6,099 research outputs found
Eclipse radius measurements
Methods for predicting the path edges and reducing observations of total solar eclipses for determining variations of the solar radius are described. Analyzed observations of the 1925 January eclipse show a 0.7 (arc second) decrease in the solar radius during the past fifty years
Effect of solidity and inclination on propeller-nacelle force coefficients
A series of wind tunnel experiments were conducted to study the effect of propeller solidity and thrust axis inclination on the propeller normal force coefficient. Experiments were conducted in the Langley 14 by 22 foot Subsonic Tunnel with a sting mounted, counterrotation, scale model propeller and nacelle. Configurations had two rows of blades with combinations of 4 and 8 blades per hub. The solidity was varied by changing the number of blades on both rows. Tests were conducted for blade pitch setting of 31.34 deg, 36.34 deg, and 41.34 deg over a range of angle of attack from -10 deg to 90 deg and range of advance ratio from 0.8 to 1.4. The increase in propeller normal force with angle of attack is greater for propellers with higher solidity
Mathematical specifications of the Onboard Navigation Package (ONPAC) simulator (revision 1)
The mathematical theory of the computational algorithms employed in the onboard navigation package system is described. This system, which simulates an onboard navigation processor, was developed to aid in the design and evaluation of onboard navigation software. The mathematical formulations presented include the factorized UDU(T) form of the extended Kalman filter, the equations of motion of the user satellite, the user clock equations, the observation equations and their partial derivatives, the coodinate transformations, and the matrix decomposition algorithms
Ionospheric refraction effects on orbit determination using the orbit determination error analysis system
The influence of ionospheric refraction on orbit determination was studied through the use of the Orbit Determination Error Analysis System (ODEAS). The results of a study of the orbital state estimate errors due to the ionospheric refraction corrections, particularly for measurements involving spacecraft-to-spacecraft tracking links, are presented. In current operational practice at the Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC) Flight Dynamics Facility (FDF), the ionospheric refraction effects on the tracking measurements are modeled in the Goddard Trajectory Determination System (GTDS) using the Bent ionospheric model. While GTDS has the capability of incorporating the ionospheric refraction effects for measurements involving ground-to-spacecraft tracking links, such as those generated by the Ground Spaceflight Tracking and Data Network (GSTDN), it does not have the capability to incorporate the refraction effects for spacecraft-to-spacecraft tracking links for measurements generated by the Tracking and Data Relay Satellite System (TDRSS). The lack of this particular capability in GTDS raised some concern about the achievable accuracy of the estimated orbit for certain classes of spacecraft missions that require high-precision orbits. Using an enhanced research version of GTDS, some efforts have already been made to assess the importance of the spacecraft-to-spacecraft ionospheric refraction corrections in an orbit determination process. While these studies were performed using simulated data or real tracking data in definitive orbit determination modes, the study results presented here were obtained by means of covariance analysis simulating the weighted least-squares method used in orbit determination
Formation of Wide Binaries by Turbulent Fragmentation
Understanding the formation of wide binary systems of very low mass stars (M
0.1 Msun) is challenging. The most obvious route is via widely separated
low-mass collapsing fragments produced through turbulent fragmentation of a
molecular core. However, close binaries/multiples from disk fragmentation can
also evolve to wide binaries over a few initial crossing times of the stellar
cluster through tidal evolution. Finding an isolated low mass wide binary
system in the earliest stage of formation, before tidal evolution could occur,
would prove that turbulent fragmentation is a viable mechanism for (very) low
mass wide binaries. Here we report high resolution ALMA observations of a known
wide-separation protostellar binary, showing that each component has a
circumstellar disk. The system is too young to have evolved from a close binary
and the disk axes are misaligned, providing strong support for the turbulent
fragmentation model. Masses of both stars are derived from the Keplerian
rotation of the disks; both are very low mass stars.Comment: Published in Nature Astronom
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Does Stigmatized Social Risk Lead to Denialism? Results from a Survey Experiment on Race, Risk Perception, and Health Policy in the United States
In this article, we report findings from an original survey experiment investigating the effects of different framings of disease threats on individual risk perceptions and policy priorities. We analyze responses from 1,946 white and African-American participants in a self-administered, web-based survey in the United States. We sought to investigate the effects of: 1) frames emphasizing disparities in the racial prevalence of disease and 2) frames emphasizing non-normative (blameworthy or stigmatized) behavioral risk factors. We find some evidence that when treated with the first frame, African-Americans are more likely to report higher risk of infection (compared to an African-American control group and to whites receiving the same treatment); and that whites are more likely to report trust in government data (compared to a White control group and to African-Americans receiving the same treatment). Notwithstanding, we find no support for our hypotheses concerning the interactive effects of providing both frames, which was a central motivation for our study. We argue that this may be due to very large differences in risk perception at baseline (which generate limits on possible treatment effects) and the fact that in the context of American race relations, it may not be possible to fully differentiate racialized and stigmatized frames.Princeton University. Center for Health and Wellbein
Revealing The Millimeter Environment of the New FU Orionis Candidate HBC722 with the Submillimeter Array
We present 230 GHz Submillimeter Array continuum and molecular line
observations of the newly discovered FUor candidate HBC722. We report the
detection of seven 1.3 mm continuum sources in the vicinity of HBC722, none of
which correspond to HBC722 itself. We compile infrared and submillimeter
continuum photometry of each source from previous studies and conclude that
three are Class 0 embedded protostars, one is a Class I embedded protostar, one
is a Class I/II transition object, and two are either starless cores or very
young, very low luminosity protostars or first hydrostatic cores. We detect a
northwest-southeast outflow, consistent with the previous detection of such an
outflow in low-resolution, single-dish observations, and note that its axis may
be precessing. We show that this outflow is centered on and driven by one of
the nearby Class 0 sources rather than HBC722, and find no conclusive evidence
that HBC722 itself is driving an outflow. The non-detection of HBC722 in the
1.3 mm continuum observations suggests an upper limit of 0.02 solar masses for
the mass of the circumstellar disk. This limit is consistent with typical T
Tauri disks and with a disk that provides sufficient mass to power the burst.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures, accepted by Ap
Post-seismic and interseismic fault creep I: model description
We present a model of localized, aseismic fault creep during the full interseismic period, including both transient and steady fault creep, in response to a sequence of imposed coseismic slip events and tectonic loading. We consider the behaviour of models with linear viscous, non-linear viscous, rate-dependent friction, and rate- and state-dependent friction fault rheologies. Both the transient post-seismic creep and the pattern of steady interseismic creep rates surrounding asperities depend on recent coseismic slip and fault rheologies. In these models, post-seismic fault creep is manifest as pulses of elevated creep rates that propagate from the coseismic slip, these pulses feature sharper fronts and are longer lived in models with rate-state friction compared to other models. With small characteristic slip distances in rate-state friction models, interseismic creep is similar to that in models with rate-dependent friction faults, except for the earliest periods of post-seismic creep. Our model can be used to constrain fault rheologies from geodetic observations in cases where the coseismic slip history is relatively well known. When only considering surface deformation over a short period of time, there are strong trade-offs between fault rheology and the details of the imposed coseismic slip. Geodetic observations over longer times following an earthquake will reduce these trade-offs, while simultaneous modelling of interseismic and post-seismic observations provide the strongest constraints on fault rheologies
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