Switches are an essential, safety-critical part of the railway infrastructure. Compared to open tracks, their complex geometry leads to increased dynamic loading on the track superstructure from passing trains, resulting in high maintenance costs. To increase efficiency, condition monitoring methods specific to railway switches are required. A common approach to track superstructure monitoring is to measure the acceleration caused by vehicle track interaction. Local interruptions in the wheel-rail contact, caused for example by local defects or track discontinuities, appear in the data as transient impact events. In this paper, such transient events are investigated in an experimental setup of a railway switch with track-side acceleration sensors, using frequency and waveform analysis. The aim is to understand if and how the origins of these impact events can be distinguished in the data of this experiment, and what the implications for condition monitoring of local track discontinuities and defects with wayside acceleration sensors are in practice. For the same experimental configuration, individual impact events are shown to be reproducible in waveform and frequency content. Nevertheless, with this track-side sensor setup, the different types of track discontinuities and defects (squats, joints, crossing) could not be clearly distinguished using characteristic frequencies or waveforms. Other factors, such as the location of impact event origin relative to the sensor, are shown to have a much stronger influence. The experimental data suggest that filtering the data to narrow frequency bands around certain natural track frequencies could be beneficial for impact event detection in practice, but differentiating between individual impact event origins requires broadband signals. A multi-sensor setup with time-synchronized acceleration sensors distributed over the switch is recommended.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s24020477 | DOI Listing |
J Med Virol
November 2024
Regional VRDL, Indian Council of Medical Research-Regional Medical Research Centre for NE Region (ICMR-RMRC NE), Dibrugarh, Assam, India.
SARS-CoV-2, a positive-strand RNA virus, utilizes both genomic replication and subgenomic mRNA transcription. Whole genome sequencing (WGS) from clinical samples can estimate viral gene expression levels. WGS was conducted on 529 SARS-CoV-2 positive clinical samples from Assam and northeastern India to track viral emergence and assess gene expression patterns.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe dynamic measurement range in phase-sensitive optical coherence elastography (PhS-OCE) is limited for the phase decorrelation induced by pixel-level displacements in precision measurement, where the consideration of the time-resolved incremental method and in-plane pixels tracking method is insufficient to recover the phase holistically. This work presented a phase volume correlation (PVC) approach to handle the phase decorrelation in three-dimensional PhS-OCE. By utilizing the ability of the discontinuous source diagram to quantify voxel phase correlation levels, the PVC establishes a wrapped phase-matching equation aimed at optimizing the number of volumetric source distributions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Cogn Neurosci
November 2024
University of British Columbia, Vancouver.
Spatially congruent cues increase the speed of bimanual reach decisions compared with abstract symbolic cues, particularly for asymmetric reaches. Asymmetric rhythmic bimanual movements are less stable than symmetric rhythmic movements, but it is not well understood if spatially congruent cues similarly increase the stability of asymmetric rhythmic bimanual movements. To address this question, in Experiment 1, participants performed symmetric and asymmetric bimanual rhythmic finger tapping movements at different movement frequencies in time with flickering spatially congruent and abstract symbolic stimuli.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Sci Comput
October 2024
Department of Mathematics "Guido Castelnuovo", University of Rome La Sapienza, Piazzale Aldo Moro 5, Roma, 00185 Italy.
We propose a novel Model Order Reduction framework that is able to handle solutions of hyperbolic problems characterized by multiple travelling discontinuities. By means of an optimization based approach, we introduce suitable calibration maps that allow us to transform the original solution manifold into a lower dimensional one. The novelty of the methodology is represented by the fact that the optimization process does not require the knowledge of the discontinuities location.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEntropy (Basel)
October 2024
Research Institute CODE, University of the Bundeswehr Munich, 81739 Munich, Germany.
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