29,624 research outputs found
High temperature glass thermal control structure and coating
A high temperature stable and solar radiation stable thermal control coating is described which is useful either as such, applied directly to a member to be protected, or applied as a coating on a re-usable surface insulation (RSI). It has a base coat layer and an overlay glass layer. The base coat layer has a high emittance, and the overlay layer is formed from discrete, but sintered together glass particles to give the overlay layer a high scattering coefficient. The resulting two-layer space and thermal control coating has an absorptivity-to-emissivity ratio of less than or equal to 0.4 at room temperature, with an emittance of 0.8 at 1200 F. It is capable of exposure to either solar radiation or temperatures as high as 2000 F without significant degradation. When used as a coating on a silica substrate to give an RSI structure, the coatings of this invention show significantly less reduction in emittance after long term convective heating and less residual strain than prior art coatings for RSI structures
Higher order first integrals of motion in a gauge covariant Hamiltonian framework
The higher order symmetries are investigated in a covariant Hamiltonian
formulation. The covariant phase-space approach is extended to include the
presence of external gauge fields and scalar potentials. The special role of
the Killing-Yano tensors is pointed out. Some non-trivial examples involving
Runge-Lenz type conserved quantities are explicitly worked out.Comment: 13 pages, references added, accepted for publication in MPL
Reusable silica surface-insulation material
Material was specifically developed for manufacture of insulating tiles, but it can be molded into other shapes as required. Basic raw materials are high-purity silica fiber, fumed-silica powder, and reagent-grade starch. Only purest materials are used, and care must be taken to avoid contamination during processing
Spin dynamics for the Lebwohl-Lasher model
A spin dynamics algorithm, combining checkerboard updating and a rotation algorithm based on the local second-rank ordering field, is developed for the Lebwohl-Lasher model of liquid crystals. The method is shown to conserve energy well and to generate simulation averages that are consistent with those obtained by Monte Carlo simulation. However, care must be taken to avoid the undesirable effects of director rotation, and a method for doing this is proposed
Fibrous refractory composite insulation
A refractory composite insulating material was prepared from silica fibers and aluminosilicate fibers in a weight ratio ranging from 1:19 to 19:1, and about 0.5 to 30% boron oxide, based on the total fiber weight. The aluminosilicate fiber and boron oxide requirements may be satisfied by using aluminoborosilicate fibers and, in such instances, additional free boron oxide may be incorporated in the mix up to the 30% limit. Small quantities of refractory opacifiers, such as silicon carbide, may be also added. The composites just described are characterized by the absence of a nonfibrous matrix
Silica reusable surface insulation
A reusable silica surface insulation material is provided by bonding amorphous silica fibers with colloidal silica at an elevated temperature. The surface insulation is ordinarily manufactured in the form of blocks (i.e., tiles)
Reaction cured glass and glass coatings
The invention relates to reaction cured glass and glass coatings prepared by reacting a compound selected from the group consisting of silicon tetraboride, silicon hexaboride, other boron silicides, boron and mixtures with a reactive glass frit composed of a porous high silica borosilicate glass and boron oxide. The glassy composites of the present invention are useful as coatings on low density fibrous porous silica insulations used as heat shields and for articles such as reaction vessels that are subjected to high temperatures with rapid heating and cooling and that require resistance to temperature and repeated thermal shock at temperatures up to about 1482C (2700PF)
Equivalence of the Ehrenfest Theorem and the Fluid-rotor Model for Mixed Quantum/Classical Theory of Collisional Energy Transfer
The theory of two seemingly different quantum/classical approaches to collisional energy transfer and ro-vibrational energy flow is reviewed: a heuristic fluid-rotor method, introduced earlier to treat recombination reactions[M. Ivanov and D. Babikov, J. Chem. Phys.134, 144107 (Year: 2011)10.1063/1.3576103], and a more rigorous method based on the Ehrenfest theorem. It is shown analytically that for the case of a diatomic molecule + quencher these two methods are entirely equivalent. Notably, they both make use of the average moment of inertia computed as inverse of average of inverse of the distributed moment of inertia. Despite this equivalence, each of the two formulations has its own advantages, and is interesting on its own. Numerical results presented here illustrate energy and momentum conservation in the mixed quantum/classical approach and open opportunities for computationally affordable treatment of collisional energy transfer
Elastohydrodynamic study of actin filaments using fluorescence microscopy
We probed the bending of actin subject to external forcing and viscous drag.
Single actin filaments were moved perpendicular to their long axis in an
oscillatory way by means of an optically tweezed latex bead attached to one end
of the filaments. Shapes of these polymers were observed by epifluorescence
microscopy. They were found to be in agreement with predictions of semiflexible
polymer theory and slender-body hydrodynamics. A persistence length of m could be extracted.Comment: RevTex, 4 pages, 5 eps figs, submitted to PR
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