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Charles Meneveau, the Louis M. Sardella Professor in Mechanical Engineering and an associate director of the Institute for Data Intensive Engineering and Science at the Johns Hopkins University, focuses his research on understanding and modeling hydrodynamic turbulence, and on complexity in fluid mechanics in general. He combines computational ...
24 participating countries [8] One collection between 2011 and 2012 Cross-sectional: Free Data to be released between December 2013 and April 2014 [9] PIRLS: Reading: more than 50 countries [10] 2001, 2006 Cross-sectional: Free NCES [11] PISA: Reading, mathematics and science, only one area being evaluated in each year. Over 70 countries [12]
Johns Hopkins public database with direct numerical simulation data TurBase public database with experimental data from European High Performance Infrastructures in Turbulence (EuHIT) Authority control databases : National
Project MUSE was founded in 1993 as a joint project between the Johns Hopkins University Press and the Milton S. Eisenhower Library at the Johns Hopkins University.With grants from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and the National Endowment for the Humanities, Project MUSE was launched online alongside the JHU Press Journals in 1995. [6]
SciELO is a bibliographic database and a model for cooperative electronic publishing in developing countries originally from Brazil. It contains 985 scientific journals from different countries in free and universal access, full-text format.
DermAtlas is an open-access website devoted to dermatology that is hosted by Johns Hopkins University's Bernard A. Cohen and Christoph U. Lehmann. Its goal is to build a large-high-quality dermatologic atlas, a database of images of skin conditions, and it encourages its users to submit their dermatology images and links for inclusion.
Computational fluid dynamics and hydrodynamic turbulence research generate massive data sets. The Johns Hopkins Turbulence Databases contains over 350 terabytes of spatiotemporal fields from Direct Numerical simulations of various turbulent flows. Such data have been difficult to share using traditional methods such as downloading flat ...
Many governments publish open data they produce or commission on official websites to be freely used, reused, or redistributed by anyone. [1] [2] These sites are often created as part of open government initiatives.