22,423 research outputs found
Solar cycle dependence of scaling in solar wind fluctuations
In this review we collate recent results for the statistical scaling properties of fluctuations in the solar wind with a view to synthesizing two descriptions: that of evolving MHD turbulence and that of a scaling signature of coronal origin that passively propagates with the solar wind. The scenario that emerges is that of coexistent signatures which map onto the well known "two component" picture of solar wind magnetic fluctuations. This highlights the need to consider quantities which track Alfvénic fluctuations, and energy and momentum flux densities to obtain a complete description of solar wind fluctuations
Squeezing out the last 1 nanometer of water: A detailed nanomechanical study
In this study, we present a detailed analysis of the squeeze-out dynamics of
nanoconfined water confined between two hydrophilic surfaces measured by
small-amplitude dynamic atomic force microscopy (AFM). Explicitly considering
the instantaneous tip-surface separation during squeezeout, we confirm the
existence of an adsorbed molecular water layer on mica and at least two
hydration layers. We also confirm the previous observation of a sharp
transition in the viscoelastic response of the nanoconfined water as the
compression rate is increased beyond a critical value (previously determined to
be about 0.8 nm/s). We find that below the critical value, the tip passes
smoothly through the molecular layers of the film, while above the critical
speed, the tip encounters "pinning" at separations where the film is able to
temporarily order. Pre-ordering of the film is accompanied by increased force
fluctuations, which lead to increased damping preceding a peak in the film
stiffness once ordering is completed. We analyze the data using both
Kelvin-Voigt and Maxwell viscoelastic models. This provides a complementary
picture of the viscoelastic response of the confined water film
Multi-Spacecraft Measurement of Turbulence within a Magnetic Reconnection Jet
The relationship between magnetic reconnection and plasma turbulence is
investigated using multipoint in-situ measurements from the Cluster spacecraft
within a high-speed reconnection jet in the terrestrial magnetotail. We show
explicitly that work done by electromagnetic fields on the particles,
, has a non-Gaussian distribution and is
concentrated in regions of high electric current density. Hence, magnetic
energy is converted to kinetic energy in an intermittent manner. Furthermore,
we find the higher-order statistics of magnetic field fluctuations generated by
reconnection are characterized by multifractal scaling on magnetofluid scales
and non-Gaussian global scale invariance on kinetic scales. These observations
suggest within the reconnection jet has an analogue
in fluid-like turbulence theory in that it proceeds via coherent structures
generated by an intermittent cascade. This supports the hypothesis that
turbulent dissipation is highly nonuniform, and thus these results could have
far reaching implications for space and astrophysical plasmas.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Physical Review Letter
Kinetic Signatures and Intermittent Turbulence in the Solar Wind Plasma
A connection between kinetic processes and intermittent turbulence is
observed in the solar wind plasma using measurements from the Wind spacecraft
at 1 AU. In particular, kinetic effects such as temperature anisotropy and
plasma heating are concentrated near coherent structures, such as current
sheets, which are non-uniformly distributed in space. Furthermore, these
coherent structures are preferentially found in plasma unstable to the mirror
and firehose instabilities. The inhomogeneous heating in these regions, which
is present in both the magnetic field parallel and perpendicular temperature
components, results in protons at least 3-4 times hotter than under typical
stable plasma conditions. These results offer a new understanding of kinetic
processes in a turbulent regime, where linear Vlasov theory is not sufficient
to explain the inhomogeneous plasma dynamics operating near non-Gaussian
structures.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Physical Review Letter
Assessment of economic factors affecting the satellite power system. Volume 2: The systems implications of rectenna siting issues
The feasibility was evaluated of finding potential sites for Solar Power Satellite (SPS) receiving antennas (rectennas) in the continental United States, in sufficient numbers to permit the SPS to make a major contribution to U.S. generating facilities, and to give statistical validity to an assessment of the characteristics of such sites and their implications for the design of the SPS system. It is found that the cost-optimum power output of the SPS does not depend on the particular value assigned to the cost per unit area of a rectenna and its site, as long as it is independent of rectenna area. Many characteristics of the sites chosen affect the optimum design of the rectenna itself
Robust multi-fidelity design of a micro re-entry unmanned space vehicle
This article addresses the preliminary robust design of a small-scale re-entry unmanned space vehicle by means of a hybrid optimization technique. The approach, developed in this article, closely couples an evolutionary multi-objective algorithm with a direct transcription method for optimal control problems. The evolutionary part handles the shape parameters of the vehicle and the uncertain objective functions, while the direct transcription method generates an optimal control profile for the re-entry trajectory. Uncertainties on the aerodynamic forces and characteristics of the thermal protection material are incorporated into the vehicle model, and a Monte-Carlo sampling procedure is used to compute relevant statistical characteristics of the maximum heat flux and internal temperature. Then, the hybrid algorithm searches for geometries that minimize the mean value of the maximum heat flux, the mean value of the maximum internal temperature, and the weighted sum of their variance: the evolutionary part handles the shape parameters of the vehicle and the uncertain functions, while the direct transcription method generates the optimal control profile for the re-entry trajectory of each individual of the population. During the optimization process, artificial neural networks are utilized to approximate the aerodynamic forces required by the optimal control solver. The artificial neural networks are trained and updated by means of a multi-fidelity approach: initially a low-fidelity analytical model, fitted on a waverider type of vehicle, is used to train the neural networks, and through the evolution a mix of analytical and computational fluid dynamic, high-fidelity computations are used to update it. The data obtained by the high-fidelity model progressively become the main source of updates for the neural networks till, near the end of the optimization process, the influence of the data obtained by the analytical model is practically nullified. On the basis of preliminary results, the adopted technique is able to predict achievable performance of the small spacecraft and the requirements in terms of thermal protection materials
A sandpile model with tokamak-like enhanced confinement phenomenology
Confinement phenomenology characteristic of magnetically confined plasmas
emerges naturally from a simple sandpile algorithm when the parameter
controlling redistribution scalelength is varied. Close analogues are found for
enhanced confinement, edge pedestals, and edge localised modes (ELMs), and for
the qualitative correlations between them. These results suggest that tokamak
observations of avalanching transport are deeply linked to the existence of
enhanced confinement and ELMs.Comment: Manuscript is revtex (latex) 1 file, 7 postscript figures Revised
version is final version accepted for publication in PRL Revisions are mino
Self-similar signature of the active solar corona within the inertial range of solar-wind turbulence
We quantify the scaling of magnetic energy density in the inertial range of solar-wind turbulence seen
in situ at 1 AU with respect to solar activity. At solar maximum, when the coronal magnetic field is
dynamic and topologically complex, we find self-similar scaling in the solar wind, whereas at solar
minimum, when the coronal fields are more ordered, we find multifractality. This quantifies the solar-wind
signature that is of direct coronal origin and distinguishes it from that of local MHD turbulence, with
quantitative implications for coronal heating of the solar wind
Magnetic Reconnection and Intermittent Turbulence in the Solar Wind
A statistical relationship between magnetic reconnection, current sheets and
intermittent turbulence in the solar wind is reported for the first time using
in-situ measurements from the Wind spacecraft at 1 AU. We identify
intermittency as non-Gaussian fluctuations in increments of the magnetic field
vector, , that are spatially and temporally non-uniform. The
reconnection events and current sheets are found to be concentrated in
intervals of intermittent turbulence, identified using the partial variance of
increments method: within the most non-Gaussian 1% of fluctuations in
, we find 87%-92% of reconnection exhausts and 9% of current
sheets. Also, the likelihood that an identified current sheet will also
correspond to a reconnection exhaust increases dramatically as the least
intermittent fluctuations are removed from the dataset. Hence, the turbulent
solar wind contains a hierarchy of intermittent magnetic field structures that
are increasingly linked to current sheets, which in turn are progressively more
likely to correspond to sites of magnetic reconnection. These results could
have far reaching implications for laboratory and astrophysical plasmas where
turbulence and magnetic reconnection are ubiquitous.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Physical Review Letter
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