3,388 research outputs found
Development in helicopter tail boom strake applications in the US
The use of a strake or spoiler on a helicopter tail boom to beneficially change helicopter tail boom air loads was suggested in the United States in 1975. The anticipated benefits were a change of tail boom loads to reduce required tail rotor thrust and power and improve directional control. High tail boom air loads experienced by the YAH-64 and described in 1978 led to a wind tunnel investigation of the usefullness of strakes in altering such loads on the AH-64, UH-60, and UH-1 helicopters. The wind tunnel tests of 2-D cross sections of the tail boom of each demonstrated that a strake or strakes would be effective. Several limited test programs with the U.S. Army's OH-58A, AH-64, and UH-60A were conducted which showed the effects of strakes were modest for those helicopters. The most recent flight test program, with a Bell 204B, disclosed that for the 204B the tail boom strake or strakes would provide more than a modest improvement in directional control and reduction in tail rotor power
Specification for a Program for an Interative Aeroelastic Solution (PIAS)
An engineering and software specification which was written for a computer program to calculate aeroelastic structural loads including the effects of nonlinear aerodynamics is presented. The procedure used in the program for an iterative aeroelastic solution (PIAS) is to alternately execute two computer codes: one to calculate aerodynamic loads for a specific wing shape, and another to calculate the deflected shape caused by this loading. A significant advantage to the design of PIAS is that the initial aerodynamic module can be replaced with others. The leading edge vortex (LEV) program is used as the aerodynamic module in PIAS. This provides the capability to calculate aeroelastic loads, including the effects of a separation induced leading edge vortex. The finite element method available in ATLAS Integrated structural analysis and design system is used to determine the deflected wing shape for the applied aerodynamics and inertia loads. The data management capabilities in ATLAS are used by the execution control monitor (ECM) of PIAS to control the solution process
Critical phenomena in ferromagnetic antidot lattices
In this paper a quantitative theoretical formulation of the critical behavior of soft mode frequencies as a function of an applied magnetic field in two-dimensional Permalloy square antidot lattices in the nanometric range is given according to micromagnetic simulations and simple analytical calculations. The degree of softening of the two lowest-frequency modes, namely the edge mode and the fundamental mode, corresponding to the field interval around the critical magnetic field, can be expressed via numerical exponents. For the antidot lattices studied we have found that: a) the ratio between the critical magnetic field and the in-plane geometric aspect ratio and (b) the ratio between the numerical exponents of the frequency power laws of the fundamental mode and of the edge mode do not depend on the geometry. The above definitions could be extended to other types of in-plane magnetized periodic magnetic systems exhibiting soft-mode dynamics and a fourfold anisotropy
Coupling and induced depinning of magnetic domain walls in adjacent spin valve nanotracks
The magnetostatic interaction between magnetic domain walls (DWs) in adjacent
nanotracks has been shown to produce strong inter-DW coupling and mutual
pinning. In this paper, we have used electrical measurements of adjacent
spin-valve nanotracks to follow the positions of interacting DWs. We show that
the magnetostatic interaction between DWs causes not only mutual pinning, as
observed till now, but that a travelling DW can also induce the depinning of
DWs in near-by tracks. These effects may have great implications for some
proposed high density magnetic devices (e.g. racetrack memory, DW logic
circuits, or DW-based MRAM).Comment: The following article has been accepted by the Journal of Applied
Physic
No planet for HD 166435
The G0V star HD166435 has been observed by the fiber-fed spectrograph ELODIE
as one of the targets in the large extra-solar planet survey that we are
conducting at the Observatory of Haute-Provence. We detected coherent,
low-amplitude, radial-velocity variations with a period of 3.7987days,
suggesting a possible close-in planetary companion. Subsequently, we initiated
a series of high-precision photometric observations to search for possible
planetary transits and an additional series of CaII H and K observations to
measure the level of surface magnetic activity and to look for possible
rotational modulation. Surprisingly, we found the star to be photometrically
variable and magnetically active. A detailed study of the phase stability of
the radial-velocity signal revealed that the radial-velocity variability
remains coherent only for durations of about 30days. Analysis of the time
variation of the spectroscopic line profiles using line bisectors revealed a
correlation between radial velocity and line-bisector orientation. All of these
observations, along with a one-quarter cycle phase shift between the
photometric and the radial-velocity variationss, are well explained by the
presence of dark photospheric spots on HD166435. We conclude that the
radial-velocity variations are not due to gravitational interaction with an
orbiting planet but, instead, originate from line-profile changes stemming from
star spots on the surface of the star. The quasi-coherence of the
radial-velocity signal over more than two years, which allowed a fair fit with
a binary model, makes the stability of this star unusual among other active
stars. It suggests a stable magnetic field orientation where spots are always
generated at about the same location on the surface of the star.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures, Accepted for publication in A&
Bandpass Dependence of X-ray Temperatures in Galaxy Clusters
We explore the band dependence of the inferred X-ray temperature of the
intracluster medium (ICM) for 192 well-observed galaxy clusters selected from
the Chandra Data Archive. If the hot ICM is nearly isothermal in the projected
region of interest, the X-ray temperature inferred from a broad-band (0.7-7.0
keV) spectrum should be identical to the X-ray temperature inferred from a
hard-band (2.0-7.0 keV) spectrum. However, if unresolved cool lumps of gas are
contributing soft X-ray emission, the temperature of a best-fit
single-component thermal model will be cooler for the broad-band spectrum than
for the hard-band spectrum. Using this difference as a diagnostic, the ratio of
best-fitting hard-band and broad-band temperatures may indicate the presence of
cooler gas even when the X-ray spectrum itself may not have sufficient
signal-to-noise to resolve multiple temperature components. To test this
possible diagnostic, we extract X-ray spectra from core-excised annular regions
for each cluster in our archival sample. We compare the X-ray temperatures
inferred from single-temperature fits when the energy range of the fit is
0.7-7.0 keV (broad) and when the energy range is 2.0/(1+z)-7.0 keV (hard). We
find that the hard-band temperature is significantly higher, on average, than
the broad-band temperature. Upon further exploration, we find this temperature
ratio is enhanced preferentially for clusters which are known merging systems.
In addition, cool-core clusters tend to have best-fit hard-band temperatures
that are in closer agreement with their best-fit broad-band temperatures. We
show, using simulated spectra, that this diagnostic is sensitive to secondary
cool components (TX = 0.5-3.0 keV) with emission measures >10-30% of the
primary hot component.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
Production of Secondary Organic Aerosol During Aging of Biomass Burning Smoke From Fresh Fuels and Its Relationship to VOC Precursors
After smoke from burning biomass is emitted into the atmosphere, chemical and physical processes change the composition and amount of organic aerosol present in the aged, diluted plume. During the fourth Fire Lab at Missoula Experiment, we performed smog-chamber experiments to investigate formation of secondary organic aerosol (SOA) and multiphase oxidation of primary organic aerosol (POA). We simulated atmospheric aging of diluted smoke from a variety of biomass fuels while measuring particle composition using high-resolution aerosol mass spectrometry. We quantified SOA formation using a tracer ion for low-volatility POA as a reference standard (akin to a naturally occurring internal standard). These smoke aging experiments revealed variable organic aerosol (OA) enhancements, even for smoke from similar fuels and aging mechanisms. This variable OA enhancement correlated well with measured differences in the amounts of emitted volatile organic compounds (VOCs) that could subsequently be oxidized to form SOA. For some aging experiments, we were able to predict the SOA production to within a factor of 2 using a fuel-specific VOC emission inventory that was scaled by burn-specific toluene measurements. For fires of coniferous fuels that were dominated by needle burning, volatile biogenic compounds were the dominant precursor class. For wiregrass fires, furans were the dominant SOA precursors. We used a POA tracer ion to calculate the amount of mass lost due to gas-phase oxidation and subsequent volatilization of semivolatile POA. Less than 5% of the POA mass was lost via multiphase oxidation-driven evaporation during up to 2 hr of equivalent atmospheric oxidation
Can we use medical examiners' records for suicide surveillance and prevention research in Nova Scotia?
Introduction: Medical examiners' records can contribute to our understanding of the extent of suicide in a population, as well as associated sociodemographic and other factors
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