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  • Cambridge University Press
  • Essen : Verl. Glückauf
  • Krefeld : Geologischer Dienst Nordhein-Westfalen
  • 2005-2009  (1,427)
  • 1955-1959
  • 2005  (1,427)
Collection
Language
Years
  • 2005-2009  (1,427)
  • 1955-1959
Year
  • 1
    Unknown
    Cambridge, U.K ; New York, N.Y : Cambridge University Press
    Keywords: Cellular telephone services industry ; Electronic books ; Mobile communication systems, Economic aspects ; Wireless communication systems, Economic aspects
    Pages: 1 v. (various pagings)
    ISBN: 0-511-11564-4
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  • 2
    Unknown
    Cambridge ; New York : Cambridge University Press
    Keywords: Shakespeare, William, Tragedies ; Electronic books ; Identity (Psychology) in literature ; Tragedy ; Violence in literature
    Pages: ix, 228 p.
    ISBN: 0-511-11352-8
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  • 3
    Unknown
    New York : Cambridge University Press
    Keywords: Capital market ; Electronic books ; Futures market ; Stock exchanges
    Pages: 1 v. (various pagings)
    ISBN: 0-511-11580-6
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  • 4
    Keywords: Developing countries, Economic policy. ; Federal government, Developing countries.
    Pages: xi, 276 p.
    ISBN: 0-511-11566-0
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  • 5
    Unknown
    Cambridge ; New York : Cambridge University Press
    Keywords: Dynamics. ; Kinematics.
    Pages: x, 374 p.
    Edition: 3rd ed
    ISBN: 0-511-11583-0
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  • 6
    Unknown
    Cambridge ; New York : Cambridge University Press
    Keywords: Shakespeare, William, Language ; Shakespeare, William, Romeo and Juliet ; Shakespeare, William, Stage history, 1950- ; Shakespeare, William, Stage history, England, London ; Electronic books ; English language, Pronunciation, Early modern, 1500-1700 ; Globe Theatre (London, England : 1996- )
    Pages: xviii, 188 p.
    ISBN: 0-511-11364-1
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  • 7
    Unknown
    Cambridge, U.K ; New York : Cambridge University Press
    Keywords: Electronic books ; Religion, Study and teaching (Higher) ; Theology, Study and teaching (Higher)
    Pages: xvii, 230 p.
    ISBN: 0-511-11355-2
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  • 8
    Unknown
    Cambridge [England] ; New York : Cambridge University Press
    Keywords: Engineering mathematics, Data processing. ; Numerical analysis, Data processing. ; MATLAB.
    Pages: viii, 426 p.
    ISBN: 0-511-12811-8
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  • 9
    Unknown
    New York : Cambridge University Press
    Keywords: Materials, Mechanical properties.
    Pages: xx, 425 p.
    ISBN: 0-511-11575-X
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  • 10
    Unknown
    Cambridge, UK ; New York : Cambridge University Press
    Keywords: Autonomy (Psychology) ; Electronic books ; Ethics, Modern
    Notes: Planning agency, autonomous agency / Michael E. Bratman -- Autonomy without free will / Bernard Berofsky -- Autonomy and the paradox of self-creation : infinite regresses, finite selves, and the limits of authenticity / Robert Noggle -- Agnostic autonomism revisited / Alfred R. Mele -- Feminist intuitions and the normative substance of autonomy / Paul Benson -- Autonomy and personal integration / Laura Waddell Ekstrom -- Responsibility, applied ethics, and complex autonomy theories / Nomy Arpaly -- Autonomy and free agency / Marina A.L. Oshana -- The relationship between autonomous and morally responsible agency / Michael McKenna -- Alternative possibilities, personal autonomy, and moral responsibility / Ishtiyaque Haji -- Freedom within reason / Susan Wolf -- Procedural autonomy and liberal legitimacy / John Christman -- The concept of autonomy in bioethics : an unwarranted fall from grace / Thomas May -- Who deserves autonomy, and whose autonomy deserves respect? / Tom L. Beauchamp -- Autonomy, diminished life, and the threshold for use / R.G. Frey
    Pages: ix, 350 p.
    ISBN: 0-511-08224-X
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  • 11
    Unknown
    Cambridge, UK ; New York : Cambridge University Press
    Keywords: Kant, Immanuel,, 1724-1804. ; Causation.
    Pages: xi, 451 p.
    ISBN: 0-511-08217-7
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  • 12
    Unknown
    Cambridge, UK ; New York : Cambridge University Press
    Keywords: Monte Carlo method. ; Statistical physics.
    Pages: xv, 432 p.
    Edition: 2nd ed
    ISBN: 0-511-13098-8
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  • 13
    Unknown
    Cambridge ; New York : Cambridge University Press
    Keywords: Equality. ; Minorities. ; Minorities, Civil rights. ; Multiculturalism. ; Social conflict. ; Social groups.
    Pages: xii, 390 p.
    ISBN: 0-511-08065-4
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  • 14
    Unknown
    Cambridge, UK ; New York : Cambridge University Press
    Keywords: Frege, Gottlob,, 1848-1925.
    Notes: Biography -- Function and argument -- Sense and reference -- Frege's Begriffsschrift theory of identity -- Concept and object -- Names and descriptions -- Existence -- Thought, truth value and assertion -- Indirect reference -- Through the quotation marks
    Pages: xix, 226 p.
    ISBN: 0-511-10977-6
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  • 15
    Unknown
    Cambridge : Cambridge University Press
    Keywords: Space time codes.
    Pages: 1 v. (various pagings)
    ISBN: 0-511-11562-8
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  • 16
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Cambridge, UK, Cambridge University Press, vol. 10, no. 1, pp. 1-40, (ISBN 0-521-84678-1 (550 pp.))
    Publication Date: 2005
    Description: ... Overall, An Introduction to Programming with Mathematica is a useful and readable book that could serve as the text for a generic programming class, a supporting text for a class on programming for geoscientists, or an introduction for experienced geoscience programmers looking for an easily readable summary of Mathematica's programming language. Experienced Mathematica programmers may find it useful as a refresher. The book's principal drawbacks are the high price of Mathematica for those who do not already have the software (although a modestly priced student version is available) and, for geoscientists in particular, a lack of relevant example problems
    Keywords: Handbook of mathematics ; computer ; algebra ; software
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  • 17
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, vol. 7, no. Publ. No. 12, pp. 127, (ISBN: 0521839270, 520 p.)
    Publication Date: 2005
    Description: Fundamentals of Structural Geology provides a new framework for the investigation of geological structures by integrating field mapping and mechanical analysis. Assuming a basic knowledge of physical geology, introductory calculus and physics, it emphasizes the observational data, modern mapping technology, principles of continuum mechanics, and the mathematical and computational skills, necessary to quantitatively map, describe, model, and explain deformation in Earth's lithosphere. By starting from the fundamental conservation laws of mass and momentum, the constitutive laws of material behavior, and the kinematic relationships for strain and rate of deformation, the authors demonstrate the relevance of solid and fluid mechanics to structural geology. This book offers a modern quantitative approach to structural geology for advanced students and researchers in structural geology and tectonics. It is supported by a website hosting images from the book, additional colour images, student exercises and MATLAB scripts. Solutions to the exercises are available to instructors
    Keywords: Structural geology ; Textbook of geology ; MATLAB ; scripts ; Tectonics ; Lithosphere
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  • 18
    Publication Date: 2005-01-01
    Description: An assumption exists in North Alaskan archaeological literature that radiometric assays produced by the now-defunct Dicarb Radioisotope Co. (Dicarb) are “too young” or more recent when compared to those produced by other laboratories. This assumption is statistically tested by comparing radiocarbon assays produced by Dicarb to those produced by Beta Analytic, Inc.; Geochron Laboratories; and the NSF-Arizona AMS Facility. The primary data set consists of radiometric and accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) assays produced from materials excavated at the Croxton site, Locality J, Tukuto Lake, northern Alaska. Statistical analyses demonstrate that 14C assays produced by Dicarb tend to be “younger” than assays produced by other laboratories on crosscheck samples, with differences ranging between 350 and 1440 yr.
    Print ISSN: 0033-8222
    Electronic ISSN: 1945-5755
    Topics: Archaeology , Energy, Environment Protection, Nuclear Power Engineering , Geosciences
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  • 19
    Publication Date: 2005-12-01
    Description: This article traces the ascent of the International Accounting Standards Committee (IASC) from an obscure group with little influence in the early 1970s to a pre-eminent position as global accounting standard-setter in 2001. I argue that the rise of the IASC can be explained by several factors, including the IASC's ability to build legitimacy through technical expertise, to embed itself in a network of international organizations, and to benefit from rivalries among developed and developing countries and among European and American regulators. But the most important reason for the IASC's success is that its core values aligned strongly with the interests of the most powerful regulator-the US Securities and Exchange Commission.
    Print ISSN: 1369-5258
    Electronic ISSN: 1469-3569
    Topics: Political Science , Economics
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  • 20
    Publication Date: 2005-08-01
    Description: In recent years programs of private regulation have spread from North America and Europe to developing countries around the world. Though central to debates over public versus private international governance, little is known about the actual operations of these programs, especially in developing countries where weak state regulation has failed for decades to control environmental degradation. This paper assesses the effectiveness in Argentina of two prominent global private environmental regulatory programs'the chemical industry's Responsible Care® program and the Forest Stewardship Council. Argentina presents an intriguing country case because, despite conditions and policies that should support such programs, their implementation there has been stunted when compared against other regional cases. A focus on the demand and supply factors that shape these programs in Argentina reveals that market demand is a necessary but insufficient condition for regime effectiveness. Supply-side factors such as industry characteristics, public policies, and the institutional culture of firms significantly influence program implementation. Some transnational corporations helped export these program to Argentina; however, many others have shown opposition or disinterest, stifling program development. Also, feckless and unstable state agencies have created an institutional environment unfavorable even for private initiatives aimed at bypassing government interference.
    Print ISSN: 1369-5258
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  • 21
    Publication Date: 2005-04-01
    Description: In 1998, the domestic steel industry in the United States devised and executed a complex and sophisticated effort to achieve an effective non-market response to a sudden, persistent, and damaging surge of imported steel. This campaign lasted until 2002, when President George W. Bush invoked Section 201 of the U.S. trade laws to impose tariffs on imports of most steel products. This case of the steel industry's trade policy campaign provides an opportunity to examine selected models of protection-seeking industries and lobbying to ask why and how the steel coalition achieved this extraordinary governmental response. These questions are explored though a descriptive case of the steel industry's protection-seeking campaign followed by a comparative examination of previous models of protection-seeking firms, and lobbying to achieve protectionist policies. A comparison with selected models of the determinants of protection-seeking and factors affecting lobbying strategies show that most, almost all, were present in the steel case. In fact, a meta-strategic approach that transcends the customary understanding of lobbying is suggested in a complex policy environment. Such an environment can be characterized by: the need to influence multiple governmental entities – legislative, regulatory, executive; the desire for multiple outcomes with varying levels of specificity – laws or resolutions, administrative rulings, policy choices; interactions between different levels and branches of government; employment of coordinated interrelated lobbying techniques; and simultaneity of these factors.
    Print ISSN: 1369-5258
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    Topics: Political Science , Economics
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  • 22
    Publication Date: 2005-04-01
    Description: The rentier-state literature pays little attention to the initial political conditions that shape the way an oil-rich country develops its resources. One of the key causal mechanisms linking oil wealth and regime type is the relationship between foreign investors and host governments. Especially in the developing countries that depend on international financing and expertise, the role of foreign capital in fashioning the balance of power in the political system and thereby the distribution of oil wealth becomes ever more important. As the experiences of Azerbaijan and Russia in the 1990s demonstrate, among oil-rich states in the developing world, those with authoritarian regimes tend to fare better in terms of attracting FDI in the oil sector than states with democratizing (or hybrid regimes). The durability of some authoritarian regimes in the developing world is partly a function of this external legitimation from foreign investors.
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  • 23
    Publication Date: 2005-12-01
    Description: We are currently witnessing the evolution of global accounting standards, as developed by the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB). This is a remarkable development, not only because accounting standards are relevant for all business operations. Whereas accounting standard-setting has previously been a task of national authorities, the process will now be managed internationally by a London-based organisation whose parent foundation is a private company incorporated in the US state of Delaware and mainly financed by the Big Four accounting firms. Furthermore, the US appear to be willing to accept foreign standards that are quite different from their own Generally Accepted Accounting Standards (GAAP). This does not only contradict a widespread perception that equals globalization with Americanization, but also offers a remarkable contrast to US unilateralism in other policy fields. Finally, we are also amidst a major change in the substance of accounting standards, as indicated by a shift from historic cost to fair value accounting within the work of the IASB. This special issue of Business and Politics is devoted to a systematic explanation of these developments, drawing on concepts from International Relations, International Political Economy and Systems Theory.
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  • 24
    Publication Date: 2005-04-01
    Description: The Federal Communications Commission rule making for low power FM radio was widely reported as an instance where Congress sharply rebuked a regulatory agency for enacting rules too favorable to entrants. Theories of bureaucratic control generally agree that when such events occur, policy differences of Congress and the agency must be large. Because rival policy positions are quantifiable in this case, the preferences of Congress and the Commission can be directly evaluated. While the distance between the policy position of the Commission and Congress appear large, they signified a negligible increment in competition when compared to a benchmark efficient policy. A financial event study supports this interpretation, as radio broadcaster's equity values were not materially affected by either events in Congress or the Commission. Thus, even marginal differences may prompt a costly intervention by Congress to ostensibly discipline an agency.
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  • 25
    Publication Date: 2005-04-01
    Description: This paper applies an economic approach to empirically investigate differences in inward foreign direct investment (FDI) patterns between East Asia and Latin America and discusses the implication of regional trade arrangements. International production/distribution networks in East Asia effectively utilize the new economic logic of fragmentation, agglomeration, and optimal internalization and seem to greatly contribute to economic development. The paper examines statistical data for international trade as well as the activities of Japanese and U.S. multinational enterprises (MNEs) and argues that international production/distribution networks, particularly in machinery industries, are extensively developed in East Asia while remaining immature in Latin America. The impact of regional trade arrangements is substantially different depending on whether international production/distribution networks have already been developed or not. Our findings suggest that the impact of FTAA on FDI in Latin America by East Asian MNEs could be either positive or negative, depending on the content of FTAA and accompanying policies. If differentials between intra-regional tariffs and MFN-based tariffs are kept large, import-substituting FDI from East Asia may stagnate or even decrease. With a proper policy package to nurture international production/distribution networks, on the other hand, FDI from East Asia could be accelerated and contributed to deeper integration of Latin America.
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  • 26
    Publication Date: 2005-08-01
    Description: Scholars of business associations have recently learned a great deal about how associations contribute to development, but much less about the origins of such developmental associations. This essay introduces and assesses a new political explanation for the origins of ‘developmental associations.’ Conventional wisdom holds that developmental associations must be able to rise above political and collusive pressures and establish autonomy from states. Yet, I argue that these associations' developmental capacities emerge as a result of active state support by key actors, and in response to challenges and threats posed by competitive business organizations. Developmental associations emerge and acquire their capacities as they confront internal threats from other associations, as well as utilize the opportunities presented by the national state and international channels. In this view, functional or organizational capacity is not enough, rather, developmental business associations, must exhibit political capacity'that is the ability to manage the political environment, and respond to the structure of opportunities and threats. This explanation views developmental business associations as political organizations seeking power as well as offers a historically sensitive analysis of transformation of business politics in reforming India.
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  • 27
    Publication Date: 2005-08-01
    Description: Negotiations for China's accession to the WTO provoked a debate between pessimists who believed that opening the economy would lead to a flood of imports and a de-nationalization of manufacturing industry, and those who believed that it would spur rationalization of state-owned enterprises, lock in domestic reforms, attract foreign investment, and open the way for trade expansion. The industry most frequently mentioned as endangered was motor vehicles, where an awkward combination of Stalinist central planning with localized autarky had resulted in a proliferation of inefficient producers. With the partial exception of two investments by Volkswagen, initial joint ventures in assembly operations failed miserably. China's commitments on joining the WTO banned (or at least complicated) many of the most important industrial policy tools it had used to promote the auto industry since the opening to joint ventures in the early 1980s'including performance requirements, high tariffs, and numerical quotas. After accession in 2001, tariffs fell steadily while output and foreign investment soared. The Chinese government moved towards a lighter-handed but more effective form of industrial policy that reduced top-down planning while expanding market incentives and scope for managerial freedom. Rather than destroying industrial policy for the auto industry, WTO accession constrained and disciplined it. When foreign auto firms and their governments pushed for more aggressive protection of trademarks and other intellectual property rights under the WTO, the Chinese government initially stalled. Continuing pressure then tilted the balance of state policy toward promotion of independent design, whether by state-owned enterprises testing the boundaries of their joint ventures with foreign multinationals, or by audacious smaller firms purchasing foreign designs and technology to complement inexpensive local parts and assembly, thereby creating the conditions for the emergence of a more competitive industry.
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  • 28
    Publication Date: 2005-12-01
    Description: The article takes a political economy perspective on the current harmonization of accounting standards. It argues that the process not only signals a major shift in the mode of governance (towards private authority), but also in the substance of what is being governed. In political-economic terms, the most significant change which the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) brings to accounting is an increased reliance on market values in the form of so-called Fair Value Accounting (FVA). The FVA paradigm represents a financial perspective on business operations. This perspective is matched by the process and structure of the institutions that govern international accounting standard setting, particularly the IASB and the European Financial Reporting Advisory Group which advises the Commission of the European Union on the adoption of IASB standards. A network analysis of the different committees and working groups of these two institutions demonstrates that financial sector actors wield substantially more influence than other categories of business actors within the governance of international accounting standard setting.
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  • 29
    Publication Date: 2005-12-01
    Description: This paper examines the interplay between leading international and American accounting authorities over the span of a critical four-year period, 2001–2005. Historically, US regulators and private-sector accounting institutions have taken a cautious approach to International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRSs), citing the superior rigor and overall quality of their own Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP). During the past four years, however, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) have each become markedly receptive to the International Accounting Standards Board's (IASB) efforts to harmonize accounting standards worldwide based on IFRSs. Why? This paper offers an explanation that highlights the role of the high-profile American corporate scandals (2001–2002) in precipitating a shift in US accounting authorities' views of the optimal form of accounting rules, an issue that has stood in the way of trans-Atlantic accounting standard convergence. Prior to the accounting scandals, the highly-detailed rules that are characteristic of US GAAP were widely seen to be the most effective form of accounting rule. Since 2002, a normative shift has taken place such that the SEC now endorses objectives-oriented rules that are conceptually aligned with the principles-based standards promulgated by the IASB. The analysis is framed by insights from contemporary International Relations theory which emphasize the influence of scope conditions on patterns of governance.
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  • 30
    Publication Date: 2005-01-01
    Description: Recent progress in graphite target production for sub-milligram environmental samples in our facility is presented. We describe an optimized hydrolysis procedure now routinely used for the preparation of CO2 from inorganic samples, a new high-vacuum line dedicated to small sample processing (combining sample distillation and graphitization units), as well as a modified graphitization procedure. Although measurements of graphite targets as small as 35 μg C have been achieved, system background and measurement uncertainties increase significantly below 150 μg C. As target lifetime can become critically short for targets
    Print ISSN: 0033-8222
    Electronic ISSN: 1945-5755
    Topics: Archaeology , Energy, Environment Protection, Nuclear Power Engineering , Geosciences
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  • 31
    Publication Date: 2005-01-01
    Description: Dating sediments which have accumulated over the last few hundred years is critical to the calibration of longer-term paleoclimate records with instrumental climate data. We attempted to use wiggle-matched radiocarbon ages to date 2 peat profiles from northern England which have high-resolution records of paleomoisture variability over the last ∼300 yr. A total of 65 14C accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) measurements were made on 33 macrofossil samples. A number of the age estimates were older than expected and some of the oldest ages occurred in the upper parts of the sequence, which had been dated to the late 19th and early 20th century using other techniques. We suggest that the older 14C ages are the result of contamination by industrial pollution. Based on counts of spheroidal carbonaceous particles (SCPs), the potential aging effect for SCP carbon was calculated and shown to be appreciable for samples from the early 20th century. Ages corrected for this effect were still too old in some cases, which could be a result of fossil CO2 fixation, non-SCP particulate carbon, contamination due to imperfect cleaning of samples, or the “reservoir effect” from fixation of fossil carbon emanating from deeper peat layers. Wiggle matches based on the overall shape of the depth-14C relationship and the 14C minima in the calibration curve could still be identified. These were tested against other age estimates (210Pb, pollen, and SCPs) to provide new age-depth models for the profiles. New approaches are needed to measure the impact of industrially derived carbon on recent sediment ages to provide more secure chronologies over the last few hundred years.
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  • 32
    Publication Date: 2005-01-01
    Description: Radiocarbon dates together with geoarchaeological, soil, and lithic analyses are presented to describe archaeological site 35-CS-9 in Bandon Ocean Wayside State Park, Oregon, northwestern USA. One of the few Oregon middle-Holocene coastal sites that includes sediments and artifacts dating to the early Holocene and possibly to the late Pleistocene, it was recorded in 1951 and surface surveyed by archaeologists in 1975, 1986, and 1991, but its depth and antiquity were not tested. In February 2002, we studied the site's stratigraphy and sediments and described 8 strata from the aeolian surface to bedrock at 350 cm depth. Soil samples taken from a cut bank for texture classification, particle size analysis, pH, carbon content, and chemical analysis suggested that the site represented a complete history of Holocene deposits. Excavation of 2 test units in August 2002 uncovered substantial lithic and charcoal remains that confirm a protracted middle-Holocene occupation and suggest that human occupation began in the early Holocene. Charcoal recovered at 235–245 cm dated to 11,000 14C BP, and the deepest lithic artifact was recovered in a level at 215–225 cm. Whether the human occupation was continuous throughout the Holocene, and whether it began in the early Holocene or in the late Pleistocene, can only be determined with further excavations.
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    Topics: Archaeology , Energy, Environment Protection, Nuclear Power Engineering , Geosciences
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  • 33
    Publication Date: 2005-01-01
    Description: The South Arabian chronology has been problematic for a long time and this is also a true vexata quaestio for the ancient history of South Arabia. Three different chronologies have been suggested for the first literate phase of South Arabian cultures, which may date to the 11th century BC, the late 8th century BC, or the 5th century BC (see de Maigret 1996:157–63; de Maigret and Robin 1989: 276–8; Pirenne 1988; Robin 1997; Figure 1). At the site of Yalâ, potsherds with incised South Arabian inscriptions have been recovered in a stratum dating at least to the 8th century BC, if not earlier, and offer evidence of the existence of South Arabian culture at that time (de Maigret and Robin 1989:288–9).
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  • 34
    Publication Date: 2005-01-01
    Description: After benzene synthesis, radiocarbon dating samples are usually stored for 3–4 weeks before counting to allow an eventual radon contamination to decay to a negligible level. This paper presents a technique that can minimize, and often eliminate, this delay by using a simple single-phototube liquid scintillation counting system, specifically designed for 14C dating. Radon contamination is assessed by pulses of 214Po (a 222Rn decay product, half-life 0.16 μs), identified through pulse-time analysis. For each 214Po pulse, 0.49 beta particle pulses of 214Pb and 214Bi fall in the 14C counting window, and the 214Po pulses are used to correct the 14C count rate. A 14C sample (count rate 11.6 cpm) was measured continuously for 16 days. It was then doped with radon, which increased the first 24-hr count rate in the 14C channel by 3.8 cpm, and the sample was measured for 27 more days. Radon did not measurably affect the 14C-corrected count rate. Counting a sample for 2 min reveals whether it needs storing. If the radon concentration is low, the sample can be measured immediately without degrading accuracy.
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    Topics: Archaeology , Energy, Environment Protection, Nuclear Power Engineering , Geosciences
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  • 35
    Publication Date: 2005-01-01
    Description: The chemical and isotopic compositions of long-chain (C36–C39) unsaturated ketones (alkenones), a unique class of algal lipids, encode surface ocean properties useful for paleoceanographic reconstruction. Recently, we have sought to extend the utility of alkenones as oceanic tracers through measurement of their radiocarbon contents. Here, we describe a method for isolation of alkenones from sediments as a compound class based on a sequence of wet chemical techniques. The steps involved, which include silica gel column chromatography, urea adduction, and silver nitrate-silica gel column chromatography, exploit various structural attributes of the alkenones. Amounts of purified alkenones estimated by GC/FID measurements were highly correlated with CO2 yields after sample combustion, indicating purities of greater than 90% for samples containing ≥ 100 μg C. The degree of alkenone unsaturation (U37K′) also varied minimally through the procedure. We also describe a high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) method to isolate individual alkenones for molecular-level structural and isotopic determination.
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  • 36
    Publication Date: 2005-01-01
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  • 37
    Publication Date: 2005-01-01
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  • 38
    Publication Date: 2005-01-01
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  • 39
    Publication Date: 2005-01-01
    Description: A regional marine reservoir correction (ΔR) of 33±24 14C yr for southern Brazil was obtained from 6 marine shell samples collected in the states of Santa Catarina and Paraná. This work also presents a ΔR estimation of 8±17 14C yr for the southern and southeastern Brazilian coast from the states of Rio de Janeiro to Santa Catarina, obtained by including 7 ages published in previous works. The high variability of R in modern and Holocene samples from the Brazilian coast is also discussed.
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  • 40
    Publication Date: 2005-01-01
    Description: Archaeological investigations in the Republic of Palau, Micronesia, have produced 409 radiocarbon age determinations from cultural contexts, indicating a range of Palauan occupation from about 3000 yr ago into the modern era. However, these dates are scattered among numerous sources (many difficult to obtain) and are presented in a number of different formats and calibrations. The goal of this paper is to compile a usable, systematic database of all of these Palauan cultural 14C assays. This database will be suitable for developing and evaluating chronological models, an effort being undertaken as a separate paper. Prior to constructing prehistoric colonization and cultural chronologies for Palau, the validity of each assay and the relative adequacy in sample size per cultural and environmental zones must be examined. After systematic recalibration, the reliability of the dates is evaluated in light of sample material, cultural context, and site formation processes. A method for dating monumental earthwork complexes through site formation analysis is presented. Sets of 237 valid and 58 potentially valid 14C dates remain to develop chronological models. The representation of Palau's environmental zones, site types, and regions within the dating pool is examined and compared to ensure meaningfulness in these chronological models. Newly obtained 14C age determinations are also provided.
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  • 41
    Publication Date: 2005-01-01
    Description: This paper reports the first chronological assessment of the Christian catacombs of Rome by radiocarbon dating. The organic materials dated were found in a set of burial rooms in the so-called Liberian region of the catacombs of St. Callixtus on the Appian Way. 14C dating of small samples by accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) represents a major advance over traditional archaeological dating methods used in catacomb archaeology; however, AMS 14C dating raises questions about sample reliability and chronological evaluation. We briefly explore these questions.
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  • 42
    Publication Date: 2005-01-01
    Description: Direct accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) dating of anaerobically preserved plant remains from the Dongan site in New Guinea, combined with assessment of preservation condition, confirms earlier doubts about the antiquity of betelnut (Areca catechu L.) found at the site. A possible sago leaf fragment is also identified as a modern contaminant. The mid-Holocene age of other fruit and nut remains is verified using these methods. The utility of AMS dating in combination with detailed archaeobotanical assessment is demonstrated, thus improving chronometric hygiene and with it knowledge of past plant use in Oceania.
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  • 43
    Publication Date: 2005-01-01
    Description: Recent osteological analyses of archaeological human skeletal remains from the Ust'-Yurt Plateau, Uzbekistan, provided the opportunity to obtain samples for radiocarbon dating. The results of 18 accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) dates are presented in this paper and provide the first absolute dates for late prehistoric and early historic archaeological sites in Uzbekistan. The AMS dates suggest that most sites are earlier than have been traditionally thought based on relative dating using artifact typologies.
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  • 44
    Publication Date: 2005-01-01
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  • 45
    Publication Date: 2005-01-01
    Description: California's San Miguel Island contains over 600 archaeological sites, some occupied as early as 12,000 yr ago and most located along the island's north coast. Archaeologists have long believed the south coast to have been marginal or largely uninhabited. Burial of some landforms by sand dunes deposited after historical overgrazing, the lack of systematic survey, and a dearth of radiocarbon dating have also contributed to an underestimation of the intensity of human land use along the south coast of San Miguel Island. Our recent reconnaissance and dating of shell middens on the island's south coast indicate more intensive occupation than previously thought, with numerous south coast sites spanning at least the past 9000 yr, and demonstrate the utility of combining systematic archaeological reconnaissance and radiometrics in reconstructions of human settlement and historical ecology in coastal environments.
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  • 46
    Publication Date: 2005-01-01
    Description: In archaeological dating, the greatest confidence is usually placed upon radiocarbon results of material that can be directly related to a defined archaeological event. Human bone should fulfill this requirement, but bone dates obtained from Pacific sites are often perceived as problematic due to the incorporation of 14C from a range of different reservoirs into the collagen via diet. In this paper, we present new human bone gelatin results for 2 burials from the SAC archaeological site on Watom Island, Papua New Guinea, and investigate the success of calibrating these determinations using dietary corrections obtained from δ34S, δ15N, and δ13C isotopes.
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  • 47
    Publication Date: 2005-01-01
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  • 48
    Publication Date: 2005-01-01
    Description: It is difficult to construct archaeological chronologies for Babeldaob, the main island of Palau (western Micronesia), because the saprolitic clays of the dominant terraced-hill sites and associated ceramic sherds often contain old carbon that originated in lignites. This has implications, as well, for chronologies of sedimentary sequences. Comparative analysis of the dating problem using lignite, pottery, and charcoal samples indicates that, in fact, there are both old and young sources of potential contamination. It is concluded that radiocarbon samples from Babeldaob need to be tested for appropriate carbon content rather than relying solely upon material identification.
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  • 49
    Publication Date: 2005-01-01
    Description: A new method is presented for the reconstruction of the radiocarbon production rate from the measured relative abundance of Δ14C. The method treats the carbon cycle as a linear Fourier filter and thus allows for the correct and unambiguous inversion of the carbon cycle. The 14C production rate, as reconstructed by the Fourier filter method, agrees with the results obtained by the traditional iteration method. Since the 2 methods use completely different approaches, this verifies the validity of the reconstruction. The composite series is presented, based on both methods and their systematic uncertainties.
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  • 50
    Publication Date: 2005-01-01
    Description: The Fengxi site is near the Feng River in Shaanxi Province, China. Feng City was the capital of the vassal state of Zhou, and the Zhou people lived in this area until the end of the Western Zhou. Serial samples of charcoal, bone, and charred millet were collected from the site and dated by accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS). A sequence model with 6 phases of the Western Zhou dynasty was constructed and the 14C ages were calibrated with OxCal v 3.9. The results showed that the site was used from 1170–1070 BC until 825–755 BC, and the Conquest of Shang by King Wu most probably occurred during 1060–1000 BC.
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  • 51
    Publication Date: 2005-01-01
    Description: Xinzhai is an important archaeological site discovered 40 yr ago and recently re-excavated in the Henan Province, China. It is believed that the cultural characteristics of the Xinzhai site correspond to the Xia dynasty, the first ancient dynasty of China. Radiocarbon measurements on bone samples from this site were performed at the Peking University AMS facility (PKU-AMS) and the Vienna University AMS facility (VERA). Calibrated ages were obtained with the computer program OxCal. The results of these measurements are presented and the related chronology is discussed.
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  • 52
    Publication Date: 2005-01-01
    Description: In this paper, we examine 3 different models used to estimate turnover of soil organic carbon (SOC) fractions using radiocarbon measurements: one conventional carbon dating model and two bomb 14C models. One of the bomb 14C models uses an atmospheric 14C record for the period 22,050 BC to AD 2003 and is solved by numerical methods, while the other assumes a constant 14C content of the atmosphere and is solved analytically. The estimates of SOC turnover obtained by the conventional 14C dating model differed substantially from those obtained by the bomb 14C models, which we attribute to the simplifying assumption of the conventional 14C model that the whole SOC fraction is of the same age. The assumptions underlying the bomb 14C models are more applicable to SOC fractions; therefore, the calculated turnover times are considered to be more reliable. We used Monte Carlo simulations to estimate the uncertainties of the turnover times calculated with the numerically solved 14C model, accounting not only for measurement errors but also for uncertainties introduced from assumptions of constant input and uncertainties in the 14C content of the CO2 assimilated by plants. The resulting uncertainties depend on systematic deviations in the atmospheric 14C record for SOC fractions with a fast turnover. Therefore, the use of the bomb 14C models can be problematic when SOC fractions with a fast turnover are analyzed, whereas the relative uncertainty of the turnover estimates turned out to be smaller than 30% when the turnover time of the SOC fractions analyzed was longer than 30 yr, and smaller than 15% when the turnover time was longer than 100 yr.
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  • 53
    Publication Date: 2005-01-01
    Description: The Δ14C content of surface waters in and around the Cariaco Basin was reconstructed from radiocarbon measurements on sub-annually sampled coral skeletal material. During the late 1930s to early 1940s, surface waters within and outside of the Cariaco Basin were similar. Within the Cariaco Basin at Islas Tortugas, coral Δ14C averages −51.9 ± 3.3%. Corals collected outside of the basin at Boca de Medio and Los Testigos have Δ14C values of −53.4 ± 3.3% and −54.3 ± 2.6, respectively. Additional 14C analyses on the Isla Tortugas coral document an ∼11% decrease between ∼1905 (−40.9 ± 4.5%) and ∼1940. The implied Suess effect trend (−3%/decade) is nearly as large as that observed in the atmosphere over the same time period. If we assume that there is little to no fossil fuel 14CO2 signature in Cariaco surface waters in ∼1905, the waters have an equivalent reservoir age of ∼312 yr.
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  • 54
    Publication Date: 2005-01-01
    Description: A variety of analytical procedures involve breaking open a glass or quartz vessel containing a gaseous sample, and then quantitatively collecting the sample gases for analysis. In order to do this, a variety of “tube crackers” have been used. This paper discusses an alternate tube cracker that offers numerous advantages over those that have been discussed previously in the literature.
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  • 55
    Publication Date: 2005-01-01
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  • 56
    Publication Date: 2005-01-01
    Description: Radioactive nuclides such as radiocarbon can be good tracers for investigating the circulation of underground carbon and water. Volcanic gas can be sampled reliably for 14C analysis and prepared for analysis by accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS). In this paper, we establish a method for the measurement of 14C in volcanic gas, and measure the amounts of 14C in various volcanic gases. Samples of fumarolic gas from some Japanese volcanoes were found to contain 0.5 to 4.2 pMC, while those from White Island in New Zealand contained 2.6 pMC. Dissolved gas from Lake Nyos, Cameroon, contained 0.4 to 4.8 pMC. The data indicate a mixing process between surface carbon and deep carbon.
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  • 57
    Publication Date: 2005-08-01
    Description: Rulings made by the World Trade Organization (WTO) dispute settlement body have, since the organization's creation in 1995, significantly advanced global economic liberalization. The response of business has been varied and far from uniformly supportive of the WTO agenda. The reason stems from the fact that adjusting to liberalization measures is easier in some industries than in others. The response is premised on the strategic alternatives available within an industry. Through examining antidumping (AD) elements of the European Union (EU) trade policy regime in the context of two European industries - chemicals and textiles - we find that both are under severe competitive pressure, due to WTO-induced market liberalization. However, the responses taken by companies within the respective industries are very different. We suggest that while WTO activity catalyzes industry evolution, the form of that adjustment is highly industry specific. In the case of textiles, the disaggregation of the industry value chain allows for a variety of product and locational adjustment strategies. In contrast, the chemicals industry is nationally based, reliant on intellectual property for competitive advantage and structurally limited in its ability to adopt a wide range of adjustment strategies. Therefore, in the absence of alternative strategy options, EU chemical companies lobby for rule harmonization in the WTO.
    Print ISSN: 1369-5258
    Electronic ISSN: 1469-3569
    Topics: Political Science , Economics
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  • 58
    Publication Date: 2005-12-01
    Description: This article starts by highlighting the significance of two forms of authority'private and technical authority'that are becoming increasingly important relative to public authority, which traditionally has been considered the only relevant form of authority in international affairs. It then suggests that public, private and technical authority are related to one another not by the erasure of one by another, but rather through a process of politicized functional differentiation. Functional differentiation involves the transformation of multi-functional units into a set of more autonomous units that are related to one another in specific limited ways. The article explores differentiation between and within each of the three types of authority in the globalization of accounting, and the role of power as well. It challenges the view that globalization necessarily involves a centralized exercise of power or an elimination of differences.
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  • 59
    Publication Date: 2005-11-18
    Description: Slender-body theory is used to investigate the steady-state deformation and time-dependent evolution of an inviscid axisymmetric bubble in zero-Reynolds-number extensional flow, when insoluble surfactant is present on the bubble surface. The asymptotic solutions reveal steady ellipsoidal bubbles covered with surfactant, and, at increasing deformation, solutions distinguished by a cylindrical surfactant-free central part, with stagnant surfactant caps at the bubble endpoints. The bubble shapes are rounded near the endpoints, in contrast to the pointed shapes found for clean inviscid bubbles. Simple expressions are derived relating the capillary number Q to the steady bubble slenderness ratio ε. These show that there is a critical value Qc above which steady solutions no longer exist. Equations governing the time-evolution of a slender inviscid bubble with surfactant, valid for large capillary number, are also derived. Numerical solutions of the slender bubble equations for Q 〉 Qc exhibit spindle shapes with tip-streaming filaments. © 2005 Cambridge University Press.
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  • 60
    Publication Date: 2005-11-18
    Description: An experimental study has been performed on the dynamics of a large turbulent buoyanthelium plume. Two-dimensional velocity fields were measured using particle image velocimetry (PIV) while helium mass fraction was determined by planar laser-induced fluorescence (PLIF). PIV and PLIF were performed simultaneously in order to obtain velocity and mass fraction data over a plane that encompassed the plume core, the near-field mixing zones and the surrounding air. The Rayleigh-Taylor instability at the base of the plume leads to the vortex that grows to dominate the flow. This process repeats in a cyclical manner. The temporally and spatially resolved data show a strong negative correlation between density and vertical velocity, as well as a strong 90° phase lag between peaks in the vertical and horizontal velocities throughout the flow field owing to large coherent structures associated with puffing of the turbulent plume. The joint velocity an mass fraction data are used to calculate Favre-averaged statistics in addition to Reynolds-(time) averaged statistics. Unexpectedly, the difference between both the Favre-averaged and Reynolds-averaged velocities and second-order turbulent statistics is less than the uncertainty in the data throughout the flow field. A simple analysis was performed to determine the expected differences between Favre and Reynolds statistics for flows with periodic fluctuations in which the density and velocity fields are perfectly correlated, but have the phase relations as suggested by the data. The analytical results agreewith the data, showing that the Favre and Reynolds statistics will be the same to lead order. The combination of observation and simple analysis suggests that for buoyancy-dominated flows in which it can be expected that density and velocity are strongly correlated,phase relations will result in only second-order differences between Favre- and Reynolds-averaged data in spite of strong fluctuations in both density and velocity. © 2005 Cambridge University Press.
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  • 61
    Publication Date: 2005-12-21
    Description: Experiments have shown that when a mixture of fuel and oxygen is passed through a zirconia tube whose inner surface is coated with a catalyst, and then ignited at the end of the tube, a reaction front, or flame, propagates back along the tube towards the fuel inlet. The reaction front is visible as a red hot region moving at a speed of a few millimetres per second. In this paper we study a model of the flow, which takes into account diffusion, advection and chemical reaction at the inner surface of the tube. By assuming that the flame propagates at a constant speed without change of form, we can formulate a steady problem in a frame of reference moving with the reaction front. This is solved using the method of matched asymptotic expansions, assuming that the Reynolds and Damköhler numbers are large. We present numerical and, where possible, analytical results, first when the change in fluid density is small (a simplistic but informative limit) and secondly in the variable-density case. The speed of the travelling wave decreases as the critical temperature of the surface reaction increases and as the mass flow rate of fuel increases. We also make a comparison between our results and some preliminary experiments. © 2005 Cambridge University Press.
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  • 62
    Publication Date: 2005-11-07
    Description: We develop asymptotic solutions for passive suspended sediment transport under a flood surge on a uniform slope. Our solutions provide predictions of the net scour under a surge, and simple estimates of the conditions under which it may 'bulk up' into a mud or debris flow, as well as illustrating their sensitivity to sediment entrainment rates. © 2005 Cambridge University Press.
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  • 63
    Publication Date: 2005-10-11
    Description: We consider the evolution of a thin viscous fluid sheet subject to thermocapillary effects. Using a lubrication approximation we find, for symmetric interfacial deflections, coupled evolution equations for the interfacial profile, the streamwise component of the fluid velocity and the temperature variation along the surface. Initial temperature profiles change the initial flow field through Marangoni-induced shear stresses. These changes then lead to preferred conditions for rupture prescribed by the initial temperature distribution. We show that the time to rupture may be minimized by varying the phase difference between the initial velocity profile and the initial temperature profile. For sufficiently large temperature differences, the phase difference between the initial velocity and temperature profiles determines the rupture location. © 2005 Cambridge Universiy Press.
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  • 64
    Publication Date: 2005-11-07
    Description: In this paper we discuss numerical simulations of the generation of large-amplitude solitary waves in a continuously stratified fluid by flow over isolated topography. We employ the fully nonlinear theory for internal solitary waves to classify the numerical results for mode-1 waves and compare with two classes of approximate theories, weakly nonlinear theory leading to the Korteweg-deVries and Gardner equations and conjugate flow theory which makes no approximation with respect to nonlinearity, but neglects dispersion entirely. We find that both weakly nonlinear theories have a limited range of applicability. In contrast, the conjugate flow theory predicts the nature of the limiting upstream propagating response (a dissipationless bore), successfully describes the bore's vertical structure, and gives a value of the inflow speed, cj, above which no upstream propagating response is possible. The numerical experiments demonstrate the existence of a class of large-amplitude response structures that are generated and trapped over the topography when the inflow speed exceeds cj. While similar in structure to fully nonlinear solitary waves, these trapped disturbances can induce isopycnal displacements more than 100% larger than those induced by the limiting solitary wave while remaining laminar. We develop a theory to describe the vertical structure at the crest of these trapped disturbances and describe its range of validity. Finally, we turn to the generation of mode-2 solitary-like waves. Mode-2 waves cannot be truly solitary owing to the existence of a small mode-1 tail that radiates energy downstream from the wave. We demonstrate that, for stratifications dominated by a single pycnocline, mode-2 wave dissipation is dominated by wave breaking as opposed to mode-1 wave radiation. We propose a phenomenological criterion based on weakly nonlinear theory to test whether mode-2 wave generation is to be expected for a given stratification. © 2005 Cambridge University Press.
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  • 65
    Publication Date: 2005-11-07
    Description: We first report a quantitative experimental study of the collision of a spdisk with water, from a single to many skips. We then focus on the high spin limit and propose a simple model which enables us to discuss both the physical origin of the bounces and the source of the dissipation which fixes the number of skips. © 2005 Cambridge University Press.
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  • 66
    Publication Date: 2005-11-07
    Description: Laboratory experiments are carried out to determine the nature of internal wave breaking and the limiting wave steepness for progressive, periodic, lowest-mode internal waves in a two-layer, miscible density stratification. Shoaling effects are not considered. The waves investigated here are long relative to the thickness of the density interface separating the two fluid layers. Planar laser-induced fluoresence (PLIF) flow visualization shows that wave breaking most closely resembles a Kelvin-Helmholtz shear instability originating in the high-shear wave crest and trough regions. However, this instability is strongly temporally and spatially modified by the oscillations of the driving wave shear. Unlike a steady stratified shear layer, the wave instability discussed here is not governed by the canonical Ri = 1/4 stability limit. Instead, the wave time scale (the time scale of the destabilizing shear) imposes an additional constraint on instability, lowering the critical Richardson number below 1/4. Experiments were carried out to quantify this instability threshold, and show that, for the range of wavenumbers considered in this study, the critical wave steepness at which the wave breaking occurs is wavenumber-dependent (unlike surface waves). The corresponding critical wave Richardson numbers at incipient wave breaking are well below 1/4, in consonance with a modified instability analysis based on results from stratified shear flow instability theory. © 2005 Cambridge University Press.
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  • 67
    Publication Date: 2005-11-07
    Description: Linear waves in bounded inviscid fluids do not generally form normal modes with regular eigenfunctions. Examples are provided by inertial waves in a rotating fluid contained in a spherical annulus, and internal gravity waves in a stratified fluid contained in a tank with a non-rectangular cross-section. For wave frequencies in the ranges of interest, the inviscid linearized equations are spatially hyperbolic and their characteristic rays are typically focused onto wave attractors. When these systems experience periodic forcing, for example of tidal origin, the response of the fluid can become localized in the neighbourhood of a wave attractor. In this paper, I define a prototypical problem of this form and construct analytically the long-term response to a periodic body force in the asymptotic limit of small viscosity. The vorticity of the fluid is localized in a detached shear layer close to the wave attractor in such a way that the total rate of dissipation of energy is asymptotically independent of the viscosity. I further demonstrate that the same asymptotic dissipation rate is obtained if a non-viscous damping force is substituted for the Navier-Stokes viscosity. I discuss the application of these results to the problem of tidal forcing in giant planets and stars, where the excitation and dissipation of inertial waves may make a dominant, or at least important, contribution to the orbital and spin evolution. © 2005 Cambridge University Press.
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  • 68
    Publication Date: 2005-10-11
    Description: Although potential flow, including viscous dissipation, explains quite well the flow around individual bubbles of about 1mm radius rising in water, and e.g. predicts their drag quite accurately, this model cannot explain the homogeneous rise of a bubbly suspension. From numerical and analytical work it follows that eventually all bubbles cluster together. On the other hand it has been shown that velocity fluctuations of the bubbles of sufficient intensity, expressed in terms of a critical (pseudo) temperature, prevents clustering. Bubbles with radius above 0.8 mm rising in water perform zigzag or spiralling motions. Recently experimental and numerical work has made it clear that such bubbles have a wake behind them consisting of twin vortical threads carrying vorticity of opposite sign in the direction of motion. It is the purpose of this contribution to make an estimate of the velocity fluctuations induced by these trailing vortices in neighbouring bubbles. To this end the two-threaded wake is represented as a horseshoe vortex similar to the wake behind an airfoil. A pair of bubbles is considered and first the velocity induced by the horseshoe vortex behind one of the pair at the centre of the other is calculated. After this the force exerted on the latter based on the induced velocity and on the relative velocity of the bubbles, due to hydrodynamic interaction is calculated. Then the motion of one bubble in the pair is analysed under the influence both of this force and the hydrodynamic forces already there in the absence of the horseshoe vortex. Using these results and appropriate averaging, an estimate is made of the intensity of the velocity fluctuations of bubbles, and the corresponding temperature. © 2005 Cambridge University Press.
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  • 69
    Publication Date: 2005-10-11
    Description: We report experiments on the shape and motion of millimetre-sized drops sliding down a plane in a situation of partial wetting. When the Bond number based on the component of gravity parallel to the plane Boα exceeds a threshold, the drops start moving at a steady velocity which increases linearly with Boα. When this velocity is increased by tilting the plate, the drops change their aspect ratio: they become longer and thinner, but maintain a constant, millimetre-scale height. As their aspect ratio changes, a threshold is reached at which the drops are no longer rounded but develop a 'corner' at their rear: the contact line breaks into two straight segments meeting at a singular point or at least in a region of high contact line curvature. This structure then evolves such that the velocity normal to the contact line remains equal to the critical value at which the corner appears, i.e. to a maximal speed of dewetting. At even higher velocities new shape changes occur in which the corner changes into a 'cusp', and later a tail breaks into smaller drops (pearling transition). Accurate visualizations show four main results. (i) The corner appears when a critical non-zero value of the receding contact angle is reached. (ii) The interface then has a conical structure in the corner regime, the in-plane and out-of-plane angles obeying a simple relationship dictated by a lubrication analysis. (iii) The corner tip has a finite non-zero radius of curvature at the transition to a corner, and its curvature diverges at a finite capillary number, just before the cusp appears. (iv) The cusp transition occurs when the corner opening in-plane half-angle reaches a critical value of about 45°. © 2005 Cambridge University Press.
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  • 70
    Publication Date: 2005-10-11
    Description: Motivated by applications in rapidly rotating machinery, we have previously extended the lubrication model of the thin-film flow on the inside of a rotating circular cylinder to incorporate the effect of a constant shear applied to the free surface of the film and discovered a system rich in film profiles featuring shock structures. In this paper, we extend our model to include the effects of surface tension at leading order and take into account higher-order effects produced by gravity in order to resolve issues regarding existence, uniqueness and stability of such weak solutions to our lubrication model. We find, by analytical and numerical means, a set of feasible steady two-dimensional solutions that fit within a rational asymptotic framework. Having identified mathematically feasible solutions, we study their stability to infinitesimal two-dimensional disturbances. based on our findings, we conjecture which of the possible weak solutions are physically meaningful. © 2005 Cambridge University Press.
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  • 71
    Publication Date: 2005-10-11
    Description: We investigate the aerodynamics of freely falling plates in a quasi-two-dimensional flow at Reynolds number of 103 which is typical for a leaf or business card falling in air. We quantify the trajectories experimentally using high-speed digital video at sufficient resolution to determine the instantaneous plate accelerations and thus to deduce the instantaneous fluid forces. We compare the measurements with direct numerical solutions of the two-dimensional Navier-Stokes equation. Using inviscid theory as a guide, we decompose the fluid forces into contributions due to acceleration, translation, and rotation of the plate. For both fluttering and tumbling we find that the fluid circulation is dominated by a rotational term proportional to the angular velocity of the plate, as opposed to the translational velocity for a glider with fixed angle of attack. We find that the torque on a freely falling plate is small, i.e. the torque is one to two orders of magnitude smaller than the torque on a glider with fixed angle of attack. Based on these results we revise the existing ODE models of freely falling plates. We get access to different kinds of dynamics by exploring the phase diagram spanned by the Reynolds number, the dimensionless moment of inertia, and the thickness-to-width ratio. In agreement with previous experiments, we find fluttering, tumbling, and apparently chaotic motion. We further investigate the dependence on initial conditions and find brief transients followed by periodic fluttering described by simple harmonics and tumbling with a pronounced period-two structure. Near the cusp-like turning points, the plates elevate, a feature which would be absent if the lift depended on the translational velocity alone. © 2005 Cambridge University Press.
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  • 72
    Publication Date: 2005-10-11
    Description: The problem of short wind waves propagating on surface wind drift is considered here. Under the assumption of small monochromatic surface waves on a steady and horizontally uniform surface shear of an inviscid fluid, the governing equation becomes the well-known Rayleigh instability equation. Perturbation solutions exist for the surface-wave problem; however, the conditions for these approximations are violated in the case of short wind waves on wind drift shear. As an alternative approach, the piecewise-linear approximation (PLA) is explored. A proof is given for the rate of convergence of the piecewise-linear approximation for solving the Rayleigh equation without limitations on boundary conditions. The artificial modes of the piecewise-linear flow system are also discussed. The method is numerically efficient and highly accurate. Applying this method, the linear instability of various boundary-layer flows is examined. Short waves propagating with surface shear-flows are stable, while it is possible for waves that are travelling against a shear current to become unstable when the surface speed of the shear is greater than the wavespeed in stagnant fluid. PLA is also applied to examine the applicability of other perturbation approaches to the problem of propagation of short waves on wind drift shear. It is found that the existing approximations cannot fit the whole range of short wind waves. To bridge the gap, new approximations are derived from an implicit form of the exact dispersion relation based upon the variational principle. © 2005 Cambridge University Press.
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  • 73
    Publication Date: 2005-10-11
    Description: We present time-dependent governing equations and boundary conditions for the mushy-zone free-boundary problem that are valid in an arbitrary frame of reference. The model for time-evolving mushy zones is more complicated than in the steady case because the interface velocity w can be distinct from both the velocity of the dendrites v and the fluid velocity u. We consider the limit of negligible solutal diffusivity, where there are four types of boundary condition at the mush-liquid interface, depending on both the direction of flow across the interface and the direction of the interface motion relative to the solid phase. We illustrate these boundary conditions by examining a family of one-dimensional problems in which a binary material is chilled from a fixed cold point in the laboratory frame of reference while fluid is pumped through the resulting mushy layer at a rate Q and the mushy layer itself is translated at a rate V. This allows us to exhibit three of the four types of mushy-layer interfaces. We show that the fourth type cannot occur in this scenario. © 2005 Cambridge University Press.
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  • 74
    Publication Date: 2005-10-11
    Description: In this paper we study the steady uniform flows that develop when granular material is released from a hopper on top of a static pile in a channel. More specifically, we focus on the role of sidewalls by carrying out experiments in set-up of different widths, from narrow channels 20 particle diameters wide to channels 600 particle diameters wide. Results show that steady flows on pile are entirely controlled by sidewall effects. A theoretical model, taking into account the wall friction and based on a simple local constitutive law recently proposed for other granular flow configurations, gives predictions in quantitative agreement with the measurements. This result gives new insights into our understanding of free-surface granular flows and strongly supports the relevance of the constitutive law proposed. © 2005 Cambridge University Press.
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  • 75
    Publication Date: 2005-09-27
    Description: Two-dimensional (plane) solitary waves on the surface of water are known to bifurcate from linear sinusoidal wavetrains at specific wavenumbers k = k0 where the phase speed c(k) attains an extremum (dc/dk 0 = 0) and equals the group speed. In particular, such an extremum occurs in the long-wave limit k0 = 0, furnishing the familiar solitary waves of the Korteweg-de Vries (KdV) type in shallow water. In addition, when surface tension is included and the Bond number B = T/(ρgh2) 〈 1/3 (T is the coefficient of surface tension, ρ the fluid density, g the gravitational acceleration and h the water depth), c(k) features a minimum at a finite wavenumber from which gravity-capillary solitary waves, in the form of wavepackets governed by the nonlinear Schrödinger (NLS) equation to leading order, bifurcate in water of finite or infinite depth. Here, it is pointed out that an entirely analogous scenario is valid for the bifurcation of three-dimensional solitary waves, commonly referred to as 'lumps', that are locally confined in all directions. Apart from the known lump solutions of the Kadomtsev-Petviashvili I equation for formula B 〉 1/3 in shallow water, gravity-capillary lumps, in the form of locally confined wavepackets, are found for B 〈 1/3 in water of finite or infinite depth; like their two-dimensional counterparts, they bifurcate at the minimum phase speed and are governed, to leading order, by an elliptic-elliptic Davey-Stewartson equation system in finite depth and an elliptic two-dimensional NLS equation in deep water. In either case, these lumps feature algebraically decaying tails owing to the induced mean flow. © 2005 Cambridge University Press.
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  • 76
    Publication Date: 2005-09-05
    Description: While many rheological studies are performed at a fixed concentration, most granular flows are constrained, not by concentration, but by an applied stress. The stress constraint sets the average concentration, but the material is free to vary that concentration slightly to match the applied stress with that generated internally. This study examines stress-controlled systems in light of recent findings that the elastic properties of the particles appear as constitutive parameters even in flowing situations. Stress-controlled flows are shown to behave very differently from flows at fixed concentration. In particular, if the stress is fixed and the shear rate is slowly increased, the flow exhibits the expected progression from elastic-quasi-static to elastic-inertial to inertial flow - a sequence opposite to that followed in fixed-concentration flows. Thus system-scale constraints can have a profound effect on granular rheology. © 2005 Cambridge University Press.
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  • 77
    Publication Date: 2005-09-05
    Description: The general problem of propagation of three-dimensional disturbances in viscous supersonic flows is considered in the framework of characteristic analysis. Unlike previous results for linear disturbances we deduce a condition determining nonlinear characteristic surfaces which is exact and therefore allows both qualitative and quantitative studies of the speed of propagation as a function of various physical phenomena. These include negative and adverse pressure gradients, and effects of wall cooling and suction-blowing, which are studied in this work as an illustration of the general theory. © 2005 Cambridge University Press.
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  • 78
    Publication Date: 2005-09-05
    Description: Consider Stokes flow in a cone of half-angle α filled with a viscous liquid. It is shown that in spherical polar coordinates there exist similarity solutions for the velocity field of the type rλ f(θ;λ) exp imφ where the eigenvalueλ satisfies a transcendental equation. It follows, by extending an argument given by Moffatt (1964a), that if the eigenvalue λ is complex there will exist, associated with the corresponding vector eigenfunction, an infinite sequence of eddies as r → 0. Consequently, provided the principal eigenvalue is complex and the driving field is appropriate, such eddy sequences will exist. It is also shown that for each wavenumber m there exists a critical angle α* below which the principal eigenvalue is complex and above which it is real. For example, for m=1 the critical angle is about 74.45°. The full set of real and complex eigenfunctions, the inner eigenfunctions, can be used to compute the flow in a cone given data on the lid. There also exist outer eigenfunctions, those that decay for r → ∞, and these can be generated from the inner ones. The two sets together can be used to calculate the flow in a conical container whose base and lid are spherical surfaces. Examples are given of flows in cones and in conical containers which illustrate how α and r0, a length scale, affect the flow fields. The fields in conical containers exhibit toroidal corner vortices whose structure is different from those at a conical vertex; their growth and evolution to primary vortices is briefly examined. © 2005 Cambridge University Press.
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  • 79
    Publication Date: 2005-09-27
    Description: The rotational and translational motions of fibres in fully developed isotropic turbulence are simulated for a range of turbulence Reynolds numbers. Equations for fibre motion based on the leading-order slender-body theory relate the fibre's translational and rotational velocities to zeroth and first moments of the fluid velocity along the fibre length. The translational and rotational motions of fibres with lengths that exceed the size of the smallest eddies are attenuated by the filtering associated with these spatial averages. The translational diffusivity of the fibres can be predicted using a simple theory that neglects any coupling between fibre orientation and the local direction of the fluid velocity. However, the coupling of fibre orientation with the axes of extension and rotation is found to greatly reduce the amplitude of the rotary motions and the rotational dispersion coefficient. The rotary dispersion coefficient is found to be on the order of the inverse integral time scale. However, its variation with Reynolds number suggests that the rotary dispersion is influenced by all the scales of turbulence over the limited range of Reynolds numbers explored in our simulations. © 2005 Cambridge University Press.
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  • 80
    Publication Date: 2005-09-05
    Description: Experiments are reported on the sustained release of saline and particle-laden fluid into a long, but relatively narrow, flume, filled with fresh water. The dense fluid rapidly spread across the flume and flowed away from the source: the motion was then essentially two-dimensional. In the absence of a background flow in the flume, the motion was symmetric, away from the source. However, in the presence of a background flow the upstream speed of propagation was slowed and the downstream speed was increased. Measurements of this motion are reported and, when the excess density was due to the presence of suspended sediment, the distribution of the deposited particles was also determined. Alongside this experimental programme, new theoretical models of the motion were developed. These were based upon multi-layered depth-averaged shallow-water equations, in which the interfacial drag and mixing processes were explicitly modelled. While the early stages of the motion are independent of these interfacial phenomena to leading order, they play an increasingly important dynamical role as the the flow is slowed, or even arrested. In addition a new integral model is proposed. This does not resolve the interior dynamics of the flow, but may be readily integrated and obviates the need for more lengthy numerical calculations. It is shown that the predictions from both the shallow-layer and integral models are in close agreement with the experimental observations. © 2005 Cambridge University Press.
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  • 81
    Publication Date: 2005-09-27
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  • 82
    Publication Date: 2005-09-27
    Description: The variability of the physical thickness of fully developed turbulent interfaces is examined using scalar measurements in the outer far-field regions of round jets at a Reynolds number of Re ∼ 20 000 and Schmidt number of Sc ∼ 2000. The interfacial thickness is considered in terms of the inverse magnitude of the scalar gradient across the interface and its relation to the scalar dissipation rate. The thickness variations and their conditional statistics are examined on outer interfaces at a resolution ∼ 10003 with data that capture the full transverse extent of the flow. At the resolution of the present measurements, the interfaces are observed to exhibit highly intermittent thickness variations that consist of striation patterns, or undulations, along the interfacial surfaces. The conditional probability density of the interfacial thickness is found to be nearly lognormal, in agreement with previous studies. A new scale-local density measure of the interfacial thickness is formulated to examine the effects of coarse graining and the dependence of the thickness on resolution scale. The scale-local thickness density, conditionally averaged on the outer interfaces, is found to exhibit self-similarity in a range of resolved scales. This observation of self-similar behaviour, in conjunction with intermittency, provides a physical ingredient useful for studies of phenomena sensitive to turbulent interfaces. © 2005 Cambridge University Press.
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  • 83
    Publication Date: 2005-09-27
    Description: We study vibrational instabilities of the thermocapillary return flow driven by a constant temperature gradient along the free surface of an infinite layer that vibrates in its normal direction with acceleration of amplitude g1 and frequency ω1. The layer is unstable to hydrothermal waves in the absence of vibrations beyond a critical Marangoni number M. Modulated gravitational instabilities with M = 0 are also possible beyond a critical Rayleigh number R based on g1. We employ two-time-scale high-frequency asymptotics to derive the equations governing the mean field. The influence of vibrations on the hydrothermal waves is found to be characterized by a dimensionless parameter G that is proportional to R2. The return flow at G = 0 is also a mean field basic flow and we study its linear instability at different Prandtl numbers P. The hydrothermal waves are stabilized with increasing G and reverse their direction of propagation at particular values of G that decrease with increasing P. At finite frequencies, a time-periodic base state exists and we study its linear instability by calculating the Floquet exponents. The stability boundaries in the (R, M)-plane are found to be composed of two intersecting branches emanating from the points of pure thermocapillary or buoyant instabilities. Three-dimensional modes are always preferred and the region of stability, while anchored at the point of hydrothermal waves corresponding to R = 0, is found to grow without bound along the R-axis with increasing frequencies. Results from the two approaches are shown to be in asymptotic agreement at large frequencies. © 2005 Cambridge University Press.
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  • 84
    Publication Date: 2005-09-27
    Description: In this study we consider the unsteady separated flow of an inviscid fluid (density ρf) around a falling flat plate (thickness T, half-chord L, width W, and density ρs) of small thickness and high aspect ratio (T ≪ L ≪ W). The motion of the plate, which is initially released from rest, is unknown in advance and is determined as part of the solution. The flow solution is assumed two-dimensional and to consist of a bound vortex sheet coincident with the plate and two free vortex sheets that emanate from each of the plate's two sharp edges. Throughout its motion, the plate continually sheds vorticity from each of its two sharp edges and the unsteady Kutta condition, which states the fluid velocity must be bounded everywhere, is applied at each edge. The coupled equations of motion for the plate and its trailing vortex wake are derived (the unsteady aerodynamic loads on the plate are included) and are shown to depend only on the modified Froude number Fr = T ρs/Lρf. Crucially, the unsteady aerodynamic loads are shown to depend on not only the usual acceleration reactions, which lead to the effect known as added mass, but also on novel unsteady vortical loads, which arise due to relative motion between the plate and its wake. Exact expressions for these loads are derived. An asymptotic solution to the full system of governing equations is developed for small times t 〉 0 and the initial motion of the plate is shown to depend only on the gravitational field strength and the acceleration reaction of the fluid; effects due to the unsteady shedding of vorticity remain of higher order at small times. At larger times, a desingularized numerical treatment of the full problem is proposed and implemented. Several example solutions are presented for a range of modified Froude numbers Fr and small initial inclinations θ0 〈 π/32. All of the cases considered were found to be unstable to oscillations of growing amplitude. The non-dimensional frequency of the oscillations is shown to scale in direct proportion with the inverse square root of the modified Froude number 1/√Fr. Importantly, the novel unsteady vortical loads are shown to dominate the evolution of the plate's trajectory in at least one example. Throughout the study, the possibility of including a general time-dependent external force (in place of gravity) is retained. © 2005 Cambridge University Press.
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  • 85
    Publication Date: 2005-09-27
    Description: Receptivity of compressible mixing layers to general source distributions is examined by a combined theoretical/computational approach. The properties of solutions to the adjoint Navier-Stokes equations are exploited to derive expressions for receptivity in terms of the local value of the adjoint solution. The result is a description of receptivity for arbitrary small-amplitude mass, momentum, and heat sources in the vicinity of a mixing-layer flow, including the edge-scattering effects due to the presence of a splitter plate of finite width. The adjoint solutions are examined in detail for a Mach 1.2 mixing-layer flow. The near field of the adjoint solution reveals regions of relatively high receptivity to direct forcing within the mixing layer, with receptivity to nearby acoustic sources depending on the source type and position. Receptivity 'nodes' are present at certain locations near the splitter plate edge where the flow is not sensitive to forcing. The presence of the nodes is explained by interpretation of the adjoint solution as the superposition of incident and scattered fields. The adjoint solution within the boundary layer upstream of the splitter-plate trailing edge reveals a mechanism for transfer of energy from boundary-layer stability modes to Kelvin-Helmholtz modes. Extension of the adjoint solution to the far field using a Kirchhoff surface gives the receptivity of the mixing layer to incident sound from distant sources. © 2005 Cambridge University Press.
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  • 86
    Publication Date: 2005-07-26
    Description: This work is concerned with the linearized theory of water waves applied to the motion of a floating structure that restricts in some way the motion of a portion of the free surface (an example of such a structure is a floating torus). When a structure of this type is held fixed in incident monochromatic waves, or forced to move time harmonically with a prescribed velocity, the amplitude of the fluid motion will have local maxima at certain frequencies of the forcing. These resonances correspond to poles of the scattering and radiation potentials when extended to the complex frequency domain. It is shown in this work that, in general, the positions of these poles in the scattering and radiation potentials will not coincide with the positions of the poles that appear in the velocity potential for the coupled problem obtained when the structure is free to move. The poles of the potential for the coupled problem are associated with the solution for the structural velocities of the equation of motion. When physical quantities such as the amplitude of the fluid motion are examined as a function of (real) frequency, there will in general be a shift in the resonant frequencies in going from the radiation and scattering problems to the coupled problem. The magnitude of this shift depends on the geometry of the structure and how it is moored. © 2005 Cambridge University Press.
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  • 87
    Publication Date: 2005-07-26
    Description: A vertically standing freely-rotating ellipsoidal vortex of uniform anomalous potential vorticity in a rotating stratified fluid under quasi-geostrophic conditions of small Rossby and Froude numbers steadily rotates without change of form. The vortex can have arbitrary axis lengths, but must have one axis parallel to the vertical z-axis along the direction of gravity. The rotation rate is proportional to the potential vorticity anomaly but otherwise depends on only two independent aspect ratios characterizing the shape of the vortex. The linear stability of this class of vortex equilibria was first determined semi-analytically more than a decade ago. It was found that vortices are unstable over a wide range of the parameter space and are stable only when strongly oblate and of nearly circular cross-section. New results, presented here, using a complementary approach and backed by non-linear simulations of the full quasi-geostrophic equations indicate that these ellipsoidal vortices are in fact stable over a much wider range of parameter space. In particular, a mode previously thought to be unstable over much of the parameter space is evidently stable. Moreover, we have determined that this mode is just the difference between two neighbouring equilibrium states having slightly different horizontal aspect ratios; hence, this mode must be neutrally stable. Agreement is found for all other modes. However, by an independent analysis considering only ellipsoidal (though time-varying) disturbances, we have identified one unstable mode as purely ellipsoidal, i.e. it does not change the form of the ellipsoid, only its shape. Under this instability, the vortex quasi-periodically tilts over while undergoing mild changes in shape. The range of parameters leading to non-ellipsoidal instabilities turns out to be narrow, with instability principally occurring for highly eccentric (horizontally squashed, prolate) vortices. The long-term fate of these Instabilities is examined by nonlinear contour-dynamical simulations. These reveal a wealth of complex phenomena such as the production of a sea of small-scale vortices, yet, remarkably, the dominant vortex often tends to relax to a stable rotating ellipsoid. © 2005 Cambridge University Press.
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  • 88
    Publication Date: 2005-07-26
    Description: The effect of angle of attack on the acoustic receptivity of the boundary layer over two-dimensional parabolic bodies is investigated using a spatial solution of the Navier-Stokes equations. The free stream is decomposed into a uniform flow with a superposed periodic velocity fluctuation of small amplitude. The method follows that of Haddad & Corke (1998) and Erturk & Corke (2001) in which the solution for the basic flow and linearized perturbation flow are solved separately. Different angles of incidence of the body are investigated for three leading-edge radii Reynolds numbers. For each, the angle of attack ranges from 0° to past the angle where the mean flow separates. The results then document the effect of the angle of incidence on the leading-edge receptivity coefficient (KLE), and in the case of the mean flow separation, on the amplitude of Tollmien-Schlichting (T-S) waves at the linear stability Branch II location (KII). For angles of attack before separation, we found that the leading-edge receptivity coefficient, KLE, increased with angle of incidence which correlated with an increase in the pressure gradient at the physical leading edge. When a separation zone formed at larger angles of incidence, it became a second site of receptivity with a receptivity coefficient that exceeded that of the leading edge. This resulted in dramatic growth of the T-S waves with Branch II amplitudes more than 100 times larger than those at angles just before separation, and 1000 times more than those at 0° angle of attack. © 2005 Cambridge University Press.
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  • 89
    Publication Date: 2005-07-26
    Description: Self-similar plane solutions for the inertial stage of gravity currents are related to the initial parameters and a coefficient that is determined by the boundary condition at the front. Different relations have been proposed for the boundary condition in terms of a Froude number at the front, none of which have a sound theoretical or experimental basis. This paper focuses on considerations of the appropriate Froude number based on results of lock-exchange experiments in which extended inertial gravity currents are generated in a rectangular cross-section channel. We use 'top-hat' vertical density profiles of the currents to obtain an 'equivalent' depth, defined by profiles having the same buoyancy at every position as the real profiles. As in previous work, our experimental results show that in the initial constant-velocity phase the Froude number can be defined in terms of the lock depth. However, as the current enters the similarity phase when the initial release conditions are no longer relevant, we find that the Froude number is more appropriately defined in terms of the maximum height of the head. Strictly speaking, the self-similar solution to the shallow-water equations requires a front condition that uses the height at the rear of the head. We find that this rear Froude number is not constant and is a function of the head Reynolds number over the range 400-4500. © 2005 Cambridge University Press.
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  • 90
    Publication Date: 2005-07-26
    Description: This paper presents an investigation of the nonlinear steepening of a gasdynamic disturbance propagating in a steady non-uniform base flow. The base flow is the steady compressible flow of a gas in a variable-area duct. The quasi-one-dimensional continuity, momentum and energy equations for the unsteady disturbance in homentropic flow are solved using the method of characteristics (wave front expansion technique). A closed-form solution for the slope of the disturbance at the wave front is obtained. The solution admits singularity for a compressive disturbance, which is responsible for the formation of shock in the flow. The solution is general and is applicable in any range of Mach number of the base flow. A special case of the steady gas flow in a convergent-divergent duct (C-D nozzle), where the flow makes a transition from subsonic to supersonic and vice versa, is investigated. © 2005 Cambridge University Press.
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  • 91
    Publication Date: 2005-07-26
    Description: The effect of initial conditions on the growth rate of turbulent Rayleigh-Taylor (RT) mixing has been studied using carefully formulated numerical simulations. A monotone integrated large-eddy simulation (MILES) using a finite-volume technique was employed to solve the three-dimensional incompressible Euler equations with numerical dissipation. The initial conditions were chosen to test the dependence of the RT growth coefficient (αb) and the self-similar parameter (βb = λb/hb) on (i) the amplitude, (ii) the spectral shape, (iii) the longest wavelength imposed, and (iv) mode-coupling effects. With long wavelengths present in the initial conditions, αb was found to increase logarithmically with the initial amplitudes, while βb is less sensitive to amplitude variations. The simulations are in reasonable agreement with the predictions for αb from a recently proposed model, but not for βb. In the opposite limit where mode-coupling dominates, no such dependence on initial amplitudes is observed, and αb takes a universal lower-bound value of ∼0.03 ± 0.003. This may explain the low values of αb reported by most numerical simulations that are initialized with annular spectra of short-wavelength modes and hence evolve purely through mode-coupling. Small-scale effects such as molecular mixing and kinetic energy dissipation showed a weak dependence on the structure of initial conditions. Initial density spectra with amplitudes distributed as k0, k-1 and k-2 were used to investigate the role of the spectral slopes on the development of turbulent RT mixing. Furthermore, in a separate study, the longest wavelength imposed in the initial wavepacket was also varied to determine its effect on αb. It was found that the slopes of the initial spectra, and the longest wavelength imposed had little effect on the RT growth parameters. © 2005 Cambridge University Press.
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  • 92
    Publication Date: 2005-07-26
    Description: The propagation of a liquid-filled crack from an over-pressured source into a semi-infinite uniform elastic solid is studied. The fluid is lighter than the solid and propagates due to its buoyancy and to the source over-pressure. The role of this over-pressure at early and late times is considered and it is found that the combination of buoyancy and over-pressure leads to significantly different behaviour from buoyancy or over-pressure alone. Lubrication theory is used to describe the flow, where the pressure in the fluid is determined by the elastic deformation of the solid due to the presence of the crack. Numerical results for the evolution of the crack shape and speed are obtained. The crack grows exponentially at early times, but at later times, when buoyancy becomes important, the crack growth accelerates towards a finite-time blow-up. These results are explained by asymptotic similarity solutions for early and late times. The predictions of these solutions are in close agreement with the full numerical results. A different case of crack geometry is also considered in order to highlight connections with previous work. The geological application to magma-filled cracks in the Earth's crust, or dykes, is discussed. © 2005 Cambridge University Press.
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  • 93
    Publication Date: 2005-07-05
    Description: The effect of the wall-normal diffusion on the spanwise spreading of a steady passive scalar interface is computed for a laminar channel in which the Péclét number, Pe, is high but the velocity profile is parabolic. Two regimes are found according to whether the dimensionless streamwise coordinate x̃ is smaller or larger than Pe. In both cases the mixing layer spreads as x̃1/2 to the lowest approximation in Pe-1, although with different numerical coefficients. When x̃ ≪ Pe there is a faster growth of order x̃1/3 that is restricted to boundary layers near the wall. The intermediate region between those two limits is universal, and is computed numerically. Quantitative results are given that should be useful to experimentally measure diffusion coefficients. The results are easily generalizable to other velocity profiles. © 2005 Cambridge University Press.
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  • 94
    Publication Date: 2005-07-05
    Description: Six direct numerical simulations of turbulent time-evolving strained plane wakes have been examined to investigate the response of a wake to successive irrotational plane strains of opposite sign. The orientation of the applied strain field has been selected so that the flow is the time-developing analogue of a spatially developing wake evolving in the presence of either a favourable or an adverse streamwise pressure gradient. The magnitude of the applied strain rate a is constant in time t until the total strain eat reaches about 4. At this point, a new simulation is begun with the sign of the applied strain being reversed (the original simulation is continued as well). When the total strain is reduced back to its original value of 1, yet another simulation is begun with the strain again being reversed back to its original sign. This is done for both initially 'favourable' and initially 'adverse' strains, providing simulations for each of these strain types from three different initial conditions. The evolution of the wake mean velocity deficit and width is found to be similar for all the 'adversely' strained cases, with both measures rapidly achieving exponential growth at the rate associated with the cross-stream expansive strain eat. In the 'favourably' strained cases, the wake widths approach a constant and the velocity deficits ultimately decay rapidly as e-2at. Although all three of these cases do exhibit the same asymptotic exponential behaviour, the time required to achieve this is longer for the cases that have been previously adversely strained (by at ≈ 1). The evolution described above is not consistent with the predictions of classical self-similar analysis; a more general 'equilibrium similarity solution' is required to describe the results. Examination of these simulations confirms that the wake width and mean velocity deficit evolutions observed in Rogers (2002) are not a result of the particular initial condition used in that work. At least for the cases considered here, the wake Reynolds number and the ratio of the turbulent kinetic energy to the square of the wake mean velocity deficit are determined nearly entirely by the total strain. For these measures, the order in which the strains are applied does not matter and the changes brought about by the strain are nearly reversible. The wake mean velocity deficit and width, on the other hand, differ by about a factor of 3 when the total strain returns to 1, depending on whether the wake was first 'favourably' or 'adversely' strained. The strain history is important for predicting the evolution of these quantities. © 2005 Cambridge University Press.
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  • 95
    Publication Date: 2005-07-05
    Description: The motion of a light particle in an eccentrically rotating cylinder provides a method for verifying stationary history lift force effects at low but non-zero particle Reynolds numbers. We examine the flow in detail using a Lagrangian equation of motion for constant, non-zero-vorticity flows, and we predict a measurable and stationary contribution of history lift effects that can be verified experimentally with current experimental techniques. Because the history lift contribution is relevant only under certain conditions (which are determined in this work), the present flow configuration also allows one to isolate history drag effects under normal gravitation conditions without resorting to the tethered-particle arrangement used in previous works. We formulate and solve the trajectory problem for light particles that attain stable orbital motion, and we propose an experimental concept that makes possible the study of individual contributions of Lagrangian forces to the motion of small particles in viscous flows. © 2005 Cambridge University Press.
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  • 96
    Publication Date: 2005-07-05
    Description: The intrusion of a fixed volume of fluid which is released from rest and then propagates horizontally at the neutral buoyancy level in a vertically stratified ambient fluid is investigated. The density change is linear, in a restricted layer or over the full depth of the container, and locks of both rectangular and cylindrical shapes are considered. A closed one-layer shallow-water inviseid formulation is used to obtain solutions of the initial-value problem. Similarity solutions for the large-time developed motion and an approximate box model are also presented. The results are corroborated by numerical solutions of the full two-dimensional Navier-Stokes equations and comparisons with previously published experiments. It is shown that the model is a versatile predictive tool which clarifies essential features of the flow field. Accurate insights are provided concerning the governing dimensionless parameters and the major features of the motion. In particular, the theory predicts and explains: (a) the fact that the initial propagation is with constant speed for intrusions released from a rectangular lock; (b) the effect of the shape of the lock on the motion; (c) the spread with time at some power in the developed stage; and (d) the sub-critical (compared to the mode 2 linear waves) speed in a full-depth stratified container configuration. The main deficiency of the shallow-water model is that internal gravity waves are not incorporated, but some insight into this effect is provided by the comparisons with the Navier-Stokes simulations and experiments. © 2005 Cambridge University Press.
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  • 97
    Publication Date: 2005-07-05
    Description: Grease ice is an agglomeration of disk-shaped ice crystals, named frazil ice, which forms in turbulent waters of the Polar Oceans and in rivers as well. It has been recognized that the property of grease ice that it damps surface gravity waves could be explained in terms of the effective viscosity of the ice slurry. This paper is devoted to the study of the dynamics of a suspension of disk-shaped particles in a gravity wave field. For dilute suspensions, depending on the strength and frequency of the external wave flow, two orientation regimes of the particles are predicted: a preferential orientation regime with the particles rotating in coherent fashion with the wave field, and a random orientation regime in which the particles oscillate around their initial orientation while diffusing under the effect of Brownian motion. For both motion regimes, the effective viscosity has been derived as a function of the wave frequency, wave amplitude and aspect ratio of the particles. Model predictions have been compared to wave attenuation data in frazil ice layers grown in wave tanks. © 2005 Cambridge University Press.
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  • 98
    Publication Date: 2005-08-04
    Description: We investigate a theoretical model of the pulsatile motion of a contaminant-doped semi-infinite bubble in a rectangular channel. We examine the fluid mechanical behaviour of the pulsatile bubble, and its influence on the transport of a surface-inactive contaminant (termed surfinactant). This investigation is used to develop a preliminary understanding of surfactant responses during unsteady pulmonary airway reopening. Reopening is modelled as the pulsatile motion of a semi-infinite gas bubble in a horizontal channel of width 2a filled with a Newtonian liquid of viscosity μ and constant surface tension γ. A modified Langmuir sorption model is assumed, which allows for the creation and respreading of a surface multilayer. The bubble is forced via a time-dependent volume flux Q(t) with mean and oscillatory components (QM and Qω respectively) at frequency ω. The flow behaviour is governed by the dimensionless parameters: CaM = μ QM/(2aγ), a steady-state capillary number, which represents the ratio of viscous to surface tension forces; CaΩ = μ Qω/(2aγ), an oscillatory forcing magnitude; Ω = ωμa/γ, a dimensionless frequency that represents the ratio of viscous relaxation to oscillatory-forcing timescales; and A = 2CaΩ/ Ω, a dimensionless oscillation amplitude. Our simulations indicate that contaminant deposition and retention in the bubble cap region occurs at moderate frequencies if retrograde bubble motion develops during the oscillation cycle. However, if oscillations are too rapid the ensuing large forward tip velocities cause a net loss of contaminant from the bubble tip. Determination of an optimal oscillation range may be important in reducing ventilator-induced lung injury associated with infant and adult respiratory distress syndromes by increasing surfactant transport to regions of collapsed airways. © 2005 Cambridge University Press.
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  • 99
    Publication Date: 2005-07-26
    Description: I calculate the optimal upper bound, subject to the assumption of streamwise invariance, on the long-time-averaged buoyancy flux ℬ* within the flow of an incompressible stratified viscous fluid of constant kinematic viscosity ν, and depth h driven by a constant surface stress τ = ρu2* where u* is the friction velocity with a constant statically stable density difference Δρ maintained across the layer. By using the variational 'background method' (due to Constantin, Doering and Hopf) and numerical continuation, I generate a rigorous upper bound on the buoyancy flux for arbitrary Grashof numbers G, where G = τh2/(ρν2). As G → ∞, for flows where horizontal mean momentum balance, horizontally averaged heat balance, total power balance and total entropy flux balance are imposed as constraints, I show numerically that the best possible upper bound for the buoyancy flux is given by ℬ* ≤ℬ* max = u4*/(4ν)+O(u3*/h). This bound is independent of both the overall strength of the stratification and the layer depth to leading order. This bound is associated with a velocity profile that has the scaling characteristics of a somewhat decelerated laminar, linear velocity profile. © 2005 Cambridge University Press.
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  • 100
    Publication Date: 2005-07-26
    Description: The generation of a gravity current by the release of a semi-infinite region of buoyant fluid of depth H overlying a deeper, denser and quiescent lower layer in a rotating channel of width w is considered. Previous studies have focused on the characteristics of the gravity current head region and produced relations for the gravity current speed cb and width wb as a functions of the local current depth along the wall hb, reduced gravity g′, and Coriolis frequency f. Here, the dam-break problem is solved analytically by the method of characteristics assuming reduced-gravity flow, uniform potential vorticity and a semigeostrophic balance. The solution makes use of a local gravity current speed relation cb = cb(hb,...) and a continuity constraint at the head to close the problem. The initial value solution links the local gravity current properties to the initiating dam-break conditions. The flow downstream of the dam consists of a rarefaction joined to a uniform gravity current with width wb (≤ w) and depth on the right-hand wall of hb, terminated at the head moving at speed cb. The solution gives hb, cb, wb and the transport of the boundary current as functions of w/LR, where LR = √g′H/ f is the deformation radius. The semigeostrophic solution compares favourably with numerical solutions of a single-layer shallow-water model that internally develops a leading bore. Existing laboratory experiments are re-analysed and some new experiments are undertaken. Comparisons are also made with a three-dimensional shallow-water model. These show that lateral boundary friction is the primary reason for differences between the experiments and the semigeostrophic theory. The wall no-slip condition is identified as the primary cause of the experimentally observed decrease in gravity current speed with time. A model for the viscous decay is developed and shown to agree with both experimental and numerical model data. © 2005 Cambridge University Press.
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