11,954 research outputs found
Photomechanical Investigation of Structural Behavior of Gyroscope Components. Task IV - Analysis of Initial Redesign of AB5-K8 GYROSCOPE
Photomechanics of structure and materials in redesigned AB5-K8 gyroscope component
Continuum description of finite-size particles advected by external flows. The effect of collisions
The equation of the density field of an assembly of macroscopic particles
advected by a hydrodynamic flow is derived from the microscopic description of
the system. This equation allows to recognize the role and the relative
importance of the different microscopic processes implicit in the model: the
driving of the external flow, the inertia of the particles, and the collisions
among them.
The validity of the density description is confirmed by comparisons of
numerical studies of the continuum equation with Direct Simulation Monte Carlo
(DSMC) simulations of hard disks advected by a chaotic flow. We show that the
collisions have two competing roles: a dispersing-like effect and a clustering
effect (even for elastic collisions). An unexpected feature is also observed in
the system: the presence of collisions can reverse the effect of inertia, so
that grains with lower inertia are more clusterized.Comment: Final (strongly modified) version accepted in PRE; 6 pages, 3 figure
TB89: Motor and Elective Activity of the Duodenum of Broilers
Recordings of pressure changes and electrical activity from the proximal small intestine of seven to eight-week-old unanesthetized chickens were made with chronically implanted transducers. The recordings were used to quantitate and determine the relationships among basic electric rhythm (BER), spike potentials (SP), and intestinal contractions (IC) of the duodenum. The omnipresence of the BER was demonstrated. SP were recorded whenever IC were detected. SP numbers and amplitudes were directly related to the strength of IC. Acetylcholine caused a general increase in the number and amplitude of both SP and IC. Epinephrine completely abolished both SP and IC. The results suggest that BER may represent the stimulus that initiates SP, and therefore, IC of the duodenum.https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/aes_techbulletin/1096/thumbnail.jp
Aerothermodynamic Analysis of a Reentry Brazilian Satellite
This work deals with a computational investigation on the small ballistic
reentry Brazilian vehicle SARA (acronyms for SAt\'elite de Reentrada
Atmosf\'erica). Hypersonic flows over the vehicle SARA at zero-degree angle of
attack in a chemical equilibrium and thermal non-equilibrium are modeled by the
Direct Simulation Monte Carlo (DSMC) method, which has become the main
technique for studying complex multidimensional rarefied flows, and that
properly accounts for the non-equilibrium aspects of the flows. The emphasis of
this paper is to examine the behavior of the primary properties during the high
altitude portion of SARA reentry. In this way, velocity, density, pressure and
temperature field are investigated for altitudes of 100, 95, 90, 85 and 80 km.
In addition, comparisons based on geometry are made between axisymmetric and
planar two-dimensional configurations. Some significant differences between
these configurations were noted on the flowfield structure in the reentry
trajectory. The analysis showed that the flow disturbances have different
influence on velocity, density, pressure and temperature along the stagnation
streamline ahead of the capsule nose. It was found that the stagnation region
is a thermally stressed zone. It was also found that the stagnation region is a
zone of strong compression, high wall pressure. Wall pressure distributions are
compared with those of available experimental data and good agreement is found
along the spherical nose for the altitude range investigated.Comment: The paper will be published in Vol. 42 of the Brazilian Journal of
Physic
Computer simulations of an impurity in a granular gas under planar Couette flow
We present in this work results from numerical solutions, obtained by means
of the direct simulation Monte Carlo (DSMC) method, of the Boltzmann and
Boltzmann--Lorentz equations for an impurity immersed in a granular gas under
planar Couette flow. The DSMC results are compared with the exact solution of a
recent kinetic model for the same problem. The results confirm that, in steady
states and over a wide range of parameter values, the state of the impurity is
enslaved to that of the host gas: it follows the same flow velocity profile,
its concentration (relative to that of the granular gas) is constant in the
bulk region, and the impurity/gas temperature ratio is also constant. We
determine also the rheological properties and nonlinear hydrodynamic transport
coefficients for the impurity, finding a good semi-quantitative agreement
between the DSMC results and the theoretical predictions.Comment: 23 pages, 11 figures; v2: minor change
The evolution of pebble size and shape in space and time
We propose a mathematical model which suggests that the two main geological
observations about shingle beaches, i.e. the emergence of predominant pebble
size ratios and strong segregation by size are interrelated. Our model is a
based on a system of ODEs called the box equations, describing the evolution of
pebble ratios. We derive these ODEs as a heuristic approximation of Bloore's
PDE describing collisional abrasion. While representing a radical
simplification of the latter, our system admits the inclusion of additional
terms related to frictional abrasion. We show that nontrivial attractors
(corresponding to predominant pebble size ratios) only exist in the presence of
friction. By interpreting our equations as a Markov process, we illustrate by
direct simulation that these attractors may only stabilized by the ongoing
segregation process.Comment: 22 pages, 8 figure
Soliton effects in dangling-bond wires on Si(001)
Dangling bond wires on Si(001) are prototypical one dimensional wires, which
are expected to show polaronic and solitonic effects. We present electronic
structure calculations, using the tight binding model, of solitons in
dangling-bond wires, and demonstrate that these defects are stable in
even-length wires, although approximately 0.1 eV higher in energy than a
perfect wire. We also note that in contrast to conjugated polymer systems,
there are two types of soliton and that the type of soliton has strong effects
on the energetics of the bandgap edges, with formation of intra-gap states
between 0.1 eV and 0.2 eV from the band edges. These intra-gap states are
localised on the atoms comprising the soliton.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, 3 tables, submitted to Phys. Rev.
An introduction to the EULAR–OMERACT rheumatoid arthritis MRI reference image atlas
This article gives a short overview of the development and characteristics of the OMERACT rheumatoid arthritis MRI scoring system (RAMRIS), followed by an introduction to the use of the EULAR–OMERACT rheumatoid arthritis MRI reference image atlas. With this atlas, MRIs of wrist and metacarpophalangeal joints of patients with rheumatoid arthritis can be scored for synovitis, bone oedema, and bone erosion, guided by standard reference images
Peeping at chaos: Nondestructive monitoring of chaotic systems by measuring long-time escape rates
One or more small holes provide non-destructive windows to observe
corresponding closed systems, for example by measuring long time escape rates
of particles as a function of hole sizes and positions. To leading order the
escape rate of chaotic systems is proportional to the hole size and independent
of position. Here we give exact formulas for the subsequent terms, as sums of
correlation functions; these depend on hole size and position, hence yield
information on the closed system dynamics. Conversely, the theory can be
readily applied to experimental design, for example to control escape rates.Comment: Originally 4 pages and 2 eps figures incorporated into the text; v2
has more numerical results and discussion: now 6 pages, 4 figure
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