1,181 research outputs found
An automated stall-speed warning system
The development and testing of a stall-speed warning system for the OV-1C was examined. NASA designed and built an automated stall-speed warning system which presents both airspeed and stall speed to the pilot. The airspeed and stall speed are computed in real time by monitoring the basic aerodynamic parameters (dynamic pressure, horizontal and vertical accelerations, and pressure altitude) and other parameters (elevator and flap positions, engine torques, and fuel flow). In addition, an aural warning at predetermined stall margins is presented to the pilot through a voice synthesizer. Once the system was designed and installed in the aircraft, a flight-test program of less than 20 hrs was anticipated to determine the stall-speed software coefficients. These coefficients would then be inserted in the system's software and then test flown over a period of about 10 hr for the purpose of evaluation
The Structure of the DoAr 25 Circumstellar Disk
We present high spatial resolution (< 0.3" = 40\Sigma
\propto r^{-p}$ with p = 0.34, significantly less steep than a steady-state
accretion disk (p = 1) or the often adopted minimum mass solar nebula (p =
1.5). Even though the total mass of material is large (M_d = 0.10 M_sun), the
densities inferred in the inner disk for such a model may be too low to
facilitate any mode of planet formation. However, alternative models with
steeper density gradients (p = 1) can explain the observations equally well if
substantial grain growth in the planet formation region (r < 40 AU) has
occurred. We discuss these data in the context of such models with dust
properties that vary with radius and highlight their implications for
understanding disk evolution and the early stages of planet formation.Comment: ApJL in pres
Results of a remote multiplexer/digitizer unit accuracy and environmental study
A remote multiplexer/digitizer unit (RMDU), a part of the airborne integrated flight test data system, was subjected to an accuracy study. The study was designed to show the effects of temperature, altitude, and vibration on the RMDU. The RMDU was subjected to tests at temperatures from -54 C (-65 F) to 71 C (160 F), and the resulting data are presented here, along with a complete analysis of the effects. The methods and means used for obtaining correctable data and correcting the data are also discussed
AIFTDS stand-alone RMDU flight test report
The remote multiplexer/digitizer unit for the airborne integrated flight test data system was subjected to a flight test environment in order to study its dynamic response and that of its associated instrumentation circuitry during an actual flight test. The shielding schemes and instrumentation used are described and the data obtained are analyzed
The Multiple Young Stellar Objects of HBC 515: An X-ray and Millimeter-wave Imaging Study in (Pre-main Sequence) Diversity
We present Chandra X-ray Observatory and Submillimeter Array (SMA) imaging of
HBC 515, a system consisting of multiple young stellar objects (YSOs). The five
members of HBC 515 represent a remarkably diverse array of YSOs, ranging from
the low-mass Class I/II protostar HBC 515B, through Class II and transition
disk objects (HBC 515D and C, respectively), to the "diskless", intermediate-
mass, pre-main sequence binary HBC 515A. Our Chandra/ACIS imaging establishes
that all five components are X-ray sources, with HBC 515A - a
subarcsecond-separation binary that is partially resolved by Chandra - being
the dominant X-ray source. We detect an X-ray flare associated with HBC 515B.
In the SMA imaging, HBC 515B is detected as a strong 1.3 mm continuum emission
source; a second, weaker mm continuum source is coincident with the position of
the transition disk object HBC 515C. These results strongly support the
protostellar nature of HBC 515B, and firmly establish HBC 515A as a member of
the rare class of relatively massive, X-ray luminous "weak-lined T Tauri stars"
that are binaries and have shed their disks at very early stages of pre-MS
evolution. The coexistence of two such disparate objects within a single,
presumably coeval multiple YSO system highlights the influence of pre- MS star
mass, binarity, and X-ray luminosity in regulating the lifetimes of
circumstellar, planet-forming disks and the timescales of star-disk
interactions.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A; 11 pages, 5 figure
VLA Imaging of the Disk Surrounding the Nearby Young Star TW Hya
The TW Hya system is perhaps the closest analog to the early solar nebula. We
have used the Very Large Array to image TW Hya at wavelengths of 7mm and 3.6 cm
with resolutions 0.1 arcseconds (about 5 AU) and 1.0 arcseconds (about 50 AU),
respectively. The 7mm emission is extended and appears dominated by a dusty
disk of radius larger than 50 AU surrounding the star. The 3.6 cm emission is
unresolved and likely arises from an ionized wind or gyrosynchrotron activity.
The dust spectrum and spatially resolved 7mm images of the TW Hya disk are
fitted by a simple model with temperature and surface density described by
radial power laws, and . These
properties are consistent with an irradiated gaseous accretion disk of mass
with an accretion rate and viscosity parameter . The estimates of
mass and mass accretion rates are uncertain as the gas-to-dust ratio in the TW
Hya disk may have evolved from the standard interstellar value.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figures, accepted by ApJ Letter
The effect of local optically thick regions in the long-wave emission of young circumstellar disks
Multi-wavelength observations of protoplanetary disks in the sub-millimeter
continuum have measured spectral indices values which are significantly lower
than what is found in the diffuse interstellar medium. Under the assumption
that mm-wave emission of disks is mostly optically thin, these data have been
generally interpreted as evidence for the presence of mm/cm-sized pebbles in
the disk outer regions. In this work we investigate the effect of possible
local optically thick regions on the mm-wave emission of protoplanetary disks
without mm/cm-sized grains. A significant local increase of the optical depth
in the disk can be caused by the concentration of solid particles, as predicted
to result from a variety of proposed physical mechanisms. We calculate the
filling factors and implied overdensities these optically thick regions would
need to significantly affect the millimeter fluxes of disks, and we discuss
their plausibility. We find that optically thick regions characterized by
relatively small filling factors can reproduce the mm-data of young disks
without requesting emission from mm/cm-sized pebbles. However, these optically
thick regions require dust overdensities much larger than what predicted by any
of the physical processes proposed in the literature to drive the concentration
of solids. We find that only for the most massive disks it is possible and
plausible to imagine that the presence of optically thick regions in the disk
is responsible for the low measured values of the mm spectral index. For the
majority of the disk population, optically thin emission from a population of
large mm-sized grains remains the most plausible explanation. The results of
this analysis further strengthen the scenario for which the measured low
spectral indices of protoplanetary disks at mm wavelengths are due to the
presence of large mm/cm-sized pebbles in the disk outer regions.Comment: 13 pages, 2 figures, A&A in pres
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