2016-11-17

Database Systems (Spring 2016) by Andy Pavlo at Carnegie Mellon University

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source: CMU Database Group     2016年5月15日
15-721 Database Systems (Spring 2016)
Annotated Video: http://cmudb.io/15721-s16-lect01
Slides PDF: http://15721.courses.cs.cmu.edu/sprin...
Reading List: http://15721.courses.cs.cmu.edu/sprin...
Andy Pavlo (http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~pavlo/)

Lecture #01 - Course Information & History of Databases 1:09:04
Lecture #02 - In-Memory Databases 1:11:53
Lecture #03 - Concurrency Control (Part I) 1:13:35
Lecture #04 - Concurrency Control (Part II) 1:11:03
Lecture #05 - Concurrency Control (Part III) 1:06:15
Lecture #06 - Indexing (Locking & Latching) 1:03:01
Lecture #07 - Indexing (OLTP) 1:03:13
Lecture #08 - Indexing (OLAP) 1:05:26
Lecture #09 - Storage Models & Data Layout 1:11:43
Lecture #10 - Query Execution & Scheduling 1:0
Lecture #12 - Join Algorithms (Sorting) 1:04:41
Lecture #13 - Logging & Recovery (Physical Logging) 1:15:40
Lecture #14 - Logging & Recovery (Alternative Methods) 1:09:41
Lecture #15 - Project Ideas & Extra Credit 45:50
Lecture #16 - Database Compression 1:11:35
Lecture #17 - Query Planning (Optimizer Implementation) 1:14:39
Lecture #18 - Query Planning (Cost Models) 53:55
Lecture #19 - Query Compilation 1:06:38
Lecture #20 - Scan Sharing 50:51
Lecture #21 - Vectorized Execution 1:05:43
Lecture #22 - Larger-than-Memory Databases 1:07:52
Lecture #23 - Non-Volatile Memory Database Systems 1:04:14
Lecture #24 - End-of-Semester + MemSQL Tech Talk 1:40:16

Psychic Self-Defense with Terence Palmer


source: New Thinking Allowed     2016年10月16日
Terence Palmer, PhD, is author of The Science of Spirit Possession. He is a member of the Society for Psychical Research as well as the Scientific and Medical Network. He is also a fellow of the Royal Society of Medicine.
Here he suggests that there exists an immune system for the human psyche that serves to protect us from invading thought forms and spiritual entities. This system is traditionally identified by spiritists as the “perispirit” and by Theosophists as the “etheric body”. It can be enhanced through the use of visualization and mental imagery. A number of examples are discussed, and the viewer is invited to link to a seven-minute exercise prepared by Dr. Palmer. While such a discussion may appear to be steeped in superstitious thought, he maintains that there are regularities in his observations that invite one to apply scientific thinking.
New Thinking Allowed host, Jeffrey Mishlove, PhD, is author of The Roots of Consciousness, Psi Development Systems, and The PK Man. Between 1986 and 2002 he hosted and co-produced the original Thinking Allowed public television series. He is the recipient of the only doctoral diploma in "parapsychology" ever awarded by an accredited university (University of California, Berkeley, 1980). He is also past-president of the non-profit Intuition Network, an organization dedicated to creating a world in which all people are encouraged to cultivate and apply their inner, intuitive abilities.
(Recorded on May 17, 2016)

Professors Schulten and Ha: Introduction to Biomolecular Physics (U of Illinois at Urbana Champaign)

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source: NanoBio Node      2013年8月28日
Phys 550: Introduction to Biomolecular Physics
See the updated video (synced with high resolution slides) at http://nanohub.org/resources/19295
See the rest of the course, including course notes and exercises at http://nanohub.org/resources/19299

Lecture 1: Biomolecular Physics - Introduction to Biomolecular Physics (We apologize for the audio quality for the first few minutes, as there was not an additional microphone.) 1:08:59
Lecture 2: Photosynthesis I 1:19:25
Lecture 3: Photosynthesis II + Interaction of Molecules with Light I 1:18:24
Lecture 4: Interaction of Molecules with Light II 1:20:57
Lecture 5: Interaction of Molecules with Light III 1:20:09
Lecture 6: Interaction of Molecules with Light IV 1:19:02
Lecture 7: Vision I 1:25:47
Lecture 8: Vision II 1:12:31
Lecture 9: Protein Overview 1:15:07
Lecture 11: Stochastic Processes II 1:21:17
Lecture 11: Stochastic Processes II 2:20:31
Lecture 12: Stochastic Processes III 1:23:38
Lecture 13: Physics of the Neuron 1:15:36
Lecture 14: Physics of the Neuron II 1:19:09
Lecture 15: Physics of the Neuron III 1:19:17
Lecture 16: Intro to BioPhysics 1:21:55
Lecture 17: Regulation of Gene Expression 1:21:33
Lecture 18: Motor Proteins/Florescence/DNA & 2-State System 1:18:20
Lecture 19: Motor Proteins/Florescence/DNA & 2-State System II 1:19:30
Lecture 20: DNA Origami/Encode/DNA Flexibility 1:20:20
Lecture 21: Super Resolution Imaging & smFRET 1:17:36
Lecture 22: FRET & Force/Toggle Switch/Repriscillator/Gene Regulation Function 1:21:37
Lecture 23: Single Molecular Manipulation & Optical Traps 1:20:12
Lecture 24: Gene Regulation at the Single-Cell Level 1:20:40
Lecture 25: Noise in Gene Expression & Sequencing Method 1:16:50
Lecture 26: Third Generation Sequencing & Gene Expression Analysis Tools 1:08:18
Lecture 27: Genome Engineering and Synthetic Cell 1:22:32
Lecture 28: Protein Sequence Analysis 1:16:55

International Year of Light Workshop 2015

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source: NanoBio Node    2016年1月2日

Microwaves are photons too: Manipulating single microwave photons with circuits (Paul Eller) 44:28
Signal Processing at Light Speed: Ultrashort Optical Pulse Generation... (Andrew Weiner) 1:10:23
Engineering Photonic Quantum States for Quantum Applications(Virginia Lorenz) 21:23

How to recognize a dystopia - Alex Gendler


source: TED-Ed     2016年11月15日
View full lesson: http://ed.ted.com/lessons/how-to-reco...
The genre of dystopia – the ‘not good place’– has captured the imaginations of artists and audiences alike for centuries. But why do we bother with all this pessimism? Alex Gendler explains how dystopias act as cautionary tales – not about some particular government or technology, but the very idea that humanity can be molded into an ideal shape.
Lesson by Alex Gendler, animation by TED-Ed.

Pauli Lectures 2015: Mathematicians helping Art Historians and Art Conservators


source: ETH Zürich    2015年10月29日
In recent years, mathematical algorithms have helped art historians and art conservators putting together the thousands of fragments into which an unfortunate WWII bombing destroyed world famous frescos by Mantegna, decide that certain paintings by masters were “roll mates” (their canvases were cut from the same bolt), virtually remove artifacts in preparation for a restoration campaign, get more insight into paintings hidden underneath a visible one.
The presentation given by Prof. Ingrid Daubechies, Duke University, Durham, USA, reviews these applications, and give a glimpse into the mathematical aspects that make this possible.
Further information: www.pauli-lectures.ethz.ch/archive/2015

Pauli Lectures 2015: Bones, Teeth and Animation


source: ETH Zürich    2015年11月13日
The talk given by Prof. Ingrid Daubechies, Duke University, Durham, USA, presents mathematical explorations motivated by the need of biological morphologists to compare different phenotypical structures. At present, scientists using physical traits to study evolutionary relationships among living and extinct animals analyze data extracted from carefully defined anatomical correspondence points (landmarks). Identifying and recording these landmarks is time consuming and can be done accurately only by trained morphologists. This necessity renders these studies inaccessible to non-morphologists and causes phenomics to lag behind genomics in elucidating evolutionary patterns.

Unlike other algorithms presented for morphological correspondences, the approach presented in the talk does not require any preliminary marking of special features or landmarks by the user. It also differs from other seminal work in computational geometry in that the algorithms are polynomial in nature and thus faster, making pairwise comparisons feasible for significantly larger numbers of digitized surfaces.
This approach has already been used by biologists to obtain new results.
Further information: www.pauli-lectures.ethz.ch/archive/2015

Pauli Lectures 2015: Surfing with Wavelets


source: ETH Zürich    2015年11月13日
Via internet we can download images from all over the world. Most of these are compressed in some way, to make the transmission and storage more efficient. Mathematics plays an important role in these compression techniques, which Prof. Ingrid Daubechies, Duke University, Durham, USA explores in her lecture.
Further information: www.pauli-lectures.ethz.ch/archive/2015

Corporate Finance for Healthcare Administrators (Fall 2008, U of Michigan)

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source: openmichigan     2009年1月21日
HMP 607 - Corporate Finance for Healthcare Administrators
Go to Open.Michigan's open educational resources (OER) downloads for this course: https://open.umich.edu/education/sph/hmp607-fall2008
View the course materials: https://open.umich.edu/education/sph/...
Help us caption and translate this video on Amara.org: http://www.amara.org/en/v/B5DK/

01. Finance and the Financial Manager 15:18
02. Financial Math I 27:08
03. Financial Math II 52:14
04. Valuing Stocks and Bonds 40:01
05. Net Present Value 50:15
06. Capital Expenditures Analysis 24:08
07. Capital Expenditure Risk Analysis 39:20
08. Capital Expenditure and Strategy 5:46
09. Risk and Return 23:36
10. Discount Rate Determination: CAPM and WACC 23:26
11. Project Discount Rate 33:22
12. Business Valuation 22:25
13. Financing Decisions 21:15
14. Corporate Financing Overview 5:44
15. Debt 1:02:23
16. Equity 17:16
17. Dividend Policy 14:04
18. Capital Structure 43:33
20. Financial Analysis and Planning 1:06:46
19. Lease Financing 34:29

Lab Methods for Clinical Biology - Multi-Lingual Captions (2009)

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source: openmichigan   2010年12月23日
Help us translate this video into other languages: http://amara.org/v/BWPh/
This series of videos was developed by Prof. Yaw Sarkodie (Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology), Mr. Charles Adjei Osei (Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology) and Prof. Cary Engleberg (University of Michigan). It is part of a larger learning module about laboratory methods for clinical microbiology. The full learning module is available at: http://open.umich.edu/education/med/oernetwork/med/microb....
This series is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/. (C) 2009 Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, Cary Engleberg.

Fecal Parasite Examination - The Formol-Ether Concentration 5:44
Preparing an Acid-Fast Stain using the Ziehl-Nielsen Method 4:36
Microscopic Staining for Blood Parasites 6:00
Agglutination assay to detect antigens 2:42
Enzyme immunoassay (EIA) to detect antigens 2:07
Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay (ELISA) 1:49
How to Prepare a Gram Stain 4:23
Measuring Serum Antibody with an Agglutination Assay 4:08
Staining of a Gram-Positive Bacterium 1:49
Staining of a Gram-Negative Bacterium 1:44
Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) 6:44
Intro to Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) 6:54

Smoking Human Lung Small Airway on a Chip


source: Harvard University    2016年10月28日
In this video, Wyss Founding Director Donald Ingber and Technology Development Fellow Kambez Benam explain how the integrated smoking device mimics normal cigarette smoke exposure and how it can impact research into the causes of COPD and into new biomarkers and therapeutics. Credit: Wyss Institute at Harvard University

Explained Pictures with Jeffrey Scudder | The New School


source: The New School    2016年10月10日
This is the first in a series of public encounters which will take place at The New School (http://newschool.edu) over the course of Casey Gollan and Victoria Sobel's Vera List Center Fellowship. L.A.-based artist Jeffrey Scudder will be making three whiteboard pictures, twenty minutes each, while commenting on and discussing his process with Gollan and Sobel, reflecting on how to collaborate with a system and yet investigate its rules, whether the system is a drawing, a computer program, a political regime or an educational organization.
Watch a preview: https://youtu.be/RmxATtWHDiA
Casey Gollan and Victoria Sobel are 2015-2017 Vera List Center Fellows whose project is part of the Vera List Center's Post Democracy cycle of programs. Continuing to address what they refer to as incisive mission-creep of cultural institutions, particularly their alma mater Cooper Union, Sobel and Gollan LARP a means of building culture that is activated, distributed, and durational. In the face of the banality of corporate restructuring of cultural institutions, they entertain both the inevitability of financialization and expansion, as well as the possibility of resituating these educational and cultural systems.
Jeffrey Scudder lives and works in Maine and L.A. where he spends his time programming and making pictures. He currently teaches Digital Painting at UCLA Design Media Arts and taught previously at Parsons School for Design. Scudder received an MFA from Yale University School of Art in 2013 and worked previously at the design studio Linked by Air.
Location: The New School, University Center, UL 105
Thursday, October 6, 2016 6.30PM-8.00PM

Tim Keller: "Making Sense of God: An Invitation to the Skeptical" | Talk...


source: Talks at Google    2016年10月19日
Skepticism is healthy if it leads us to question the received pieties of our age. But our modern culture has elevated skepticism to such an ultimate value that belief in anything seems faintly absurd. Yet human beings cannot live without meaning, satisfaction, freedom, identity, justice, and hope—and these things all require a faith dimension. In an earlier book, The New York Times bestseller The Reason for God, Dr. Timothy Keller made a case for Christianity. In his new book, Dr. Keller starts further back, addressing those who strongly doubt that any version of religion or faith makes sense or has anything of value to offer the contemporary world.
In his trademark accessible prose, Dr. Keller invites those who have dismissed Christianity as irrelevant to reconsider. As the founder of Redeemer Presbyterian Church in New York City, Dr. Keller has spent decades engaging with skeptics of all persuasions, from the hostile to the hopeful, in personal conversations, sermons, and books, which have sold over two million copies.
Timothy Keller was born and raised in Pennsylvania and educated at Bucknell University, Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary, and Westminster Theological Seminary. His first pastorate was in Hopewell, Virginia. In 1989 he started Redeemer Presbyterian Church in New York City with his wife, Kathy, and their three sons. Today, Redeemer has nearly six thousand regular Sunday attendees and has helped to start more than three hundred new churches around the world. He is the author of The Songs of Jesus, Preaching, Prayer, Encounters with Jesus, Walking with God Through Pain and Suffering, Every Good Endeavor, and The Meaning of Marriage, among others, including the perennial bestsellers The Reason for God and The Prodigal God.
Get the book here: https://goo.gl/cajZeX

3 Tips for Maximizing Productivity | Kathryn Minshew


source: Big Think      2016年10月17日
We all want to get more done with the limited amount of time we have. Here are Kathryn Minshew’s 3 easy ways to become more productive, have greater focus, and learn more about yourself in the process. Minshew is the co-founder and CEO of The Muse.
Read more at BigThink.com: http://bigthink.com/videos/kathryn-mi...

Transcript - A couple tips I have for being the most productive version of yourself, since we all wish we could get more done, one is to really figure out when you do your best work. I think there's a classic expectation that we all start work at 9:00 and work at 5:00. That's the kind of way that it's always been done, but for many people that's not actually the case. I know people who are could incredibly productive in the morning and then have a slump in the afternoons. For me I actually get really productive late at night. I can just sit on the couch with my laptop and just crake through things that would be challenging for me to do at other times. So my first tip is figure out when you personally are productive and then protect that time. That actually leads really well into the second tip, which is to put up barriers. So for example, it's really hard when you're sitting at your desk or if you're somewhere where people have easy access to you to not get interrupted. Somebody has just one question or there's a fire that suddenly needs to be put out and you are the only one who can do it. And so when I really need to be my most productive self I will often physically put up barriers. So this can mean coming into work an hour late and just taking that time at home to really focus. It can mean actually booking a conference room, not for a call but because I just need to be in the zone. For one of my cofounders she will actually sometimes have headphones that she'll put on whether or not she's listening to music because it actually lets her really zero in on time to just completely focus. Read Full Transcript Here: https://goo.gl/RqOJbP.

Myths of the Modern American Mind: Religion by Wesley Cecil


source: Wes Cecil    2015年2月26日
The Sixth Lecture in the series by Wesley Cecil PhD. explores the history, development and influence of America's peculiar relationship with religion. You can find a copy of the lecture handout here:https://docs.google.com/viewer?a=v&pi...

The Illusion of Free Will & Meaning (Derk Pereboom)


source: Philosophical Overdose     2013年1月15日
Derk Pereboom argues that free will is an illusion, but despite this fact, this doesn't actually undermine the core elements of morality, value and meaning in life.
"Among the grandest of philosophical puzzles is a riddle about moral responsibility. Almost all of us believe that each one of us is, has been, or will be responsible for at least some of our behavior. But how can this be so if determinism is true and all our thoughts, decisions, choices, and actions are simply droplets in a river of deterministic events that began its flow long, long before we were ever born? The specter of determinism, as it were, devours agents, for if determinism is true, then arguably we never initiate or control our actions; there is no driver in the driver's seat; we are simply one transitional link in an extended deterministic chain originating long before our time. The puzzle is tantalizingly gripping and ever so perplexing — because even if determinism is false, responsibility seems impossible: how can we be morally accountable for behavior that issues from an "actional pathway" in which there is an indeterministic break? Such a break might free us from domination or regulation by the past, but how can it possibly help to ensure that the reins of control are now in our hands?"
This talk is from the University of Alabama, as part of the Philosophy Today series.

Implications of the Near-Death Experience with Barbara Harris Whitfield


source: New Thinking Allowed     2016年3月17日
Barbara Harris Whitfield is the author of many books, including The Natural Soul, Full Circle: The Near Death Experience and Beyond, Spiritual Awakenings: Insights of the NDE and Other Doorways to Our Soul, and Final Passage: Sharing the Journey as This Life Ends. She is a therapist in private practice in Atlanta, Georgia. She has been on the board of Directors for the Kundalini Research Network and was on the faculty of Rutgers University's Institute on Alcohol and Drug Studies for 12 years. She also spent six years researching the aftereffects of the near-death experience at the University of Connecticut Medical School. She is a consulting editor and contributor for the Journal of Near-Death Studies.
Here she describes her own near death experience that took place more than forty years ago, including a feeling of being embraced by the divine and also including a detailed review of her life up until that moment. That was a transformative experience that set the pattern for the rest of her life. As a result she became associated with researchers Kenneth Ring and Bruce Greyson at the University of Connecticut. There she discovered the correlation between near-death experience and early life trauma. She likens her particular path to “the hero’s journey” as described by the mythologist, Joseph Campbell.

New Thinking Allowed host, Jeffrey Mishlove, PhD, is author of The Roots of Consciousness, Psi Development Systems, and The PK Man. Between 1986 and 2002 he hosted and co-produced the original Thinking Allowed public television series. He serves as dean of transformational psychology at the University of Philosophical Research. He teaches parapsychology for ministers in training with the Centers for Spiritual Living through the Holmes Institute. He has served as vice-president of the Association for Humanistic Psychology, and is the recipient of its Pathfinder Award for outstanding contributions to the field of human consciousness. He is also past-president of the non-profit Intuition Network, an organization dedicated to creating a world in which all people are encouraged to cultivate and apply their inner, intuitive abilities.
(Recorded on March 1, 2016)

V. V. Satyamurty: Solar Energy Technology (IIT Kharagpur)

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source: nptelhrd     2013年7月22日
Mechanical - Solar Energy Technology by Prof. V. V. Satyamurty, Department of Mechanical Engineering, IIT Kharagpur. For more details on NPTEL visit http://nptel.iitm.ac.in

01 Energy and Dependence on External Sources and Sun, Physical Descriptions and Reactions 54:40
02 Sun - Earth Geometry 50:16
03 Terminology Extra - Terrestrial Radiation Terrestria Radiation 52:00
04 Measuring Instruments 54:40
05 Estimation of Solar Radiation or Details 53:02
06 Radiation Processing - Long Term 54:48
07 Evaluation of the Apparent Sunrise and Sunset Angles 57:36
08 Estimation of Daily/Monthly Average daily Tilt Factor Under Terrestrial Conditions 44:10
09 Solar Colector Basics 54:53
10 Transmission - Absorptance Product 49:03
11 Daily (Or Monthly Average Daily) Transmittance 49:13
12 Theory of Flat Plate Collectors - Liquid Based (A) 51:49
13 Theory of Flat Plate Collectors - Liquid Based (B) 57:41
14 Theory of Flat Plate Collectors - Liquid Based (C) 55:10
15 Mean temperature and Heat Capacity Effects 56:45
16 Theory of Air Based Solar Flat Plate Collectors 54:35
17 Theory of Air Based Solar Flat Plate Collectors (Contd.) 52:44
18 Other Collector Geometries 54:24
19 Concentrating Collectors 55:13
20 Concentrating Collectors (Contd.) 43:01
21 Concentrating Collectors (Contd. ) 39:46
22 Compound Parabolic Collectors 57:18
23 Exercise - I 55:52
24 Exercise - I (Contd.) 56:35
25 Device and System Performance 54:43
26 Long Term Solar Energy System Performance 52:35
27 Exercise - I (Contd. ) 45:20
28 Long Term Solar Energy System Performance Simplified Design Methods 50:43
29 Long Term Solar Energy System Performance Simplified Design Methods (Contd.) 54:03
30 Monthly Average Daily Utilizability 52:13
31 The phi(bar) - f chart method (Contd.) 52:09
32 The phi(bar) - f chart method Tank Losses and Finite Heat Exchanger 55:36
33 Exercise - 2 55:08
34 Exercise - 2 (Contd.) 54:22
35 Exercise - 2 (Contd.) 54:59
36 Economic Analysis 54:17
37 Life Cycle Savings : The P1 and P2 Method 55:52
38 Passive Devices 55:05
39 Passive Architecture, Overhangs and Wing Walls 53:38
40 Passive Architecture, Overhangs and Wing Walls (Contd.) 50:33
41 Summary 51:43
42 Summary (Contd.) 1:00:11
43 Summary (Contd. ) 19:57

T. Sahoo: Marine Hydrodynamics (IIT Kharagpur)

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source: nptelhrd   2013年7月1日
Ocean - Marine Hydrodynamics by Dr. T. Sahoo, Department of Ocean Engineering, IIT Kharagpur. For more details on NPTEL visit http://nptel.iitm.ac.in

01 Introduction to Marine Hydrodynamics 50:48
02 Law of Conservation of Mass - Continuity of Equation 52:57
03 Streamlines and Flow Direction 53:04
04 Worked Examples on Various Types of Flow 54:54
05 Equation of Motion (Law of Conservation of Momentum) 52:11
06 Applications of Equations of Motion 53:58
07 Applications of Equations of Motion (Contd.) 52:03
08 Two Dimensional Flows 54:04
09 Two Dimensional Flows (Contd.) 53:27
10 Source, Sink and Doublet 53:35
11 Worked Examples on Two Dimensional Flows 54:32
12 Conformal Mapping and Joukowsky Transformation 53:43
13 Uniform Flow Past an Elliptic Cylinder 56:03
14 Aerofoil theory 53:06
15 Aerofoil theory (Contd.) 55:09
16 Aerofoil theory (Contd.) 55:28
17 Schwarz - Christoffel Transformation 55:18
18 Motion of a cylinder 54:01
19 Vertex Motion 56:18
20 Irrotational Flow - A Bird's eyeview 54:12
21 Introduction to Water Waves 56:05
22 Basic Equation and Conditions of Water Waves 52:33
23 Water particle kinematics in wave motion 54:45
24 Capillary Gravity Waves 56:03
25 Linearised Long Wave Equation 55:01
26 Linearised Long Wave Equation (Contd.) 54:30
27 Wave motion in two layer fluids 55:16
28 Worked Examples on Wave Motion 54:53
29 Worked Examples on Wave Motion (Contd.) 52:13
30 Gravity wave transformation and energy rotation 54:36
31 Gravity wave transformation and energy rotation (Contd.) 55:58
32 Gravity wave transformation and energy rotation (Contd.) 54:42
33 Navier - Stokes equation of motion 55:30
34 Analysis of Basic Flow Problems 54:12
35 Analysis of Basic Flow Problems (Contd.) 55:01
36 Unsteady unidirectional flows 54:56
37 Unsteady unidirectional flows (Contd.) 54:58
38 An introduction to Boundary Layer Theory 55:36
39 Solution methods for Boundary Layer Equations 55:43
40 Solutions Methods for Boundary Layer Equations (Contd.) 52:12

S. C. Misra & D. Sen: Performance of Marine Vehicles At Sea (IIT Kharagpur)

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source: nptelhrd      2008年5月14日
Ocean - Performance of Marine Vehicles At Sea by Prof. S. C. Misra and Prof. D. Sen, Department of Ocean Engineering and Naval Architecture, IIT Kharagpur.

Lecture - 1 Components of Resistance - I 59:53
Lecture - 2 Components of Resistance - II 59:52
Lecture - 3 Dimensional Analysis 59:52
Lecture - 4 Frictional Resistance 1:02:05
Lecture - 5 Wave Making Resistance 59:52
Lecture - 6 Other Components of Resistance 1:00:12
Lecture - 7 Model Experiments 1:01:32
Lecture - 8 Shallow Water Effects 59:52
Lecture - 9 Ship hull form and Resistance 59:35
Lecture - 10 Propeller Geometry Part - I 1:00:28
Lecture - 11 Propeller Geometry Part - II 59:55
Lecture - 12 Introduction to High Speed Crafts Part - I 59:54
Lecture - 13 Introduction to High Speed Crafts Part - II 59:53
Lecture - 14 Propeller in Open Water Part - I 59:52
Lecture - 15 Propeller in Open Water Part - II 59:51
Lecture 16 - Propeller 'behind' a ship 59:51
Lecture 17 - propeller experiments 59:51
Lecture 18 - propeller theories Part I 59:54
Lecture 19 - propeller Theories 59:54
Lecture - 20 Cavitation 59:56
Lecture - 21 Regular Sea Waves - I 59:52
Lecture - 22 Regular Sea Waves - II 59:52
Lecture - 23 Irregular sea Waves - I 59:47
Lecture - 24 Irregular Sea Waves - II 59:51
Lecture - 25 Ship Motion in Regular Waves - I 59:46
Lecture - 26 Ship Motion in Regular Waves - II 59:51
Lecture - 27 Ship Motion in Regular Waves - III 59:52
Lecture - 28 Ship Motion in irregular Waves - I 59:53
Lecture - 29 Ship Motion in irregular Waves - II 59:31
Lecture - 30 Ship Motion in irregular Waves - III 59:51
Lecture - 31 Motion in Short Crested Sea,Coupled Motions 59:24
Lecture - 32 Derived Responses 1:00:02
Lecture - 33 Ship Controllability : Introductory Notes 59:53
Lecture - 34 Equation of Motion in Horizontal Plane 59:51
Lecture - 35 Hydrodynamic Derivatives and Stability 59:51
Lecture - 36 Hydrodynamic Derivatives and Stability 59:52
Lecture - 37 Ship Trials and Maneuvers - I 59:50
Lecture - 38 Ship Trials and Maneuvers - II 59:52
Lecture - 39 Heel During Turn, IMO Requirements 59:52
Lecture - 40 Rudder Hydrodynamics 1:00:27