1,302 research outputs found
Energy Dissipation and Trapping of Particles Moving on a Rough Surface
We report an experimental, numerical and theoretical study of the motion of a
ball on a rough inclined surface. The control parameters are , the diameter
of the ball, , the inclination angle of the rough surface and ,
the initial kinetic energy. When the angle of inclination is larger than some
critical value, , the ball moves at a constant average
velocity which is independent of the initial conditions. For an angle , the balls are trapped after moving a certain distance. The
dependence of the travelled distances on , and . is
analysed. The existence of two kinds of mechanisms of dissipation is thus
brought to light. We find that for high initial velocities the friction force
is constant. As the velocity decreases below a certain threshold the friction
becomes viscous.Comment: 8 pages RevTeX, 12 Postscript figure
Stochastic Model for the Motion of a Particle on an Inclined Rough Plane and the Onset of Viscous Friction
Experiments on the motion of a particle on an inclined rough plane have
yielded some surprising results. For example, it was found that the frictional
force acting on the ball is viscous, {\it i.e.} proportional to the velocity
rather than the expected square of the velocity. It was also found that, for a
given inclination of the plane, the velocity of the ball scales as a power of
its radius. We present here a one dimensional stochastic model based on the
microscopic equations of motion of the ball, which exhibits the same behaviour
as the experiments. This model yields a mechanism for the origins of the
viscous friction force and the scaling of the velocity with the radius. It also
reproduces other aspects of the phase diagram of the motion which we will
discuss.Comment: 19 pages, latex, 11 postscript figures in separate uuencoded fil
Orbiting experiment for study of extended weightlessness Final report
Design, mission, and development of orbiting experiment to study extended weightlessness using monkeys and Apollo applications vehicl
Complexion-mediated martensitic phase transformation in Titanium
The most efficient way to tune microstructures and mechanical properties of metallic alloys lies in designing and using athermal phase transformations. Examples are shape memory alloys and high strength steels, which together stand for 1,500 million tons annual production. In these materials, martensite formation and mechanical twinning are tuned via composition adjustment for realizing complex microstructures and beneficial mechanical properties. Here we report a new phase transformation that has the potential to widen the application window of Ti alloys, the most important structural material in aerospace design, by nanostructuring them via complexion-mediated transformation. This is a reversible martensitic transformation mechanism that leads to a final nanolaminate structure of α″ (orthorhombic) martensite bounded with planar complexions of athermal ω (a–ω, hexagonal). Both phases are crystallographically related to the parent β (BCC) matrix. As expected from a planar complexion, the a–ω is stable only at the hetero-interface
Plug flow and the breakdown of Bagnold scaling in cohesive granular flows
Cohesive granular media flowing down an inclined plane are studied by
discrete element simulations. Previous work on cohesionless granular media
demonstrated that within the steady flow regime where gravitational energy is
balanced by dissipation arising from intergrain forces, the velocity profile in
the flow direction scales with depth in a manner consistent with the
predictions of Bagnold. Here we demonstrate that this Bagnold scaling does not
hold for the analogous steady-flows in cohesive granular media. We develop a
generalization of the Bagnold constitutive relation to account for our
observation and speculate as to the underlying physical mechanisms responsible
for the different constitutive laws for cohesive and noncohesive granular
media.Comment: 8 pages, 10 figure
Complexion-mediated martensitic phase transformation in Titanium
The most efficient way to tune microstructures and mechanical properties of metallic alloys lies in designing and using athermal phase transformations. Examples are shape memory alloys and high strength steels, which together stand for 1,500 million tons annual production. In these materials, martensite formation and mechanical twinning are tuned via composition adjustment for realizing complex microstructures and beneficial mechanical properties. Here we report a new phase transformation that has the potential to widen the application window of Ti alloys, the most important structural material in aerospace design, by nanostructuring them via complexion-mediated transformation. This is a reversible martensitic transformation mechanism that leads to a final nanolaminate structure of α″ (orthorhombic) martensite bounded with planar complexions of athermal ω (a–ω, hexagonal). Both phases are crystallographically related to the parent β (BCC) matrix. As expected from a planar complexion, the a–ω is stable only at the hetero-interface.European Commission. Framework Programme for Research and Innovation (FP7/2007–2013))/ERC Grant agreement 290998 'SmartMet’)Innovative Research Team in University (IRT13034)National Basic Research Program of China (973 Program) (2014CB644003)China. Ministry of Science and Technology. National Key Research and Development Program (2016YFB0701302)National Natural Science Foundation of China (51501145)National Natural Science Foundation of China (51320105014)National Natural Science Foundation of China (51621063
Instability of dilute granular flow on rough slope
We study numerically the stability of granular flow on a rough slope in
collisional flow regime in the two-dimension. We examine the density dependence
of the flowing behavior in low density region, and demonstrate that the
particle collisions stabilize the flow above a certain density in the parameter
region where a single particle shows an accelerated behavior. Within this
parameter regime, however, the uniform flow is only metastable and is shown to
be unstable against clustering when the particle density is not high enough.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figures, submitted to J. Phys. Soc. Jpn.; Fig. 2 replaced;
references added; comments added; misprints correcte
- …