8,733 research outputs found
Technique for producing wind-tunnel heat-transfer models
Inexpensive thin skinned wind tunnel models with thermocouples on certain surface areas were fabricated. Thermocouples were designed for measuring aerodynamic heat transfer in wind tunnels
Duality Symmetry in Kaluza-Klein Dimensional Cosmological Model
It is shown that, with the only exception of , the Einstein-Hilbert
action in dimensions, with times, is invariant under the duality
transformation and , where is a
Friedmann-Robertson-Walker scale factor in dimensions and a Brans-Dicke
scalar field in dimensions respectively. We investigate the
dimensional cosmological model in some detail.Comment: 23 pages, Late
Dynamical Masses of RCS Galaxy Clusters
A multi-object spectroscopy follow-up survey of galaxy clusters selected from
the Red-sequence Cluster Survey (RCS) is being completed. About forty clusters
were chosen with redshifts from 0.15 to 0.6, and in a wide range of richnesses.
One of the main science drivers of this survey is a study of internal dynamics
of clusters. We present some preliminary results for a subset of the clusters,
including the correlation of optical richness with mass, and the mass-to-light
ratio as a function of cluster mass.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, to appear in the Proceedings of IAU Colloquium
195: "Outskirts of Galaxy Clusters: intense life in the suburbs", Torino
Italy, March 200
Hypersonic blunt body computations including real gas effects
The recently developed second-order explicit and implicit total variation diminishing (TVD) shock-capturing methods of the Harten and Yee, Yee, and van Leer types in conjunction with a generalized Roe's approximate Riemann solver of Vinokur and the generalized flux-vector splittings of Vinokur and Montagne for two-dimensional hypersonic real gas flows are studied. A previous study on one-dimensional unsteady problems indicated that these schemes produce good shock-capturing capability and that the state equation does not have a large effect on the general behavior of these methods for a wide range of flow conditions for equilibrium air. The objective of this paper is to investigate the applicability and shock resolution of these schemes for two-dimensional steady-state hypersonic blunt body flows. The main contribution of this paper is to identify some of the elements and parameters which can affect the convergence rate for high Mach numbers or real gases but have negligible effect for low Mach number cases for steady-state inviscid blunt body flows
Entropy Splitting and Numerical Dissipation
A rigorous stability estimate for arbitrary order of accuracy of spatial central difference schemes for initial boundary value problems of nonlinear symmetrizable systems of hyperbolic conservation laws was established recently by Olsson and Oliger (1994, “Energy and Maximum Norm Estimates for Nonlinear Conservation Laws,” RIACS Report, NASA Ames Research Center) and Olsson (1995, Math. Comput. 64, 212) and was applied to the two-dimensional compressible Euler equations for a perfect gas by Gerritsen and Olsson (1996, J. Comput. Phys. 129, 245) and Gerritsen (1996, “Designing an Efficient Solution Strategy for Fluid Flows, Ph.D. Thesis, Stanford). The basic building block in developing the stability estimate is a generalized energy approach based on a special splitting of the flux derivative via a convex entropy function and certain homogeneous properties. Due to some of the unique properties of the compressible Euler equations for a perfect gas, the splitting resulted in the sum of a conservative portion and a non-conservative portion of the flux derivative, hereafter referred to as the “entropy splitting.” There are several potentially desirable attributes and side benefits of the entropy splitting for the compressible Euler equations that were not fully explored in Gerritsen and Olsson. This paper has several objectives. The first is to investigate the choice of the arbitrary parameter that determines the amount of splitting and its dependence on the type of physics of current interest to computational fluid dynamics. The second is to investigate in what manner the splitting affects the nonlinear stability of the central schemes for long time integrations of unsteady flows such as in nonlinear aeroacoustics and turbulence dynamics. If numerical dissipation indeed is needed to stabilize the central scheme, can the splitting help minimize the numerical dissipation compared to its un-split cousin? Extensive numerical study on the vortex preservation capability of the splitting in conjunction with central schemes for long time integrations will be presented. The third is to study the effect of the non-conservative proportion of splitting in obtaining the correct shock location for high speed complex shock-turbulence interactions. The fourth is to determine if this method can be extended to other physical equations of state and other evolutionary equation sets. If numerical dissipation is needed, the Yee, Sandham, and Djomehri (1999, J. Comput. Phys. 150, 199) numerical dissipation is employed. The Yee et al. schemes fit in the Olsson and Oliger framework
- …