7,524 research outputs found
Improved techniques for thermomechanical testing in support of deformation modeling
The feasibility of generating precise thermomechanical deformation data to support constitutive model development was investigated. Here, the requirement is for experimental data that is free from anomalies caused by less than ideal equipment and procedures. A series of exploratory tests conducted on Hastelloy X showed that generally accepted techniques for strain controlled tests were lacking in at least three areas. Specifically, problems were encountered with specimen stability, thermal strain compensation, and temperature/mechanical strain phasing. The source of these difficulties was identified and improved thermomechanical testing techniques to correct them were developed. These goals were achieved by developing improved procedures for measuring and controlling thermal gradients and by designing a specimen specifically for thermomechanical testing. In addition, innovative control strategies were developed to correctly proportion and phase the thermal and mechanical components of strain. Subsequently, the improved techniques were used to generate deformation data for Hastelloy X over the temperature range, 200 to 1000 C
Homodyne detection as a near-optimum receiver for phase-shift keyed binary communication in the presence of phase diffusion
We address binary optical communication channels based on phase-shift keyed
coherent signals in the presence of phase diffusion. We prove theoretically and
demonstrate experimentally that a discrimination strategy based on homodyne
detection is robust against this kind of noise for any value of the channel
energy. Moreover, we find that homodyne receiver beats the performance of
Kennedy receiver as the signal energy increases, and achieves the Helstrom
bound in the limit of large noise
Integrated Light 2MASS IR Photometry of Galactic Globular Clusters
We have mosaiced 2MASS images to derive surface brightness profiles in JHK
for 104 Galactic globular clusters. We fit these with King profiles, and show
that the core radii are identical to within the errors for each of these IR
colors, and are identical to the core radii at V in essentially all cases. We
derive integrated light colors V-J, V-H, V-K_s, J-H and J-K_s for these
globular clusters. Each color shows a reasonably tight relation between the
dereddened colors and metallicity. Fits to these are given for each color. The
IR--IR colors have very small errors due largely to the all-sky photometric
calibration of the 2MASS survey, while the V-IR colors have substantially
larger uncertainties. We find fairly good agreement with measurements of
integrated light colors for a smaller sample of Galactic globular clusters by
Aaronson, Malkan & Kleinmann from 1977. Our results provide a calibration for
the integrated light of distant single burst old stellar populations from very
low to Solar metallicities. A comparison of our dereddened measured colors with
predictions from several models of the integrated light of single burst old
populations shows good agreement in the low metallicity domain for V-K_s
colors, but an offset at a fixed [Fe/H] of ~0.1 mag in J-K_s, which we ascribe
to photometric system transformation issues. Some of the models fail to
reproduce the behavior of the integrated light colors of the Galactic globular
clusters near Solar metallicity.Comment: Accepted for publication in the A
Thermomechanical deformation behavior of a dynamic strain aging alloy, Hastelloy X
An experimental study was performed to identify the effects of dynamic strain aging (solute drag) and metallurgical instabilities under thermomechanical loading conditions. The study involved a series of closely controlled thermomechanical deformation tests on the solid-solution-strenghened nickel-base superalloy, Hastelloy X. This alloy exhibits a strong isothermal strain aging peak at approximately 600 C, promoted by the effects of solute drag and precipitation hardening. Macroscopic thermomechanical hardening trends are correlated with microstructural characteristics through the use of transmission electron microscopy. These observations are compared and contrasted with isothermal conditions. Thermomechanical behavior unique to the isothermal database is identified and discussed. The microstructural characteristics were shown to be dominated by effects associated with the highest temperature of the thermomechanical cycle. Results indicate that the deformation behavior of Hastelloy X is thermomechanically path dependent. In addition, guidance is given pertaining to deformation modeling in the context of macroscopic unified theory. An internal state variable is formulated to qualitatively reflect the isotropic hardening trends identified in the TMD experiments
Thermomechanical testing techniques for high-temparature composites: TMF behavior of SiC(SCS-6)/Ti-15-3
Thermomechanical testing techniques recently developed for monolithic structural alloys were successfully extended to continuous fiber reinforced composite materials in plate form. The success of this adaptation was verified on a model metal matrix composite (MMC) material, namely SiC(SCS-6)/Ti-15V-3Cr-3Al-3Sn. Effects of heating system type and specimen preparation are also addressed. Cyclic lives determined under full thermo-mechanical conditions were shown to be significantly reduced from those obtained under comparable isothermal and in-phase bi-thermal conditions. Fractography and metallography from specimens subjected to isothermal, out-of-phase and in-phase conditions reveal distinct differences in damage-failure modes. Isothermal metallography revealed extensive matrix cracking associated with fiber damage throughout the entire cross-section of the specimen. Out-of-phase metallography revealed extensive matrix damage associated with minimal (if any) fiber cracking. However, the damage was located exclusively at surface and near-surface locations. In-phase conditions produced extensive fiber cracking throughout the entire cross-section, associated with minimal (if any) matrix damage
Experimental investigation of cyclic thermomechanical deformation in torsion
An investigation of thermomechanical testing and deformation behavior of tubular specimens under torsional loading is described. Experimental issues concerning test accuracy and control specific to thermomechanical loadings under a torsional regime are discussed. A series of shear strain-controlled tests involving the nickel-base superalloy Hastelloy X were performed with various temperature excursions and compared to similar thermomechanical uniaxial tests. The concept and use of second invariants of the deviatoric stress and strain tensors as a means of comparing uniaxial and torsional specimens is also briefly presented and discussed in light of previous thermomechanical tests conducted under uniaxial conditions
CCD Photometry of Galactic Globular Clusters. IV. The NGC 1851 RR Lyraes
The variable star population of the galactic globular cluster NGC 1851
(C0512-400) has been studied by CCD photometry, from observations made in the
B, V, and I bands during 1993-4. Light curves are presented for 29 variables,
seven of which are new discoveries. The behavior of the RR lyraes in the
period-temperature diagram appears normal when compared to clusters which
bracket the NGC 1851 metallicity. Reddening and metallicity are re-evaluated,
with no compelling evidence to change from accepted values. Photometry for
stars within an annulus with radii 80 and 260 arcsec agrees to better than 0.02
mag in all colors with extensive earlier photometry, to at least V = 18.5.
Instability strip boundary positions for several clusters shows a trend for the
red boundary to move to redder colors as the metallicity increases.Comment: 29 pages, 9 figures, accepted by A.
Engage D5.14 Engage SESAR Summer School 2021
This report describes the third edition of the Engage SESAR summer school, which was held as a virtual event, between 30th August and 2nd September 2021
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