49,239 research outputs found
STOL and STOVL hot gas ingestion and airframe heating tests in the NASA Lewis 9- by 15-foot low-speed wind tunnel
Short takeoff and landing (STOL) and advanced short takeoff and vertical landing (STOVL) aircraft are being pursued for deployment near the end of this century. These concepts offer unique capabilities not seen in conventional aircraft: for example, shorter takeoff distances and the ability to operate from damaged runways and remote sites. However, special technology is critical to the development of this unique class of aircraft. Some of the real issues that are associated with these concepts are hot gas ingestion and airframe heating while in ground effects. Over the past nine years, NASA Lewis Research Center has been involved in several cooperative programs in the 9- by 15 Foot Low-Speed Wind Tunnel (LSWT) to establish a database for hot gas ingestion and airframe heating. The modifications are presented that were made in the 9- by 15-Foot LSWT, including the evolution of the ground plane, model support system, and tunnel sidewalls; and flow visualization techniques, instrumentation, test procedures, and test results. The 9- by 15-Foot LSWT tests were conducted at full scale exhaust nozzle pressure ratios. The headwind velocities varied from 8 to 120 kn depending on the concept (STOL or STOVL). Typical compressor-face distortions (pressure and temperature), ground plane contours, and model surface temperature profiles are presented
Comment on "Enhancing Acceleration Radiation from Ground-State Atoms via Cavity Quantum Electrodynamics"
This is a comment on [Phys. Rev. Lett. 91, 243004 (2003)] by Marlan O.
Scully, Vitaly V. Kocharovsky, Alexey Belyanin, Edward Fry and Federico Capasso
(quant-ph/0305178).Comment: 1 page, REVTeX
Experimental results for a two-dimensional supersonic inlet used as a thrust deflecting nozzle
Nearly all supersonic V/STOL aircraft concepts are dependent on the thrust deflecting capability of a nozzle. In one unique concept, referred to as the reverse flow dual fan, not only is there a thrust deflecting nozzle for the fan and core engine exit flow, but because of the way the propulsion system operates during vertical takeoff and landing, the supersonic inlet is also used as a thrust deflecting nozzle. This paper presents results of an experimental study to evaluate the performance of a supersonic inlet used as a thrust deflecting nozzle for this reverse flow dual fan concept. Results are presented in terms of nozzle thrust coefficient and thrust vector angle for a number of inlet/nozzle configurations. Flow visualization and nozzle exit flow survey results are also shown
Cozymase. A study of purification methods
Cozymase is one of the essential components of the complex enzyme mixture which effects alcoholic fermentation in the absence of living cells. The separation of the mixture into zymase and cozymase was first accomplished by Harden and Young [1] by means of ultrafiltration through a gelatin-impregnated Chamberland filter candle. The residue and filtrate as thus prepared possessed, separately, no fermentative action, but when mixed were found to produce a rapid fermentation. The active constituent of the residue was named zymase, while that constituent of the filtrate responsible for the reactivation of the residue was named cozymase.
We studied the purification produced in our material by a variety of reagents. In the investigation we have repeated much of the work done by von Euler and Myrbäk [2], and several differences have been found, which appear difficult to explain solely upon the basis of the lower initial purity of our material. As certain of the experiments show distinct promise, we hope to be able to extend the work upon a material of considerably higher original purity, such as was employed by von Euler and Myrbäk
Zinc abundances of planetary nebulae
Zinc is a useful surrogate element for measuring Fe/H as, unlike iron, it is
not depleted in the gas phase media. Zn/H and O/Zn ratios have been derived
using the [Zn IV] emission line at 3.625um for a sample of nine Galactic
planetary nebulae, seven of which are based upon new observations using the
VLT. Based on photoionization models, O/O++ is the most reliable ionisation
correction factor for zinc that can readily be determined from optical emission
lines, with an estimated accuracy of 10% or better for all targets in our
sample. The majority of the sample is found to be sub-solar in [Zn/H]. [O/Zn]
in half of the sample is found to be consistent with Solar within
uncertainties, whereas the remaining half are enhanced in [O/Zn]. [Zn/H] and
[O/Zn] as functions of Galactocentric distance have been investigated and there
is little evidence to support a trend in either case.Comment: Accepted MNRAS, 11 pages, 8 figure
Bose-Einstein condensation in complex networks
The evolution of many complex systems, including the world wide web, business
and citation networks is encoded in the dynamic web describing the interactions
between the system's constituents. Despite their irreversible and
non-equilibrium nature these networks follow Bose statistics and can undergo
Bose-Einstein condensation. Addressing the dynamical properties of these
non-equilibrium systems within the framework of equilibrium quantum gases
predicts that the 'first-mover-advantage', 'fit-get-rich' and
'winner-takes-all' phenomena observed in competitive systems are
thermodynamically distinct phases of the underlying evolving networks
An implicit algorithm for the conservative, transonic full-potential equation with effective rotated differencing
A new differencing scheme for the conservative full potential equation which effectively simulates rotated differencing is presented. The scheme was implemented by an appropriate upwind bias of the density coefficient along coordinate directions. A fast, fully implicit, approximate factorization iteration scheme was then used to solve the resulting difference equations. Solutions for a number of traditionally difficult transonic airfoil test cases are presented
- …