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Antisymmetric relation

About: Antisymmetric relation is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 3322 publications have been published within this topic receiving 64365 citations. The topic is also known as: antisymmetric property & anti-symmetric property.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a line spring model is developed for a part-through crack under mixed mode conditions and mode II and III compliance functions are determined for a thin elastic plate containing a planar surface crack and subjected to antisymmetric loading conditions.

20 citations

Posted Content
TL;DR: In this paper, the flow past inline oscillating rectangular cylinders is studied numerically at a Reynolds number representative of two-dimensional flow, and a symmetric mode, known as S-II, consisting of a pair of oppositely signed vortices on each side, observed recently in experiments, is obtained computationally.
Abstract: The flow past inline oscillating rectangular cylinders is studied numerically at a Reynolds number representative of two-dimensional flow. A symmetric mode, known as S-II, consisting of a pair of oppositely-signed vortices on each side, observed recently in experiments, is obtained computationally. A new symmetric mode, named here as S-III, is also found. At low oscillation amplitudes, the vortex shedding pattern transitions from antisymmetric to symmetric smoothly via a regime of intermediate phase. At higher amplitudes, this intermediate regime is chaotic. The finding of chaos extends and complements the recent work of Perdikaris et al. [1]. Moreover it shows that the chaos results from a competition between antisymmetric and symmetric shedding modes. Rectangular cylinders rather than square are seen to facilitate these observations. A global, and very reliable, measure is used to establish the existence of chaos.

20 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the buckling and free vibration problem of a thin composite antisymmetric angle-ply laminated circular cylindrical shell is studied and Galerkin's method is used to solve it.

20 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors define the operations of ordered addition and multiplication of families of systems and define certain unary operations called transitization and contraction, which are applied to single systems.
Abstract: This paper was first conceived as a short note in which two operationscalled ordered addition and ordered multiplication-were to be defined for ordered systems and shown to include all but the sixth of the assorted operations of ordinal and cardinal addition, multiplication, and exponentiation discussed by G Birkhoff in [1 ](1) These facts are still in the paper but are completely overshadowed by far more important considerations, mostly arising from the rather unexpected properties of the operation of ordered multiplication The general purpose of this paper is easily explained We define these operations of ordered addition and multiplication of families of systems and define certain unary operations called transitization and contraction, which are applied to single systems We wish to discuss, first, the properties of these operations singly and in combination, and, second, the nature of the ordered systems which arise when these are applied to systems with assigned properties Examples of the first type of theorem are the general associative laws satisfied by ordered addition and multiplication; a sample of the second type is Theorem 514 which shows that while the product of transitive systems need not be transitive it has a property (defined below) which is closely allied to transitivity The systems (called numbers) studied by Birkhoff have the two properties of transitivity (if a _ b _ c, then a _ c) and antisymmetry (if a > b > a, then a= b) It is noted in [1] that the ordinal power of such systems need not be antisymmetric; that transitivity also fails is easily seen by an example (see ?3 below) in which the base is a two-element well-ordered system and the exponent is the system of integers ordered by magnitude It can be seen from the systems used in this example that any restriction on base and exponent so great that the ordinal power is transitive must be very strong indeed (For example, we show in ?4 that when base and exponent are both numbers, the ordinal power is a number if and only if the base is a cardinal number or the exponent satisfies the ascending chain condition) In this paper an ordered system T = (R, _) will be a set R in which a reflexive binary relation > holds between some pairs of elements of R The preceding paragraph shows why no further restriction is placed on the systems involved; apparently no reasonable subclass is closed under ordinal exponentiation Even the ordinal power of countable ordinals leads to nontransitive systems! Since we often prefer transitive systems or numbers, this

20 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the massive nonsymmetric gravitational theory is shown to possess a linearisation instability at purely GR field configurations, disallowing the use of the linear approximation in these situations, and arbitrarily small antisymmetric sector Cauchy data leads to singular evolution unless an ad hoc condition is imposed on the initial data hypersurface.
Abstract: The massive nonsymmetric gravitational theory is shown to posses a linearisation instability at purely GR field configurations, disallowing the use of the linear approximation in these situations. It is also shown that arbitrarily small antisymmetric sector Cauchy data leads to singular evolution unless an ad hoc condition is imposed on the initial data hypersurface.

20 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
2023145
2022286
2021109
2020112
2019118
2018122