The goal of this project is to relate properties of nanowire networks to their structure. The structure of these networks was determined from electron and atomic force microscopy, which were used as the basis for property predictions. Properties include sheet resistance, conductive anisotropy, absorption spectra, and current capacity.
This investigation utilizes a new and more accurate multiscale analysis that combines molecular dynamics and polycrystalline theory with micromechanics to capture the influence of the amorphous boron nitride interphase thickness on the mechanical properties of the SiC/SiC composites.
Passive flow control devices, such as vortex generators (VGs), can effectively modulate the turbulent boundary layer flow near regions of adverse pressure gradients, but the interactions between the salient flow structures produced by VGs and those of the separated flow are not fully understood. In this study, a spatially evolving turbulent boundary layer interacting with a wall-mounted cube ahead of a backward-facing ramp is investigated using wall-resolved large-eddy simulations for a Reynolds number of 19,600, based on the inlet boundary layer thickness and freestream velocity. Different cube configurations are examined to isolate the effects of cube height and streamwise position.
Suyash Tandon, Kevin J. Maki, and Eric Johnsen, "Large-Eddy Simulations of Flow over a Backward-Facing Ramp with a Wall-Mounted Cube, " AIAAJ, Vol. 62, No. 9 (2024), pp. 3403-3417 doi: doi/abs/10.2514/1.J063803
This dataset contains data from two direct numerical simulations of a turbulent zero-pressure-gradient flat-plate boundary layer spanning friction Reynolds numbers from 292 to 728 (BL1) and 488 to 1024 (BL2). The dataset contains time-resolved snapshots of the three-dimensional velocity field for both cases: roughly 10,000 snapshots spanning 20 eddy-turnover times for BL1 and 7,500 snapshots spanning 7 eddy-turnover times for BL2 . Also included for both cases are pre-processed correlations at several wall-normal distances, mean and root-mean-squared velocity and vorticity profiles, several boundary-layer metrics, and time-resolved velocity data in the streamwise-wall-normal plane. All data are stored within hdf5 files, and a Matlab script showing how the data can be read and manipulated is provided. Please see the ‘BLdns_README.pdf’ file for more information. We recommend using the ‘BLdns_example.zip’ file as an entry point to the dataset. and The dataset is part of “A database for reduced-complexity modeling of fluid flows” (see references below) and is intended to aid in the conception, training, demonstration, evaluation, and comparison of reduced-complexity models for fluid mechanics. The paper introduces the flow setup and computational methods, describes the available data, and provides an example of how these data can be used for reduced-complexity modeling. Users of these data should cite the paper listed below.
Towne, A., Dawson, S., Brès, G. A., Lozano-Durán, A., Saxton-Fox, T., Parthasarthy, A., Biler, H., Jones, A. R., Yeh, C.-A., Patel, H., Taira, K. (2022). A database for reduced-complexity modeling of fluid flows. AIAA Journal 61(7): 2867-2892.
Robotic models are useful for independently varying specific features, but most quadrupedal robots differ so greatly from animal morphologies that they have minimal evolutionary relevance. Commercially available quadrupedal robots are also prohibitively expensive for biological research programs and difficult to customize. Here, we present a low-cost quadrupedal robot with modular legs that can match a wide range of animal morphologies for biomechanical hypothesis testing. The Robot Of Theseus (TROT) costs ≈$4000 to build out of 3D printed parts and standard off-the-shelf supplies. Each limb consists of 2 or 3 rigid links; the proximal joint can be rotated to become a knee or elbow. Telescoping mechanisms vary the length of each limb link. The open-source software accommodates user-defined gaits and morphology changes. Effective leg length, or crouch, is determined by the four-bar linkage actuating each joint. The backdrivable motors can vary virtual spring stiffness and range of motion.
A work that demonstrates enhancement by nearly two-orders of magnitude of the circular-polarized optical Stark effect in WSe₂ embedded into a Fabry Perot cavity, and use this mechanism to implement a XOR switch.
This dataset contains experimental measurements of a zero-pressure-gradient flat-plate boundary layer at five different Reynolds numbers collected using particle image velocimetry. For each Reynolds number, the dataset contains approximately 6000 snapshots of planar velocity fields as well as raw particle image pairs. All data are stored within hdf5 files, and a Matlab script showing how the data can be read and manipulated is provided. Please see the ‘BLexp_README.pdf’ file for more information. We recommend using the ‘BLexp_example.zip’ file as an entry point to the dataset. and The dataset is part of “A database for reduced-complexity modeling of fluid flows” (see references below) and is intended to aid in the conception, training, demonstration, evaluation, and comparison of reduced-complexity models for fluid mechanics. The paper introduces the flow setup and computational methods, describes the available data, and provides an example of how these data can be used for reduced-complexity modeling. Users of these data should cite the papers listed below.
Towne, A., Dawson, S., Brès, G. A., Lozano-Durán, A., Saxton-Fox, T., Parthasarthy, A., Biler, H., Jones, A. R., Yeh, C.-A., Patel, H., Taira, K. (2022). A database for reduced-complexity modeling of fluid flows. AIAA Journal 61(7): 2867-2892.
Data deposited here includes 60 image sets (30 individual participants, and 2 eyes per individual) consisting of raw fluorescence images, diffuse reflection images using ambient lighting, images used for correction, and calibration, and metadata. Images are split into two wavelength bands as described in the methodology. Raw images are stored in Hierarchical Data Format 5 (HDF5) file nodes (one file per eye) and each image node contains a tag for frame rate, exposure duration, and timestamp (stored in ImageData.zip).
Summary statistics including demographic data, participant-reported diseases (e.g., diabetes, keratoconus), and pupil size are also stored in a text-based comma-separated table and as an Excel spreadsheet. Finally, 2-channel pseudocolor images and ratiometric grayscale images combining the two fully-processed image bands are stored as portable network graphics (PNG) files (stored in PseudocolorImages.zip).
Herzog, Joshua M., Verkade, Angela, and Sick, Volker. "Corneal shadowgraphy: a simple, low-cost, rapid, and quantitative tool with potential clinical utility." Manuscript in review. 2024. and Herzog, Joshua M., Verkade, Angela, and Sick, Volker. "Quantitative and rapid in vivo imaging of human lenticular fluorescence." Manuscript in review. 2024.
WarpX simulations of the 2D axial-azimuthal Hall thruster benchmark, as described in IEPC paper 409 (2024):
https://www.thomasmarks.space/files/Marks_T_IEPC_2024_WarpX.pdf
Contains one subdirectory:
baseline_20us: 20 us of data, saved every 5000 iterations (32 GB)
The data is in AMReX plotfile format.
@inproceedings{marksWarpX2024, title = {Hall thruster simulations in {{Warp-X}}}, booktitle = {38th {{International Electric Propulsion Conference}}}, author = {Marks, Thomas A. and Gorodetsky, Alex A.}, year = {2024}, month = jun, address = {Toulouse, France} }
The MEVDT dataset was created to fill a critical gap in event-based computer vision research by supplying a high-quality, real-world labeled dataset. Intended to facilitate the development of advanced algorithms for object detection and tracking applications, MEVDT includes multi-modal traffic scene data with synchronized grayscale images and high-temporal-resolution event streams. Additionally, it provides annotations for object detection and tracking with class labels, pixel-precise bounding box coordinates, and unique object identifiers. The dataset is organized into directories containing sequences of images and event streams, comprehensive ground truth labels, fixed-duration event samples, and data indexing sets for training and testing. and To access and utilize the dataset, researchers need specific software or scripts compatible with the data formats included, such as PNG for grayscale images, CSV for event stream data, AEDAT for the encoded fixed-duration event samples, and TXT for annotations. Recommended tools include standard image processing libraries for PNG files and CSV or text parsers for event data. A specialized Python script for reading AEDAT files is available at: https://github.com/Zelshair/cstr-event-vision/blob/main/scripts/data_processing/read_aedat.py, which streamlines access to the encoded event sample data.
El Shair, Z. and Rawashdeh, S., 2024. MEVDT: Multi-Modal Event-Based Vehicle Detection and Tracking Dataset. Data In Brief (under review)., El Shair, Z. and Rawashdeh, S.A., 2022. High-temporal-resolution object detection and tracking using images and events. Journal of Imaging, 8(8), p.210., El Shair, Z. and Rawashdeh, S., 2023. High-temporal-resolution event-based vehicle detection and tracking. Optical Engineering, 62(3), pp.031209-031209., and El Shair, Z.A., 2024. Advancing Neuromorphic Event-Based Vision Methods for Robotic Perception Tasks (Doctoral dissertation, University of Michigan-Dearborn).