3,140 research outputs found
Thermal insulation attaching means
An improved isolation system is provided for attaching ceramic tiles of insulating material to the surface of a structure to be protected against extreme temperatures of the nature expected to be encountered by the space shuttle orbiter. This system isolates the fragile ceramic tiles from thermally and mechanically induced vehicle structural strains. The insulating tiles are affixed to a felt isolation pad formed of closely arranged and randomly oriented fibers by means of a flexible adhesive and in turn the felt pad is affixed to the metallic vehicle structure by an additional layer of flexible adhesive
Method and device for detection of surface discontinuities or defects
Surface discontinuities of defects such as cracks and orifices are detected by applying a penetrating fluid, preferably a liquid, to a test surface so as to cause the liquid to penetrate any minute cracks or opening in the surface, removing the excess liquid from the surface, and leaving a residual in the discontinuities, cavities, or in the subsurface materials. A sheet of porous material impregnated with a sensitizing medium which will react with vapors of the residual liquid to form a visible pattern is applied to the test surface. The residual liquid trapped in the discontinuities, cavities, or subsurface material is vaporized, and, as the vapors contact the sensitizing medium on the sheet, a pattern corresponding to the discontinuity is formed on the sheet material and the penetrant completely removed from the sample
2D radiative modelling of He I spectral lines formed in solar prominences
We present preliminary results of 2D radiative modelling of He I lines in
solar prominences, using a new numerical code developed by us (Leger,
Chevallier and Paletou 2007). It treats self-consistently the radiation
transfer and the non-LTE statistical equilibrium of H and, in a second stage,
the one of He using a detailed atomic model. Preliminary comparisons with new
visible plus near-infrared observations made at high spectral resolution with
THeMIS are very satisfactory.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures (to appear in the Procs. of Solar Polarization
Workshop #5, eds. Berdyugina, Nagendra and Ramelli), revised +2 citations,
better figure
Oxygen atom reaction with shuttle materials at orbital altitudes
Surfaces of materials used in the space shuttle orbiter payload bay and exposed during STS-1 through STS-3 were examined after flight. Paints and polymers, in particular Kapton used on the television camera thermal blanket, showed significant change. Generally, the change was a loss of surface gloss on the polymer with apparent aging on the paint surfaces. The Kapton surfaces showed the greatest change, and postflight analyses showed mass loss of 4.8 percent on STS-2 and 35 percent on STS-3 for most heavily affected surfaces. Strong shadow patterns were evident. The greatest mass loss was measured on surfaces which were exposed to solar radiation in conjunction with exposure in the vehicle velocity vector. A mechanism which involves the interaction of atomic oxygen with organic polymer surfaces is proposed. Atomic oxygen is the major ambient species at low orbital altitudes and presents a flux of 8 x 10 to the 14th power atoms/cu cm sec for reaction. Correlation of the expected mass loss based on ground-based oxygen atom/polymer reaction rates shows lower mass loss of the Kapton than measured. Consideration of solar heating effects on reaction rates as well as the high oxygen atom energy due to the orbiter's orbital velocity brings the predicted and measured mass loss in surprisingly good agreement. Flight sample surface morphology comparison with ground based Kapton/oxygen atom exposures provides additional support for the oxygen interaction mechanism
Identification of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons
The nature of the Very Small Grains evidenced by K. Sellgren (1985) is discussed. Thsir stability suggests that they are graphitic material and specifically Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons (PAHs). The expected infrared emission of a typical PAH, coronene, gives an impressive spectroscopic agreement with the five observed Unidentified IR Emission Features, leading to an unambiguous identification. Those PAHs are the most abundant organic molecules detected to date (f is approximately .00001)
Pregraphitic molecules and the red-rectangle emission
In light of the recent identification of an infrared emission band at 3.3, 6.2, 7.7, 8.6, and 11 microns as emissions from pregraphitic molecules, the possibility that a large broad emission bump in the red part of the spectrum of the Red-Rectangle (AFGL 918) nebula is luminescence from the same molecules was investigated. The abundance, luminescence yield of the carrier, and the phosphorescence is discussed
Are aromatic hydrocarbons the carriers of the diffuse interstellar bands in the visible?
Large Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons (PAH) are the likely origin of the Unidentified Infrared Emission Feature. The molecules or their ions are also attractive candidates for the carriers of the Diffuse Interstellar Bands (DIBs) in the visible range. The PAHs have optically active transitions in the visible spectrum; have the ability to survive the ultraviolet photons in the Diffuse Interstellar Medium; and are the most abundant among the detected molecular species after H2 and CO. In particular, PAHs are better candidates than the long carbon chains that were proposed previously
Heat-shrinkable jacket holds fluid in contact with tensile test specimen
Heat-shrinkable plastic tubing can be quickly sealed around a metal tensile test specimen and used as a jacket for any compatible liquid
Freeware solutions for spectropolarimetric data reduction
Most of the solar physicists use very expensive software for data reduction
and visualization. We present hereafter a reliable freeware solution based on
the Python language. This is made possible by the association of the latter
with a small set of additional libraries developed in the scientific community.
It provides then a very powerful and economical alternative to other
interactive data languages. Although it can also be used for any kind of
post-processing of data, we demonstrate the capabities of such a set of
freeware tools using THeMIS observations of the second solar spectrum.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures (to appear in the Procs. of Solar Polarization
Workshop #5, eds. Berdyugina, Nagendra and Ramelli
Molecular Dynamics in grafted layers of poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS)
Dielectric relaxation spectroscopy 10^-1 Hz to 10^6 Hz) is employed to study
the molecular dynamics of poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS, Mw=1.7 10^5 g/mol and
Mw=9.6 10^4 g/mol as grafted films with thicknesses d below and above the
radius of gyration Rg. For d smaller than Rg the molecular dynamics becomes
faster by up to three orders of magnitude with respect to the bulk resulting in
a pronounced decrease of the Vogel temperature T0 and hence the calorimetric
glass transition temperature Tg. For d larger than Rg the molecular dynamics is
comparable to that of the bulk melt. The results are interpreted in terms of a
chain confinement effect and compared with the findings for low molecular eight
glass forming liquids contained in nanoporous glasses and zeolites.
Crystallization effects - well known for PDMS - are observed for films of
thicknesses above and below Rg.Comment: 20 pages, 4 figure
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