802 research outputs found

    Photoelectric charging of partially sunlit dielectric surfaces in space

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    Sunlight-shadow effects may substantially alter the charging situation for a dielectric surface. The sunlight-shadow boundary tends to be the site of intense multipole electric fields. Charges on a sunlit dielectric surface have a finite effective mobility. The charge distribution tends to resemble that on a conducting surface. A boundary between a conducting and a dielectric surface may not represent a conductivity discontinuity when this boundary is sunlit; charges may migrate at a nontrivial rate across the boundary. A contracting or expanding sunlit area may experience a supercharging

    Lunar interactions: Abstracts of papers presented at the Conference on Interactions of the Interplanetary Plasma with the Modern and Ancient Moon

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    Reviewed are the active mechanisms relating the moon to its environment and the linkage between these mechanisms and their records in the lunar sample and geophysical data. Topics: (1) large scale plasma interactions with the moon and non-magnetic planets; (2) ancient and present day lunar surface magnetic and electric fields; (3) dynamics and evolution of the lunar atmosphere; (4) evolution of the solar plasma; (5) lunar record of solar radiations; (6) non-meteoritic and meteoritic disturbance and transport of lunar surface materials; and (7) future lunar exploration

    Utilization of lunar materials and expertise for large scale operations in space: Abstracts

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    The practicality of exploiting the moon, not only as a source of materials for large habitable structures at Lagrangian points, but also as a base for colonization is discussed in abstracts of papers presented at a special session on lunar utilization. Questions and answers which followed each presentation are included after the appropriate abstract. Author and subject indexes are provided

    Energia solar des de la lluna

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    Material variability and wood joist floor response

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    CER75-76RVG-MEC-JRG-MDV-JB46.May 1976.Includes bibliographical references

    Layered beam systems with interlayer slip

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    CER72-73MFK-JRG-MDV-MEC-JB27.December, 1972.Includes bibliographical references (pages 118-120).This report describes a portion of a study on wood joist floor systems. The objective of this portion of the study is to develop a general theory for the analysis of the layered beams within the system including the effects of interlayer slip. The development leads to the governing equations for beams having a single axis of symmetry and an arbitrary number of layers and fastened together with mechanical connectors. Solutions to the governing equations are presented in closed form and in finite difference approximation. These solutions show the effect of interlayer connection on the deflection. In all cases, consideration is given to variation of properties along the beam length. The results of some tests are presented. The proposed theory is shown to agree favorably with the results obtained in the tests

    Verification of a mathematical model for layered T-beams

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    CER73-74MLK-MEC-JRG-JB-EGT-MDV28.March 1974.Includes bibliographical references.An experimental program and the verification of a mathematical model for layered T-beams, developed assuming small deflection theory and including effects of interlayer slip, are described in this report. This research is a part of an overall program to develop a verified analysis procedure for wood joist floor systems. After a description of the construction and load-testing of 14 two-and three-layered T-beams, a brief discussion on the mechanical properties of the materials used is given. The deflections observed in the loading tests are then compared with the predicted deflections given by the mathematical model, which used a finite element solution technique. These comparisons for the fourteen T-beams, including two and three-layered systems, formed the primary basis for the verification of the mathematical model. Test results provided by a manufacturer of joist systems were also compared to the mathematical model. Good agreement between the observed and theoretical values were obtained for all tests. These favorable results show the validity of this general layered beam theory

    Lunar Outgassing, Transient Phenomena and The Return to The Moon, I: Existing Data

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    Herein the transient lunar phenomena (TLP) report database is subjected to a discriminating statistical filter robust against sites of spurious reports, and produces a restricted sample that may be largely reliable. This subset is highly correlated geographically with the catalog of outgassing events seen by the Apollo 15, 16 and Lunar Prospector alpha-particle spectrometers for episodic Rn-222 gas release. Both this robust TLP sample and even the larger, unfiltered sample are highly correlated with the boundary between mare and highlands, as are both deep and shallow moonquakes, as well as Po-210, a long-lived product of Rn-222 decay and a further tracer of outgassing. This offers another significant correlation relating TLPs and outgassing, and may tie some of this activity to sagging mare basalt plains (perhaps mascons). Additionally, low-level but likely significant TLP activity is connected to recent, major impact craters (while moonquakes are not), which may indicate the effects of cracks caused by the impacts, or perhaps avalanches, allowing release of gas. The majority of TLP (and Rn-222) activity, however, is confined to one site that produced much of the basalt in the Procellarum Terrane, and it seems plausible that this TLP activity may be tied to residual outgassing from the formerly largest volcanic ffusion sites from the deep lunar interior. With the coming in the next few years of robotic spacecraft followed by human exploration, the study of TLPs and outgassing is both promising and imperiled. We will have an unprecedented pportunity to study lunar outgassing, but will also deal with a greater burden of anthropogenic lunar gas than ever produced. There is a pressing need to study lunar atmosphere and its sources while still pristine. [Abstract abridged.]Comment: 35 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Icarus. Other papers in series found at http://www.astro.columbia.edu/~arlin/TLP
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