1,346 research outputs found
A wall interference assessment/correction system
The Hackett method (a Wall Pressure Signature Method) was selected to be adapted for the 12 ft Wind Tunnel WIAC system. This method uses limited measurements of the static pressure at the wall, in conjunction with the solid wall boundary condition, to determine the strength and distribution of singularities representing the test article. The singularities are used in term for estimating wall interference at the model location. Hackett's method will have to be formulated for application to the unique geometry of the 12 ft tunnel. The WIAC code will be validated by conducting numerically simulated experiments rather than actual wind tunnel experiments. The simulations will be used to generate both free air and confined wind tunnel flow fields for each of the test articles over a range of test configurations. Specifically the pressure signature at the test section wall will be computed for the confined case to provide the simulated 'measured' data. These data will serve as the input for the WIAC method. The performance of the WIAC method then may be evaluated by comparing the corrected parameters with those for the free air simulation
The multi-parameter remote measurement of rainfall
The measurement of rainfall by remote sensors is investigated. One parameter radar rainfall measurement is limited because both reflectivity and rain rate are dependent on at least two parameters of the drop size distribution (DSD), i.e., representative raindrop size and number concentration. A generalized rain parameter diagram is developed which includes a third distribution parameter, the breadth of the DSD, to better specify rain rate and all possible remote variables. Simulations show the improvement in accuracy attainable through the use of combinations of two and three remote measurables. The spectrum of remote measurables is reviewed. These include path integrated techniques of radiometry and of microwave and optical attenuation
Research on the structural performance of large rocket booster subjected to longitudinal excitations
Dynamic structural behavior of large booster rocket subjected to longitudinal excitations - analysis of theoretical mode
Petrography of alkaline volcanic-subvolcanic rocks from the Brazilian Fernando de Noronha Archipelago, Southern Atlantic Ocean
A classification scheme for the volcanic-subvolcanic rocks of the Fernando de Noronha Archipelago is presented, following the IUGS recommendations, based on the petrographic study of a large number of samples. In Fernando de Noronha two main volcanic events were defined by Almeida (1955): an older Remédios Formation (12 to 8 Ma old) composed of domes, plugs and dikes of tephritic-basanitic to trachytic and phonolitic compositions, with essexite porphyries, limburgites and alkaline lamprophyres intruding basal pyroclastic rocks, and a younger Quixaba Formation (3 to 2 Ma), made up mostly by flows of nephelinitic composition (ankaratrites). The lamprophyres were separated in two groups: tephritic or melanocratic lamprophyres and typical lamprophyres, the first ones belonging to a suite characterized by continuous increase in amphibole content. Most of the rocks of the Remédios Formation appear to belong to two distinct petrographic series, one represented by an undersaturated sodic basanite-tephrite (essexite)-phonolite trend and the other by a potassic alkali basalt-trachyandesite-trachyte series, while the limburgites and lamprophyres are of uncertain ancestry. Some ankaratrite and olivine nephelinite dikes that only cut the Remédios rocks are also attributed to the Quixaba Formation. The basanitic flow with mantle xenoliths of the São José Island, considered by Almeida (1955) to form the youngest São José Formation, is here tentatively interpreted as representing the waning stages of the Quixaba volcanism.Apresenta-se neste trabalho um esquema de classificação para as rochas vulcânicas do Archipelago de Fernando de Noronha, com base no estudo de um grande número de amostras. Dois eventos vulcânicos principais foram definidos em Fernando de Noronha por Almeida (1955). A Formação Remédios é a mais antiga (12 a 8 Ma), composta por domos, "plugs" e diques e por depósitos piroclásticos basais por eles cortados, que apresentam composições variando de tefritos-basanitos a traquitos e fonolitos, junto com essexitos pórfiros, limburgitos e lamprófiros alcalinos. A formação mais nova, a de Quixaba, é constituÃda principalmente por derrames de nefelinitos (ankaratritos). Os lamprófiros foram separados em dois grupos: lamprófiros tefrÃticos ou melanocráticos e lamprófiros tÃpicos, os primeiros pertencendo a uma suite caracterizada pelo aumento contÃnuo no conteúdo modal de anfÃbólio. As rochas da Formação Remédios parecem pertencer a duas séries petrográficas, uma subsaturada, de tendência sódica, representada por basanitos-tefritos (essexitos)-fonolitos e a outra de tendência potássica constituÃda por alkali basaltos-traquiandesitostraquitos. Os lamprófiros e limburgitos são de origem duvidosa. Alguns diques que cortam a Formação Remédios (ankaratritos e nefelinito) foram atribuÃdos à Formação Quixaba. Os derrames de basanitos com xenólitos mantélicos da Ilha de São José, que Almeida (1955) atribui a uma formação mais nova, a de São José, são aqui considerados como pertencentes aos estágios finais do vulcanismo nefelinÃtico da Formação Quixaba
Mapping Itinerant Electrons around Kondo Impurities
We investigate single Fe and Co atoms buried below a Cu(100) surface using
low temperature scanning tunneling spectroscopy. By mapping the local density
of states of the itinerant electrons at the surface, the Kondo resonance near
the Fermi energy is analyzed. Probing bulk impurities in this well-defined
scattering geometry allows separating the physics of the Kondo system and the
measuring process. The line shape of the Kondo signature shows an oscillatory
behavior as a function of depth of the impurity as well as a function of
lateral distance. The oscillation period along the different directions reveals
that the spectral function of the itinerant electrons is anisotropic.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, accepted by Physical Review Letter
Application of a Temperature-Dependent Load Prediction Method to a RUAG Six-Component Block-Type Balance
Temperature-dependent data of a RUAG six-component block-type balance was analyzed to assess the accuracy of two load prediction methods for temperature-dependent balance data. The supplied data was prepared for the analysis by splitting it into calibration and check load data subsets. The first calibration data subset was obtained at a temperature of 294 Kelvin. The second calibration data subset was obtained at a temperature of 315 Kelvin. A subset of 38 points was extracted from the second data set and used as check loads so that the accuracy of the two load prediction methods could be tested. First, the Iterative Method in combination with an extended independent and dependent variable set was used for the balance load prediction. This approach fits electrical outputs as a function of loads and the temperature and, afterwards, constructs a load iteration scheme from the regression coefficients so that loads can be predicted from outputs and the temperature during a wind tunnel test. The Non-Iterative Method was also used for the load prediction. This alternate method can more easily be implemented in a data system as loads are directly fitted as a function of electrical outputs and the temperature. Analysis results for the axial force are only discussed in the paper as similar results were obtained for the other five load components. Results for both methods clearly show that the cross-product term constructed from either a primary gage load or a primary gage output and the temperature explains the majority of the temperature-dependent part of the predicted balance load. This term models the temperature dependent nature of the gage sensitivity. Therefore, it is recommended to apply primary gage loadings at different temperatures during a balance calibration whenever temperature effects need to be described. These loadings will contain information about the temperature-dependent nature of the gage sensitivities that can be quantified by related cross-product terms in regression models of the data
UHF and VHF radar observations of thunderstorms
A study of thunderstorms was made in the Summer of 1985 with the 430-MHz and 50-MHz radars at the Arecibo Observatory in Puerto Rico. Both radars use the 300-meter dish, which gives a beam width of less than 2 degrees even at these long wavelengths. Though the radars are steerable, only vertical beams were used in this experiment. The height resolution was 300 and 150 meters for the UHF and VHF, respectively. Lightning echoes, as well as returns from precipitation and clear-air turbulence were detected with both wavelengths. Large increases in the returned power were found to be coincident with increasing downward vertical velocities at UHF, whereas at VHF the total power returned was relatively constant during the life of a storm. This was attributed to the fact that the VHF is more sensitive to scattering from the turbulence-induced inhomogeneities in the refractive index and less sensitive to scatter from precipitation particles. On occasion, the shape of the Doppler spectra was observed to change with the occurrence of a lightning discharge in the pulse volume. Though the total power and mean reflectivity weighted Doppler velocity changed little during these events, the power is Doppler frequency bins near that corresponding to the updraft did increase substantially within a fraction of a second after a discharge was detected in the beam. This suggests some interaction between precipitation and lightning
Recommended from our members
Cyclones causing wind storms in the Mediterranean: characteristics, trends and links to large-scale patterns
A climatology of cyclones with a focus on their relation to wind storm tracks in the Mediterranean region (MR) is presented. Trends in the frequency of cyclones and wind storms, as well as variations associated with the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO), the East Atlantic/West Russian (EAWR) and the Scandinavian variability pattern (SCAND) are discussed.
The study is based on the ERA40 reanalysis dataset. Wind storm tracks are identified by tracking clusters of adjacent grid boxes characterised by extremely high local wind speeds. The wind track is assigned to a cyclone track independently identified with an objective scheme.
Areas with high wind activity – quantified by extreme wind tracks – are typically located south of the Golf of Genoa, south of Cyprus, southeast of Sicily and west of the Iberian Peninsula. About 69% of the wind storms are caused by cyclones located in the Mediterranean region, while the remaining 31% can be attributed to North Atlantic or Northern European cyclones.
The North Atlantic Oscillation, the East Atlantic/West Russian pattern and the Scandinavian pattern all influence the amount and spatial distribution of wind inducing cyclones and wind events in the MR. The strongest signals exist for the NAO and the EAWR pattern, which are both associated with an increase in the number of organised strong wind events in the eastern MR during their positive phase. On the other hand, the storm numbers decrease over the western MR for the positive phase of the NAO and over the central MR during the positive phase of the EAWR pattern. The positive phase of the Scandinavian pattern is associated with a decrease in the number of winter wind storms over most of the MR.
A third of the trends in the number of wind storms and wind producing cyclones during the winter season of the ERA40 period may be attributed to the variability of the North Atlantic Oscillation
Recommended from our members
Extra-tropical cyclones in the present and future climate: a review
Based on the availability of hemispheric gridded data sets from observations, analysis and global climate models, objective cyclone identification methods were developed and applied to these data sets. Due to the large amount of investigation methods combined with the variety of different datasets, a multitude of results exist, not only for the recent climate period but also for the next century, assuming anthropogenic changed conditions. Different thresholds, different physical quantities, and considerations of different atmospheric vertical levels add to a picture that is difficult to combine into a common view of cyclones, their variability and trends, in the real world and in GCM studies. Thus, this paper will give a comprehensive review of the actual knowledge on climatologies of mid-latitude cyclones for the Northern and Southern Hemisphere for the present climate and for its possible changes under anthropogenic climate conditions
Theory of Optical Orientation in n-Type Semiconductors
Time resolved measurements of magnetization in n-GaAs have revealed a rich
array of spin decoherence processes, and have shown that fairly long lifetimes
(\sim 100 ns) can be achieved under certain circumstances. In time-resolved
Faraday rotation and time-resolved Kerr rotation the evolution of the
magnetization can be followed as a function of temperature, applied field,
doping level and excitation level. We present a theory for the spin relaxation
in n-GaAs based on a set of rate equations for two interacting thermalized
subsystems of spins: localized states on donor sites and itinerant states in
the conduction band. The conduction band spins relax by scattering from defects
or phonons through the D'yakonov-Perel' mechanism, while the localized spins
relax by interacting with phonons (when in an applied field) or through the
Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction. In this model, numerous features of the
data, including puzzling temperature and doping dependences of the relaxation
time, find an explanation.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures; revised version has a more complete discussion of
the Elliott-Yafet and spin-phonon decay mechanism
- …