7,848 research outputs found
A flight investigation of simulated data link communications during single-pilot IFR flight
A Flight Data Console (FDC) was developed to allow simulation of a digital communications link to replace the current voice communication system used in air traffic control (ATC). The voice system requires manipulation of radio equipment, read-back of clearances, and mental storage of critical information items, all contributing to high workload, particularly during single-pilot operations. This was an inflight study to determine how a digital communications system might reduce cockpit workload, improve flight proficiency, and be accepted by general aviation pilots. Results show that instrument flight, including approach and landing, can be accomplished quite effectively using a digital data link system for ATC communications. All pilots expressed a need for a back-up voice channel. When included, this channel was used sparingly and principally to confirm any item of information about which there might be uncertainty
A flight investigation of simulated data-link communications during single-pilot IFR flight. Volume 1: Experimental design and initial test
A Flight Data Console simulation of a digital communication link to replace the current voice communication system used in air traffic control (ATC) was developed. The study determined how a digital communications system reduces cockpit workload, improve, flight proficiency, and is acceptable to general aviation pilots. It is shown that instrument flight, including approach and landing, can be accomplished by using a digital data link system for ATC communication
The Caustic Ring Model of the Milky Way Halo
We present a proposal for the full phase space distribution of the Milky Way
halo. The model is axially and reflection symmetric and its time evolution is
self-similar. It describes the halo as a set of discrete dark matter flows with
stated densities and velocity vectors everywhere. We first discuss the general
conditions under which the time evolution of a cold collisionless
self-gravitating fluid is self-similar, and show that symmetry is not necessary
for self-similarity. When spherical symmetry is imposed, the model is the same
as described by Fillmore and Goldreich, and by Bertschinger, twenty-three years
ago. The spherically symmetric model depends on one dimensionless parameter
and two dimensionful parameters. We set = 0.3, a value
consistent with the slope of the power spectrum of density perturbations on
galactic scales. The dimensionful parameters are determined by the Galactic
rotation velocity (220 km/s) at the position of the Sun and by the age of the
Galaxy (13.7 Gyr). The properties of the outer caustics are derived in the
spherically symmetric model. The structure of the inner halo depends on the
angular momentum distribution of the dark matter particles. We assume that
distribution to be axial and reflection symmetric, and dominated by net overall
rotation. The inner caustics are rings whose radii are determined in terms of a
single additional parameter . We summarize the observational
evidence in support of the model. The evidence is consistent with
= 0.18 in Concordance Cosmology, equivalent to = 0.26 in
Einstein - de Sitter cosmology. We give formulas to estimate the flow densities
and velocity vectors anywhere in the Milky Way halo. The properties of the
first forty flows at the location of the Earth are listed.Comment: 35 pages, 6 figure
Early out-of-equilibrium beam-plasma evolution
We solve analytically the out-of-equilibrium initial stage that follows the
injection of a radially finite electron beam into a plasma at rest and test it
against particle-in-cell simulations. For initial large beam edge gradients and
not too large beam radius, compared to the electron skin depth, the electron
beam is shown to evolve into a ring structure. For low enough transverse
temperatures, the filamentation instability eventually proceeds and saturates
when transverse isotropy is reached. The analysis accounts for the variety of
very recent experimental beam transverse observations.Comment: to appear in Phys. Rev. Letter
The Rotating Quantum Thermal Distribution
We show that the rigidly rotating quantum thermal distribution on flat
space-time suffers from a global pathology which can be cured by introducing a
cylindrical mirror if and only if it has a radius smaller than that of the
speed-of-light cylinder. When this condition is met, we demonstrate numerically
that the renormalized expectation value of the energy-momentum stress tensor
corresponds to a rigidly rotating thermal bath up to a finite correction except
on the mirror where there are the usual Casimir divergences.Comment: 8 pages, 2 PostScript figure
Nearly universal crossing point of the specific heat curves of Hubbard models
A nearly universal feature of the specific heat curves C(T,U) vs. T for
different U of a general class of Hubbard models is observed. That is, the
value C_+ of the specific heat curves at their high-temperature crossing point
T_+ is almost independent of lattice structure and spatial dimension d, with
C_+/k_B \approx 0.34. This surprising feature is explained within second order
perturbation theory in U by identifying two small parameters controlling the
value of C_+: the integral over the deviation of the density of states
N(\epsilon) from a constant value, characterized by \delta N=\int d\epsilon
|N(\epsilon)-1/2|, and the inverse dimension, 1/d.Comment: Revtex, 9 pages, 6 figure
Factors Affecting the Corporate Decision-Making Process of Air Transport Manufacturers
Fuel economy is a pivotal question influencing the future sale and utilization of commercial aircraft. The NASA Aircraft Energy Efficiency (ACEE) Program Office has a program intended to accelerate the readiness of advanced technologies for energy efficient aircraft. Because the decision to develop a new airframe or engine is a major financial hazard for manufacturers, it is important to know what factors influence the decision making process. A method is described for identifying and ranking individuals and organizations involved at each stage of commercial air transport development, and the barriers that must be overcome in adopting new technologies
Cosmic Ray Propagation: Nonlinear Diffusion Parallel and Perpendicular to Mean Magnetic Field
We consider the propagation of cosmic rays in turbulent magnetic fields. We
use the models of magnetohydrodynamic turbulence that were tested in numerical
simulations, in which the turbulence is injected on large scale and cascades to
small scales. Our attention is focused on the models of the strong turbulence,
but we also briefly discuss the effects that the weak turbulence and the slab
Alfv\'enic perturbations can have. The latter are likely to emerge as a result
of instabilities with in the cosmic ray fluid itself, e.g., beaming and
gyroresonance instabilities of cosmic rays. To describe the interaction of
cosmic rays with magnetic perturbations we develop a non-linear formalism that
extends the ordinary Quasi-Linear Theory (QLT) that is routinely used for the
purpose. This allows us to avoid the usual problem of 90 degree scattering and
enable our computation of the mean free path of cosmic rays. We apply the
formalism to the cosmic ray propagation in the galactic halo and in the Warm
Ionized medium (WIM). In addition, we address the issue of the transport of
cosmic rays perpendicular to the mean magnetic field and show that the issue of
cosmic ray subdiffusion (i.e., propagation with retracing the trajectories
backwards, which slows down the diffusion) is only important for restricted
cases when the ambient turbulence is far from what numerical simulations
suggest to us. As a result, this work provides formalism that can be applied
for calculating cosmic ray propagation in a wide variety of circumstances.Comment: minor changes, accepted to Ap
Decentralised Learning MACs for Collision-free Access in WLANs
By combining the features of CSMA and TDMA, fully decentralised WLAN MAC
schemes have recently been proposed that converge to collision-free schedules.
In this paper we describe a MAC with optimal long-run throughput that is almost
decentralised. We then design two \changed{schemes} that are practically
realisable, decentralised approximations of this optimal scheme and operate
with different amounts of sensing information. We achieve this by (1)
introducing learning algorithms that can substantially speed up convergence to
collision free operation; (2) developing a decentralised schedule length
adaptation scheme that provides long-run fair (uniform) access to the medium
while maintaining collision-free access for arbitrary numbers of stations
Granular Elasticity without the Coulomb Condition
An self-contained elastic theory is derived which accounts both for
mechanical yield and shear-induced volume dilatancy. Its two essential
ingredients are thermodynamic instability and the dependence of the elastic
moduli on compression.Comment: 4pages, 2 figure
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