1,018 research outputs found
Coolant passage heat transfer with rotation, a progress report
The objective of this 36-month experimental and analytical program is to develop a heat transfer and pressure drop database, computational fluid dynamic techniques, and correlations for multipass rotating coolant passages with and without flow turbulators. The experimental effort will be focused on the simulation of configurations and conditions expected in the blades of advanced aircraft high pressure turbines so that the effects of Coriolis and buoyancy forces on the coolant side flow can be rationally included in the design of turbine blades
Singularity Cancellation in Fermion Loops through Ward Identities
Recently Neumayr and Metzner have shown that the connected N-point density-
correlation functions of the two-dimensional and the one-dimensional Fermi gas
at one-loop order generically vanish/are regular in the small momentum/small
energy-momentum limits. Their result is based on an explicit analysis in the
sequel of results of Feldman et al.[2]. In this note we use Ward identities to
give a proof of the same fact - in a considerably shortened and simplified way
- for any dimension of space.Comment: 11 pages, 2nd corrected and improved version, to appear in Ann. Henri
Poincar
Irrelevant Interactions without Composite Operators - A Remark on the Universality of Second Order Phase Transitions
We study the critical behaviour of symmetric theory including
irrelevant terms of the form in the bare action,
where is the UV cutoff (corresponding e.g. to the inverse lattice
spacing for a spin system). The main technical tool is renormalization theory
based on the flow equations of the renormalization group which permits to
establish the required convergence statements in generality and rigour. As a
consequence the effect of irrelevant terms on the critical behaviour may be
studied to any order without using renormalization theory for composite
operators. This is a technical simplification and seems preferable from the
physical point of view. In this short note we restrict for simplicity to the
symmetry class of the Ising model, i.e. one component theory. The
method is general, however.Comment: 13 page
Coolant side heat transfer with rotation. Task 3 report: Application of computational fluid dynamics
An experimental and analytical program was conducted to investigate heat transfer and pressure losses in rotating multipass passages with configurations and dimensions typical of modern turbine blades. The objective of this program is the development and verification of improved analysis methods that will form the basis for a design system that will produce turbine components with improved durability. As part of this overall program, a technique is developed for computational fluid dynamics. The specific objectives were to: select a baseline CFD computer code, assess the limitations of the baseline code, modify the baseline code for rotational effects, verify the modified code against benchmark experiments in the literature, and to identify shortcomings in the code as revealed by the verification. The Pratt and Whitney 3D-TEACH CFD code was selected as the vehicle for this program. The code was modified to account for rotating internal flows, and these modifications were evaluated for flow characteristics of those expected in the application. Results can make a useful contribution to blade internal cooling
Estimation of time delay by coherence analysis
Using coherence analysis (which is an extensively used method to study the
correlations in frequency domain, between two simultaneously measured signals)
we estimate the time delay between two signals. This method is suitable for
time delay estimation of narrow band coherence signals for which the
conventional methods cannot be reliably applied. We show by analysing coupled
R\"ossler attractors with a known delay, that the method yields satisfactory
results. Then, we apply this method to human pathologic tremor. The delay
between simultaneously measured traces of Electroencephalogram (EEG) and
Electromyogram (EMG) data of subjects with essential hand tremor is calculated.
We find that there is a delay of 11-27 milli-seconds () between the tremor
correlated parts (cortex) of the brain (EEG) and the trembling hand (EMG) which
is in agreement with the experimentally observed delay value of 15 for the
cortico-muscular conduction time. By surrogate analysis we calculate error-bars
of the estimated delay.Comment: 21 pages, 8 figures, elstart.cls file included. Accepted for
publication in Physica
Energy efficient engine: Low-pressure turbine subsonic cascade component development and integration program
A subsonic cascade test program was conducted to provide technical data for optimizing the blade and vane airfoil designs for the Energy Efficient Engine Low-Pressure Turbine component. The program consisted of three parts. The first involved an evaluation of the low-chamber inlet guide vane. The second, was an evaluation of two candidate aerodynamic loading philosophies for the fourth blade root section. The third part consisted of an evaluation of three candidate airfoil geometries for the fourth blade mean section. The performance of each candidate airfoil was evaluated in a linear cascade configuration. The overall results of this study indicate that the aft-loaded airfoil designs resulted in lower losses which substantiated Pratt & Whitney Aircraft's design philosophy for the Energy Efficient Engine low-pressure turbine component
Myelin as an Inflammatory Mediator: Myelin Interactions with Complement, Macrophages, and Microglia in Spinal Cord Injury
Spinal cord injury (SCI) triggers chronic intraspinal inflammation consisting of activated resident and infiltrating immune cells (especially microglia/macrophages). The environmental factors contributing to this protracted inflammation are not well understood; however, myelin lipid debris is a hallmark of SCI. Myelin is also a potent macrophage stimulus and target of complement‐mediated clearance and inflammation. The downstream effects of these neuroimmune interactions have the potential to contribute to ongoing pathology or facilitate repair. This depends in large part on whether myelin drives pathological or reparative macrophage activation states, commonly referred to as M1 (proinflammatory) or M2 (alternatively) macrophages, respectively. Here we review the processes by which myelin debris may be cleared through macrophage surface receptors and the complement system, how this differentially influences macrophage and microglial activation states, and how the cellular functions of these myelin macrophages and complement proteins contribute to chronic inflammation and secondary injury after SCI
Phase transition in scalar -theory beyond the super daisy resummations
The temperature phase transition in scalar field theory with
spontaneous symmetry breaking is investigated in a partly resummed perturbative
approach. The second Legendre transform is used and the resulting gap equation
is considered in the extrema of the free energy functional. It is found that
the phase transition is of first order in the super daisy as well as in a
certain beyond super daisy resummations. No unwanted imaginary parts in the
free energy are found but a loss of the smallness of the effective expansion
parameter near the phase transition temperature is found in both cases. This
means an insufficiency of the resummations or a deficit of the perturbative
approach.Comment: 14 page
Comparing Visual Search Patterns in Chest X-Ray Diagnostics
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
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