23,202 research outputs found
Late Wenlock (middle Silurian) bio-events: Caused by volatile boloid impact/s
Late Wenlockian (late mid-Silurian) life is characterized by three significant changes or bioevents: sudden development of massive carbonate reefs after a long interval of limited reef growth; sudden mass mortality among colonial zooplankton, graptolites; and origination of land plants with vascular tissue (Cooksonia). Both marine bioevents are short in duration and occur essentially simultaneously at the end of the Wenlock without any recorded major climatic change from the general global warm climate. These three disparate biologic events may be linked to sudden environmental change that could have resulted from sudden infusion of a massive amount of ammonia into the tropical ocean. Impact of a boloid or swarm of extraterrestrial bodies containing substantial quantities of a volatile (ammonia) component could provide such an infusion. Major carbonate precipitation (formation), as seen in the reefs as well as, to a more limited extent, in certain brachiopods, would be favored by increased pH resulting from addition of a massive quantity of ammonia into the upper ocean. Because of the buffer capacity of the ocean and dilution effects, the pH would have returned soon to equilibrium. Major proliferation of massive reefs ceased at the same time. Addition of ammonia as fertilizer to terrestrial environments in the tropics would have created optimum environmental conditions for development of land plants with vascular, nutrient-conductive tissue. Fertilization of terrestrial environments thus seemingly preceded development of vascular tissue by a short time interval. Although no direct evidence of impact of a volatile boloid may be found, the bioevent evidence is suggestive that such an impact in the oceans could have taken place. Indeed, in the case of an ammonia boloid, evidence, such as that of the Late Wenlockian bioevents may be the only available data for impact of such a boloid
Stability and control of maneuvering high-performance aircraft
The stability and control of a high-performance aircraft was analyzed, and a design methodology for a departure prevention stability augmentation system (DPSAS) was developed. A general linear aircraft model was derived which includes maneuvering flight effects and trim calculation procedures for investigating highly dynamic trajectories. The stability and control analysis systematically explored the effects of flight condition and angular motion, as well as the stability of typical air combat trajectories. The effects of configuration variation also were examined
The design of digital-adaptive controllers for VTOL aircraft
Design procedures for VTOL automatic control systems have been developed and are presented. Using linear-optimal estimation and control techniques as a starting point, digital-adaptive control laws have been designed for the VALT Research Aircraft, a tandem-rotor helicopter which is equipped for fully automatic flight in terminal area operations. These control laws are designed to interface with velocity-command and attitude-command guidance logic, which could be used in short-haul VTOL operations. Developments reported here include new algorithms for designing non-zero-set-point digital regulators, design procedures for rate-limited systems, and algorithms for dynamic control trim setting
Modern digital flight control system design for VTOL aircraft
Methods for and results from the design and evaluation of a digital flight control system (DFCS) for a CH-47B helicopter are presented. The DFCS employed proportional-integral control logic to provide rapid, precise response to automatic or manual guidance commands while following conventional or spiral-descent approach paths. It contained altitude- and velocity-command modes, and it adapted to varying flight conditions through gain scheduling. Extensive use was made of linear systems analysis techniques. The DFCS was designed, using linear-optimal estimation and control theory, and the effects of gain scheduling are assessed by examination of closed-loop eigenvalues and time responses
Animal studies on Spacelab-3
The flight of two squirrel monkeys and 24 rates on Spacelab-3 was the first mission to provide hand-on maintenance on animals in a laboratory environment. With few exceptions, the animals grew and behaved normally, were free of chronic stress, and differed from ground controls only for gravity-dependent parameters. One of the monkeys exhibited symptoms of space sickness similar to those observed in humans, which suggests squirrel monkeys may be good models for studying the space-adaptation syndrome. Among the wide variety of parameters measured in the rats, most notable was the dramatic loss of muscle mass and increased fragility of long bones. Other interesting rat findings were those of suppressed interferon production by spleen cells, defective release of growth hormone by somatotrophs, possible dissociation of circadian pacemakers, changes in hepatic lipid and carbohydrate metabolism, and hypersensitivity of marrow cells to erythopoietin. These results portend a strong role for animals in identifying and elucidating the physiological and anatomical responses of mammals to microgravity
Quantum enhanced spectroscopy with entangled multi-photon states
Traditionally, spectroscopy is performed by examining the position of
absorption lines. However, at frequencies near the transition frequency,
additional information can be obtained from the phase shift. In this work we
consider the information about the transition frequency obtained from both the
absorption and the phase shift, as quantified by the Fisher information in an
interferometric measurement. We examine the use of multiple single-photon
states, NOON states, and numerically optimized states that are entangled and
have multiple photons. We find the optimized states that improve over the
standard quantum limit set by independent single photons for some atom number
densities.Comment: 6 pages, 8 figures, comments are welcom
Collisions with ice-volatile objects: Geological implications
The collision of the Earth with extra-terrestrial ice-volatile bodies is proposed as a mechanism to produce rapid changes in the geologic record. These bodies would be analogs of the ice satellites found for the Jovian planets and suspected for comets and certain low density bodies in the Asteroid belt. Five generic end-members are postulated: (1) water ice; (2) dry ice: carbon-carbon dioxide rich, (3) oceanic (chloride) ice; (4) sulfur-rich ice; (5) ammonia hydrate-rich ice; and (6) clathrate: methane-rich ice. Due to the volatile nature of these bodies, evidence for their impact with the Earth would be subtle and probably best reflected geochemically or in the fossil record. Actual boloids impacting the Earth may have a variable composition, generally some admixture with water ice. However for discussion purposes, only the effects of a dominant component will be treated. The general geological effects of such collisions, as a function of the dominant component would be: (1) rapid sea level rise unrelated to deglaciation, (2) decreased oceanic pH and rapid climatic warming or deglaciation; (3) increased paleosalinities; (4) increased acid rain; (5) increased oceanic pH and rapid carbonate deposition; and (6) rapid climatic warming or deglaciation
Quantum dots in graphene
We suggest a way of confining quasiparticles by an external potential in a
small region of a graphene strip. Transversal electron motion plays a crucial
role in this confinement. Properties of thus obtained graphene quantum dots are
investigated theoretically for different types of the boundary conditions at
the edges of the strip. The (quasi)bound states exist in all systems
considered. At the same time, the dependence of the conductance on the gate
voltage carries an information about the shape of the edges.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Superconductor-proximity effect in chaotic and integrable billiards
We explore the effects of the proximity to a superconductor on the level
density of a billiard for the two extreme cases that the classical motion in
the billiard is chaotic or integrable. In zero magnetic field and for a uniform
phase in the superconductor, a chaotic billiard has an excitation gap equal to
the Thouless energy. In contrast, an integrable (rectangular or circular)
billiard has a reduced density of states near the Fermi level, but no gap. We
present numerical calculations for both cases in support of our analytical
results. For the chaotic case, we calculate how the gap closes as a function of
magnetic field or phase difference.Comment: 4 pages, RevTeX, 2 Encapsulated Postscript figures. To be published
by Physica Scripta in the proceedings of the "17th Nordic Semiconductor
Meeting", held in Trondheim, June 199
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