Coriolis


Book Description

The Intergalactic Dating Agency promised him a bride from this small, blue planet… With her allergy to water -- water, that keeps everything on Earth alive -- getting worse every day, reclusive billionaire heiress Marisol Wavercrest assumes she is going to die. So when she's offered one chance to survive, she has to take it. Except that chance will take her to another world that's nearly 100% covered by water in the company of an alien merman...who claims she is his fated mate. As commander of the western fleet on Tritona, Coriolis Kelyre fought long and hard against the cruel land-dwellers who poisoned the seas. When he's given one last task after the war -- to take an alien bride to help save his world -- he'll do what he's told, just as he's always done, even if the bride he's sent to retrieve makes him question everything he's sacrificed. Their predestined union is supposed to save a fragile planet, but a perfect storm is brewing between the enemies seeking to tear them apart and the tidal wave of their rising desire. Intergalactic Dating Agency Big Sky Alien Mail Order Brides Mermaids of Montana #1 Maelstrom #2 Coriolis #3 Fathom




Coriolis


Book Description

"The Coriolis effect--from which A. D. Lauren-Abunassar's Coriolis, winner of the 2023 Etel Adnan Poetry Prize, borrows its title--describes a force that deflects a moving mass off its course. This concept is at play both formally and psychically in this hyperkinetic debut collection, which explores the force of dream, prayer, trauma, and acts of belief and disbelief"--




An Introduction to the Coriolis Force


Book Description

Offers a physical explanation of the Coriolis force. This book is useful for studying the hydrodynamics of the ocean and atmosphere. It also presents many aspects of classical mechanics/dynamics physics. It explains the complexities of this force, about which many scientists have had lingering uncertainties since it was first described in 1831.




Coriolis


Book Description

Im getting a signal. Dalils voice crackled over the com. Were close. The navigator gazed into the darkness ahead, his face ghostly pale in the cold glow from the tabula in his hands.




Coriolis Vibratory Gyroscopes


Book Description

This book provides the latest theoretical analysis and design methodologies of different types of Coriolis vibratory gyroscopes (CVG). Together, the chapters analyze different types of sensitive element designs and their kinematics, derivation of motion equations, analysis of sensitive elements dynamics in modulated and demodulated signals, calculation and optimization of main performance characteristics, and signal processing and control. Essential aspects of numerical simulation of CVG using Simulink® are also covered. This is an ideal book for graduate students, researchers, and engineers working in fields that require gyroscope application, including but not limited to: inertial sensors and systems, automotive and consumer electronics, small unmanned aircraft control systems, personal mobile navigation systems and related software development, and augmented and virtual reality systems.




Adaptation to Coriolis Accelerations


Book Description

The problem was to determine how adaptation to Coriolis accelerations, acquired through controlled head movements in a room rotating in one direction, transfers to the opposite direction as a consequence of the stimulus mode during an intervening period at zero velocity. Under one experimental condition the subjects continued to make the same head movements as those used to acquire perrotational adaptation, thus evoking postrotational responses opposite in sign but similar in quality to those experienced during the initial period of rotation. In the other, mechanical restraints were applied to the head and torso for an equivalent period of time. Subjects who performed the head motion activity during the intervening static period were able to adapt more rapidly to the second (opposite) direction of rotation than to the first. In addition, the intervening activity appeared to confer some immunity to motion sickness during the second direction of rotation. Postrotational effects following the second direction of rotation were less severe and of shorter duration than those experienced following the initial period of rotation. The opposite findings were obtained for those subjects who remained immobilized during the intervening period at zero velocity. (Author).







Magnitude Estimations of Coriolis Sensations


Book Description

This investigation was concerned with estimates of the subjective strength of the Coriolis vestibular reaction evoked by 30 deg. lateral head motions at constant angular velocity in the Slow Rotation Room. In the first experiment, a power relation was obtained between geometric mean magnitude estimates of the Coriolis reaction and angular velocity. These estimates tended to be greater when vision was present than in its absence. In both conditions of visual reference, head motions evoking a pitch-forward sensation were more disturbing than those producing a pitch-back sensation. In the second experiment, it was found that the strongest reaction was produced by the return from the left shoulder (counterclockwise rotation), and the next strongest by the return from the right shoulder. Subjective rankings did not differentiate adequately between the strengths of the right and left tilt motions. (Author).




A Standardized Laboratory Means of Determining Susceptibility to Coriolis (motion) Sickness


Book Description

A standard method developed for quantifying Coriolis (motion) sickness susceptibility was evaluated in 250 normal and three labyrinthine-defective subjects. The procedure required the subject to execute standard head movements (plus or minus 90 degrees in the frontal and sagittal planes) while seated in a chair device that was rotated at one of several constant velocities. The proper test velocity was predicted in the majority of cases with the Motion Experience Questionnaire. Three of the normal and all of the labyrinthine-defective subjects were found to be unsusceptible to these test conditions. Coriolis Sickness Susceptibility Index, CSSI, was determined for each subject by multiplying the appropriate E factor, the average stress effect of each head movement for the rpm used in the test, by the number of head movements required to provoke severe malaise (M III). The resultant CSSI values for the 250 subjects ranged from 0.4 to 100, but the distribution was markedly rigt skewed. The procedure yielded a high test-retest reliability (p = .89) in terms of CSSI scores and pattern of symptomatology. In reaching the Malaise III level, the nausea syndrome was manifested in most cases, but a significant percentage (9.6%) of the subjects remained free of any epigastric disturbance or nausea. (Author).




The Coriolis Effect


Book Description

Everyone is a character in somebody's story, but not everyone finds out they are. Things get complicated when Sherlock Holmes can't prove he's real. We thought we lived in 21st-century London, but when everything around us turned into that Victorian cesspool on the pages of the Strand Magazine, it was clear the evil genius was not Moriarty. It was a doctor with a silly moustache. There are two solutions to the mystery of finding yourself in a story from over a hundred years ago. Solution 1: you have been fooled by a clever fake. That would not happen to Sherlock Holmes, who has for once himself consulted experts on the matter without revealing his own identity to them. Solution 2: the stories are genuine and it turns out you are just a fictional character who finds himself in the wrong time period. By mistake, by adaptation, by magic? All impossible gobbledygook, in Watson’s opinion - did I say, Watson? I meant John. Of course, we’re in the 21st century, after all. Or are we? Sherlock and John are not so sure when suddenly, A Case of Identity happens in front of them, including the ridiculous Victorian clothes described in it. The only person at 221B who can’t find themselves in the stories is amnesiac Scarlett Vendalle, whose forgotten criminal past and love for John resurface as she finds out why she is seeing visions of Anne Boleyn...