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Full-Text Articles in Mechanical Engineering
Application And Evaluation Of Lighthouse Technology For Precision Motion Capture, Soumitra Sitole
Application And Evaluation Of Lighthouse Technology For Precision Motion Capture, Soumitra Sitole
Masters Theses
This thesis presents the development towards a system that can capture and quantify motion for applications in biomechanical and medical fields demanding precision motion tracking using the lighthouse technology. Commercially known as SteamVR tracking, the lighthouse technology is a motion tracking system developed for virtual reality applications that makes use of patterned infrared light sources to highlight trackers (objects embedded with photodiodes) to obtain their pose or spatial position and orientation. Current motion capture systems such as the camera-based motion capture are expensive and not readily available outside of research labs. This thesis provides a case for low-cost motion capture …
Non-Equispaced Fast Fourier Transforms In Turbulence Simulation, Aditya M. Kulkarni
Non-Equispaced Fast Fourier Transforms In Turbulence Simulation, Aditya M. Kulkarni
Masters Theses
Fourier pseudo-spectral method on equispaced grid is one of the approaches in turbulence simulation, to compute derivative of discrete data, using fast Fourier Transform (FFT) and gives low dispersion and dissipation errors. In many turbulent flows the dynamically important scales of motion are concentrated in certain regions which requires a coarser grid for higher accuracy. A coarser grid in other regions minimizes the memory requirement. This requires the use of Non-equispaced Fast Fourier Transform (NFFT) to compute the Fourier transform, by solving a system of linear equations.
To achieve similar accuracy, the NFFT needs to return more Fourier coefficients than …
Robust Identification Of Dynamically Distinct Regions In Stratified Turbulence, Gavin D. Portwood, Stephen M. De Bruyn Kops, J. R. Taylor, H. Salehipour, C. P. Caulfield
Robust Identification Of Dynamically Distinct Regions In Stratified Turbulence, Gavin D. Portwood, Stephen M. De Bruyn Kops, J. R. Taylor, H. Salehipour, C. P. Caulfield
Mechanical and Industrial Engineering Faculty Publication Series
we present a new robust method for identifying three dynamically distinct regions in a stratified turbulent flow, which we characterise as quiescent flow, intermittent layers, and turbulent patches. The method uses the cumulative filtered distribution function of the local density gradient to identify each region. We apply it to data from direct numerical simulations of homogeneous stratified turbulence, with unity Prandtl number, resolved on up to 8192x8192x4092 grid points. In addition to classifying regions consistently with contour plots of potential enstropy, our method identifies quiescent regions as regions where ∊ ⁄ νΝ2 ~ Ο(1), layers as regions where …