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Institution

Clarkson University

EducationPotsdam, New York, United States
About: Clarkson University is a education organization based out in Potsdam, New York, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Particle & Turbulence. The organization has 4414 authors who have published 10009 publications receiving 305356 citations. The organization is also known as: Thomas S. Clarkson Memorial School of Technology & Thomas S. Clarkson Memorial College of Technology.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors considered the problem of hydraulic fracture in which an incompressible Newtonian fluid is injected at a constant rate to drive a fracture in a permeable, infinite, brittle elastic solid.
Abstract: This paper considers the problem of a hydraulic fracture in which an incompressible Newtonian fluid is injected at a constant rate to drive a fracture in a permeable, infinite, brittle elastic solid. The two cases of a plane strain and a penny-shaped fracture are considered. The fluid pressure is assumed to be uniform and thus the lag between the fracture front and the fluid is taken to be zero. The validity of these assumptions is shown to depend on a parameter, which has the physical interpretation of a dimensionless fluid viscosity. It is shown that when the dimensionless viscosity is negligibly small, the problem depends only on a single parameter, a dimensionless time. Small and large time asymptotic solutions are derived which correspond to regimes dominated by storage of fluid in the fracture and infiltration of fluid into the rock, respectively. Evolution from the small to the large time asymptotic solution is obtained using a fourth order Runge–Kutta method.

218 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors solved an initial-boundary value problem for the Davey-Stewartson 1 equation, which is a two-dimensional generalization of the nonlinear Schrodinger equation and showed that the energy from the mean flow can be transferred to the surface envelope and create focusing effects.

217 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The percolation properties of directed scale-free networks with correlated in and out degree distributions are studied, derived from a phase diagram that indicates the existence of three regimes, determined by the values of the degree exponents.
Abstract: Many complex networks in nature have directed links, a property that affects the network’s navigability and large-scale topology. Here we study the percolation properties of such directed scale-free networks with correlated in and out degree distributions. We derive a phase diagram that indicates the existence of three regimes, determined by the values of the degree exponents. In the first regime we regain the known directed percolation mean field exponents. In contrast, the second and third regimes are characterized by anomalous exponents, which we calculate analytically. In the third regime the network is resilient to random dilution, i.e., the percolation threshold is pc!1.

217 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: These analyses revealed strong relationships between fungal aerodynamic diameters and features of taxonomic compositions, including allergens and infectious pathogens in seasonal, size-resolved fungal communities in outdoor air in an urban setting in the northeastern United States.
Abstract: Fungi are ubiquitous in outdoor air, and their concentration, aerodynamic diameters and taxonomic composition have potentially important implications for human health. Although exposure to fungal allergens is considered a strong risk factor for asthma prevalence and severity, limitations in tracking fungal diversity in air have thus far prevented a clear understanding of their human pathogenic properties. This study used a cascade impactor for sampling, and quantitative real-time PCR plus 454 pyrosequencing for analysis to investigate seasonal, size-resolved fungal communities in outdoor air in an urban setting in the northeastern United States. From the 20 libraries produced with an average of ∼800 internal transcribed spacer (ITS) sequences (total 15 326 reads), 12 864 and 11 280 sequences were determined to the genus and species levels, respectively, and 558 different genera and 1172 different species were identified, including allergens and infectious pathogens. These analyses revealed strong relationships between fungal aerodynamic diameters and features of taxonomic compositions. The relative abundance of airborne allergenic fungi ranged from 2.8% to 10.7% of total airborne fungal taxa, peaked in the fall, and increased with increasing aerodynamic diameter. Fungi that can cause invasive fungal infections peaked in the spring, comprised 0.1–1.6% of fungal taxa and typically increased in relative abundance with decreasing aerodynamic diameter. Atmospheric fungal ecology is a strong function of aerodynamic diameter, whereby through physical processes, the size influences the diversity of airborne fungi that deposit in human airways and the efficiencies with which specific groups of fungi partition from outdoor air to indoor environments.

217 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article proposes a mathematical model that effectively addresses this issue and contributes to the sourcing literature by demonstrating an approach for optimally selecting suppliers and supplier bids given the relative importance of multiple criteria across multiple products over their PLC.
Abstract: In industrial purchasing contexts firms often procure a set of products from the same suppliers to benefit from economies of scale and scope. These products are often at different stages of their respective product life cycles (PLCs). Firms consider multiple criteria in purchasing such products, and the relative importance of these criteria varies depending on the PLC stage of a given product. Therefore, a firm should select suppliers and choose sourcing arrangements such that product requirements across multiple criteria are satisfied over time. The extant models in sourcing literature for evaluating and selecting suppliers for a portfolio of products have not considered this important and practical issue faced by firms. This article proposes a mathematical model that effectively addresses this issue and contributes to the sourcing literature by demonstrating an approach for optimally selecting suppliers and supplier bids given the relative importance of multiple criteria across multiple products over their PLC. The application of the model on a hypothetical data set illustrates the strategic and tactical significance of such considerations.

216 citations


Authors

Showing all 4454 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Xuan Zhang119153065398
Michael R. Hoffmann10950063474
Philip K. Hopke9192940612
Sudipta Seal8651432788
Egon Matijević8146625015
Mark J. Ablowitz7437427715
Kim R. Dunbar7447020262
Maureen E. Callow7018814957
Igor M. Sokolov6967320256
James A. Callow6818614424
Michal Borkovec6623519638
Sergiy Minko6625618723
Corwin Hansch6634226798
David H. Russell6647717172
Nitash P. Balsara6241115083
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202315
202259
2021395
2020394
2019414
2018428