|
|
Books > Professional & Technical > Transport technology
Electromagnetic compatibility (EMC) deals with the unintentional
propagation and reception of electromagnetic energy which may cause
disturbances or even physical damage in electronic or
electromechanical systems. With the increase in number and density
of electronic devices and systems in modern vehicles, EMC has
become a substantial concern and a key cause of malfunction of
automotive electronics. This book explores electromagnetic
compatibility in the context of automotive electronics, with a
close relation to functional safety as required by ISO 26262.
Topics covered include an introduction to automotive electronics;
electrical drives and charging infrastructure; fundamentals of
functional safety; fundamentals of EMC, signal and power integrity;
the legal framework; EMC design at the ECU Level; EMC design at the
system level and in special subsystems; modelling and simulation;
and test and measurement for EMC.
From the Foreword by Captain Daniel Maurino, ICAO: '...Air Traffic
Control...will remain a technology-intensive system. People
(controllers) must harmoniously interact with technology to
contribute to achieve the aviation system's goals of safe and
efficient transportation of passengers and cargo...This
book...considers human error and human factors from a contemporary
and operational perspective and discusses the parts as well as the
whole...I hope you enjoy reading it as much as I did.' The
motivation for writing this book comes from the author's long
standing belief that the needs of Air Traffic Service personnel are
inadequately represented in the aviation literature. There are few
references to air traffic control in many of the books written for
pilots and about pilots and this is also observed at the main
international conferences. In line with the ICAO syllabus for human
factors training for air traffic controllers, the book covers the
main issues in air traffic control, with regard to human
performance: physiology including stress, fatigue and shift work
problems; psychology with emphasis on human error and its
management, social psychology including issues of communication and
working in teams, the environment including ergonomic principles
and working with new technologies and hardware and software issues
including the development of documentation and procedures and a
study of the changes brought about by advanced technologies.
Throughout the text there are actual examples taken from the air
traffic control environment to illustrate the issues discussed. A
full bibliography is included for those who want to read beyond
these issues. It has been written for all in air traffic services,
from ab initio to the boardroom; it is important that the men and
women in senior management positions have some knowledge and
awareness of the fundamental problems that limit and enhance human
performance.
The control of the longitudinal, lateral and vertical dynamics of
two and four-wheeled vehicles, both of conventional type as well as
fully-electric, is important not only for general safety of
vehicular traffic in general, but also for future automated
driving. Sliding Mode Control of Vehicular Dynamics provides an
overview of this important topic. Topics covered include an
introduction to sliding mode control; longitudinal vehicle dynamics
control via sliding modes generation; sliding mode control of
traction and braking in two-wheeled vehicles; lateral vehicle
dynamics control via sliding modes generation; stability control of
heavy vehicles; sliding mode approach in semi-active suspension
control; and observer-based parameter identification for vehicle
dynamics assessment. Each chapter introduces the problem
formulation and a general overview of its physical aspects,
provides a survey of the relevant literature on the topic, and
reports on the authors' contributions to solving the control
problem. The book is essential reading for researchers involved in
vehicle control, from both industry and academia, as well as
advanced students.
The major changes taking place in technology have some of the
greatest effect in the world of aviation. Yet, in an industry which
started with the concept of 'open skies', each sector has
traditionally developed on its own and adjusted to developments in
other areas as and when required. The need for integration is
particularly important as the skies become increasingly crowded.
More intense commercialization dramatically increases the
interlocking between technological developments and the size of the
financial investments required. For maximum efficiency the aviation
system thus has to develop as an integrated whole with a greater
awareness of events in other sectors. This book is intended to meet
this requirement by addressing the breadth and depth of the
aviation system and looking at some areas where significant
advances are happening. While following the processes of
development, the reader will see where the results might lead in
the new century. Its three parts concentrate on areas of great
significance - in integration as well as in technological progress
- especially for their impact on human and social aspects. The
editor and the invited contributors are amongst the foremost
experts, researchers and industry leaders in their fields in the
global aviation community, many with hands-on experience of massive
change. The intended readership includes those who are moving into
management functions in air traffic management, airplane
manufacturing and airline operations; in training centres, colleges
and institutions.
This textbook provides a coherent and structured overview of fluid
mechanics, a discipline concerned with many natural phenomena and
at the very heart of the most diversified industrial applications
and human activities. The balance between phenomenological
analysis, physical conceptualization and mathematical formulation
serve both as a unifying educational marker and as a methodological
guide to the three parts of the work. The thermo-mechanical motion
equations of a homogeneous single-phase fluid are established, from
which flow models (perfect fluid, viscous) and motion classes
(isovolume, barotropic, irrotational, etc.) are derived.
Incompressible, potential flows and compressible flows, both in an
isentropic evolution and shock, of an ideal inviscid fluid are
addressed in the second part. The viscous fluid is the subject of
the last one, with the creeping motion regime and the laminar,
dynamic and thermal boundary layer. Historical perspectives are
included whenever they enrich the understanding of modern concepts.
Many examples, chosen for their pedagogical relevance, are dealt
with in exercises. The book is intended as a teaching tool for
undergraduate students, wishing to acquire a first command of fluid
mechanics, as well as graduates in advanced courses and engineers
in other fields, concerned with completing what is sometimes a
scattered body of knowledge.
This volume contains the results of the Manchester Benchmarking
exercise for railway vehicle dynamics simulation packages. Five of
the main computer packages currently used for this purpose were
examined in the exercise and the results are presented in the form
of tables and graphs.
FROM THE INTRODUCTION
Vehicle crashworthiness has been improving in recent years with
attention mainly directed towards reducing the impact of the crash
on the passengers. Effort has been spent in experimental research
and in establishing safe theoretical design criteria on the
mechanics of crumpling, providing to the engineers the ability to
design vehicle structures so that the maximum amount of energy will
dissipate while the material surrounding the passenger compartment
is deformed, thus protecting the people inside.
During the last decade the attention given to crashworthiness and
crash energy management has been centered on composite structures.
The main advantages of fibre reinforced composite materials over
more conventional isotropic materials, are the very high specific
strengths and specific stiffness which can be achieved. Moreover,
with composites, the designer can vary the type of fibre, matrix
and fibre orientation to produce composites with proved material
properties. Besides the perspective of reduced weight, design
flexibility and low fabrication costs, composite materials offer a
considerable potential for lightweight energy absorbing structures;
these facts attract the attention of the automotive and aircraft
industry owing to the increased use of composite materials in
various applications, such as frame rails used in the apron
construction of a car body and the subfloor of an aircraft,
replacing the conventional materials used.
Our monograph is intended to provide an introduction to this
relatively new topic of structural crashworthiness for professional
engineers. It will introduce them to terms and concepts of it and
acquaint them with some sources of literature about it. We believe
that our survey constitutes a reasonably well-balanced synopsis of
the topic.
Questions concerning safety in aviation attract a great deal of
attention, due to the growth in this industry and the number of
fatal accidents in recent years. The aerospace industry has always
been deeply concerned with the permanent prevention of accidents
and the conscientious safeguarding of all imaginable critical
factors surrounding the organization of processes in aeronautical
technology. However, the developments in aircraft technology and
control systems require further improvements to meet future safety
demands.
This book embodies the proceedings of the 1997 International
Aviation Safety Conference, and contains 60 talks by
internationally recognized experts on various aspects of aviation
safety. Subjects covered include:
Human interfaces and man-machine interactions; Flight safety
engineering and operational control systems; Aircraft development
and integrated safety designs; Safety strategies relating to risk
insurance and economics; Corporate aspects and safety management
factors --- including airlines services and airport security
environment.
With a focus on cargo transportation, this book addresses the
development of approaches intended to secure an infrastructure of
smart services to support the adaptive implementation of online
multi-modal freight transport management processes. It discusses
the development of multi-criteria decision-making components and
their integration into the multi-layered computer-based information
management of intelligent systems. Through detailed descriptions of
various components of intelligent transport management systems, the
book demonstrates how to develop the services needed in the right
place and at the right time, and how to properly adapt to user
needs, making necessary interventions to ensure the safety of the
transportation process. Further, it describes the main ways to
increase the autonomy and efficiency of user-vehicle interaction
and shows how Information and Communications Technology (ICT)
structural support for current and past situations in AI-based
systems can help to anticipate future developments in freight
transportation.
This classic book in the Kemp and Young series has been fully
revised and updated by David J Eyres, author of the well-known
Butterworth-Heinemann title "Ship Construction," and will prove
indispensable to the student reader. The contents cover, in
numerous fully illustrated items, shipyard practices, principles of
construction methods, the design and construction of the various
component parts of the ship, and the overall arrangement of
different types of merchant and passenger vessels.
This book provides a single comprehensive resource that reviews many of the current aircraft flight control programmes from the perspective of experienced practitioners directly involved in the projects. Each chapter discusses a specific aircraft flight programme covering the control system design considerations, control law architecture, simulation and analysis, flight test optimization and handling qualities evaluations. The programmes described have widely exploited modern interdisciplinary tools and techniques and the discussions include extensive flight test results. Many important `lessons learned' are included from the experience gained when design methods and requirements were tested and optimized in actual flight demonstration.
The book includes the research papers presented in the final
conference of the EU funded SARISTU (Smart Intelligent Aircraft
Structures) project, held at Moscow, Russia between 19-21 of May
2015. The SARISTU project, which was launched in September 2011,
developed and tested a variety of individual applications as well
as their combinations. With a strong focus on actual physical
integration and subsequent material and structural testing, SARISTU
has been responsible for important progress on the route to
industrialization of structure integrated functionalities such as
Conformal Morphing, Structural Health Monitoring and
Nanocomposites. The gap- and edge-free deformation of aerodynamic
surfaces known as conformal morphing has gained previously
unrealized capabilities such as inherent de-icing, erosion
protection and lightning strike protection, while at the same time
the technological risk has been greatly reduced. Individual
structural health monitoring techniques can now be applied at the
part-manufacturing level rather than via extending an aircraft's
time in the final assembly line. And nanocomposites no longer lose
their improved properties when trying to upscale from neat resin
testing to full laminate testing at element level. As such, this
book familiarizes the reader with the most significant develo
pments, achievements and key technological steps which have been
made possible through the four-year long cooperation of 64 leading
entities from 16 different countries with the financial support of
the European Commission.
J.L. Burch*V. Angelopoulos Originally published in the journal
Space Science Reviews, Volume 141, Nos 1-4, 1-3. DOI:
10.1007/s11214-008-9474-5 (c) Springer Science+Business Media B.V.
2008 The Earth, like all the other planets, is continuously
bombarded by the solar wind, which is variable on many time scales
owing to its connection to the activity of the Sun. But the Earth
is unique among planets because its atmosphere, magnetic eld, and
rotation rates are each signi cant, though not dominant, players in
the formation of its magnetosphere and its reaction to solar-wind
inputs. An intriguing fact is that no matter what the time scale of
solar-wind variations, the Earth's response has a de nite pattern
lasting a few hours. Known as a magnetospheric substorm, the
response involves a build-up, a crash, and a recovery. The build-up
(known as the growth phase) occurs because of an interlinking of
the geom- netic eld and the solar-wind magnetic eld known as
magnetic reconnection, which leads to storage of increasing amounts
of magnetic energy and stress in the tail of the mag- tosphere and
lasts about a half hour. The crash (known as the expansion phase)
occurs when the increased magnetic energy and stresses are
impulsively relieved, the current system that supports the
stretched out magnetic tail is diverted into the ionosphere, and
bright, dynamic displays of the aurora appear in the upper
atmosphere. The expansion and subsequent rec- ery phases result
from a second magnetic reconnection event that decouples the
solar-wind and geomagnetic elds.
The atlas contains 12 sheets- 2600.1 Trevose Head to St David's
Head 1:450, 000 WGS 84 2600.2 Padstow to Hartland Point 1:120, 000
WGS 84 Plans Approaches to Padstow, Bude Haven 2600.3 Hartland to
Ilfracombe 1:140, 000 WGS 84 Plans Barnstaple to Bideford, Lundy,
Continuation to Barnstaple 2600.4 Approaches to the Bristol Channel
1:130, 000 WGS 84 2600.5 Ilfracombe to Nash Point 1:130, 000 WGS 84
Plans The Mumbles, Swansea Marina, Porthcawl, Ilfracombe 2600.6
Nash Point to Flat Holm 1:80, 000 WGS 84 Plans Watchet 2600.7 Flat
Holm to Avonmouth 1:70, 000 WGS 84 Plans Cardiff Bay 2600.8 River
Severn to Sharpness 1:50, 000 WGS 84 Plans Sharpness 2600.9 River
Avon 1: 20, 000 WGS 84 Plans River Avon (continuation) 2600.10
Tenby to Skomer Island 1:135 000 WGS 84 Plans Jack Sound, Tenby
& Caldey Island 2600.11 Milford Haven - St Ann's Head to
Neyland Point 1:30, 000 WGS 84 Plans Milford Marina 2600.12 River
Cleddau - above Neyland Point 1:25, 000 WGS 84 Plans Neyland Yacht
Haven, Continuation to Haverfordwest Imray Digital Charts: Free
mobile download A voucher code to download the relevant Imray
digital charts into our Imray Navigator app is included with this
atlas.
This book highlights the capabilities and limitations of radar and
air navigation. It discusses issues related to the physical
principles of an electromagnetic field, the structure of radar
information, and ways to transmit it. Attention is paid to the
classification of radio waves used for transmitting radar
information, as well as to the physical description of their
propagation media. The third part of the book addresses issues
related to the current state of navigation systems used in civil
aviation and the prospects for their development in the future, as
well as the history of satellite radio navigation systems. The book
may be useful for schoolchildren, interested in the problems of
radar and air navigation.
Franz Georg Hey summarises the development and testing of a
micro-Newton thrust balance, as well as the downscaling of a High
Efficiency Multistage Plasma Thruster to micro-Newton thrust
levels. The balance is tailored to fully characterise thruster
candidates for the space based gravitational wave detector LISA.
Thus, thrust noise measurements in sub-micro-Newton regime can be
performed in the overall LISA bandwidth. The downscaled thruster
can be operated down to serval tens of micro-Newton with a
comparably high specific impulse. About the Author Franz Georg Hey
works as mechanical, thermal, propulsion architect and technical
lead of the micro-Newton propulsion laboratory of Europe's leading
air and spacecraft manufacturer. The author is participating on
major programmes for future satellite and electric propulsion
development. The author's research is performed in close
collaboration with the Dresden University of Technology, the
University of Bremen and the DLR Bremen.
Black Tulip is the dramatic story of history's top fighter ace,
Luftwaffe pilot Erich Hartmann. It's also the story of how his
service under Hitler was simplified and elevated to Western
mythology during the Cold War. Over 1,404 wartime missions,
Hartmann claimed a staggering 352 airborne kills, and his career
contains all the dramas you would expect. There were the
frostbitten fighter sweeps over the Eastern Front, drunken forays
to Hitler’s Eagle’s Nest, a decade of imprisonment in the
wretched Soviet POW camps, and further military service during the
Cold War that ended with conflict and angst. Just when Hartmann’s
second career was faltering, he was adopted by a network of writers
and commentators personally invested in his welfare and reputation.
These men, mostly Americans, published elaborate, celebratory
stories about Hartmann and his elite fraternity of Luftwaffe
pilots. With each dogfight tale put into print, Hartmann’s legacy
became loftier and more secure, and his complicated service in
support of Nazism faded away. A simplified, one-dimensional account
of his life – devoid of the harder questions about allegiance and
service under Hitler – has gone unchallenged for almost a
generation. Black Tulip locates the ambiguous truth about Hartmann
and so much of the German Wehrmacht in general: that many of these
men were neither full-blown Nazis nor impeccable knights. They were
complex, contradictory, and elusive. This book portrays a complex
human rather than the heroic caricature we’re used to, and it
argues that the tidy, polished hero stories we’ve inherited about
men like Hartmann say as much about those who've crafted them as
they do about the heroes themselves.
This text discusses the skills and abilities that air-traffic
controllers need. Its approach is international as air-traffic
control practices throughout the world have to be mutually
compatible and agreed. The book aims to include every kind of
A few years ago the Helmholtz Association (HGF) consisting of 15
research Institutions including the German Aerospace Center (DLR)
started a network research program called 'Virtual Institutes'. The
basic idea of this program was to establish research groups formed
by Helmholtz research centers and universities to study and develop
methods or technologies for future applications and educate young
scientists. It should also enable and encourage the partners of
this Virtual Institute after 3 years funding to continue their
cooperation in other programs. Following this HGF request and
chance the DLR Windtunnel Department of the Institute of
Aerodynamics and Flow Technology took the initiative and
established a network with other DLR institutes and German u-
versities RWTH Aachen, University of Stuttgart and Technical
University Munich. The main goal of this network was to share the
experience in system analysis, ae- dynamics and material science
for aerospace for improving the understanding and applicability of
some key technologies for future reusable space transportation s-
tems. Therefore, the virtual institute was named RESPACE (Key
Technologies for Re- Usable Space Systems).
|
You may like...
Deliverance
Burt Reynolds, Jon Voight, …
Blu-ray disc
R326
Discovery Miles 3 260
Nightcrawler
Jake Gyllenhaal, Bill Paxton, …
DVD
(2)
R210
Discovery Miles 2 100
|