11,015 research outputs found
Wind tunnel test 0A113 of the 0.010-scale space shuttle orbiter model 51-0 in the calspan hypersonic shock tunnel (48-inch leg)
Results are presented of wind tunnel test conducted Hypersonic Shock Tunnel using a 0.010-scale 140A/B configuration orbiter model designated 51-0. The test objectives were: (1) to obtain force and moment data at various Mach numbers and Reynolds numbers from which viscous interaction effects on stability and control may be determined. (1) To provide flow visualization data from which the effects of control surface separation may be evaluated. and (3) To obtain pressure data in conjunction with force and moment data to assist in analyzing viscous interaction and flow separation effects. Data were obtained at angles-of-attack of 20 deg, 30 deg, 40 deg, and 50 deg. The Mach number range covered was from 10 to 16 and the viscous interaction parameter range was from 0.01 to 0.06
Ks-band detection of thermal emission and color constraints to CoRoT-1b: A low-albedo planet with inefficient atmospheric energy redistribution and a temperature inversion
We report the detection in Ks-band of the secondary eclipse of the hot
Jupiter CoRoT-1b, from time series photometry with the ARC 3.5-m telescope at
Apache Point Observatory. The eclipse shows a depth of 0.336+/-0.042 percent
and is centered at phase 0.5022 (+0.0023,-0.0027), consistent with a zero
eccentricity orbit ecos{\omega} = 0.0035 (+0.0036,-0.0042). We perform the
first optical to near-infrared multi-band photometric analysis of an
exoplanet's atmosphere and constrain the reflected and thermal emissions by
combining our result with the recent 0.6, 0.71, and 2.09 micron secondary
eclipse detections by Snellen et al. (2009), Gillon et al. (2009), and Alonso
et al. (2009a). Comparing the multi-wavelength detections to state-of-the-art
radiative-convective chemical-equilibrium atmosphere models, we find the
near-infrared fluxes difficult to reproduce. The closest blackbody-based and
physical models provide the following atmosphere parameters: a temperature T =
2454 (+84,-170) K, a very low Bond albedo A_B = 0.000 (+0.087,-0.000), and an
energy redistribution parameter P_n = 0.1, indicating a small but nonzero
amount of heat transfer from the day- to night-side. The best physical model
suggests a thermal inversion layer with an extra optical absorber of opacity
kappa_e =0.05cm^2g^-1, placed near the 0.1-bar atmospheric pressure level. This
inversion layer is located ten times deeper in the atmosphere than the
absorbers used in models to fit mid-infrared Spitzer detections of other
irradiated hot Jupiters.Comment: accepted for publication on Ap
Should One Use the Ray-by-Ray Approximation in Core-Collapse Supernova Simulations?
We perform the first self-consistent, time-dependent, multi-group
calculations in two dimensions (2D) to address the consequences of using the
ray-by-ray+ transport simplification in core-collapse supernova simulations.
Such a dimensional reduction is employed by many researchers to facilitate
their resource-intensive calculations. Our new code (F{\sc{ornax}}) implements
multi-D transport, and can, by zeroing out transverse flux terms, emulate the
ray-by-ray+ scheme. Using the same microphysics, initial models, resolution,
and code, we compare the results of simulating 12-, 15-, 20-, and
25-M progenitor models using these two transport methods. Our
findings call into question the wisdom of the pervasive use of the ray-by-ray+
approach. Employing it leads to maximum post-bounce/pre-explosion shock radii
that are almost universally larger by tens of kilometers than those derived
using the more accurate scheme, typically leaving the post-bounce matter less
bound and artificially more "explodable." In fact, for our 25-M
progenitor, the ray-by-ray+ model explodes, while the corresponding multi-D
transport model does not. Therefore, in two dimensions the combination of
ray-by-ray+ with the axial sloshing hydrodynamics that is a feature of 2D
supernova dynamics can result in quantitatively, and perhaps qualitatively,
incorrect results.Comment: Updated and revised text; 13 pages; 13 figures; Accepted to Ap.
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
Mixing and reaction studies of hydrazine and nitrogen tetroxide using photographic and spectral techniques
Mixing and reaction studies of hydrazine and nitrogen tetroxide using photographic and spectral technique
Theoretical Spectra and Light Curves of Close-in Extrasolar Giant Planets and Comparison with Data
We present theoretical atmosphere, spectral, and light-curve models for
extrasolar giant planets (EGPs) undergoing strong irradiation for which {\it
Spitzer} planet/star contrast ratios or light curves have been published (circa
June 2007). These include HD 209458b, HD 189733b, TrES-1, HD 149026b, HD
179949b, and And b. By comparing models with data, we find that a
number of EGP atmospheres experience thermal inversions and have stratospheres.
This is particularly true for HD 209458b, HD 149026b, and And b.
This finding translates into qualitative changes in the planet/star contrast
ratios at secondary eclipse and in close-in EGP orbital light curves. Moreover,
the presence of atmospheric water in abundance is fully consistent with all the
{\it Spitzer} data for the measured planets. For planets with stratospheres,
water absorption features invert into emission features and mid-infrared fluxes
can be enhanced by a factor of two. In addition, the character of near-infrared
planetary spectra can be radically altered. We derive a correlation between the
importance of such stratospheres and the stellar flux on the planet, suggesting
that close-in EGPs bifurcate into two groups: those with and without
stratospheres. From the finding that TrES-1 shows no signs of a stratosphere,
while HD 209458b does, we estimate the magnitude of this stellar flux
breakpoint. We find that the heat redistribution parameter, P, for the
family of close-in EGPs assumes values from 0.1 to 0.4. This paper
provides a broad theoretical context for the future direct characterization of
EGPs in tight orbits around their illuminating stars.Comment: Accepted to Ap. J., provided here in emulateapj format: 28 pages, 8
figures, many with multiple panel
Consideraciones diagnósticas sobre la diarrea crónica en el perro y en el gato
En el presente artículo se discute el protocolo a seguir para llegar al diagnóstico etiológico de un proceso diarreico crónico en un perro o en un gato.In this article a discussion is presented on the protocol to be followed to reach an aetiological diagnosis of chronic diarrhoea in dogs or cats
Dimensional Dependence of the Hydrodynamics of Core-Collapse Supernovae
The multidimensional character of the hydrodynamics in core-collapse
supernova (CCSN) cores is a key facilitator of explosions. Unfortunately, much
of this work has necessarily been performed assuming axisymmetry and it remains
unclear whether or not this compromises those results. In this work, we present
analyses of simplified two- and three-dimensional CCSN models with the goal of
comparing the multidimensional hydrodynamics in setups that differ only in
dimension. Not surprisingly, we find many differences between 2D and 3D models.
While some differences are subtle and perhaps not crucial to understanding the
explosion mechanism, others are quite dramatic and make interpreting 2D CCSN
models problematic. In particular, we find that imposing axisymmetry
artificially produces excess power at the largest spatial scales, power that
has been deemed critical in the success of previous explosion models and has
been attributed solely to the standing accretion shock instability.
Nevertheless, our 3D models, which have an order of magnitude less power on
large scales compared to 2D models, explode earlier. Since we see explosions
earlier in 3D than in 2D, the vigorous sloshing associated with the large scale
power in 2D models is either not critical in any dimension or the explosion
mechanism operates differently in 2D and 3D. Possibly related to the earlier
explosions in 3D, we find that about 25% of the accreted material spends more
time in the gain region in 3D than in 2D, being exposed to more integrated
heating and reaching higher peak entropies, an effect we associate with the
differing characters of turbulence in 2D and 3D. Finally, we discuss a simple
model for the runaway growth of buoyant bubbles that is able to quantitatively
account for the growth of the shock radius and predicts a critical luminosity
relation.Comment: Submitted to the Astrophysical Journa
Neutrino Signatures and the Neutrino-Driven Wind in Binary Neutron Star Mergers
We present VULCAN/2D multigroup flux-limited-diffusion radiation-hydrodynamics simulations of binary neutron star mergers, using the Shen equation of state, covering ≳ 100 ms, and starting from azimuthal-averaged two-dimensional slices obtained from three-dimensional smooth-particle-hydrodynamics simulations of Rosswog & Price for 1.4M☉ (baryonic) neutron stars with no initial spins, co-rotating spins, or counter-rotating spins. Snapshots are post-processed at 10 ms intervals with a multiangle neutrino-transport solver. We find polar-enhanced neutrino luminosities, dominated by ¯νe and “νμ” neutrinos at the peak, although νe emission may be stronger at late times. We obtain typical peak neutrino energies for νe, ¯νe, and “νμ” of ∼12, ∼16, and ∼22 MeV, respectively. The supermassive neutron star (SMNS) formed from the merger has a cooling timescale of ≾ 1 s. Charge-current neutrino reactions lead to the formation of a thermally driven bipolar wind with (M·) ∼ 10^−3 M☉ s^−1 and baryon-loading in the polar regions, preventing any production of a γ-ray burst prior to black hole formation. The large budget of rotational free energy suggests that magneto-rotational effects could produce a much-greater polar mass loss. We estimate that ≾ 10^−4 M☉ of material with an electron fraction in the range 0.1–0.2 becomes unbound during this SMNS phase as a result of neutrino heating. We present a new formalism to compute the νi ¯νi annihilation rate based on moments of the neutrino-specific intensity computed with our multiangle solver. Cumulative annihilation rates, which decay as ∼t^−1.8, decrease over our 100 ms window from a few ×1050 to ∼ 1049 erg s−1, equivalent to a few ×10^54 to ∼10^53 e−e+ pairs per second
Two-Dimensional Core-Collapse Supernova Models with Multi-Dimensional Transport
We present new two-dimensional (2D) axisymmetric neutrino
radiation/hydrodynamic models of core-collapse supernova (CCSN) cores. We use
the CASTRO code, which incorporates truly multi-dimensional, multi-group,
flux-limited diffusion (MGFLD) neutrino transport, including all relevant
terms. Our main motivation for carrying out this study is to
compare with recent 2D models produced by other groups who have obtained
explosions for some progenitor stars and with recent 2D VULCAN results that did
not incorporate terms. We follow the evolution of 12, 15,
20, and 25 solar-mass progenitors to approximately 600 milliseconds after
bounce and do not obtain an explosion in any of these models. Though the reason
for the qualitative disagreement among the groups engaged in CCSN modeling
remains unclear, we speculate that the simplifying ``ray-by-ray' approach
employed by all other groups may be compromising their results. We show that
``ray-by-ray' calculations greatly exaggerate the angular and temporal
variations of the neutrino fluxes, which we argue are better captured by our
multi-dimensional MGFLD approach. On the other hand, our 2D models also make
approximations, making it difficult to draw definitive conclusions concerning
the root of the differences between groups. We discuss some of the diagnostics
often employed in the analyses of CCSN simulations and highlight the intimate
relationship between the various explosion conditions that have been proposed.
Finally, we explore the ingredients that may be missing in current calculations
that may be important in reproducing the properties of the average CCSNe,
should the delayed neutrino-heating mechanism be the correct mechanism of
explosion.Comment: ApJ accepted version. Minor changes from origina
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