38,566 research outputs found
Some advantages of methane in an aircraft gas turbine
Liquid methane, which can be manufactured from any of the hydrocarbon sources such as coal, shale biomass, and organic waste considered as a petroleum replacement for aircraft fuels. A simple cycle analysis is carried out for a turboprop engine flying a Mach 0.8 and 10, 688 meters (35,000 ft.) altitude. Cycle performance comparisions are rendered for four cases in which the turbine cooling air is cooled or not cooled by the methane fuel. The advantages and disadvantages of involving the fuel in the turbine cooling system are discussed. Methane combustion characteristics are appreciably different from Jet A and will require different combustor designs. Although a number of similar difficult technical problems exist, a highly fuel efficient turboprop engine burning methane appear to be feasible
A review of NASA combustor and turbine heat transfer research
The thermal design of the combustor and turbine of a gas turbine engine poses a number of difficult heat transfer problems. The importance of improved prediction techniques becomes more critical in anticipation of future generations of gas turbine engines which will operate at higher cycle pressure and temperatures. Research which addresses many of the complex heat transfer processes holds promise for yielding significant improvements in prediction of metal temperatures. Such research involves several kinds of program including: (1) basic experiments which delineate the fundamental flow and heat transfer phenomena that occur in the hot sections of the gas turbine but at low enthalpy conditions; (2) analytical modeling of these flow and heat transfer phenomena which results from the physical insights gained in experimental research; and (3) verification of advanced prediction techniques in facilities which operate near the real engine thermodynamic conditions. In this paper, key elements of the NASA program which involves turbine and combustor heat transfer research will be described and discussed
Minimax studies
Effect of nonzero initial conditions on selection of minimax controllers for large launch vehicles and extremal bounded amplitude bounded rate inputs to linear system
Indirect Signals from Dark Matter in Split Supersymmetry
We study the possibilities for the indirect detection of dark matter in Split
Supersymmetry from gamma-rays, positrons, and antiprotons. The most promising
signal is the gamma-ray line, which may be observable at the next generation of
detectors. For certain halo profiles and a high mass neutralino, the line can
even be visible in current experiments. The continuous gamma-ray signal may be
observable, if there is a central spike in the galactic halo density. The
signals are found to be similar to those in MSSM models. These indirect signals
complement other experiments, being most easily observable for regions of
parameter space, such as heavy wino and higgsino dominated neutralinos, which
are least accessible for direct detection and accelerator searches.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures; experimental sensitivities added to figure 2,
revised version to appear in Phys. Rev.
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