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At last robots with a sense of touch
For a number of years surgeons have been using robotic arms to carry out precision operations. These technical
appendages can operate without any tremors, and according to the manufacturers, they off er up to ten times the precision of the human hand. The downside is that surgeons using robot arms cannot feel what they are doing. Until now,that is. Countless research groups are looking into the possibilities of force feedback, i.e. transmitting the reaction force acting on the robot arm back to the surgeon. A lot of progress has already been made with soft structures, but hard structures remained a problem. Researchers at TU Delft have succeeded in building a fi rst prototype that can grasp both hard and soft structures while enabling the remotely operating surgeon to really feel what he is doing.
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Lecture notes on the principles and practice of airplane performance prediction: Part I: Basic elements
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Het ontwerp van een gasmassastroom regelsysteem ten behoeve van de gastoevoerinstallatie voor de vaste brandstof verbrandingskamer
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The development of a man-machine interface for space manipulator displacement
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Some forms of the one-dimensional wave-equation for inviscid flows
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Imperfection sensitivity of the Brazier effect for orthotropic cylindrical shells
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Nanoparticles made-to-measure: aerosols prove to be indispensable for nanotechnology
Is it possible to make platinum particles with a diameter of less than eight nanometres? That was the question Jan Marijnissen at the aerosol lab of Delft ChemTech was asked. Together with graduate student Jan van Erven, the famous aerosol expert Sheldon Friedlander of the University of California (UCLA), and the University of Karlsruhe, Germany, Marijnissen set out to experiment. He managed to do achieve this by using his favourite electrospray method. While they were at it, the research teams used an electron microscope to see how a soot filter uses the platinum nanogranules to get rid of its soot.
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Finite volume discretization of the incompressible Navier-Stokes equations innon-smooth boundary-fitted coordinate in two dimensions
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Gradient SMB Chromatography
Simulated Moving Bed (SMB) chromatography is a unit operation in bio(chemical) process industry that is gaining more and more popularity. Possible reasons for the increasing popularity are the continuous operation, high selectivity and considerable savings in the consumption of solvents and resin.
The aim of this project was to apply gradient solvent operation to the SMB technology. This decreases the solvent and resin consumption even more, and reduces the costs even more. In addition, less dilution of the product is achieved. Possible drawbacks of the technology are the complicated construction, laborous set-up, and mathematical modeling to get the initial process parameters.
The project was financed by the Norwegian company Alpharma, AS, based in Oslo.
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On the topology of three-dimensional viscous flow structures near a plane wall: A classification of hyperbolic and non-hyperbolic singularities on the wall
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Attitude stabilization and control of earth satellites
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Modelling of separation using Euler methods
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Solid fuel combustion chamber: Progress report VIII: Seventh phase, July-December 1985
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Baanberekening van satellieten voor geogysisch onderzoek
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The computer can tell what's exciting: Choosing videos: emotion curve replaces storyline
As many viewers will know from experience, the thrilling description on a video cover offers no guarantee of suspense in the video itself. The exciting bits may add up to only a few minutes of the 90 minutes or so running time, and that is something you would have liked to have known in advance. Dr. Alan Hanjalic at the Information Technology and Systems (its) faculty of Delft University of Technology has collaborated with Dr. Li-Qun Xu of British Telecom to develop a method that will let a computer analyse the video content for suspense, melancholy, mirth, or any mix of these emotions.On top of this the Delft researcher has been working on a system that will automate access to video archives. Over the years, film and television companies have built up enormous archives. The Dutch Audiovisual Archive alone contains some 900,000 hours of analogue audiovisual material. The only way to
make this material accessible is to look at the video frames, make a record of what you see, and store the record in a computer. Hanjalics system can classify video stills as well as moving video frames. It can pick Editors always have to dig into the image archives to put together documentaries, or to illustrate television news stories. Television companies have masses of video material at their disposal. The archives keep on growing so that locating the right bit of footage on people who are not in the news daily is becoming more and more difficult. It can pick out the goals in a soccer match with no trouble at all. News broadcasts are automatically cut into sections and
arranged according to subject.
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Pinned connections in composite materials: Theory and experiment
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Damage tolerance aspects of a full composite airplane fuselage
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Detective dragonfly
The latest camera-toting flying spy and aid worker to come from TU Delft, the Delfly Micro, almost fits into an empty cigarette pack. This summer the micro air vehicle, which flies just like a dragonfly, flapped its wings for the first time.
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Investigation of a solid fuel combustion chamber
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Development of an aeroelastic oscillator: Design and initial results of an experimental set-up
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