5,559 research outputs found
Analysis and Experimental Tests of a High-Performance Evacuated Tubular Collector
A high-performance collector based on the use of all-glass, evacuated tubular collector elements is described and analyzed, and supporting experimental data presented. The collector operated with excellent efficiency at temperatures high enough to drive existing air conditioning units, and showed good performance under diffuse light and low insolation conditions. Collector efficiency was insensitive to operating temperature, ambient temperature, and wind speed. In addition, air, as well as liquid, can be used as the heat transfer fluid, with no significant performance penalty. While the equations governing the useful energy produced can be cast in a form similar to that for flat plate collectors, several important parameters were unique in a number of respects. The loss coefficient was unusually low, while the flow factor and effective insolation were unusually high
Clustering of the Diffuse Infrared Light from the COBE DIRBE maps. An all-sky survey of
We measure the smoothness of the infrared sky using the COBE DIRBE maps, and
obtain interesting limits on the production of the diffuse cosmic infrared
background (CIB) light by matter clustered like galaxies. The predicted
fluctuations of the CIB with the DIRBE beam size of 0.7\deg\ are of the order
of 10\%, and the maps are smooth at the level of a few
\nwm2sr rms from 2.2 to 100 \um. The lowest numbers are achieved at mid- to
far-IR where the foreground is bright but smooth; they are
\nwm2sr at 10-100 \um. If the CIB comes
from clustered matter evolving according to typical scenarios, then the
smoothness of the maps implies CIB levels less than \nwm2sr
over this wavelength range.Comment: 15 pages (LATEX) with 2 figures and 1 plate; Ap. J. Letters, in pres
On the origin of extinction in the Coma cluster of galaxies
Visual extinction of distant clusters seen through the Coma cluster seem to suggest that dust may be present in the hot x ray emitting intracluster gas. However, the Infrared Astronomy Satellite (IRAS) failed to detect any infrared emission from the cluster at the level expected from the extinction measurements. Researchers carried out a detailed analysis of the properties of intracluster dust in the context of a model which includes continuous injection of dust by the cluster galaxies, grain destruction by sputtering, and transient grain heating by the hot plasma. Computed infrared fluxes are in agreement with the upper limit obtained from the IRAS. The calculations, and the constraint implied by the IRAS observations, suggest that the intracluster dust must be significantly depleted compared to interstellar abundances. Researchers discuss possible explanations for the discrepancy between the observed visual extinction and the IRAS upper limit
Clustering of the Diffuse Infrared Light from the COBE DIRBE maps. I. and limits on the near-IR background
This paper is devoted to studying the CIB through its correlation properties.
We studied the limits on CIB anisotropy in the near IR (1.25, 2.2, and 3.5 \um,
or ) bands at a scale of 0.7\deg\ using the COBE\footnote{ The
National Aeronautics and Space Administration/Goddard Space Flight Center
(NASA/GSFC) is responsible for the design, development, and operation of the
{\it COBE}. Scientific guidance is provided by the {\it COBE} Science Working
Group. GSFC is also responsible for the development of the analysis software
and for the production of the mission data sets.} Diffuse Infrared Background
Experiment (DIRBE) data. In single bands we obtain the upper limits on the
zero-lag correlation signal \w2m4sr2 for the
bands respectively. The DIRBE data exhibit a clear color between the
various bands with a small dispersion. On the other hand most of the CIB is
expected to come from redshifted galaxies and thus should have different color
properties. We use this observation to develop a `color subtraction' method of
linear combinations of maps at two different bands. This method is expected to
suppress the dominant fluctuations from foreground stars and nearby galaxies,
while not reducing (or perhaps even amplifying) the extragalactic contribution
to . Applying this technique gives significantly lower and more isotropic
limits.Comment: 44 pages postcript; includes 5 tables, 14 figures. Astrophysical
Journal, in pres
On the unification of geodetic leveling datums using satellite altimetry
Techniques are described for determining the height of Mean Sea Level (MSL) at coastal sites from satellite altimetry. Such information is of value in the adjustment of continental leveling networks. Numerical results are obtained from the 1977 GEOS-3 altimetry data bank at Goddard Space Flight Center using the Bermuda calibration of the altimeter. Estimates are made of the heights of MSL at the leveling datums for Australia and a hypothetical Galveston datum for central North America. The results obtained are in reasonable agreement with oceanographic estimates obtained by extrapolation. It is concluded that all gravity data in the Australian bank AUSGAD 76 and in the Rapp data file for central North America refer to the GEOS-3 altimeter geoid for 1976.0 with uncertainties which do not exceed + or - 0.1 mGal
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