3,414 research outputs found
Performance, emissions, and physical characteristics of a rotating combustion aircraft engine
The RC2-75, a liquid cooled two chamber rotary combustion engine (Wankel type), designed for aircraft use, was tested and representative baseline (212 KW, 285 BHP) performance and emissions characteristics established. The testing included running fuel/air mixture control curves and varied ignition timing to permit selection of desirable and practical settings for running wide open throttle curves, propeller load curves, variable manifold pressure curves covering cruise conditions, and EPA cycle operating points. Performance and emissions data were recorded for all of the points run. In addition to the test data, information required to characterize the engine and evaluate its performance in aircraft use is provided over a range from one half to twice its present power. The exhaust emissions results are compared to the 1980 EPA requirements. Standard day take-off brake specific fuel consumption is 356 g/KW-HR (.585 lb/BHP-HR) for the configuration tested
Recovery from Hepatorenal Syndrome after Orthotopic Liver Transplantation
Three patients with progressive renal failure and advanced hepatic insufficiency due to cirrhosis of the liver underwent orthotopic liver transplantation. All three patients had immediate improvement in hepatic function and within two weeks after liver replacement regained nearly normal kidney function. However, the renal recovery was delayed in each case, and its course was not uniform. Plasma renin activity was high, and renin substrate was low before transplantation in one case in which these measurements were obtained; both returned to normal soon after liver replacement. (N Engl J Med 289:1155–1159, 1973). © 1973, Massachusetts Medical Society. All rights reserved
Ab Initio Liquid Hydrogen Muon Cooling Simulations with ELMS in ICOOL
This paper presents new theoretical results on the passage of muons through
liquid hydrogen which have been confirmed in a recent experiment. These are
used to demonstrate that muon bunches may be compressed by ionisation cooling
more effectively than suggested by previous calculations.
Muon cooling depends on the differential cross section for energy loss and
scattering of muons. We have calculated this cross section for liquid H2 from
first principles and atomic data, avoiding traditional assumptions. Thence, 2-D
probability maps of energy loss and scattering in mm-scale thicknesses are
derived by folding, and stored in a database. Large first-order correlations
between energy loss and scattering are found for H2, which are absent in other
simulations. This code is named ELMS, Energy Loss & Multiple Scattering. Single
particle trajectories may then be tracked by Monte Carlo sampling from this
database on a scale of 1 mm or less. This processor has been inserted into the
cooling code ICOOL. Significant improvements in 6-D muon cooling are predicted
compared with previous predictions based on GEANT. This is examined in various
geometries. The large correlation effect is found to have only a small effect
on cooling. The experimental scattering observed for liquid H2 in the MUSCAT
experiment has recently been reported to be in good agreement with the ELMS
prediction, but in poor agreement with GEANT simulation.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
Advanced stratified charge rotary aircraft engine design study
A technology base of new developments which offered potential benefits to a general aviation engine was compiled and ranked. Using design approaches selected from the ranked list, conceptual design studies were performed of an advanced and a highly advanced engine sized to provide 186/250 shaft Kw/HP under cruise conditions at 7620/25,000 m/ft altitude. These are turbocharged, direct-injected stratified charge engines intended for commercial introduction in the early 1990's. The engine descriptive data includes tables, curves, and drawings depicting configuration, performance, weights and sizes, heat rejection, ignition and fuel injection system descriptions, maintenance requirements, and scaling data for varying power. An engine-airframe integration study of the resulting engines in advanced airframes was performed on a comparative basis with current production type engines. The results show airplane performance, costs, noise & installation factors. The rotary-engined airplanes display substantial improvements over the baseline, including 30 to 35% lower fuel usage
Silicon-based molecular electronics
Molecular electronics on silicon has distinct advantages over its metallic
counterpart. We describe a theoretical formalism for transport through
semiconductor-molecule heterostructures, combining a semi-empirical treatment
of the bulk silicon bandstructure with a first-principles description of the
molecular chemistry and its bonding with silicon. Using this method, we
demonstrate that the presence of a semiconducting band-edge can lead to a novel
molecular resonant tunneling diode (RTD) that shows negative differential
resistance (NDR) when the molecular levels are driven by an STM potential into
the semiconducting band-gap. The peaks appear for positive bias on a p-doped
and negative for an n-doped substrate. Charging in these devices is compromised
by the RTD action, allowing possible identification of several molecular
highest occupied (HOMO) and lowest unoccupied (LUMO) levels. Recent experiments
by Hersam et al. [1] support our theoretical predictions.Comment: Author list is reverse alphabetical. All authors contributed equally.
Email: rakshit/liangg/ ghosha/[email protected]
On the photoionization of the outer electrons in noble gas endohedral atoms
We demonstrate the prominent modification of the outer shell photoionization
cross-section in noble gas (NG) endohedral atoms NG@F under the action of the
fullerene F electron shell. This shell leads to two important effects, namely
to strong enhancement of the cross-section due to fullerenes shell polarization
under the action of the incoming electromagnetic wave and to prominent
oscillation of this cross-section due to the reflection of the photoelectron
from NG by the F shell.
All but He noble gas atoms are considered. The polarization of the fullerene
shell is expressed via the total photoabsorption cross-section of F. The
reflection of the photoelectron is taken into account in the frame of the
so-called bubble potential that is a spherical zero --thickness potential.
It is assumed in the derivations that NG is centrally located in the
fullerene. It is assumed also, in accord with the existing experimental data,
that the fullerenes radius R is much bigger than the atomic radius and the
thickness of the fullerenes shell . These assumptions permit, as it was
demonstrated recently, to present the NG@F photoionization cross-section as a
product of the NG cross-section and two well defined calculated factors.Comment: 19 pages, 9 figure
Value at Risk models with long memory features and their economic performance
We study alternative dynamics for Value at Risk (VaR) that incorporate a slow moving component and information on recent aggregate returns in established quantile (auto) regression models. These models are compared on their economic performance, and also on metrics of first-order importance such as violation ratios. By better economic performance, we mean that changes in the VaR forecasts should have a lower variance to reduce transaction costs and should lead to lower exceedance sizes without raising the average level of the VaR. We find that, in combination with a targeted estimation strategy, our proposed models lead to improved performance in both statistical and economic terms
Self-similar magnetoresistance of Fibonacci ultrathin magnetic films
We study numerically the magnetic properties (magnetization and
magnetoresistance) of ultra-thin magnetic films (Fe/Cr) grown following the
Fibonacci sequence. We use a phenomenological model which includes Zeeman,
cubic anisotropy, bilinear and biquadratic exchange energies. Our physical
parameters are based on experimental data recently reported, which contain
biquadratic exchange coupling with magnitude comparable to the bilinear
exchange coupling. When biquadratic exchange coupling is sufficiently large a
striking self-similar pattern emerges.Comment: 5 pages, 5 EPS figures, REVTeX, accepted for publication in Phys.
Rev.
Free energy barrier for melittin reorientation from a membrane-bound state to a transmembrane state
An important step in a phospholipid membrane pore formation by melittin
antimicrobial peptide is a reorientation of the peptide from a surface into a
transmembrane conformation. In this work we perform umbrella sampling
simulations to calculate the potential of mean force (PMF) for the
reorientation of melittin from a surface-bound state to a transmembrane state
and provide a molecular level insight into understanding peptide and lipid
properties that influence the existence of the free energy barrier. The PMFs
were calculated for a peptide to lipid (P/L) ratio of 1/128 and 4/128. We
observe that the free energy barrier is reduced when the P/L ratio increased.
In addition, we study the cooperative effect; specifically we investigate if
the barrier is smaller for a second melittin reorientation, given that another
neighboring melittin was already in the transmembrane state. We observe that
indeed the barrier of the PMF curve is reduced in this case, thus confirming
the presence of a cooperative effect
Maximum Flux Transition Paths of Conformational Change
Given two metastable states A and B of a biomolecular system, the problem is
to calculate the likely paths of the transition from A to B. Such a calculation
is more informative and more manageable if done for a reduced set of collective
variables chosen so that paths cluster in collective variable space. The
computational task becomes that of computing the "center" of such a cluster. A
good way to define the center employs the concept of a committor, whose value
at a point in collective variable space is the probability that a trajectory at
that point will reach B before A. The committor "foliates" the transition
region into a set of isocommittors. The maximum flux transition path is defined
as a path that crosses each isocommittor at a point which (locally) has the
highest crossing rate of distinct reactive trajectories. (This path is
different from that of the MaxFlux method of Huo and Straub.) It is argued that
such a path is nearer to an ideal path than others that have been proposed with
the possible exception of the finite-temperature string method path. To make
the calculation tractable, three approximations are introduced, yielding a path
that is the solution of a nonsingular two-point boundary-value problem. For
such a problem, one can construct a simple and robust algorithm. One such
algorithm and its performance is discussed.Comment: 7 figure
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