancements and applications of 14C as well as other cosmogenic isotopes and this has left a requirement for an alternative medium for the publication of date lists per se. In the late 1980s, an International Radiocarbon Data Base was proposed by Renee Kra (then the managing editor) but limitations in computer and communications technologies together with the inevitable financial implications meant that this timely concept could not be taken to completion. In the last year, we have taken advantage of the development of the worldwide web to compile a database of 14C age measurements of a Scottish archaeological nature which can be found at the web address http://www.historic-scotland.gov.uk/.
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  • 41
    Publication Date: 2000-01-01
    Description: When introduced almost five decades ago, radiocarbon (14C) dating provided New World archaeologists with a common chronometric scale that transcended the countless site-specific and regional schemes that had been developed by four generations of field researchers employing a wide array of criteria for distinguishing relative chronological phases. A topic of long standing interest in New World studies where 14C values have played an especially critical role is the temporal framework for the initial peopling of the New World. Other important issues where 14C results have been of particular importance include the origins and development of New World agriculture and the determination of the relationship between the western and Mayan calendars. It has been suggested that the great success of 14C was an important factor in redirecting the focus of American archaeological scholarship in the 1960s from chronology building to theory building, led to a noticeable improvement in US archaeological field methods, and provided a major catalyst that moved American archaeologists increasingly to direct attention to analytical and statistical approaches in the manipulation and evaluation of archaeological data.
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  • 42
    Publication Date: 2000-01-01
    Description: A comparison of radiocarbon histograms of samples controlled and uncontrolled for sample provenance and composition factors indicates that differences are sufficiently large to influence the discrimination of alternative hypotheses on the age of the important, early Bellows Dune site in Hawai'i.
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  • 43
    Publication Date: 2000-01-01
    Description: We present a method for the isolation of phenolic compounds derived from lignin for radiocarbon analysis. These phenols are generated by chemical oxidation of polymeric materials and derivatized for separation and recovery by preparative capillary gas chromatography (PCGC). This technique yields tens of micrograms of pure, stable compounds that can be converted to graphite and analyzed by accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS). Analysis of model flavor compounds and dated woods indicates that, in most cases, the radiocarbon (14C) contents of the individual compounds, corrected for the contribution of the derivative, agree with that of the bulk material to within 20%.
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  • 44
    Publication Date: 2000-01-01
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  • 45
    Publication Date: 2000-01-01
    Description: The paper presents a comparison of U-series and radiocarbon dates of speleothems collected in several caves in central and southern Europe and southeast Africa. Despite a large spread of dates, mainly due to contamination with younger carbon, the group of corresponding 14C and 230Th/U ages of speleothem samples seems to be coherent with the previous suggestion of large deviation between the 14C and the absolute time scale between 35 and 45 ka BP. This agrees with the result of frequency analysis of published 14C and 230Th/U ages of speleothem.
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  • 46
    Publication Date: 2000-01-01
    Description: This paper discusses some aspects of the development of accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS), the international conferences that have been held, and the books that have been written on the subject. It also mentions some details of the technique and its strengths. Some of the interesting measurements that have been made recently are covered, and finally, it presents some thoughts on future developments.
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  • 47
    Publication Date: 2000-01-01
    Description: A new suite of five dates on a whale rib from Varangerfjord was completed on different fractions obtained by EDTA treatment. The intention was to test the possible influence of contaminants, the criteria for complete reactions, and the reliability of the treatment in light of scattered values obtained earlier on samples from Varangerfjord. The yield on the treatment of the selected bone did, however, not allow any general conclusions regarding the influence of contaminants in nature. The results are interesting from an inter-sample comparison point of view. Included are observations, made during treatment, of pH and color changes as well as the appearance of the samples. These observations are provided as a reference for deciding when the treatment is complete.
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  • 48
    Publication Date: 2000-01-01
    Description: Appropriate management strategies are essential for the protection and maintenance of groundwater resources. It is therefore important that aquifers are understood in terms of hydraulics, recharge, and yield potential, and that the vulnerability of aquifers to surface pollution is evaluated. A range of aquifer types were examined in this study, and water samples were analyzed for the radiocarbon content of the total dissolved inorganic carbon (TDIC), stable isotopes, and a suite of chemical and physical parameters. The data were input to a selection of models for the estimation of the initial activity of the TDIC, and groundwater ages were calculated. Eight commonly used models were comparatively assessed in the study. The Tamers, Mook, and IAEA models gave anomalous ages, probably because of their inability to correct for solid phase isotopic exchange in aquifers. The Pearson, F&G, Evans, Eichinger, and Mass Balance models produced results in broad agreement.The study shows that contrary to popular belief, there are sources of ancient groundwater in Ireland. Of the 19 sampling stations, two boreholes yielded waters with age estimates of greater than 10,000 BP. Water samples from a further six sites returned ages of between around 800 and 4000 BP. In contrast to borehole samples, spring wells yielded water of consistently young ages, demonstrating rapid recharge and flow mechanisms. Samples from several spring wells produced negative ages, indicating the presence of anthropogenic 14C. The findings demonstrate the potential for contamination of springs by surface runoff, while sources of greater age generally offer a greater degree of protection from surface pollution.
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    Topics: Archaeology , Energy, Environment Protection, Nuclear Power Engineering , Geosciences
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  • 49
    Publication Date: 2000-11-01
    Description: This study explores sources of variation in the efficacy of constituency building as corporate political strategy. The theoretical focus is on the persistent agency problems inherent in the principal-agent relationship between constituents and legislators. Analysis of data from key congressional respondents indicates that the nature of these agency problems significantly determines the relative effectiveness of corporate constituency building as a means to influence legislative decisionmaking. Corporate constituency building appears to be more effective for influencing legislators' voting behavior than for influencing the specific content of legislation; more effective in the House than the Senate; contingent on party affiliation; contingent on the types of feedback corporate stakeholders use to communicate with legislative offices; contingent on the types of corporate stakeholders involved. This paper discusses these findings in the context of the existing literature and makes suggestions for further inquiry into the use, efficacy, and evolution of constituency-based lobbying as corporate political strategy.
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  • 50
    Publication Date: 2000-04-01
    Description: There is a vast empirical literature on the allocation of corporate PAC contributions in Congressional elections and the influence that these contributions have on the policy-making process. The attention given to PAC contributions is far in excess of their actual importance. Corporate PAC contributions account for about 10% of Congressional campaign spending and major corporations allocate far more money to lobbying or philanthropy than their affiliated PACs make in contributions.
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  • 51
    Publication Date: 2000-08-01
    Description: This paper analyzes the evolution of corporate governance and regulation in privatized telecommunication companies in the four largest EU economies. A political-economy approach is used to test the validity of the convergence hypothesis, which posits that globalization should produce convergence in business practices, ownership patterns, and regulatory frameworks. While there are signs that the structure of ownership and monitoring in continental Europe is adopting some of the features of the Anglo-Saxon arms-length governance system, corporate decisions remain shaped by durable national institutions and distinctive political traditions regarding the role of the corporation in society, the “just” level of executive remuneration, the concept of universal service, and the involvement of the state in corporate restructuring.
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  • 52
    Publication Date: 2000-11-01
    Description: In recent decades, both South Korea and Taiwan have made remarkable leaps in the development and production of semiconductors-the core element in burgeoning global telecommunications, computer, and computer equipment industries. Although many aspects of their sectoral industrial strategies have differed, both countries are now moving aggressively to adapt their semiconductor industries to turbulent global markets. In the wake of the severe regional financial crisis that began in 1997, this case study compares and contrasts continuing processes of adaptation among primary semiconductor manufacturers in the two countries. The crisis had observable effects, especially in Korea, but it was not deep enough to force fundamental adjustments in either country. In the early days of the industry in both places, a sense of vulnerability-the need to come from behind-gave rise to quite different corporate structures and attendant strategies. Remarkable differences persist in the ways in which the South Korean and Taiwanese semiconductor firms are seeking new advantages in rapidly changing regional and global markets. Strategic change and structural continuity mark the attempt of two relatively small countries to stay competitive in a key industry.
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  • 53
    Publication Date: 2000-04-01
    Description: This paper examines several hypotheses that have been proposed to explain the existence and growth of legislators' campaign “warchests”. We examine the sources and political consequences of warchests in US House elections over the period of 1978–1998. Briefly, our findings are as follows. First, we find little evidence in support of the deterrence hypotheses. Second, short-term electoral forces-scandals, partisan tides, challenger quality-accounts for a large fraction of the explained variation in savings. Third, incumbents act as if they have finite, “target” levels of total savings. Fourth, some of the accumulated savings before 1992 appear to be for retirement. Finally, we find considerable evidence that many of the largest warchests are accumulated to help members run for higher office.
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  • 54
    Publication Date: 2000-08-01
    Description: Business plays a critical yet poorly understood role in trade policymaking. This paper develops an analytical framework that focuses on the distribution of business trade preferences, the forces that cause those preferences to change, and the ability of different groups to exert political influence over policy. It then applies this framework to Mexico in the 1980s and 1990s. Large, exporting firms increased their weight due to shifts in the international context, the condition of the domestic economy, and previous government policies. Policymakers granted political access to actors whose economic and political leverage had risen, typically those who controlled numerous investment resources and sought out a direct role in policymaking. Many of these actors also favored free trade. Business participation in trade policy reflects these patterns. Large, outward-oriented firms played an increasingly important role in Mexico's adoption of free trade policies over the 1980s and early 1990s.
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  • 55
    Publication Date: 2000-04-01
    Description: Interest groups cannot enforce contracts with legislators to work in their favor since fee-for-service agreements would be considered bribery. When such contracts are not available, a system of specialized, standing committees can provide a second-best way to maximize contributions, since such a system facilitates repeated interactions and reputational development between PACs and members of the relevant committees. Using data on PAC contributions by competing financial services interests to members of the House Banking Committee, we find evidence consistent with key implications of our model of committees as reputational-development devises. We then interpret important episodes in the evolution and development of the committee system during the twentieth century from the perspective of our theory. We focus on the revolt against House Speaker Cannon, which resulted in the birth of the modern committee system, and the post-Watergate reforms. We also consider broader implications of this approach for analyzing term limits, corruption, and party strength. JEL classifications: D72, D78, G28.
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  • 56
    Publication Date: 2000-08-01
    Description: Since the late 1980s, the Cooperative Research and Development Agreement (CRADA) has been a prominent vehicle used to support collaboration between US federal laboratories and private firms. This paper examines the structure and goals of one of the most ambitious CRADAs conducted to date, the EUV CRADA, which involves three Department of Energy laboratories and leading US firms in the semiconductor industry and is aimed at the development of next-generation lithographic technologies. This large project is an important case study in ‘post-Cold-War’ technology policy and government-industry collaboration. Although the EUV project represents significant improvements in the design and management of CRADAs, it also illustrates the inherent difficulties of balancing political and economic goals in complex technology development programs.
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  • 57
    Publication Date: 2000-04-01
    Description: Campaign finance reform is the subject of ongoing public policy debates in many modern democratic societies. In the United States, individuals and interest groups from across the ideological spectrum have proposed or embraced a variety of campaign finance reforms in attempts to alter the electoral landscape. At least one recent presidential candidate highlighted the issue of campaign finance reform which appear to resonate with voters, as part of a broader strategy to secure his party's nomination. Many of these reforms propose to alter the sources and uses of financial resources in Congressional elections.
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  • 58
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    Cambridge University Press
    Publication Date: 2000-01-01
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    Topics: Archaeology , Energy, Environment Protection, Nuclear Power Engineering , Geosciences
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  • 59
    Publication Date: 2000-01-01
    Description: By correlating the climate records and radiocarbon ages of the planktonic foraminifera N. pachyderma(s) of deep-sea core PS2644 from the Iceland Sea with the annual-layer chronology of the GISP2 ice core, we obtained 80 marine 14C calibration points for the interval 11.4-53.3 ka cal BP. Between 27 and 54 ka cal BP the continuous record of 14C/cal age differences reveals three intervals of highly increased 14C concentrations coincident with low values of paleomagnetic field intensity, two of which are attributed to the geomagnetic Mono Lake and Laschamp excursions (33.5-34.5 ka cal BP with maximum 550 marine δ14C, and 40.3-41.7 ka cal BP with maximum 1215 marine δ14C, respectively). A third maximum (marine δ14C: 755) is observed around 38 ka cal BP and attributed to the geomagnetic intensity minimum following the Laschamp excursion. During all three events the A14C values increase rapidly with maximum values occurring at the end of the respective geomagnetic intensity minimum. During the Mono Lake Event, however, our A14C values seem to underestimate the atmospheric level, if compared to the 36Cl flux measured in the GRIP ice core (Wagner et al. 2000) and other records. As this excursion coincides with a meltwater event in core PS2644, the underestimation is probably caused by an increased planktonic reservoir age. The same effect also occurs from 38.5 to 40 ka cal BP when the meltwater lid of Heinrich Event 4 affected the planktonic record.
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  • 60
    Publication Date: 2000-11-01
    Description: Most current theoretical treatments view business associations as rent-seeking, special interest groups. Yet, empirical research in a wide range of developing countries reveals a broad range of functions and activities undertaken by business associations, many of which promote efficiency. These positive functions address crucial development issues (emphasized in the New Institutional Economics) such as strengthening property rights, facilitating vertical and horizontal coordination, reducing information costs, and upgrading worker training. The associations that engage in these developmental activities tend to be well organized and staffed. This institutional strength depends in turn on high member density, valuable selective benefits (often delegated by governments), and effective internal mediation of member interests. In addition external factors, especially competitive markets and government pressure, encourage associations to use their institutional strength for productive ends.
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  • 61
    Publication Date: 2000-08-01
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  • 62
    Publication Date: 2000-08-01
    Description: The recent zero-priced award of $11–70 billion in digital TV (DTV) licenses by the federal government occurred when auctions had been initiated for non-broadcast licenses and when the seven decade-old regime of ‘public trusteeship’ in broadcasting had become famous for licensee reneging on promised obligations. Policymakers nonetheless declined to auction DTV licenses when enacting the Telecommunications Act of 1996, rejecting a plea from the Senate Majority Leader. This paper provides an overview of the episode and investigates three basic questions. (1) Why does Congress continue a regulatory system that routinely fails to provide the benefits it is supposed to generate? (2) Why did the National Association of Broadcasters propose high definition television as a way of keeping land mobile operators off an unused spectrum? (3) Why did Congress delegate to the FCC the decision to award licenses for digital television broadcasting?
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  • 63
    Publication Date: 2000-11-01
    Description: Taxation reform has dominated Australian politics over the past twenty-five years. Despite this prominence on the political agenda, until recently Australian governments have lacked the capacity to consolidate key elements of this tax reform agenda. While the problematic nature of Australian tax reform can be explained in part by macro-level variables, this protracted policy deadlock has also influenced historical patterns of business-government intermediation. The article argues that the evolution of the Australian tax policy network over the study period was prompted by both associational and state actors reassessing their strategies in the context of the political failure of tax reform proposals. These developments provide empirical insights into the ongoing debate relating to the factors which lead to the formation and evolution of sectoral level policy networks. The article concludes that while the increasing levels of business mobilization experienced over the study period enhanced the electoral viability of reform proposals, these new patterns of sectoral business politics should be regarded as a consequence of the policy deadlock relating to tax reform rather than primary cause of policy change.
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  • 64
    Publication Date: 2000-08-01
    Description: The examination of the U.S.—Japan conflicts from the mid-1980s to early 1990s over the space industry sheds light on our understanding of the Japanese political economy. The Japanese response to U.S. pressure was not so strategic as conventional wisdom suggests. Under U.S. pressure, Japan shifted to international cooperation, abandoning the autonomous development policy it had sought for four decades. This unexpected policy change primarily resulted from the lack of clear jurisdictional authority among the government actors over the rapidly changing space industry. This study's findings will apply to other high technology industries such as telecommunications and information technology, where bureaucratic boundaries are ambiguous and technological change is rapid.
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  • 65
    Publication Date: 2000-04-01
    Description: This paper examines the political activity of US defense contractors over the years 1980–1994. Using econometric techniques to account for both fixed-effects and selection, I examine the industry determinants and distribution patterns of political action committee (PAC) contributions to the US House of Representatives. The analysis finds that the size of the defense budget is a primary factor explaining political activity across the industry as well as within individual firms; firm size, dependency on defense, and defense contract awards explain much less. I also find that firms appeared to change their political strategies in the face of large exogenous shifts in the US defense budget. While defense expenditures were on the rise, defense firms spread their contributions relatively broadly over the defense committee system; when the budget fell, however, the firms switched strategies and targeted committee leaders. An incidental contribution of the paper is an empirical application of the trimmed least absolute deviations estimator for fixed-effects models with selection.
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  • 66
    Publication Date: 2000-11-01
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  • 67
    Publication Date: 2000-12-25
    Description: Motivated by the non-Newtonian properties of mucus and the bilayer nature of fluid lining in the pulmonary airways, we investigate surfactant transport on both single and bilayer fluid systems; the aim is twofold. First, we explore the influence of two principle rheological properties of mucus, yield stress and shear thinning, on the surfactant spreading behaviour. Secondly, in these airways, mucus, which has substantial non-Newtonian properties, overlies the periciliary liquid layer (PCL) which is primarily Newtonian, and we incorporate this bilayer structure into the analysis. This consists of the derivation of coupled spatio-temporal evolution equations describing the layer thicknesses and surfactant concentration. Subsequent analytical methods examine limiting cases where similarity variables can be usefully employed, and more generally numerical simulations are performed.
    Print ISSN: 0022-1120
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  • 68
    Publication Date: 2000-12-25
    Description: The motion of fluid droplets in capillary tubes subject to the action of a mean pressure gradient and an oscillatory body force is studied via numerical computations. The effects of the oscillatory forcing on the bulk flow rate and on the droplet velocity are evaluated, and results are presented for a range of forcing conditions, fluid properties and drop sizes. For large droplets (whose undeformed diameter exceeds that of the capillary tube), significant enhancement in the bulk flow rate is observed when the drop capillary number is small and the oscillatory forcing is strong. The enhancement is associated with increased droplet deformation in the presence of oscillatory forcing. The dependence of the flow enhancement on the amplitude, frequency and waveform of the oscillatory body force is evaluated for a range of fluid properties.
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  • 69
    Publication Date: 2000-12-25
    Description: A new theory for the turbulent plane wall jet without external stream is proposed based on a similarity analysis of the governing equations. The asymptotic invariance principle (AIP) is used to require that properly scaled profiles reduce to similarity solutions of the inner and outer equations separately in the limit of infinite Reynolds number. Application to the inner equations shows that the appropriate velocity scale is the friction velocity, u*, and the length scale is v/u*. For finite Reynolds numbers, the profiles retain a dependence on the length-scale ratio, y1/2+ = u*y1/2/v, where y1/2 is the distance from the wall at which the mean velocity has dropped to 1/2 its maximum value. In the limit as y1/2+ → ∞, the familiar law of the wall is obtained. Application of the AIP to the outer equations shows the appropriate velocity scale to be Um, the velocity maximum, and the length scale y1/2; but again the profiles retain a dependence on y1/2+ for finite values of it. The Reynolds shear stress in the outer layer scales with u*2, while the normal stresses scale with Um2. Also Um ∼ y1/2n where n 〈 -1/2 and must be determined from the data. The theory cannot rule out the possibility that the outer flow may retain a dependence on the source conditions, even asymptotically. The fact that both these profiles describe the entire wall jet for finite values of y1/2+, but reduce to inner and outer profiles in the limit, is used to determine their functional forms in the 'overlap' region which both retain. The result from near asymptotics is that the velocity profiles in the overlap region must be power laws, but with parameters which depend on Reynolds number y1/2+ and are only asymptotically constant. The theoretical friction law is also a power law depending on the velocity parameters. As a consequence, the asymptotic plane wall jet cannot grow linearly, although the difference from linear growth is small. It is hypothesized that the inner part of the wall jet and the inner part of the zero-pressure-gradient boundary layer are the same. It follows immediately that all of the wall jet and boundary layer parameters should be the same, except for two in the outer flow which can differ only by a constant scale factor. The theory is shown to be in excellent agreement with the experimental data which show that source conditions may determine uniquely the asymptotic state achieved. Surprisingly, only a single parameter, B1 = (Umv/Mo)/(y1/2Mo/v2)n = constant where n ≈ -0.528, appears to be required to determine the entire flow for a given source.
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  • 70
    Publication Date: 2000-12-25
    Description: Theoretical and computational aspects of the self-induced motion of closed and periodic three-dimensional vortex sheets situated at the interfaces between two inviscid fluids with generally different densities in the presence of surface tension are considered. In the mathematical formulation, the vortex sheet is described by a continuous distribution of marker points that move with the velocity of the fluid normal to the vortex sheet while executing an arbitrary tangential motion. Evolution equations for the vectorial jump in the velocity across the vortex sheet, the vectorial strength of the vortex sheet, and the scalar circulation field or strength of the effective dipole field following the marker points are derived. The computation of the self-induced motion of the vortex sheet requires the accurate evaluation of the strongly singular Biot-Savart integral whose existence requires that the normal vector varies in a continuous fashion over the vortex sheet. Two methods of computing the principal value of the Biot-Savart integral are implemented. The first method involves computing the vector potential and the principal value of the harmonic potential over the vortex sheet, and then differentiating them in tangential directions to produce the normal or tangential component of the velocity, in the spirit of generalized vortex methods developed by Baker (1983). The second method involves subtracting off the dominant singularity of the Biot-Savart kernel and then accounting for its contribution by use of vector identities. Evaluating the strongly singular Biot-Savart integral is thus reduced to computing a weakly singular integral involving the mean curvature of the vortex sheet, and this allows the routine discretization of the vortex sheet into curved elements whose normal vector is not necessarily continuous across the edges, and the computation of the self-induced velocity without kernel desingularization. Numerical simulations of the motion of a closed or periodic vortex sheet immersed in a homogeneous fluid confirm the effectiveness of the numerical methods for a limited time of evolution. Numerical instabilities arise after a certain evolution time due to the ill-posedness of vortex sheet dynamics. The motion may be regularized by desingularizing the Biot-Savart kernel using either Krasny's (1986b) method or spectrum truncation. Depending, however, on the physical mechanism that drives the motion, the instabilities may persevere.
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  • 71
    Publication Date: 2000-12-25
    Description: The collision of a strong vortex with a surface is an important problem because significant impulsive loads may be generated. Prediction of helicopter fatigue lifetime may be limited by an inability to predict these loads accurately. Experimental results for the impingement of a helicopter rotor-tip vortex on a cylindrical airframe show a suction peak on the top of the airframe that strengthens and then weakens within milliseconds. A simple line-vortex model can predict the experimental results if the vortex is at least two vortex-core radii away from the airframe. After this, the model predicts continually deepening rather than lessening suction as the vortex stretches. Experimental results suggest that axial flow within the core of a tip vortex has an impact on the airframe pressure distribution upon close approach. The mechanism for this is hypothesized to be the inviscid redistribution of the vorticity field within the vortex as the axial velocity stagnates. Two models of a tip vortex with axial flow are considered. First, a classical axisymmetric line vortex with a cutoff parameter is superimposed with vortex ringlets suitably placed to represent the helically wound vortex shed by the rotor tip. Thus, inclusion of axial flow is found to advect vortex core thinning away from the point of closest interaction as the vortex stretches around the cylindrical surface during the collision process. With less local thinning, vorticity in the cutoff parameter model significantly overlaps the solid cylinder in an unphysical manner, highlighting the fact that the vortex core must deform from its original cylindrical shape. A second model is then developed in which axial and azimuthal vorticity are confined within a rectangular-section vortex. Area and aspect ratio of this vortex can be varied independently to simulate deformation of the vortex core. Both axial velocity and core deformation are shown to be important to calculate the local induced pressure loads properly. The computational results are compared with experiments conducted at the Georgia Institute of Technology.
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  • 72
    Publication Date: 2000-11-16
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  • 73
    Publication Date: 2000-09-25
    Description: In this article we present new experimental and theoretical results which were obtained for the flow between two concentric cylinders, with the inner one rotating and in the presence of an axial, stable density stratification. This system is characterized by two control parameters: one destabilizing, the rotation rate of the inner cylinder; and the other stabilizing, the stratification. Two oscillatory linear stability analyses assuming axisymmetric flow conditions are presented. First an eigenmode linear stability analysis is performed, using the small-gap approximation. The solutions obtained give insight into the instability mechanisms and indicate the existence of a confined internal gravity wave mode at the onset of instability. In the second stability analysis, only diffusion is neglected, predicting accurately the instability threshold as well as the critical pulsation for all the stratifications used in the experiments. Experiments show that the basic, purely azimuthal flow (circular Couette flow) is destabilized through a supercritical Hopf bifurcation to an oscillatory flow of confined internal gravity waves, in excellent agreement with the linear stability anlysis. The secondary bifurcation, which takes the system to a pattern of drifting non-axisymmetric vortices, is a saddle-node bifurcation. The proposed bifurcation diagram shows a global bifurcation, and explains the discrepancies between previous experimental and numerical results. For slightly larger values of the rotation rate, weakly turbulent spectra are obtained, indicating an early appearance of weak turbulence: stationary structures and defects coexist. Moreover, in this regime, there is a large distribution of structure sizes. Visualizations of the next regime exhibit constant-wavelength structures and fluid exchange between neighbouring cells, similar to wavy vortices. Their existence is explained by a simple energy argument. The generalization of the bifurcation diagram to hydrodynamic systems with one destabilizing and one stabilizing control parameter is discussed. A qualitative argument is derived to discriminate between oscillatory and stationary onset of instability in the general case.
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  • 74
    Publication Date: 2000-09-10
    Description: Direct numerical simulations are performed of gravity-current fronts in the lock-exchange configuration. The case of small density differences is considered, where the Boussinesq approximations can be adopted. The key objective of the investigation is a detailed analysis of the flow structure at the foremost part of the front, where no previous high-resolution data were available. For the simulations, high-order numerical methods are used, based on spectral and spectral-element discretizations and compact finite differences. A three-dimensional simulation is conducted of a front spreading along a no-slip boundary at a Reynolds number of about 750. The simulation exhibits all features typically observed in experimental flows near the gravity-current head, including the lobe-and-cleft structure at the leading edge. The results reveal that the flow topology at the head differs from what has been assumed previously, in that the foremost point is not a stagnation point in a translating system. Rather, the stagnation point is located below and slightly behind the foremost point in the vicinity of the wall. The relevance of this finding for the mechanism behind the lobe-and-cleft instability is discussed. In order to explore the high-Reynolds-number regime, and to assess potential Reynolds-number effects, two-dimensional simulations are conducted for Reynolds numbers up to about 30 000, for both no-slip and slip (i.e. shear-stress free) boundaries. It is shown that although quantitative Reynolds-number effects persist over the whole range examined, no qualitative changes in the flow structure at the head can be observed. A comparison of the two-dimensional results with laboratory data and the three-dimensional simulation provides evidence that a two-dimensional model is able to capture essential features of the flow at the head. The simulations also show that for the free-slip case the shape of the head agrees closely with the classical inviscid theory of Benjamin.
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  • 75
    Publication Date: 2000-09-10
    Description: A laboratory study was carried out to directly measure the turbulence properties in a benthic boundary layer (BBL) above a uniformly sloping bottom where the BBL is energized by internal waves. The ambient fluid was continuously stratified and the steadily forced incoming wave field consisted of a confined beam, restricting the turbulent activity to a finite region along the bottom slope. Measurements of dissipation showed some variation over the wave phase, but cycle-averaged values indicated that the dissipation was nearly constant with height within the BBL. Dissipation levels were up to three orders of magnitude larger than background laminar values and the thickness of the BBL could be defined in terms of the observed dissipation variation with height. Assuming that most of the incoming wave energy was dissipated within the BBL, predicted levels of dissipation were in good agreement with the observations. Measurements were also made of density and two orthogonal components of the velocity fluctuations at discrete heights above the bottom. Cospectral estimates of density and velocity fluctuations showed that the major contributions to both the vertical density flux and the momentum flux resulted from frequencies near the wave forcing frequency, rather than super-buoyancy frequencies, suggesting a strong nonlinear interaction between the incident and reflected waves close to the bottom. Within the turbulent BBL, time-averaged density fluxes were significant and negative near the wave frequencies but negligible at frequencies greater than the buoyancy frequency N. While dissipation rates were high compared to background laminar values, they were low compared to the value of ε(tr) ~ 15 ν N2, the transition value often used to assess the capacity of a stratified flow to produce mixing. Existing models relating mixing to dissipation rate rely on the existence of a positive-definite density flux at frequencies greater than N as a signature of fluid mixing and therefore cannot apply to these experiments. We therefore introduce a simple model, based on the concept of diascalar fluxes, to interpret the mixing in the stratified fluid in the BBL and suggest that this may have wider application than to the particular configuration studied here.
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  • 76
    Publication Date: 2000-09-25
    Description: The dependence of the Nusselt number Nu on the Rayleigh Ra and Prandtl Pr number is determined for 104 〈 Ra 〈 107 and 0.07 〈 Pr 〈 7 using DNS with no-slip upper and lower boundaries and free-slip sidewalls in a 8 x 8 x 2 box. Nusselt numbers, velocity scales and boundary layer thicknesses are calculated. For Nu there are good comparisons with experimental data and scaling laws for all the cases, including Ra(2/7) laws at Pr = 0.7 and Pr = 7 and at low Pr, a Ra(1/4) regime. Calculations at Pr = 0.3 predict a new Nu ~ Ra(2/7) regime at slightly higher Ra than the Pr = 0.07 calculations reported here and the mercury Pr = 0.025 experiments.
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  • 77
    Publication Date: 2000-09-25
    Description: A general theoretical account is proposed for the zigzag instability of a vertical columnar vortex pair recently discovered in a strongly stratified experiment. The linear inviscid stability of the Lamb-Chaplygin vortex pair is analysed by a multiple-scale expansion analysis for small horizontal Froude number (F(h) = U/L(h)N, where U is the magnitude of the horizontal velocity, L(h) the horizontal lengthscale and N the Brunt-Vaisala frequency) and small vertical Froude number (F(v) = U/L(v)N, where L(v) is the vertical lengthscale) using the scaling of the equations of motion introduced by Riley, Metcalfe and Weissman (1981). In the limit F(v) = 0, these equations reduce to two-dimensional Euler equations for the horizontal velocity with undetermined vertical dependence. Thus, at leading order, neutral modes of the flow are associated, among others, to translational and rotational invariances in each horizontal plane. To each broken invariance is related a phase variable that may vary freely along the vertical. Conservation of mass and potential vorticity impose at higher order the evolution equations governing the phase variables that we derive for F(h) 〈〈 1 and F(v) 〈〈 1 in the spirit of phase dynamics techniques established for periodic patterns. In agreement with the experimental observations, this asymptotic analysis shows the existence of an instability consisting of a vertically modulated rotation and a translation of the columnar vortex pair perpendicular to the travelling direction. The dispersion relation as well as the spatial eigenmode of the zigzag instability are determined. The analysis predicts that the most amplified vertical wavelength should scale as U/N and the maximum growth rate as U/L(h). Our main finding is thus that the typical thickness of the ensuing layers will be such that F(v) = 0(1) and not F(v) 〈〈 1 as assumed by Riley et al. (1981) and Lilly (1983). This implies that such strongly stratified flows are not described by two-dimensional horizontal equations. These results may help to understand the layering commonly observed in stratified turbulence and the fundamental differences with strictly two-dimensional turbulence.
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  • 78
    Publication Date: 2000-08-25
    Description: The goals of this study were to develop a set of Reynolds-averaged governing equations for turbulent free-surface flow, and to use the resulting equations to determine the origin of the surface current in high-Froude-number jet flows. To develop the Reynolds-averaged equations, free-surface turbulent flow is treated as a two-fluid flow separated by an interface. It is shown that the general Navier-Stokes equations written for variable property flow embody the field equations applicable to each fluid, as well as the boundary conditions for the interface and, therefore, can be applied across the entire fluid domain, including the interface. With this as a starting point, a formulation of the Reynolds-averaged governing equations for turbulent free-surface flows can be developed rigorously. The resulting Reynolds-averaged equations are written in terms of density-weighted averages, their derivatives, and the probability density function for the free-surface position. These equations are similar to the conventional Reynolds-averaged equations, but include additional terms which represent the average effect of the forces acting instantaneously on the free surface, forces normally associated with the boundary conditions. These averaged equations are applied to the interaction of a turbulent jet with the free surface in order to establish, for arbitrary-Froude-number flows, the origin of the surface current, the large outward velocity which occurs in a thin layer adjacent to the surface. It is shown via an order-of-magnitude analysis that the outward acceleration associated with the surface current results from a combination of the Reynolds-stress anisotropy and the free-surface fluctuations. For low Froude number, the surface current is mainly driven by the Reynolds stress anisotropy, consistent with the results of Walker (1997); when the Froude number is large, the Reynolds-stress anisotropy is smaller and the free-surface fluctuations make a significant contribution.
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  • 79
    Publication Date: 2000-08-25
    Description: A linear stability analysis is carried out to examine the initial stage of sand-wave growth under tidal flows and the occurrence of a preferred length scale. The fact that these bedforms typically have length scales small compared to the tidal excursion is exploited by adopting an asymptotic approach to solve the hydrodynamic part of the problem, i.e. to find the hydrodynamic response to an initially small bed perturbation. This method is shown to have important advantages over previously used methods, since it allows an exploration of the complete sand-wave regime (whereas other methods fail for short sand waves), and in general it is also more accurate. It is found that the selection of a preferred length scale depends mainly on only two parameters (the bed-slope coefficient, and the ratio of friction velocity to eddy viscosity), whereas there appears to be almost no dependence on the water depth.
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  • 80
    Publication Date: 2000-08-10
    Description: Instabilities of a wake produced by a circular cylinder in a uniform water flow are studied experimentally when viscoelastic solutions are injected through holes pierced in the cylinder. It is shown that the viscoelastic solutions fill the shear regions and drastically modify the instabilities. The two-dimensional instability giving rise to the Karman street is found to be inhibited: The roll-up process appears to be delayed and the wavelength of the street increase. The wavelength increase obeys an exponential law and depends on the elasticity number, which provides a ratio of elastic forces to inertial forces. The three-dimensional instability leading to the A mode is generally found to be suppressed. In the rare case where the A mode is observed, its wavelength is shown to be proportional to the wavelength of the Karman street and the streamwise stretching appears to be inhibited. Injection of viscoelastic solutions also decreases the aspect ratio of the two-dimensional wake, and this is correlated with stabilization of the A mode and with changes in the shape of the Karman vortices. The observations of this work are consistent with recent numerical simulations of viscoelastic mixing layers. The results suggest mechanisms through which polymers inhibit the formation of high-vorticity coherent structures and reduce drag in turbulent flows.
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  • 81
    Publication Date: 2000-08-10
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  • 82
    Publication Date: 2000-08-10
    Description: When a ferrofluid layer is subjected to a uniform and vertically oriented magnetic field, an interfacial instability occurs, above a critical value of the magnetic field, giving rise to a hexagonal array of peaks. On increasing the magnetic field, a smooth morphological transition from the hexagonal array to a square array was observed above a second threshold. The hexagon-square transition phenomenology, in addition to the role of penta-hepta defects initially present in the hexagonal pattern, was investigated. Furthermore, the pattern and wavenumber selection was studied by two different procedures: first by imposing jumps in field intensity and second by varying the magnetic field in a quasi-static way. The results obtained were very different for the two procedures. They indicated that the square pattern was a metastable state induced by the compression of the hexagonal pattern on increasing the control parameter. This hypothesis was confirmed by performing an additional experiment where the pattern was isotropically compressed. In this experiment, the transition was induced at a constant magnetic field lower than the transition onset value. However, the theoretical values for stability domains of hexagons and squares proposed in the literature were found to not agree with the experimental values.
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  • 83
    Publication Date: 2000-07-25
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  • 84
    Publication Date: 2000-11-03
    Description: In a recent study by Yeung and Parkinson (1997), a wake width was proposed which allowed the bluff-body potential-flow model by Parkinson and Jandali (1970) to be extended to include the flow around an oblique flat plate. By incorporating this wake width in the momentum equation originally derived by Eppler (1954) for separated flow, the drag of the plate is related to its inclination and base pressure through a simple analytical condition. It allows the base pressure, which is usually treated as an empirical input, to be determined theoretically and thus the model becomes self-contained. Predictions of the base pressure, drag and width of wake are found to be in reasonable agreement with the experimental data. When applied to the symmetrical flow around a wedge of arbitrary vertex angle, similar agreement with experimental measurements is obtained as well. It is also demonstrated that this condition is compatible with the free-streamline models by Wu (1962) and Wu and Wang (1964) such that the corresponding predictions are in good agreement with experiment.
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  • 85
    Publication Date: 2000-11-03
    Description: A boundary layer maintained as close as possible to separation over an extended distance was produced, in accordance with the concept of Stratford. The resulting layer was two-dimensional in the mean, had nearly a constant shape factor of 2.5 and approximately linear streamwise growth of its integral length scales. The flow exhibited a definite non-equilibrium character, indicated by the different scales required for collapse of the mean velocity and turbulence intensity profiles. It was also very sensitive to the thickness of the upstream boundary layer. External excitation was imposed for diagnostic purposes and as a tool for delaying separation. The oscillatory momentum level of c(μ) ~ 0.1% was tested for its ability to increase the skin friction c(f) at the prescribed geometry. Various frequencies, corresponding to the Strouhal number 0.008 〈 fθ0/U(ref) 〈 0.064, were used for the free stream reference velocity of U(ref) = 15 m s-1 and for two different inflow conditions. Notable increase (close to 60%) in c(f) was observed at higher frequencies that did not undergo maximum amplification. The increase in c(f) was accompanied by a reduction in the boundary layer thickness and in the shape factor H. The latter decreased in one case from 2.5 to 2.1. The overall turbulence level in the boundary layer decreased due to the addition of plane external perturbations.
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  • 86
    Publication Date: 2000-11-03
    Description: A methodology for deriving a pressure-strain correlation model with variable coefficients is developed. The methodology is based on two important premises: (i) the extreme states of turbulence - the rapid distortion and equilibrium limits - are more amenable to mathematically rigorous modelling because of significant simplifications not possible at other states; and (ii) the models of the extreme states collectively contain all of the relevant physics so that models for any intermediate state can be obtained by suitable interpolation. A pressure-strain model of the standard form is considered and the coefficients are determined from linear analysis in the rapid distortion limit and from a fixed point analysis in the equilibrium limit. The model coefficients, which depend on the mean deformation and turbulence state, vary from flow to flow in a manner consistent with Navier-Stokes physics. The exact causal relationship between the model coefficients and the model's equilibrium behaviour is established by fixed point analysis performed using representation theory. Then, the equilibrium values of the model coefficients are chosen to yield the observed equilibrium behaviour. The values of the model coefficients in the rapid distortion limit are determined by enforcing consistency with the Crow constraint. The new variable-coefficient model reduces to the traditional constant-coefficient model in strain-dominated turbulent flows near equilibrium. The model performance in benchmark turbulent flows, in which the traditional models have been calibrated extensively, is preserved intact. The new model is significantly different from the traditional one in mean vorticity-dominated and non-equilibrium turbulence. These two important classes of flows, in which traditional models fail, are successfully captured by the new model.
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  • 87
    Publication Date: 2000-11-03
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  • 88
    Publication Date: 2000-09-25
    Description: An erodible surface exposed to supercritical flow often devolves into a series of steps that migrate slowly upstream. Each step delineates a headcut with an associated hydraulic jump. These steps can form in a bed of cohesive material which, once eroded, is carried downstream as washload without redeposition. Here the case of purely erosional, one-dimensional periodic, or cyclic steps in cohesive material is considered. The St. Venant shallow-water equations combined with a formulation for sediment erosion are used to construct a complete theory of the erosional case. The solution allows wavelength, wave height, migration speed and bed and water surface profiles to be determined as functions of imposed parameters. The analysis also admits a solution for a solitary step, or single headcut of self-preserving form.
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  • 89
    Publication Date: 2000-09-25
    Description: This paper investigates the three-dimensional stability of a Lamb-Chaplygin columnar vertical vortex pair as a function of the vertical wavenumber k(z), horizontal Froude number F(h), Reynolds number Re and Schmidt number Sc. The horizontal Froude number F(h) (F(h) = U/NR, where U is the dipole travelling velocity, R the dipole radius and N the Brunt-Vaisala frequency) is varied in the range [0.033, ∞[ and three set of Reynolds-Schmidt numbers are investigated: {Re = 10 000, Sc = 1}, {Re = 1000, Sc = 1}, {Re = 200, Sc = 637}. In the whole range of F(h) and Re, the dominant mode is always antisymmetric with respect to the middle plane between the vortices but its physical nature and properties change when F(h) is varied. An elliptic instability prevails for F(h) 〉 0.25, independently of the Reynolds number. It manifests itself by the bending of each vortex core in the opposite direction to the vortex periphery. The growth rate of the elliptic instability is reduced by stratification effects but its spatial structure is almost unaffected. In the range 0.2 〈 F(h) 〈 0.25, a continuous transition occurs from the elliptic instability to a different instability called zigzag instability. The transitional range F(hc) = 0.2-0.25 is in good agreement with the value F(h) = 0.22 at which the elliptic instability of an infinite uniform vortex is suppressed by the stratification. The zigzag instability dominates for F(h) ≤ 0.2 and corresponds to a vertically modulated bending and twisting of the whole vortex pair. The experimental evidence for this zigzag instability in a strongly stratified fluid reported in the first part of this study (Billant and Chomaz 2000a) are therefore confirmed and extended. The numerically calculated wavelength and growth rate for low Reynolds number compare well with experimental measurements. The present numerical stability analysis fully agrees with the inviscid asymptotic analysis carried out in the second part of this investigation (Billant and Chomaz 2000b) for small Froude number F(h) and long wavelength. This confirms that the zigzag instability is related to the breaking of translational and rotational invariances. As predicted, the growth rate of the zigzag instability is observed to be self-similar with respect to the variable F(h)k(z), implying that the maximum growth rate is independent of F(h) while the most amplified dimensional wavenumber varies with N/U. The numerically computed eigenmode and dispersion relation are in striking agreement with the analytical results.
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  • 90
    Publication Date: 2000-09-10
    Description: The steady translational motion of a sphere in a Boussinesq stratified fluid, where the motion is parallel to the stratification surfaces, is studied. A model based on existing linear gravity wave theory for large Froude numbers and on new theory for small Froude numbers is presented. The small-Froude-number theory describes wave generation and the presence of a rectangular-section attached wake whose size and shape is controlled by the size and shape of the wave generation regions. Existing laboratory data are used to evaluate the model's prediction for the drag coefficient of the sphere as a function of Froude number.
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  • 91
    Publication Date: 2000-09-10
    Description: This paper shows that a long vertical columnar vortex pair created by a double flap apparatus in a strongly stratified fluid is subjected to an instability distinct from the Crow and short-wavelength instabilities known to occur in homogeneous fluid. This new instability, which we name zigzag instability, is antisymmetric with respect to the plane separating the vortices. It is characterized by a vertically modulated twisting and bending of the whole vortex pair with almost no change of the dipole's cross-sectional structure. No saturation is observed and, ultimately, the vortex pair is sliced into thin horizontal layers of independent pancake dipoles. For the largest Brunt-Vaisala frequency N = 1.75 rad s-1 that may be achieved in the experiments, the zigzag instability is observed only in the range of Froude numbers: 0.13 〈 F(h0) 〈 0.21 (F(h0) = U0/NR, where U0 and R are the initial dipole travelling velocity and radius). When F(h0) 〉 0.21, the elliptic instability develops resulting in three-dimensional motions which eventually collapse into a relaminarized vortex pair. Irregular zigzags are then also observed to grow. The threshold for the inhibition of the elliptic instability F(h0) = 0.2±0.01 is independent of N and in good agreement with the theoretical study of Miyazaki and Fukumoto (1992). Complete stabilization for F(h0) 〈 0.13 is probably due to viscous effects since the associated Reynolds number is low, Re0 〈 260. In geophysical flows characterized by low Froude numbers and large Reynolds numbers, we conjecture that this viscous stabilization will occur at much lower Froude number. It is tentatively argued that this new type of instability may explain the layering widely observed in stratified turbulent flows.
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  • 92
    Publication Date: 2000-09-10
    Description: It has long been known from linear stability theory that heating a surface immersed in water flow tends to stabilize the boundary layer on the surface, suggesting that there may be a corresponding delay in transition. Experiments confirm the suggestion, but based on intermittency data on a heated body of revolution (Lauchle and Gurney 1984) it has been inferred that incremental changes in transition Reynolds number diminish as the overheat increases. The parameter chosen to locate transition in the analysis leading to this conclusion corresponds to the point where the intermittency is 0.5. However, intermittency distributions in the transition zone on an axisymmetric body may contain what have been called 'subtransitions' (Narasimha 1984). Taking this possibility into account, we formulate here a model for the variation of intermittency with flow Reynolds number at a fixed station on the body, as in the experiments. The rate at which turbulent spots merge with each other is shown to determine the location of subtransition. The transition onset Reynolds number (corresponding to the location where intermittency begins to depart from zero), inferred from the data on the basis of this model, shows a continuing increase with the temperature overheat, a trend in closer agreement with stability theory; but the axisymmetric body geometry results in a very short transition zone, countering in part the benefits of transition delay.
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  • 93
    Publication Date: 2000-09-10
    Description: The three-dimensional flow in a corner of fixed angle α induced by the rotation in its plane of one of the boundaries is considered. A local similarity solution valid in a neighborhood of the centre of rotation is obtained and the streamlines are shown to be closed curves. The effects of inertia are considered and are shown to be significant in a small neighbourhood of the plane of symmetry of the flow. A simple experiment confirms that the streamlines are indeed nearly closed; their projections on planes normal to the line of intersection of the boundaries are precisely the 'Taylor' streamlines of the well-known 'paint-scraper' problem. Three geometrical variants are considered: (i) when the centre of rotation of the lower plate is offset from the contact line; (ii) when both planes rotate with different angular velocities about a vertical axis and Coriolis effects are retained in the analysis; and (iii) when two vertical planes intersecting at an angle 2β are honored by a rotating conical boundary. The last is described by a similarity solution of the first kind (in the terminology of Barenblatt) which incorporates within its structure a similarity solution of the second kind involving corner eddies of a type familiar in two-dimensional corner flows.
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  • 94
    Publication Date: 2000-08-25
    Description: The initial stage of the water flow caused by an impact on a floating body is considered. The vertical velocity of the body is prescribed and kept constant after a short acceleration stage. The present study demonstrates that impact on a floating and non-flared body gives acoustic effects that are localized in time behind the front of the compression wave generated at the moment of impact and are of major significance for explaining the energy distribution throughout the water, but their contribution to the flow pattern near the body decays with time. We analyse the dependence on the body acceleration of both the water flow and the energy distribution - temporal and spatial. Calculations are performed for a half-submerged sphere within the framework of the acoustic approximation. It is shown that the pressure impulse and the total impulse of the flow are independent of the history of the body motion and are readily found from pressure-impulse theory. On the other hand, the work done to oppose the pressure force, the internal energy of the water and its kinetic energy are essentially dependent on details of the body motion during the acceleration stage. The main parameter is the ratio of the time scale for the acoustic effects and the duration of the acceleration stage. When this parameter is small the work done to accelerate the body is minimal and is spent mostly on the kinetic energy of the flow. When the sphere is impulsively started to a constant velocity (the parameter is infinitely large), the work takes its maximum value: Longhorn (1952) discovered that half of this work goes to the kinetic energy of the flow near the body and the other half is taken away with the compression wave. However, the work required to accelerate the body decreases rapidly as the duration of the acceleration stage increases. The optimal acceleration of the sphere, which minimizes the acoustic energy, is determined for a given duration of the acceleration stage. Roughly speaking, the optimal acceleration is a combination of both sudden changes of the sphere velocity and uniform acceleration. If only the initial velocity of the body is prescribed and it then moves freely under the influences of the pressure, the fraction of the energy lost in acoustic waves depends only on the ratio of the body's mass to the mass of water displaced by the hemisphere.
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  • 95
    Publication Date: 2000-11-03
    Description: Exact and numerical similarity solutions for compressible perturbations to an incompressible, two-dimensional, axisymmetric vortex reference flow are presented. The reference flow consists of a set of two-dimensional, self-similar, incompressible vortices. Similarity variables, which give explicit expressions for the decay rates of the velocities and thermodynamic variables in the vortex flows, are used to reduce the governing partial differential equations to a set of ordinary differential equations. The ODEs are solved analytically and numerically for a Taylor vortex reference flow, and numerically for an Oseen vortex reference flow. The solutions are employed to study the dependences of the temperature, density, entropy, dissipation and radial velocity on the Prandtl number. Additionally, several integral relations, which allow one to trace the energy transfer in a slightly compressible vortex, are derived.
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  • 96
    Publication Date: 2000-11-03
    Description: The separation of the laminar boundary layer from a convex corner on a rigid body contour in transonic flow is studied based on the asymptotic analysis of the Navier-Stokes equations at large values of the Reynolds number. It is shown that the flow in a small vicinity of the separation point is governed, as usual, by strong interaction between the boundary layer and the inviscid part of the flow. Outside the interaction region the Karman-Guderley equation describing transonic inviscid flow admits a self-similar solution with the pressure on the body surface being proportional to the cubic root of the distance from the separation point. Analysis of the boundary layer driven by this pressure shows that as the interaction region is approached the boundary layer splits into two parts: the near-wall viscous sublayer and the main body of the boundary layer where the flow is locally inviscid. It is interesting that contrary to what happens in subsonic and supersonic flows, the displacement effect of the boundary layer is primarily due to the inviscid part. The contribution of the viscous sublayer proves to be negligible to the leading order. Consequently, the flow in the interaction region is governed by the inviscid-inviscid interaction. To describe this flow one needs to solve the Karman-Guderley equation for the potential flow region outside the boundary layer; the solution in the main part of the boundary layer was found in an analytical form, thanks to which the interaction between the boundary layer and external flow can be expressed via the corresponding boundary condition for the Karman-Guderley equation. Formulation of the interaction problem involves one similarity parameter which in essence is the Karman-Guderley parameter suitably modified for the flow at hand. The solution of the interaction problem has been constructed numerically.
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  • 97
    Publication Date: 2000-11-03
    Description: A comprehensive numerical study on the linear stability of mixed-convection flow in a vertical pipe with constant heat flux is presented with particular emphasis on the instability mechanism and the Prandtl number effect. Three Prandtl numbers representative of different regimes in the Prandtl number spectrum are employed to simulate the stability characteristics of liquid mercury, water and oil. The results suggest that mixed-convection flow in a vertical pipe can become unstable at low Reynolds number and Rayleigh numbers irrespective of the Prandtl number, in contrast to the isothermal case. For water, the calculation predicts critical Rayleigh numbers of 80 and -120 for assisted and opposed flows, which agree very well with experimental values of Rac = 76 and -118 (Scheele & Hanratty 1962). It is found that the first azimuthal mode is always the most unstable, which also agrees with the experimental observation that the unstable pattern is a double spiral flow. Scheele & Hanratty's speculation that the instability in assisted and opposed flows can be attributed to the appearance of inflection points and separation is true only for fluids with O(1) Prandtl number. Our study on the effect of the Prandtl number discloses that it plays an active role in buoyancy-assisted flow and is an indication of the viability of kinematic or thermal disturbances. It profoundly affects the stability of assisted flow and changes the instability mechanism as well. For assisted flow with Prandtl numbers less than 0.3, the thermal-shear instability is dominant. With Prandtl numbers higher than 0.3, the assisted-thermal-buoyant instability becomes responsible. In buoyancy-opposed flow, the effect of the Prandtl number is less significant since the flow is unstably stratified. There are three distinct instability mechanisms at work independent of the Prandtl number. The Rayleigh-Taylor instability is operative when the Reynolds number is extremely low. The opposed-thermal-buoyant instability takes over when the Reynolds number becomes higher. A still higher Reynolds number eventually leads the thermal-shear instability to dominate. While the thermal-buoyant instability is present in both assisted and opposed flows, the mechanism by which it destabilizes the flow is completely different.
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  • 98
    Publication Date: 2000-11-03
    Description: A three-dimensional shear-driven turbulent boundary layer over a flat plate generated by moving a section of the wall in the transverse direction is studied using large-eddy simulations. The configuration is analogous to shear-driven boundary layer experiments on spinning cylinders, except for the absence of curvature effects. The data presented include the time-averaged mean flow, the Reynolds stresses and their budgets, and instantaneous flow visualizations. The near-wall behaviour of the flow, which was not accessible to previous experimental studies, is investigated in detail. The transverse mean velocity profile develops like a Stokes layer, only weakly coupled to the streamwise flow, and is self-similar when scaled with the transverse wall velocity, W(s). The axial skin friction and the turbulent kinetic energy, K, are significantly reduced after the imposition of the transverse shear, due to the disruption of the streaky structures and of the outer-layer vortical structures. The turbulent kinetic energy budget reveals that the decrease in production is responsible for the reduction of K. The flow then adjusts to the perturbation, reaching a quasi-equilibrium three-dimensional collateral state. Following the cessation of the transverse motion, similar phenomena take place again. The flow eventually relaxes back to a two-dimensional equilibrium boundary layer.
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  • 99
    Publication Date: 2000-10-25
    Description: The generation of ship bow waves is studied within the framework of potential flow theory. Assuming the ship bow to be slender, or thin, a pattern of the flow is derived using the method of matched asymptotic expansions. This method leads to the determination of three different zones in which three asymptotic expansions are performed and matched. To first order with respect to the slenderness parameter, the near-field flow appears to be two-dimensional in each transverse plane along the bow. However, it is demonstrated that three-dimensional effects are important in front of the ship and must be taken into account in the composite solution. This leads to a three-dimensional correction to be added to the two-dimensional solution along the ship. The asymptotic approach is then applied to explain the structure of the bow flow in connection with experimental observations and numerical simulations.
    Print ISSN: 0022-1120
    Electronic ISSN: 1469-7645
    Topics: Mechanical Engineering, Materials Science, Production Engineering, Mining and Metallurgy, Traffic Engineering, Precision Mechanics , Physics
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  • 100
    Publication Date: 2000-11-03
    Description: The particle tracking (PT) technique is used to study turbulent diffusion of particle pairs in a three-dimensional turbulent flow generated by two oscillating grids. The experimental data show a range where the Richardson-Obukhov law 〈r〉2 = Cεt3 is satisfied, and the Richardson-Obukhov constant is found to be C = 0.5. A number of models predict much larger values. Furthermore, the distance-neighbour function is studied in detail in order to determine its general shape. The results are compared with the predictions of three models: Richardson (1926), Batchelor (1952) and Kraichnan (1966a). These three models predict different behaviours of the distance-neighbour function, and of the three, only Richardson's model is found to be consistent with the measurements. We have corrected a minor error in Kraichnan's (1996a) Lagrangian history direct interaction calculations with the result that we had to increase his theoretical value from C = 2.42 to C = 5.5.
    Print ISSN: 0022-1120
    Electronic ISSN: 1469-7645
    Topics: Mechanical Engineering, Materials Science, Production Engineering, Mining and Metallurgy, Traffic Engineering, Precision Mechanics , Physics
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