938 research outputs found
Design study for a magnetically supported reaction wheel
Results are described of a study program in which the characteristics of a magnetically supported reaction wheel are defined. Tradeoff analyses are presented for the principal components, which are then combined in several reaction wheel design concepts. A preliminary layout of the preferred configuration is presented along with calculated design and performance parameters. Recommendations are made for a prototype development program
Particle acceleration by circularly and elliptically polarised dispersive Alfven waves in a transversely inhomogeneous plasma in the inertial and kinetic regimes
Dispersive Alfven waves (DAWs) offer, an alternative to magnetic
reconnection, opportunity to accelerate solar flare particles. We study the
effect of DAW polarisation, L-, R-, circular and elliptical, in different
regimes inertial and kinetic on the efficiency of particle acceleration. We use
2.5D PIC simulations to study how particles are accelerated when DAW, triggered
by a solar flare, propagates in transversely inhomogeneous plasma that mimics
solar coronal loop. (i) In inertial regime, fraction of accelerated electrons
(along the magnetic field), in density gradient regions is ~20% by the time
when DAW develops 3 wavelengths and is increasing to ~30% by the time DAW
develops 13 wavelengths. In all considered cases ions are heated in transverse
to the magnetic field direction and fraction of the heated particles is ~35%.
(ii) The case of R-circular, L- and R- elliptical polarisation DAWs, with the
electric field in the non-ignorable transverse direction exceeding several
times that of in the ignorable direction, produce more pronounced parallel
electron beams and transverse ion beams in the ignorable direction. In the
inertial regime such polarisations yield the fraction of accelerated electrons
~20%. In the kinetic regime this increases to ~35%. (iii) The parallel electric
field that is generated in the density inhomogeneity regions is independent of
m_i/m_e and exceeds the Dreicer value by 8 orders of magnitude. (iv) Electron
beam velocity has the phase velocity of the DAW. Thus electron acceleration is
via Landau damping of DAWs. For the Alfven speeds of 0.3c the considered
mechanism can accelerate electrons to energies circa 20 keV. (v) The increase
of mass ratio from m_i/m_e=16 to 73.44 increases the fraction of accelerated
electrons from 20% to 30-35% (depending on DAW polarisation). For the mass
ratio m_i/m_e=1836 the fraction of accelerated electrons would be >35%.Comment: Final accepted version. To appear in Physics of Plasmas, volume 18,
issue 9 (September 2011
A Semicoarsening Multigrid Algorithm for SIMD Machines
A semicoarsening multigrid algorithm suitable for use on single instruction multiple data (SIMD) architectures has been implemented on the CM-2. The method performs well for strongly anisotropic problems and for problems with coefficients jumping by orders of magnitude across internal interfaces. The parallel efficiency of this method is analyzed, and its actual performance is compared with its performance on some other machines, both parallel and nonparallel
AFRICAN AMERICAN MEN\u27S PROSTATE CANCER KNOWLEDGE AND SELF-EFFICACY FOR INFORMED DECISION-MAKING: A MIXED METHODS STUDY
A mixed methods study was conducted whereby, the quantitative portion has a randomized control design, in an urban Delaware community to examine the effectiveness of an educational intervention, which included the testimony of an African American (AA) prostate cancer survivor on AA men’s (n=98) prostate cancer knowledge and self-efficacy for informed decision making. Guided by Bandura’s Social Cognitive theory, participants’ prostate cancer knowledge measured by PROCASE and for self-efficacy measured by the Prostate Cancer Screening Self-efficacy scale, were evaluated before and following viewing of the American Cancer Society’s prostate cancer video. Participants randomized to the intervention completed evaluations after the intervention. A sample (n=10) from each group participated in their respective focus groups. A control focus group (those who neither watched video or heard speaker) was also evaluated. The MANCOVA, using Pillai’s trace, demonstrated a significant effect of the intervention on knowledge and self-efficacy posttest scores, (V= .28, F6,82 = 4.937, p= .000). Combining a prostate cancer survivor’s testimonial with an educational video increases knowledge and self-efficacy among AA men in this urban community
Quantifying fusion born ion populations in magnetically confined plasmas using ion cyclotron emission
Ion cyclotron emission (ICE) offers unique promise as a diagnostic of the
fusion born alpha-particle population in magnetically confined plasmas.
Pioneering observations from JET and TFTR found that ICE intensity
scales approximately linearly with the measured neutron flux from fusion
reactions, and with the inferred concentration, , of fusion-born
alpha-particles confined within the plasma. We present fully nonlinear
self-consistent kinetic simulations that reproduce this scaling for the first
time. This resolves a longstanding question in the physics of fusion
alpha-particle confinement and stability in MCF plasmas. It confirms the
magnetoacoustic cyclotron instability (MCI) as the likely emission mechanism
and greatly strengthens the basis for diagnostic exploitation of ICE in future
burning plasmas
Discrimination and visualization of ELM types based on a probabilistic description of inter-ELM waiting times
Discrimination and visualization of different observed classes of edge-localized plasma instabilities (ELMs), using advanced data analysis techniques has been considered. An automated ELM type classifier which effectively incorporates measurement uncertainties is developed herein and applied to the discrimination of type I and type III ELMs in a set of carbon-wall JET plasmas. The approach involves constructing probability density functions (PDFs) for inter-ELM waiting times and global plasma parameters and then utilizing an effective similarity measure for comparing distributions: the Rao geodesic distance (GD). It is demonstrated that complete probability distributions of plasma parameters contain significantly more information than the measurement values alone, enabling effective discrimination of ELM type
X-ray diffraction from shock-loaded polycrystals
X-ray diffraction was demonstrated from shock-compressed polycrystalline
metal on nanosecond time scales. Laser ablation was used to induce shock waves
in polycrystalline foils of Be, 25 to 125 microns thick. A second laser pulse
was used to generate a plasma x-ray source by irradiation of a Ti foil. The
x-ray source was collimated to produce a beam of controllable diameter, and the
beam was directed at the Be sample. X-rays were diffracted from the sample, and
detected using films and x-ray streak cameras. The diffraction angle was
observed to change with shock pressure. The diffraction angles were consistent
with the uniaxial (elastic) and isotropic (plastic) compressions expected for
the loading conditions used. Polycrystalline diffraction will be used to
measure the response of the crystal lattice to high shock pressures and through
phase changes
Transitions to improved confinement regimes induced by changes in heating in zero-dimensional models for tokamak plasmas
It is shown that rapid substantial changes in heating rate can induce
transitions to improved energy confinement regimes in zero-dimensional models
for tokamak plasma phenomenology. We examine for the first time the effect of
step changes in heating rate in the models of E-J.Kim and P.H.Diamond,
Phys.Rev.Lett. 90, 185006 (2003) and M.A.Malkov and P.H.Diamond, Phys.Plasmas
16, 012504 (2009) which nonlinearly couple the evolving temperature gradient,
micro-turbulence and a mesoscale flow; and in the extension of H.Zhu,
S.C.Chapman and R.O.Dendy, Phys.Plasmas 20, 042302 (2013), which couples to a
second mesoscale flow component. The temperature gradient rises, as does the
confinement time defined by analogy with the fusion context, while
micro-turbulence is suppressed. This outcome is robust against variation of
heating rise time and against introduction of an additional variable into the
model. It is also demonstrated that oscillating changes in heating rate can
drive the level of micro-turbulence through a period-doubling path to chaos,
where the amplitude of the oscillatory component of the heating rate is the
control parameter.Comment: 8 pages, 14 figure
- …