249 research outputs found
Electrical conductivity of carbonaceous chondrites and electric heating of meteorite parent bodies
The electrical conductivity of samples of the Murchison and Allende carbonaceous chondrites is 4 to 6 magnitudes greater than rock forming minerals such as Olivine up to 700 C. The remarkably high electrical conductivity of these meteorites is attributed to carbon at grain boundaries. The environment in the wake of the space station can be exploited to produce conditions which will allow pyrolysis of carbonaceous chondrites. An experimental package consisting of a one square meter shield attached to a 15 cm diameter by 40 cm long furnace and tied to a conductance bridge, furnace controller, and digital voltmeter inside the space station via umbilical cable could make the required measurements. Since heating rates as low as 0.1 C/hour are required to study kinetics of the pyrolysis reations which are the cause of the high conductivity of the carbonaceous chondrites, experimental times up to 3 months will be needed
YF-12 Lockalloy ventral fin program, volume 1
Results are presented of the YF-12 Lockalloy Ventral Fin Program which was carried out by Lockheed Aircraft Corporation - Advanced Development Projects for the joint NASA/USAF YF-12 Project. The primary purpose of the program was to redesign and fabricate the ventral fin of the YF-12 research airplane (to reduce flutter) using Lockalloy, and alloy of beryllium and aluminum, as a major structural material. A secondary purpose, was to make a material characterization study (thermodynamic properties, corrosion; fatigue tests, mechanical properties) of Lockalloy to validate the design of the ventral fin and expand the existing data base on this material. All significant information pertinent to the design and fabrication of the ventral fin is covered. Emphasis throughout is given to Lockalloy fabrication and machining techniques and attendant personnel safety precautions. Costs are also examined. Photographs of tested alloy specimens are shown along with the test equipment used
Report on opportunities and/or techniques for high-caliber experimental research (other) proposals for SSPEX
Brief discriptions of the following 13 experiments are included: ultrahigh vacuum petrology facility; artificial comet free flyer; artificial comet (tethered); cosmic dust detector; cosmic dust collector; dust collection using tethered satellites; artificial magnetosphere; microgravity petrological studies; slitless ultraviolet spectrometer; orbital determination and capture experiment (ODACE); high velocity sputtering of amorphous silicates; particle release experiments; and calibration of gamma and X-ray remote sensingprobes
Report on OTHER proposals for SSPEX
The only unifying factor among the experiments discussed is that they are all unique Opportunities and/or Techniques for High-caliber Experimental Research (OTHER). Thirteen of the experiments are briefly described
High-pressure mechanical properties of an Area 12, Nevada Test Site tuff
The mechanical properties of tuff from instrument hole UG3, tunnel U12e.06 at the Nevada Test Site have been investigated to 1400 MPa, The shear strength increases from about 5 MHa unconfined to 12 MPa at 300 MPa mean pressure. A brittle-ductile transition was indicated at about 250 MPa. In uniaxial strain, the sample loads to the vicinity of the failure envelope and then is parallel to that envelope up to the highest stresses, 420 MPa. Hydrostatic pressure of 1400 MPa produces about 9% volume compression and 1.3% permanent compaction in this apparently saturated tuff. (auth
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Electrical properties of SB-15D rocks at reservoir conditions
The electrical properties of reservoir rocks are important for many reasons including the establishment of a database for interpretation of borehole data and surface EM measurements and for the information that can be obtained regarding the physical and transport properties of the rock/water system. We have measured the electrical properties of several samples of geysers core at pressures up to 100 bars (confining pressure) and temperatures between 20 and 150{degrees}C. Two types of measurements have been made, those with separate pore pressure control and those without pore pressure control. 3 figs
YF-12 Lockalloy ventral fin program, volume 2
For abstract, see N76-23252
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Physical properties of preserved core from The Geysers Scientific Corehole, SB-15D
X-ray attenuation, electrical conductivity, and ultra-sonic velocity are reported for a segment of preserved core from SB-15D, 918 ft. X- ray tomography and ultrasonic measurements change as the core dries, providing information regarding handling and disturbance of the core. Electrical conductivity measurements at reservoir conditions indicate that pore fluid properties and pore microstructure control bulk conductivity. These data are useful for calibration and interpretation of field geophysical measurements
Solar Fusion Cross Sections
We review and analyze the available information for nuclear fusion cross
sections that are most important for solar energy generation and solar neutrino
production. We provide best values for the low-energy cross-section factors
and, wherever possible, estimates of the uncertainties. We also describe the
most important experiments and calculations that are required in order to
improve our knowledge of solar fusion rates.Comment: LaTeX file, 48 pages (figures not included). To appear in Rev. Mod.
Phys., 10/98. All authors now listed. Full postscript version with figures
available at http://www.sns.ias.edu/~jnb/Papers/Preprints/nuclearfusion.htm
Black Rap 2020 v.1 issue 2
https://publications.lakeforest.edu/black_rap/1001/thumbnail.jp
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