Paper
13 March 2003 DAMASCOS damage location demonstrator for structural health monitoring
Graeme Manson, B. C. Lee, Graham Thursby, Keith Worden, Fengzhong Dong, Brian Culshaw
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Abstract
The problem of damage detection and identification has a natural hierarchical structure. At the higher levels, one might require the diagnostic to return say, information about the expected time to failure of a structure, while at the lowest level, the question is simply of whether a fault is present or not. In many ways, the latter is the most fundamental. In response to the need for robust low-level damage detection strategies, the discipline of novelty detection has recently evolved. The problem is simply to identify from measured data if a machine or structure has deviated from normal condition, i.e., if the data are novel. The method requires a bank of normal condition data against which the possible damage condition data are compared.
© (2003) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Graeme Manson, B. C. Lee, Graham Thursby, Keith Worden, Fengzhong Dong, and Brian Culshaw "DAMASCOS damage location demonstrator for structural health monitoring", Proc. SPIE 4763, European Workshop on Smart Structures in Engineering and Technology, (13 March 2003); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.508686
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Cited by 2 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Sensors

Data acquisition

Composites

Actuators

Neural networks

Transducers

Damage detection

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