Proceedings of the ... International Conference on Offshore Mechanics and Arctic Engineering, Volume 18, Part 5American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 1999 - Arctic regions |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 66
Page 201
Each wedge may be assumed to fail as an semi - infinite wedge . Nevel ( 1980 )
has pioneered the theoretical analysis of ice breaking due to interaction with a
cone . He assumed that the radial cracks propagated to such an extent that the ...
Each wedge may be assumed to fail as an semi - infinite wedge . Nevel ( 1980 )
has pioneered the theoretical analysis of ice breaking due to interaction with a
cone . He assumed that the radial cracks propagated to such an extent that the ...
Page 226
ZW Zw The bottom - surface pressure due to the acceleration of the water is
treated by assuming that the motion of the water ... the influence of this term is
assumed to be insignificant , although this assumption will be checked by
comparing the ...
ZW Zw The bottom - surface pressure due to the acceleration of the water is
treated by assuming that the motion of the water ... the influence of this term is
assumed to be insignificant , although this assumption will be checked by
comparing the ...
Page 258
The four lateral sides of the model are assumed free to move , simulating the free
boundary of an artificial island . The specific gravity , the initial soil concentration ,
and the salinity of the frozen soil are assumed to be a function of the depth ...
The four lateral sides of the model are assumed free to move , simulating the free
boundary of an artificial island . The specific gravity , the initial soil concentration ,
and the salinity of the frozen soil are assumed to be a function of the depth ...
What people are saying - Write a review
We haven't found any reviews in the usual places.
Contents
SHIP NAVIGATION IN | 119 |
OMAE99PA1103 | 209 |
OMAE99PA1154 | 267 |
Copyright | |
13 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
analysis angle applied Arctic ASME assumed average blade block brittle calculated Canada channel coefficient compared component conducted cone considered constant Copyright crack creep crushing damage dependence depth determined direction distribution draft edge effect Engineering equation estimate experiments factor failure field Figure floe flow friction function given horizontal ice force ice loads ice sheet ice thickness iceberg icebreaker increase indentation indentor interaction International length maximum mean measured Mechanics method Newfoundland observed obtained occurred Offshore operations parameters peak performance pipeline predicted present pressure Proceedings propeller range ratio recorded region Report Research resistance rubble salinity scale shape shear ship shown shows speed strength stress structure surface Table temperature tests values velocity vertical wave width wind zone