3,055 research outputs found
Mechanisms and Observations of Coronal Dimming for the 2010 August 7 Event
Coronal dimming of extreme ultraviolet (EUV) emission has the potential to be
a useful forecaster of coronal mass ejections (CMEs). As emitting material
leaves the corona, a temporary void is left behind which can be observed in
spectral images and irradiance measurements. The velocity and mass of the CMEs
should impact the character of those observations. However, other physical
processes can confuse the observations. We describe these processes and the
expected observational signature, with special emphasis placed on the
differences. We then apply this understanding to a coronal dimming event with
an associated CME that occurred on 2010 August 7. Data from the Solar Dynamics
Observatory's (SDO) Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (AIA) and EUV Variability
Experiment (EVE) are used for observations of the dimming, while the Solar and
Heliospheric Observatory's (SOHO) Large Angle and Spectrometric Coronagraph
(LASCO) and the Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory's (STEREO) COR1 and
COR2 are used to obtain velocity and mass estimates for the associated CME. We
develop a technique for mitigating temperature effects in coronal dimming from
full-disk irradiance measurements taken by EVE. We find that for this event,
nearly 100% of the dimming is due to mass loss in the corona
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Towards Integrated Design and Modeling of High Field Accelerator Magnets
The next generation of superconducting accelerator magnets will most likely use a brittle conductor (such as Nb{sub 3}Sn), generate fields around 18 T, handle forces that are 3-4 times higher than in the present LHC dipoles, and store energy that starts to make accelerator magnets look like fusion magnets. To meet the challenge and reduce the complexity, magnet design will have to be more innovative and better integrated. The recent design of several high field superconducting magnets have now benefited from the integration between CAD (e.g. ProE), magnetic analysis tools (e.g. TOSCA) and structural analysis tools (e.g. ANSYS). Not only it is now possible to address complex issues such as stress in magnet ends, but the analysis can be better detailed an extended into new areas previously too difficult to address. Integrated thermal, electrical and structural analysis can be followed from assembly and cool-down through excitation and quench propagation. In this paper we report on the integrated design approach, discuss analysis results and point out areas of future interest
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