6,625 research outputs found
A gas flow indicator for portable life support systems
A three-part program was conducted to develop a gas flow indicator (GFI) to monitor ventilation flow in a portable life support system. The first program phase identified concepts which could potentially meet the GFI requirements. In the second phase, a working breadboard GFI, based on the concept of a pressure sensing diaphragm-aneroid assembly connected to a venturi, was constructed and tested. Extensive testing of the breadboard GFI indicated that the design would meet all NASA requirements including eliminating problems experienced with the ventilation flow sensor used in the Apollo program. In the third program phase, an optimized GFI was designed by utilizing test data obtained on the breadboard unit. A prototype unit was constructed using prototype materials and fabrication techniques, and performance tests indicated that the prototype GFI met or exceeded all requirements
Ion-tracer anemometer
Gas velocity measuring instrument measures transport time of ion-trace traveling fixed distance between ionization probe and detector probe. Electric field superimposes drift velocity onto flow velocity so travel times can be reduced to minimize ion diffusion effects
Slow imbalance relaxation and thermoelectric transport in graphene
We compute the electronic component of the thermal conductivity (TC) and the
thermoelectric power (TEP) of monolayer graphene, within the hydrodynamic
regime, taking into account the slow rate of carrier population imbalance
relaxation. Interband electron-hole generation and recombination processes are
inefficient due to the non-decaying nature of the relativistic energy spectrum.
As a result, a population imbalance of the conduction and valence bands is
generically induced upon the application of a thermal gradient. We show that
the thermoelectric response of a graphene monolayer depends upon the ratio of
the sample length to an intrinsic length scale l_Q, set by the imbalance
relaxation rate. At the same time, we incorporate the crucial influence of the
metallic contacts required for the thermopower measurement (under open circuit
boundary conditions), since carrier exchange with the contacts also relaxes the
imbalance. These effects are especially pronounced for clean graphene, where
the thermoelectric transport is limited exclusively by intercarrier collisions.
For specimens shorter than l_Q, the population imbalance extends throughout the
sample; the TC and TEP asymptote toward their zero imbalance relaxation limits.
In the opposite limit of a graphene slab longer than l_Q, at non-zero doping
the TC and TEP approach intrinsic values characteristic of the infinite
imbalance relaxation limit. Samples of intermediate (long) length in the doped
(undoped) case are predicted to exhibit an inhomogeneous temperature profile,
whilst the TC and TEP grow linearly with the system size. In all cases except
for the shortest devices, we develop a picture of bulk electron and hole number
currents that flow between thermally conductive leads, where steady-state
recombination and generation processes relax the accumulating imbalance.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figure
Hybrid digital-analog computer parallel processor
Describes a hybrid digital-analog computer parallel processing apparatus wherein a template circuit, or multiplicity thereof, is connected to receive parallel digital inputs. Each template circuit has controlled current sources with control gates connected respectively to parallel digital inputs. Current subsources for each pixel normally have programmable current output and â0â or â1â responses. Each template circuit has a current summing device for algebraically adding the current outputs of current sources, while a greatest value is detected at a comparator which may have a ramp signal applied to another input thereby identifying which template produced a maximum indication from the same parallel inputs. A self-calibrating feedback controlled current generator supplies all current sources on a chip making it possible to generate a known comparator input independent of IC resistivity or other parameters. The value of the indication of other templates may also be determined by the time relation of comparator output signals. If templates of the apparatus represent printed character correlation data, the output of the processor would identify the template with maximum indication and character with highest probability from a set of pixel inputs. Similar apparatus can be cascaded to first identify details in a scene and then match such detail charts with second stage templates
Strangeness Enhancement in Heavy Ion Collisions - Evidence for Quark-Gluon-Matter ?
The centrality dependence of (multi-)strange hadron abundances is studied for
Pb(158 AGeV)Pb reactions and compared to p(158 GeV)Pb collisions. The
microscopic transport model UrQMD is used for this analysis. The predicted
Lambda/pi-, Xi-/pi- and Omega-/pi- ratios are enhanced due to rescattering in
central Pb-Pb collisions as compared to peripheral Pb-Pb or p-Pb collisions. A
reduction of the constituent quark masses to the current quark masses m_s \sim
230 MeV, m_q \sim 10 MeV, as motivated by chiral symmetry restoration, enhances
the hyperon yields to the experimentally observed high values. Similar results
are obtained by an ad hoc overall increase of the color electric field strength
(effective string tension of kappa=3 GeV/fm). The enhancement depends strongly
on the kinematical cuts. The maximum enhancement is predicted around
midrapidity. For Lambda's, strangeness suppression is predicted at
projectile/target rapidity. For Omega's, the predicted enhancement can be as
large as one order of magnitude. Comparisons of Pb-Pb data to proton induced
asymmetric (p-A) collisions are hampered due to the predicted strong asymmetry
in the various rapidity distributions of the different (strange) particle
species. In p-Pb collisions, strangeness is locally (in rapidity) not
conserved. The present comparison to the data of the WA97 and NA49
collaborations clearly supports the suggestion that conventional (free)
hadronic scenarios are unable to describe the observed high (anti-)hyperon
yields in central collisions. The doubling of the strangeness to nonstrange
suppression factor, gamma_s \approx 0.65, might be interpreted as a signal of a
phase of nearly massless particles.Comment: published version, discussion on strange mesons and new table added,
extended discussion on strange baryon yields. Latex, 20 pages, including 5
eps-figure
Local Thermal and Chemical Equilibration and the Equation of State in Relativistic Heavy Ion Collisions
Thermodynamical variables and their time evolution are studied for central
relativistic heavy ion collisions from 10.7 to 160 AGeV in the microscopic
Ultrarelativistic Quantum Molecular Dynamics model (UrQMD). The UrQMD model
exhibits drastic deviations from equilibrium during the early high density
phase of the collision. Local thermal and chemical equilibration of the
hadronic matter seems to be established only at later stages of the quasi-
isentropic expansion in the central reaction cell with volume 125 fm.
distributions at all collision energies for with a unique
Baryon energy spectra in this cell are approximately reproduced by Boltzmann
rapidly dropping temperature. At these times the equation of state has a simple
form: . At 160 AGeV the strong deviation from
chemical equilibrium is found for mesons, especially for pions, even at the
late stage of the reaction. The final enhancement of pions is supported by
experimental data.Comment: 17 Pages, LaTex, 8 eps figures. Talk given at SQM'98 conference,
20-24 July 1998, Padova, Italy, submitted to J. Phys.
Evidence for nonhadronic degrees of freedom in the transverse mass spectra of kaons from relativistic nucleus-nucleus collisions?
We investigate transverse hadron spectra from relativistic nucleus-nucleus
collisions which reflect important aspects of the dynamics - such as the
generation of pressure - in the hot and dense zone formed in the early phase of
the reaction. Our analysis is performed within two independent transport
approaches (HSD and UrQMD) that are based on quark, diquark, string and
hadronic degrees of freedom. Both transport models show their reliability for
elementary as well as light-ion (C+C, Si+Si) reactions. However, for
central Au+Au (Pb+Pb) collisions at bombarding energies above 5
AGeV the measured transverse mass spectra have a larger
inverse slope parameter than expected from the calculation. Thus the pressure
generated by hadronic interactions in the transport models above 5
AGeV is lower than observed in the experimental data. This finding shows
that the additional pressure - as expected from lattice QCD calculations at
finite quark chemical potential and temperature - is generated by strong
partonic interactions in the early phase of central Au+Au (Pb+Pb) collisions.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures,discussions extended, references added, to be
published in Phys. Rev. Let
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