8,691 research outputs found
Aluminum chlorine battery Quarterly report
High energy density battery based on aluminum and chlorine carbon electrode
The new Section 23 of DO160C/ED14C lightning testing of externally mounted electrical equipment
The new Section 23 is introduced which has only very recently been fully approved by the RTCA for incorporation into the first revision of DO160C/ED14C. Full threat lightning direct effects testing of equipment is entirely new to DO160, the only existing lightning testing is transient testing for LRU's (Line Replaceable Units) by pin or cable bundle injection methods, for equipment entirely contained within the airframe and assumed to be unaffected by direct effects. This testing required transients of very low amplitude compared with lightning itself, whereas the tests now to be described involve full threat lightning testing, that is using the previously established severe parameters of lightning appropriate to the Zone, such as 200 kA for Zone 1A as in AC20-136. Direct effects (i.e., damage) testing involves normally the lightning current arc attaching to the object under test (or very near to it) so submitting it to full potential for the electric, mechanical, thermal and shock damage which is caused by high current arcing. Since equipment for any part of the airframe require qualification, tests to demonstrate safety of equipment in fuel vapor regions of the airframe are also included
Possible Solutions to the Radius Anomalies of Transiting Giant Planets
We calculate the theoretical evolution of the radii of all fourteen of the
known transiting extrasolar giant planets (EGPs) for a variety of assumptions
concerning atmospheric opacity, dense inner core masses, and possible internal
power sources. We incorporate the effects of stellar irradiation and customize
such effects for each EGP and star. Looking collectively at the family as a
whole, we find that there are in fact two radius anomalies to be explained. Not
only are the radii of a subset of the known transiting EGPs larger than
expected from previous theory, but many of the other objects are smaller than
the default theory would allow. We suggest that the larger EGPs can be
explained by invoking enhanced atmospheric opacities that naturally retain
internal heat. This explanation might obviate the necessity for an extra
internal power source. We explain the smaller radii by the presence in perhaps
all the known transiting EGPs of dense cores, such as have been inferred for
Saturn and Jupiter. Importantly, we derive a rough correlation between the
masses of our "best-fit" cores and the stellar metallicity that seems to
buttress the core-accretion model of their formation. Though many caveats and
uncertainties remain, the resulting comprehensive theory that incorporates
enhanced-opacity atmospheres and dense cores is in reasonable accord with all
the current structural data for the known transiting giant planets.Comment: 22 pages in emulateapj format, including 10 figures (mostly in
color), accepted to the Astrophysical Journal (February 9, 2007); to appear
in volume 661, June 200
Sympathetic cooling of He ions in a radiofrequency trap
We have generated Coulomb crystals of ultracold He ions in a linear
radiofrequency trap, by sympathetic cooling via laser--cooled Be.
Stable crystals containing up to 150 localized He ions at 20 mK were
obtained. Ensembles or single ultracold He ions open up interesting
perspectives for performing precision tests of QED and measurements of nuclear
radii. The present work also indicates the feasibility of cooling and
crystallizing highly charged atomic ions using Be as coolant.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
On homogeneous statistical distributions exoplanets for their dynamic parameters
Correct distributions of extrasolar systems for their orbital parameters
(semi-major axes, period, eccentricity) and physical characteristics (mass,
spectral type of parent star) are received. Orbital resonances in extrasolar
systems are considered. It is shown, that the account of more thin effects,
including with use of wavelet methods, in obviously incorrectly reduced
distributions it is not justified, to what the homogeneous statistical
distributions for dynamic parameters of exoplanets, received in the present
work, testify.Comment: 9 pages, 15 figures; International Conference "100 years since
Tunguska phenomenon: Past, present and future", (June 26-28, 2008. Russia,
Moscow), Lomonosov readings 2009 (Moscow State University
Thermal Phase Variations of WASP-12b: Defying Predictions
[Abridged] We report Warm Spitzer full-orbit phase observations of WASP-12b
at 3.6 and 4.5 micron. We are able to measure the transit depths, eclipse
depths, thermal and ellipsoidal phase variations at both wavelengths. The large
amplitude phase variations, combined with the planet's previously-measured
day-side spectral energy distribution, is indicative of non-zero Bond albedo
and very poor day-night heat redistribution. The transit depths in the
mid-infrared indicate that the atmospheric opacity is greater at 3.6 than at
4.5 micron, in disagreement with model predictions, irrespective of C/O ratio.
The secondary eclipse depths are consistent with previous studies. We do not
detect ellipsoidal variations at 3.6 micron, but our parameter uncertainties
-estimated via prayer-bead Monte Carlo- keep this non-detection consistent with
model predictions. At 4.5 micron, on the other hand, we detect ellipsoidal
variations that are much stronger than predicted. If interpreted as a geometric
effect due to the planet's elongated shape, these variations imply a 3:2 ratio
for the planet's longest:shortest axes and a relatively bright day-night
terminator. If we instead presume that the 4.5 micron ellipsoidal variations
are due to uncorrected systematic noise and we fix the amplitude of the
variations to zero, the best fit 4.5 micron transit depth becomes commensurate
with the 3.6 micron depth, within the uncertainties. The relative transit
depths are then consistent with a Solar composition and short scale height at
the terminator. Assuming zero ellipsoidal variations also yields a much deeper
4.5 micron eclipse depth, consistent with a Solar composition and modest
temperature inversion. We suggest future observations that could distinguish
between these two scenarios.Comment: 19 pages, 10 figures, ApJ in press. Improved discussion of gravity
brightenin
A Theory for the Radius of the Transiting Giant Planet HD 209458b
Using a full frequency-dependent atmosphere code that can incorporate
irradiation by a central primary star, we calculate self-consistent boundary
conditions for the evolution of the radius of the transiting planet HD 209458b.
Using a well-tested extrasolar giant planet evolutionary code, we then
calculate the behavior of this planet's radius with age. The measured radius is
in fact a transit radius that resides high in HD 209458b's inflated atmosphere.
Using our derived atmospheric and interior structures, we find that irradiation
plus the proper interpretation of the transit radius can yield a theoretical
radius that is within the measured error bars. We conclude that if HD 209458b's
true transit radius is at the lower end of the measured range, an extra source
of core heating power is not necessary to explain the transit observations.Comment: 6 pages in emulateapj format, plus 2 figures (one color), accepted to
the Astrophysical Journa
Crucial Physical Dependencies of the Core-Collapse Supernova Mechanism
We explore with self-consistent 2D F{\sc{ornax}} simulations the dependence
of the outcome of collapse on many-body corrections to neutrino-nucleon cross
sections, the nucleon-nucleon bremsstrahlung rate, electron capture on heavy
nuclei, pre-collapse seed perturbations, and inelastic neutrino-electron and
neutrino-nucleon scattering. Importantly, proximity to criticality amplifies
the role of even small changes in the neutrino-matter couplings, and such
changes can together add to produce outsized effects. When close to the
critical condition the cumulative result of a few small effects (including
seeds) that individually have only modest consequence can convert an anemic
into a robust explosion, or even a dud into a blast. Such sensitivity is not
seen in one dimension and may explain the apparent heterogeneity in the
outcomes of detailed simulations performed internationally. A natural
conclusion is that the different groups collectively are closer to a realistic
understanding of the mechanism of core-collapse supernovae than might have
seemed apparent.Comment: 25 pages; 10 figure
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