Leidsid 33 sarnast õppematerjali, mis on seotud failiga "Tugevusõpetus I kodutöö 1 / Stength of materials I HW 1". Need materjalid aitavad sul teemat sügavamalt mõista.
strength, components, safe, teacher, rope, diameter, load, conditions, answer, method, structure, value, factor, both, quality, symbols, overall, total, filled, wire, force, allowed, safety, solution, student, maximum, function, aluminium, code, stress, functions, internal, forces, check, steel, alloy, draw, sketch, values, equal, digit, statement, finalHomework nr 4 in STRENGTH of MATERIALS I (MHE0011) Variant Title A B Strength Analysis of a Beam 8 9 Student Student Code Delivery Date Teacher 18.12.2017 Priit Põdra Hot-rolled INP section, manufactured of steel S235 must be used for a beam. The beam will be loaded by the concentrated load F and line distributed load p. Beam dimensions obey the relationship: b = a/2. The value of concentrated load is F = 10 kN and the line distributed load is uniform with the intensity: p = F/b. The value of design factor is: [S] = 4
STRUCTURAL TESTING OF HOMEBUILTS Editor's Note: Alex Strojnik's Aviation articles on laminar flow in in all cases of new designs. He writings and aircraft designs have lightplane design, Alex designed also believes load testing may be in appeared in Sport Aviation many and built a very low drag powered order in a number of instances times in the past decade. A native sailplane, the S-2 (Sport Aviation, involving composite airframes. of Yugoslavia, Alex has very April 1982), which would become While there has been no history of impressive academic credentials. the first homebuilt motorglider in structural failure in composite
capillary is absent. This effect explain a very slight broadening of the bands observed in the CE (Fig. 4). Separation process Band separation in zone electrophoresis is based on a combination of electrophoretic mobility and electroosmotic flow of ions. In electroosmosis effect voltage value, ionic strength, viscosity of a buffer, additives in eluent and different coatings of the capillary walls. Electrophoretic mobility of positive, neutral and negative sample molecules is different, but all of the particles under the effect of electroosmotic flow migrate towards the cathode. The rate of migration of the particle is the sum of its own electrophoretic mobility and electroosmotic flow rate
Tavaline põhjatraalnoot grunttropp 20 21 22 23 24 Alumise selise tagalastus põhjatraalnoodal 25 Hard Bottom Snapper Trawl Traalnoot püügiks nn. rasketel põhjadel. Features Three-bridle design for maximum vertical height. Cutaway lower wings allow fishing on rugged bottom conditions. Low-stretch, high-strength riblines support codend loads. Net may be fitted with varying footrope styles to "fine-tune" it to particular fish species and grounds Kasutatud on kolme kaabliga taglastust, et tagada suurem vertikaalava. Alumiste 26tiibade konstruktsioon lubab ohutumalt traalida. Gunttropp võib olla erinev, sõltuvalt püügikohast ja objektist. Rockhoppers
Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 1-1 CPM1A Features and Functions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 1-2 System Configuration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 SECTION 2 Unit Specifications and Components . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 2-1 Specifications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 2-2 Unit Components . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31 SECTION 3 Installation and Wiring . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
For the purpose of this contextual essay, bridge design and construction is dealt with chronologically by material and by type. In addition to the obvious evaluation factors as age, rarity, integrity, and the fame of the builder, consideration also is given to the substructure (piers, abutments, foundation), the superstructure (beam, arch, truss, suspension, and combinations thereof), the materials of construction (their strength and properties), the evolution of construction techniques, and whether the bridge advanced structural theory or methods of evaluating material behaviour. Bridges discussed in this essay illustrate important types or technological turning points and are listed at the end. Some, like the Pont du Gard (France) and the Iron Bridge (UK), are already inscribed on the World Heritage List. Others may be candidates for listing given adequate study, comparison, and evaluation
myofibril, and are thus termed myofibrillar rity both during contraction and during the proteins. In general, the myofibrillar proteins early postmortem period. Ultimately, these are not soluble at low ionic strengths found postmortem changes will influence the suit- in skeletal muscle (ionic strength ≤0.15), but ability of meat for further processing. can be solubilized at higher ionic strengths (≥0.3). This class of proteins includes both the proteins directly involved in movement Muscle Composition (contractile proteins) and proteins that regu-
.36 Alternator drivebelt check . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .20 Hinge and lock check and lubrication . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .31 Automatic transmission fluid level check . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .27 Idle speed and mixture adjustment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10 Automatic transmission selector mechanism check . . . . . . . . . . . .28 Ignition system components check . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11 Battery check . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5 Ignition timing check - models with contact breaker distributor . . .14 Brake components check . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .38 Intensive maintenance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 Brake fluid renewal . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
•Software should not be designed as monolithic unit but partitioned into composableservices that can be spontaneously connected and orchestrated by business/technical processes (component-based software). •„Software entropy“should be maximized: loosely coupling between peers,decentralized information access, reflective approaches (Just-in-Time Integration). •Software must be e-enabled. Application Partioning •Solutions consist of collections of components. •Components are divided into multiple packages. •Packages can work with each other across a network through ObjectRequestBroker(ORB). •This application partitioning is transparent to the component developer. 3. COM Principles: Rigorous Encapsulation: - no leakage of implementation details; – All object manipulation through strict interfaces. Polymorphism: – via multiple interfaces per class; – “Discoverable”: Query Interface COM Model – how the techogy is used.
Logistics is essentially a framework Supply chain builds upon this that creates a single plan for the framework and seeks to achieve flow of products and information linkage and coordination between through a business process of other entities in the pipeline i.e. suppliers and costumers, and the organization it self. COMPONENTS OF SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT The following are the five basic components of Supply Chain Management: 1. Plan:- This is the strategic portion of SCM. You need a strategy for managing all the resources that go toward meeting customer demand for your product or service. A big piece of planning is developing a set of metrics to monitor the supply chain so that it is efficient, costs less and delivers high quality and value to customers. 2. Source:-
remarkable shift in the building industry. Intelligent 3D technology in the form of Building Information Modeling (BIM) not only promises to improve the notoriously inefficient construction process, but also opens the door for designing new geometric shapes, which until recently have been considered unbuildable. Steel has been extensively used to build some of the most challenging architectural icons of the 21st century, due to its low weight and high strength in both compression and tension. Therefore, the steel design and construction industry has been on the forefront of technical innovation. The purpose of this study is to determine how 3D and BIM are changing the design, fabrication and construction of complex steel structures. The thesis is qualitative in nature, in that it tries to determine the effects of virtual design and construction based on in-depth analysis of two case studies. Data were collected during 5 interviews with people
However, there are some system considerations in any design that must interface to the real world, and these will be considered here. Dynamic Range Before a system can be designed, the dynamic range of the inputs and outputs must be known. The dynamic range defines the precision that must be applied to measuring the inputs or generating the outputs. This in turn drives other parts of the design, such as allowable noise and the precision that is required of the components. A simple microprocessor-based system might read an analog input voltage and convert it to a digital value (how this happens will be examined in Chapter 2, “Digital-to-Analog Converters”). Dynamic range is usually expressed in db because it is usually a measurement of relative power or voltage. However, this does not cover all the things that a microprocessor-based system might want to measure. In simplest terms, the dynamic range can be thought of as the
In steady state, a constant flow rate and agitation was applied until temperatures stayed constant, then were the readings taken. In unsteady state, bath was heated up and then cooled down with cold water running through the submerged coil and temperature readings were taken every five minutes. A theoretical overall heat transfer coefficient was calculated using different sources of literature and then they were compared to experimental coefficients. The difference is explained based on the conditions of equations and experimental setup. The results showed that overall heat transfer coefficient changed as expected, it was bigger with higher flow rates, which directly results in higher Reynolds numbers, and higher agitation rates. Some anomalies did occur, but they can be explained with atypical details in experimental setup. 3 4 Table of Contents Table of Contents..........................
Classroom dynamics: An interview with Jill Hadfield. Available at http://ltprofessionals.com/journalpdfs/vol1no1/features/winter2000kahny.pdf accessed 27.12.2012 ESOL Teaching Skills TaskBook. Classroom dynamics: unit 1 a). Available at http://akoaotearoa.ac.nz/download/ng/file/group-4/n2431-esol-teaching-skills- taskbook-unit-1-a---classroom-dynamics.pdf accessed 27.12.2012 III Language teaching methods. · (Traditional: the grammar-translation method/ classical method.) · Traditional: the direct method Youtube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XiQvG-fvzLM Kids lesson (direct method) Language is primarily speech Reading skills are developed through practice with speaking Realia is used to convey the meaning Demonstration instead of translation or explanation Complete sentences instead of vocabulary lists The purpose of language learning is communication Pronunciation Self correction
(iii) support, figure lower than 5.991 / figure lower than critical value; R ‘support’ on its own. ecf applies if value in (ii) is incorrect 1 [16] 2. named characteristic; named environmental factor; (mark first answer only) 2 [2] 3. 1 ref to operon; 2 normally repressor substance bound to operator; 3 prevents RNA polymerase binding (at promoter) / prevents transcription; 4 lactose binds to repressor; 5 changes shape of protein molecule; 6 unable to bind (to operator); 7 RNA polymerase binds (at promoter) / transcription occurs / genes
double kahekordne hollow space õõnsus exhaust side väljalaske pool furthermore pealegi longitudinal piki- cooling oil jahutusõli CYLINDER LINER Liners are cast in pearlitic grey cast iron. Chromium plating of the internal surface can be carried out to reduce wear and corrosion. Chrome plated liners have extended life but the initial cost is greater. The upper end of the liner forms a flange to support it. The liner thickness must give strength to resist the internal gas load. Thickness may be reduced towards the lower end where pressures and temperatures are less. In the two-stroke engine (MAN B&W) the upper part of the cylinder liner is surrounded by a cooling jacket between the cylinder cover and the cylinder block. The cooling water is led through water transitions from the cylinder block to the lower part of the cooling jacket. The water continues from the upper part of the
Zeo--Good Sleep Example Zeo--Bad Sleep Example Monophasic Sleep and Polyphasic Sleep REVERSING INJURIES Barefoot Walker's Feet and Modern Man's Feet Static Back Static Extension Position on Elbows Shoulder Bridge with Pillow Active Bridges with Pillow Supine Groin Progressive in Tower Alternative: Supine Groin on Chair Air Bench ART, Before and After Thoraco-dorsal Fascia The Chop and Lift Full and Half-Kneeling Ideal Placement on One Line Tricep Rope Attachment Single-Leg Flexibility Assessment Down-Left Chop Ideal Placement Down-Left Chop Ideal Placement Turkish Get-Up Start and Finish of Two-Arm Single-Leg Deadlift RUNNING FASTER AND FASTER Hip Flexors Stretch Reverse Lunge Demonstration Untrained and Trained Start Positions Reverse Hyper(extension) on a Bench and Swiss Ball Enzyme Activity Graph Super Quad Stretch Pelvic Symmetry and Glute Flexibility Stretches Repositioning the Pelvis Pre-Workout Glute Activation
> Bit synchronization Independent transmit & receive clocks. receiver explicitly resynchronizes on 1st primary and secondary station. What's new in the frame, compared to HDLC: bit of each byte remaining bits recovered by estimating bit boundaries explicit byte synchronization > Operation of combined station · Contains protocol components of primary · Two octet address (first is destination, second is source): · Network Control Protocols(NCPs) become critical for correct bit synchronization. Receiver clock: and secondary in one physical station. · Transmits both commands and responses. these are LLC addresses and NOT addresses that appear on Functionalities, message types Authentication phase: Link establishment
allow it to focus on more promising projects and clients, but the immediate influx of monetary resources would be a material advantage to initiation of OO1 conversion. OO3: Tuning appearances Lee IS image would benefit a lot from modernization. Superficiality of human nature is such that oftentimes the visual aspects of company's representation can be crucial in cultivation of inclination to trust. Outdated visual components can be easily associated with usage of technologies that are not state of the art, whereas neat and modern representation of the company is likely to produce the contrary effect. The components that require redesign include but are not limited to the company's website, business cards, company's products/solutions and their business websites. OO4: Turning relations in other countries into local representatives
. . . . . . .12 What is ECDIS? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13 How is an ECDIS approved and by whom? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14 Meeting Carriage Requirements with ECDIS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14 What to do in areas without official ENC coverage? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16 What are the requirements for the safe use of ECDIS ? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .18 What is ECS? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .19 Final remarks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .20 Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .20 ANNEX I Glossary/list of abbreviations . . . . . . . .
http://math.hws.edu/TMCM/java/labs/xTurtleLab3.html http://math.hws.edu/TMCM/java/xTurtle/index.html Tutvu Tanel Tammeti näidetega: http://www.lambda.ee/images/7/77/Itsissejuhatus_calc.html http://www.lambda.ee/images/6/61/Itsissejuhatus_xmcssjscriptnaited.zip Tutvu e-Government Academy´ga: http://www.ega.ee/?lang=ee kuula helisalvestisi: http://www.tehnokratt.net/2006/06/09 Kas JavaScript on W3C standard? Student Value Correct Answer Feedback Response 1. Jah 0% 2. Ei 100% Score: 0/10 2. Milline allolevatest tagidest defineerib tabeli välja? Student Value Correct Answer Feedback Response 1.
FIGURE 1. Example of pilled fabric Two common pieces of equipment for pilling measurement, mainly used in Europe, are the Martindale pilling tester and the Pilling Box. The Martindale tester consists of a number of testing plates (See Figure 2) on which the abrading fabrics is attached; these four testing plates are mounted on the base plate of the instrument. Generally speaking, fabrics to be tested using Martindale are cut in an approximate circular shape with diameter equal to 90± 1 mm. A worsted wool cloth is used for abrading the samples and a trajectory based on the Lissajous figure is used to perform each cycle (more precisely, a cycle consists of 16 movements in the Lissajous figure). A 12 kPa head pressure is applied by the machine. 5 FIGURE 2. Martindale pilling tester.
The sunflower (Helianthus annuus) is an annual(iga aastane) plant in the family Asteraceae, with a large flower head (inflorescence(õiekobar, õisik, õitseaeg, õidumine)). The stem(tüvi) of the flower can grow up to 3 metres tall, with the flower head reaching 30 cm in diameter. The term "sunflower" is also used to refer(nimetama, viitama, üle andma) to all plants of the genus(perekond, sugu) Helianthus, many of which are perennial(alaline, aastaringne) plants. What is usually called the flower is actually a head (formally(ametlikult) composite(liit-, komposiit- ; korvõieline, komposiit) flower) of numerous flowers (florets) crowded(täistuubitud, tunglev, rahvarohke) together. The outer flowers are the ray
v= @vD = tper s The power of waves is given by rH O *g2 * h2 *tper W 2 P= @PD = 32 *p mcrl or with the approximation P ~ h2 ä tper . The power is defined per meter of crest length. Exercise: North Atlantic offshore wave conditions Wave climate for the north Atlantic offshore region is given by the table below. The unknown values have to be calculated. 5 Period High Power density Velocity wavelength kW @tD=s @hD=m @PD= @vD= m @lD=m m s calm 3
Thus people in the AEC industry, including scholars and practitioners, have come together to find new solutions for delivering projects and fulfilling high requirements. 1.1 Problem formulation The construction industry makes up a great share of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in many countries all over the world and provides employment to a great number of people. Thus, it is important to conduct research in this field, with a view to making it more productive, safe and free of waste. This can all happen only with a better understanding of the concepts, principles and physics of the construction industry. Therefore, many academics, academic institutions and even companies have started to work together to propose solutions for the problems occurring in the construction industry. LC and BIM are fundamentally different approaches and ordinarily implemented independently. Their
un-constitutional)it has to be published in the state gazette (riigiteataja) Vald rural municipality Kihelkond - parish Come/enter into force - jõustuma Legislative bodys seadusandlikud organid Curia.europa.eu Eur-lex.europa.eu c-200/02 Zhu Chen 12.02.09 Case brief You have to know the name and nr of the case (ex Zhu or Chen) When I answer home reading start with the name and nr of the case. And then the parties. (preferably ,,Full court"). Then the relevant problems and events. Let the details be. The next one is what was the question that was asked from court. (Normally very concrete question). Then the decision of the court with my own words. (5 things all together!): 1. Name and nr of the case 2. The parties (there is a trick queen v Smith might mean state v Smith (in UK) a not
1. Does the conclusion follow from the premises? 2. Are the premises true? Validity To overcome the ambiguities of the commonsense notion of ‘following from’, we introduce the technical notion of validity. Question: 1. ‘Does the conclusion follow from the premises?’ can be rephrased as: 1. Is the argument valid? An argument is valid if it is impossible for its premise(s) to be (all of them) true and its conditions false. In a valid argument, if the premises are all true, then the conclusion is necessarily true. Soundness An argument might be valid even when some or all its premises are false and/or its conclusion is false. No Human is mortal Aristotle is a human Therefore, Aristotle is not mortal. The validity of an argument does not guarantee the truth of its conclusion. An argument is Sound if it is valid and has (all non-superflous) true premises. Sound = Valid + (all) true premises
FOH spending variance is the same amount as the FOH flexible-budget variance. Production volume variance arises only for fixed costs, denominator level variance, difference between budgeted FOH and FOH allocated on the basis of actual output produced. Production volume var = budgeted FOH - FOH allocated for actual output units produced. Chapter 11 - Relevant costs Managers usually follow a decision model for choosing among different courses of action. A decision model is a formal method of making a choice, and it often involves both quantitative and qualitative analyses. Five-step decision-making process to make decisions (Ch1). Relevant costs are expected future costs and relevant revenues are expected future revenues that differ among the alternative courses of action being considered. Past costs are called sunk costs, because they are unavoidable and cannot be changed no matter what action is taken. Quantitative factors are outcomes that are measured in
The plaintext is the message that will be put into secret form. Usually the plaintext is in the native tongue of the communicators. The message may be hidden in two basic ways. The methods of steganography conceal the very existence of the message. Among them are invisible inks and microdots and arrangements in which, for example, the first letter of each word in an apparently innocuous text spells out the real message. (When steganography is applied to electrical communications, such as a method that transmits a long radio message in a single short spurt, it is called transmission security.) The methods of cryptography, on the other hand, do not conceal the presence of a secret message but render it unintelligible to outsiders by various transformations of the plaintext. Two basic transformations exist. In transposition, the letters of the plaintext are jumbled; their normal order is disarranged. To shuffle secret into ETCRSE is a transposition. In substitution, the letters of the
epithelial cells slows down bacterial adhesion (Postma et al., 2007). In conclusion tear films are likely one of the most essential mechanisms to avoid fixation and colonization by microorganisms in nature (Ely et al., 2017). Etiology Moraxella bovis is the most common etiological agent isolated in chronic and severe instance of IBK. Some of the bacteria characteristics are responsible for taking crucial part to evolve the disease. Especially the components such as pili, discharge of cytotoxin and hemolysin, 2 also outer membrane proteins and lipopolysaccharides. The different virulence strains of the disease are associated with capsular pili. Pili is important structural attributes that helps the bacteria to adhere to the corneal surface. Attachment keeps bacteria safe from blinking activity of the eyelids and being washed off by the lachrymal secretions (Postma et al., 2007).
YOU WILL HEAR: To get to the post office, cross the street, go three blocks, and you'll see it right on the corner. YOU WILL SEE: (A) The post office is right on the corner. (B) The post office is at the next corner. (C) The post office has a cross near it. (D) The post office is three blocks away. The correct choice is, which most closely gives the same meaning as the sentence you heard. It is important for you to know that if similar sounding words or the same words appear in an answer choice, that answer choice is seldom correct. Short Dialogs Part B contains short dialogs followed by a question about what the people said in their conversation. Generally, key information is found in the second speaker's sentence. You will need to understand the meaning of the conversation and also the context , such as the time or place in which it could occur. The correct choice directly answers the question. YOU WILL HERE: (Man Did you get to go shopping last night'
Contents vii The big one 105 Summary 108 Questions 108 Further reading 108 9 Truth-Condition Theories: Davidson's program 109 Overview 109 Truth conditions 109 Truth-defining natural languages 114 Objections to the Davidsonian version 117 Summary 123 Questions 124 Further reading 125 10 Truth-Condition Theories: possible worlds and intensional semantics 126
· Parents = King/queen; emperor/empress, etc. Metaphors · Children and siblings = vermin · Difficult to test or refute; `explains everything' · Birth = water · Neglects social nature of humans · Death = departure · Case study method · Nakedness = Clothes & uniforms Select sample; recall bias, influenced patients · Little proven success as therapy After Freud... Freud: positive aspects