69,571 research outputs found
Bacteriology of select aquatic hosts utilized in lunar sample exposure studies Final report
Procedures and immunofluorescent techniques for screening Apollo aquatic test animals for bacterial pathogens after lunar sample exposur
Two-stage combustion for reducing pollutant emissions from gas turbine combustors
Combustion and emission results are presented for a premix combustor fueled with admixtures of JP5 with neat H2 and of JP5 with simulated partial-oxidation product gas. The combustor was operated with inlet-air state conditions typical of cruise power for high performance aviation engines. Ultralow NOx, CO and HC emissions and extended lean burning limits were achieved simultaneously. Laboratory scale studies of the non-catalyzed rich-burning characteristics of several paraffin-series hydrocarbon fuels and of JP5 showed sooting limits at equivalence ratios of about 2.0 and that in order to achieve very rich sootless burning it is necessary to premix the reactants thoroughly and to use high levels of air preheat. The application of two-stage combustion for the reduction of fuel NOx was reviewed. An experimental combustor designed and constructed for two-stage combustion experiments is described
Evaluation of the use of powered flight tracking and telemetry data in lunar orbit differential correction procedures
Powered flight maneuver data used to reduce state vector uncertainties for lunar satellite orbit differential correctio
Resistive Magnetohydrodynamic Equilibria in a Torus
It was recently demonstrated that static, resistive, magnetohydrodynamic
equilibria, in the presence of spatially-uniform electrical conductivity, do
not exist in a torus under a standard set of assumed symmetries and boundary
conditions. The difficulty, which goes away in the ``periodic straight cylinder
approximation,'' is associated with the necessarily non-vanishing character of
the curl of the Lorentz force, j x B. Here, we ask if there exists a spatial
profile of electrical conductivity that permits the existence of zero-flow,
axisymmetric r esistive equilibria in a torus, and answer the question in the
affirmative. However, the physical properties of the conductivity profile are
unusual (the conductivity cannot be constant on a magnetic surface, for
example) and whether such equilibria are to be considered physically possible
remains an open question.Comment: 17 pages, 4 figure
Universal Properties of Linear Magnetoresistance in Strongly Disordered Semiconductors
Linear magnetoresistance occurs in semiconductors as a consequence of strong
electrical disorder and is characterized by nonsaturating magnetoresistance
that is proportional to the applied magnetic field. By investigating a
disordered MnAs-GaAs composite material, it is found that the magnitude of the
linear magnetoresistance (LMR) is numerically equal to the carrier mobility
over a wide range and is independent of carrier density. This behavior is
complementary to the Hall effect that is independent of the mobility and
dependent on the carrier density. Moreover, the LMR appears to be insensitive
to the details of the disorder and points to a universal explanation of
classical LMR that can be applied to other material systems.Comment: Accepted by Phys. Rev. B (2010
Electrolysis of simulated lunar melts
Electrolysis of molten lunar soil or rock is examined as an attractive means of wresting useful raw materials from lunar rocks. It requires only hat to melt the soil or rock and electricity to electrolyze it, and both can be developed from solar power. The conductivities of the simple silicate diopside, Mg CaSi2O6 were measured. Iron oxide was added to determine the effect on conductivity. The iron brought about substantial electronic conduction. The conductivities of simulated lunar lavas were measured. The simulated basalt had an AC conductivity nearly a fctor of two higher than that of diopside, reflecting the basalt's slightly higher total concentration of the 2+ ions Ca, Mg, and Fe that are the dominant charge carriers. Electrolysis was shown to be about 30% efficient for the basalt composition
Structure of the hepatitis C virus IRES bound to the human 80S ribosome: Remodeling of the HCV IRES
Kinematic study of flight telerobotic servicer configuration issues
Several factors, such as body size and shape, and the number of arms and their placement, will influence how well the Flight Telerobotic Servicer (FTS) is suited to its potential duties for the Space Station Program. In order to examine the implications of these configuration options, eight specific 2, 3, and 4 armed FTS configuration were simulated and used to perform a Space Station Orbital Replacement Unit (ORU) exchange. The strengths and weaknesses of each configuration were evaluated. Although most of the configurations examined were able to perform the exchange, several of the 3 and 4 arm configurations had operational advantages. The results obtained form these simulations are specific to the assumptions associated with the ORU exchange scenario examined. However, they do illustrate the general interrelationships and sensitivities which need to be understood
NERVA irradiation program, GTR test 21. Volume 4 - Effect of radiation on structural materials tested at cryogenic and elevated temperatures
Effect of radiation on structural materials for NERVA engine tested at cryogenic and elevated temperatures - Vol.
Submillimetre observations of a sample of broad absorption line quasars
The broad absorption line (BAL) features seen in a small fraction of quasar
optical/UV spectra are attributed to bulk outflows away from the quasar core.
Observational evidence suggests that dust plays a key role in these systems,
although whether the inferred dust properties are a signature of orientation
effects or whether they are indicative of an evolutionary sequence remains an
outstanding issue. Submillimetre (submm) detections of BAL quasars (BALQSOs),
which would clearly help to resolve this issue, have so far been sparse. This
paper reports on new submm observations of seven BALQSOs. The strongest
influence on the observed flux is found to be the redshift, with the two
highest redshift sources appearing intrinsically more submm-luminous than the
lower redshift ones. Since this trend is also seen in other high redshift AGN,
including non-BAL quasars it implies that the dust emission properties of these
systems are no different from those of the general AGN population, which is
difficult to reconcile with the evolutionary interpretation of the BAL
phenomenon.Comment: 5 Pages, to appear in ApJ Letter
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