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Table 5. Design variable changes made by the response surface optimization. Left panel coresponds to conventional configuration, right panel coresponds to oblique wing configuration.

in T Conceptual Design of Conventional and Oblique Wing Configurations for Small Supersonic Aircraft
by Mathias Wintzer, Peter Sturdza, Ilan Kroo
"... In PAGE 9: ... 14). In order to improve the shape of the wing for beter L/D, it was agresively washed out at the tip and break (se Table5 ). Given constraints on the wing angle of atack due to the takeof alpha limit, the resulting reduction in takeof CL adversely efects the field length performance.... In PAGE 11: ... 18). Design variable changes efected by the optimizer are sumarized in Table5 , with a notable change ocuring in the wing taper ratio, which increased over 20%, most likely in an efort to reduce the section Cl near the tips. Although the cruise L/D is lower for the fit-derived configuration than the low-fidelity prediction, the overal weight is also lower, making this the beter overal design.... ..."

Table 5. Properties of the conventional glider.

in ¯c Reference chord [m] cl Two-dimensional lift coefficient
by Christopher J. Sequeira, David J. Willis, Jaime Peraire
"... In PAGE 7: ... Conventional Glider The conventional glider geometry represents a two-surface aircraft with a main wing and horizontal stabilizer behind it. It has the properties listed in Table5 and the geometry visible in Figure 2(b). C.... ..."

Table 1. Boolean operations can be performed on objects represented by distance fields using simple min() max() operators. The functions listed in this table assume a signed distance field with the object surface lying at the zero-valued iso-surface and a sign convention that uses positive distances for points inside the shape and negative distances for points outside of the shape.

in Designing with Distance Fields
by Sarah F. Frisken, Ronald N. Perry 2006
"... In PAGE 4: ... operations can be performed using simple min() and max() operators (see Table1 ). Although the resultant fields are not strictly Euclidean (in particular, the combined field near sharp corners is non-Euclidean), the fields are often a reasonable approximation to the true Euclidean distance field close to the ... ..."

Table 1. Boolean operations can be performed on objects represented by distance fields using simple min() max() operators. The functions listed in this table assume a signed distance field with the object surface lying at the zero-valued iso-surface and a sign convention that uses positive distances for points inside the shape and negative distances for points outside of the shape.

in
by unknown authors
"... In PAGE 2: ... operations can be performed using simple min() and max() operators (see Table1 ). Although the resultant fields are not strictly Euclidean (in particular, the combined field near sharp corners is non-Euclidean), the fields are often a reasonable approximation to the true Euclidean distance field close to the ... ..."

Table 4. Filenaming conventions for segmented volumes Segmentation characteristic Append Exemplar

in unknown title
by unknown authors
"... In PAGE 25: ... This reduces irregularities along the medial wall and yields a smoother surface reconstruction. The output volume has a quot;_vent quot; appended to the file type (see Table4 ). For partial hemisphere, select quot;no quot;.... In PAGE 26: ...ill show the corrected segmentation (Test.L.occipital.segment_pad_corr.mnc), and the surface viewer will show the fiducial surface. Table4 indicates the naming conventions for segmented volumes and the associated surfaces, according to whether or not the volume has been padded, whether or not error correction has been done, and whether the ventricle has been filled. For the segmented volume, the filename quot;segment quot; is appended by quot;_pad quot; if the volume is padded, by quot;_vent quot; if the ventricle is included, and by quot;_corr quot; if automated error corrections have been applied.... ..."

Table 1. Control Surface Position and Rate Limits

in High-Alpha Research Vehicle Lateral-Directional Control Law Description, Analyses, and Simulation Results
by John B. Davidson, Patrick C. Murphy, Frederick J. Lallman, Keith D. Hoffler, Barton J. Bacon
"... In PAGE 8: ... The HARV has five conventional aerodynamic control surfaces - stabilators, rudders, ailerons, leading-edge flaps, and trailing- edge flaps. Maximum control surface position and rate limits are presented in Table1 . Thrust-vectoring capability has been added to the basic F/A-18 aircraft by removing the divergent flap portion of the engine nozzles and adding externally mounted engine thrust vanes (three for each engine) for deflection of the exhaust plume.... In PAGE 14: ... Feedback Path A block diagram representation of the feedback path is given in Figure 11. Sensed body-axis roll and yaw rates are first passed through second-order structural notch filters ( Table1 0). After filtering, these rates are transformed to stability-axis rates.... ..."

Table 1: Examples of RKHS Kernels and the decision surfaces they define.

in RKHS based Functional Analysis for Exact Incremental
by unknown authors
"... In PAGE 8: ... Another important question is: which Hilbert space and kernels correspond to standard approximation schemes used conventionally. Table1 gives examples of kernel functions corresponding to some RKHS and the type of decision surface they describe, recovering some well known approximation schemes like Gaussian RBF, MLP... ..."

Table 2. Effectiveness in terms of surface in view.

in Improved Visualization in Virtual Colonoscopy Using Image-Based Rendering
by Iwo Serlie, Frans Vos, Rogier Van Gelder, Jaap Stoker, Roel Truyen, Frans Gerritsen, Yung Nio, Frits Post
"... In PAGE 9: ...me were identified in the same manner as described in Section 2.2. Subsequently, we determined which fraction of them was visible from the given set of viewing positions. The results are summarized in Table2 . The single plane entry is defined by consider- ing the backward and forward views of the conventional technique individually (n = 80).... ..."

Table 5 Surface Hardness (Rebound Hammer) Tests on Concrete Placed with and without Permeable Formwork

in Engineer Research and Development Center Cataloging-in-Publication Data
by Philip G. Malone, Philip G. Malone, Malone P. G 1999
"... In PAGE 30: ... Kolek (1958) showed there is a correlation of the rebound hammer reading from concrete to the hardness measured using the Brinell method. Table5 summarizes the results of tests performed by a number of investigators using rebound-hammer techniques to compare samples of concrete prepared with permeable formwork with samples prepared using conventional formwork. The test materials and the test methods varied, but the results indicate that permeable formwork will increase the rebound number readings, indicating that a harder surface is produced by the permeable formwork.... In PAGE 31: ...In measuring the properties of concrete cast in conventional formwork, a 10 percent increase in rebound number (within the range shown in Table5 ) would correlate to an increase in overall strength of the concrete of approximately 6 MPa (Zoldners 1957). The denser surface layer on concrete cast on permeable formwork extends to a depth of only a few tens of millimetres.... ..."

Table 8. Estimated Number of Surface Site Search Engines

in The Deep Web: Surfacing Hidden Value
by Michael K. Bergman 2000
"... In PAGE 11: ... Moreover, the technology for delivering deep Web sites has been around for a shorter period of time. Thousands of Conventional Search Engines Remain Undiscovered While we have specifically defined the deep Web to exclude search engines (see next section), many specialized search engines, such as those shown in Table8 below or @griculture.com, AgriSurf, or joefarmer in the agriculture domain, provide unique content not readily indexed by major engines such as AltaVista, Fast or Northern Light.... ..."
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