3,311 research outputs found
Investigating the potential for using a simple water reaction turbine for power production from low head hydro resources
In this analysis the simple reaction water turbine known as Barkerâs Mill is revisited. The major geometrical and operational parameters have been identified and, using principles of conservation of mass, momentum and energy, the governing equations have been developed for the ideal case of there being no frictional losses. The solutions of the resulting equations are offered in a non-dimensional form. It is shown that the maximum torque produced by the machine is developed when the turbine is stationary. At this point the net output power is zero. As the load torque is decreased the turbine rotates and power is produced. Furthermore, because of a centrifugal pumping effect, the mass flow rate of water through the turbine increases during acceleration. Further decrease in the load torque is accompanied by increases of speed, output power, water mass flow rate and efficiency. It is shown that when the load torque is reduced towards half the value of the torque at the stationary condition, water mass flow rate, rotational speed and output power tend towards infinity. Under this condition the efficiency of the machine approaches unity. The non-dimensional characteristics of the idealized turbine are used to investigate the general characteristics of the machine and to explore its application for production of power from water reservoirs with low heads. Theoretical analysis of a simple reaction turbine is presented including consideration of the fluid frictional losses for a practical situation. A practical turbine will never run away towards infinite speed and the maximum power and efficiency of such a turbine will depend on the fluid frictional losses. Here a new factor is defined, representing the overall fluid frictional losses within the turbine. Finally this paper presents briefly the experimental performance results for two simple reaction water turbine prototypes. The two turbine prototypes under investigation have rotor diameters Ă0.24 m and Ă0.12 m respectively. The two turbine models were tested under supply heads ranging from 1 m to 4 m. The simple reaction water turbine can operate under very low hydro-static head with high energy conversion efficiency. This type of turbine exhibits prominent self-pumping ability at high rotational speeds. Under low head to achieve high rotational speeds the turbine diameter should be very small and this limits the volumetric capacity and hence the power generation capacity of such a turbine. Consequently the practical applications of this turbine would be limited to micro-hydro power generation. The split pipe design of the reaction turbine tested is easy to manufacture and it has been shown to have overall energy conversion efficiency of approximately 50% even under low heads
Isolated Horizon, Killing Horizon and Event Horizon
We consider space-times which in addition to admitting an isolated horizon
also admit Killing horizons with or without an event horizon. We show that an
isolated horizon is a Killing horizon provided either (1) it admits a
stationary neighbourhood or (2) it admits a neighbourhood with two independent,
commuting Killing vectors. A Killing horizon is always an isolated horizon. For
the case when an event horizon is definable, all conceivable relative locations
of isolated horizon and event horizons are possible. Corresponding conditions
are given.Comment: 14 pages, Latex, no figures. Some arguments tightened. To appear in
Class. Quant. Gra
Genericness of inflation in isotropic loop quantum cosmology
Non-perturbative corrections from loop quantum cosmology (LQC) to the scalar
matter sector is already known to imply inflation. We prove that the LQC
modified scalar field generates exponential inflation in the small scale factor
regime, for all positive definite potentials, independent of initial conditions
and independent of ambiguity parameters. For positive semi-definite potentials
it is always possible to choose, without fine tuning, a value of one of the
ambiguity parameters such that exponential inflation results, provided zeros of
the potential are approached at most as a power law in the scale factor. In
conjunction with generic occurrence of bounce at small volumes, particle
horizon is absent thus eliminating the horizon problem of the standard Big Bang
model.Comment: 4 pages, revtex4, one figure. Only e-print archive numbers correctedi
in the second version. Reference added in the 3rd version. Final version to
appear in Phys. Rev. Lett. Explanations improve
Exploiting structure in piecewise affine identification of LFT systems
Identification of interconnected systems is a challenging problem in which it is crucial to exploit the available knowledge about the interconnection structure. In this paper, identification of discrete-time nonlinear systems composed by interconnected linear
and nonlinear systems, is addressed. An iterative identification procedure is proposed, which alternates the estimation of the linear and the nonlinear components. Standard identification techniques are applied to the linear subsystem, whereas recently developed piecewise affine (PWA) identification techniques are employed for modelling the nonlinearity. A numerical
example analyzes the benefits of the proposed structure-exploiting identification algorithm compared to applying black-box PWA identification techniques to the overall system
A Symmetric Generalization of Linear B\"acklund Transformation associated with the Hirota Bilinear Difference Equation
The Hirota bilinear difference equation is generalized to discrete space of
arbitrary dimension. Solutions to the nonlinear difference equations can be
obtained via B\"acklund transformation of the corresponding linear problems.Comment: Latex, 12 pages, 1 figur
On obtaining classical mechanics from quantum mechanics
Constructing a classical mechanical system associated with a given quantum
mechanical one, entails construction of a classical phase space and a
corresponding Hamiltonian function from the available quantum structures and a
notion of coarser observations. The Hilbert space of any quantum mechanical
system naturally has the structure of an infinite dimensional symplectic
manifold (`quantum phase space'). There is also a systematic, quotienting
procedure which imparts a bundle structure to the quantum phase space and
extracts a classical phase space as the base space. This works straight
forwardly when the Hilbert space carries weakly continuous representation of
the Heisenberg group and recovers the linear classical phase space
. We report on how the procedure also allows
extraction of non-linear classical phase spaces and illustrate it for Hilbert
spaces being finite dimensional (spin-j systems), infinite dimensional but
separable (particle on a circle) and infinite dimensional but non-separable
(Polymer quantization). To construct a corresponding classical dynamics, one
needs to choose a suitable section and identify an effective Hamiltonian. The
effective dynamics mirrors the quantum dynamics provided the section satisfies
conditions of semiclassicality and tangentiality.Comment: revtex4, 24 pages, no figures. In the version 2 certain technical
errors in section I-B are corrected, the part on WKB (and section II-B) is
removed, discussion of dynamics and semiclassicality is extended and
references are added. Accepted for publication on Classical and Quantum
Gravit
Vertex Operators for Deformed Virasoro Algebra
Vertex operators for the deformed Virasoro algebra are defined, their bosonic
representation is constructed and difference equation for the simplest vertex
operators is described.Comment: stylistic errors correcte
Reflectionless analytic difference operators I. algebraic framework
We introduce and study a class of analytic difference operators admitting
reflectionless eigenfunctions. Our construction of the class is patterned after
the Inverse Scattering Transform for the reflectionless self-adjoint
Schr\"odinger and Jacobi operators corresponding to KdV and Toda lattice
solitons
Classical Many-particle Clusters in Two Dimensions
We report on a study of a classical, finite system of confined particles in
two dimensions with a two-body repulsive interaction. We first develop a simple
analytical method to obtain equilibrium configurations and energies for few
particles. When the confinement is harmonic, we prove that the first transition
from a single shell occurs when the number of particles changes from five to
six. The shell structure in the case of an arbitrary number of particles is
shown to be independent of the strength of the interaction but dependent only
on its functional form. It is also independent of the magnetic field strength
when included. We further study the effect of the functional form of the
confinement potential on the shell structure. Finally we report some
interesting results when a three-body interaction is included, albeit in a
particular model.Comment: Minor corrections, a few references added. To appear in J. Phys:
Condensed Matte
Managing Libraries and Information with Technology
The influx of an ever-explosive information in library and
information centres, through varied information sources, and in a
mixed media format, has drastically changed the patterns of
information services and its administration.
This paper explores the possible interfaces of library and
information science with sophisticated information technology
(IT), which helps elicit code, store, to finally disseminate and
manage information in various library infrastructures effectively.
The conclusion follows the observations entailing from today's IT-
Library synergy
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