220 research outputs found
Monolithic simulation of convection-coupled phase-change - verification and reproducibility
Phase interfaces in melting and solidification processes are strongly
affected by the presence of convection in the liquid. One way of modeling their
transient evolution is to couple an incompressible flow model to an energy
balance in enthalpy formulation. Two strong nonlinearities arise, which account
for the viscosity variation between phases and the latent heat of fusion at the
phase interface.
The resulting coupled system of PDE's can be solved by a single-domain
semi-phase-field, variable viscosity, finite element method with monolithic
system coupling and global Newton linearization. A robust computational model
for realistic phase-change regimes furthermore requires a flexible
implementation based on sophisticated mesh adaptivity. In this article, we
present first steps towards implementing such a computational model into a
simulation tool which we call Phaseflow.
Phaseflow utilizes the finite element software FEniCS, which includes a
dual-weighted residual method for goal-oriented adaptive mesh refinement.
Phaseflow is an open-source, dimension-independent implementation that, upon an
appropriate parameter choice, reduces to classical benchmark situations
including the lid-driven cavity and the Stefan problem. We present and discuss
numerical results for these, an octadecane PCM convection-coupled melting
benchmark, and a preliminary 3D convection-coupled melting example,
demonstrating the flexible implementation. Though being preliminary, the latter
is, to our knowledge, the first published 3D result for this method. In our
work, we especially emphasize reproducibility and provide an easy-to-use
portable software container using Docker.Comment: 20 pages, 8 figure
Preparation of self-healing acrylic latex coatings using novel oil-filled ethyl cellulose microcapsules
Novel oil-filled microcapsules were prepared by introducing a phase separation method using ethyl cellulose as a shell-forming containing rapeseed oil. The prepared oil-filled microcapsules were evaluated by optical microscopy, scanning electron microscopy and particle size analysis. Results showed that spherical microcapsules with a diameter of 10 to 45 ÎĽm and a rough porous shell were obtained. Carboxylated styrene/butadiene copolymer latex films containing various levels of these microcapsules were subjected to various levels of pre-elongation and their tensile properties were examined. The addition of oil-filled microcapsules resulted in a significant improvement in the modulus, strain-to-break, and toughness of the films. The self-healing mechanism of latex films was examined through the colorimetric measurements of the release of dye-containing following the pre-elongation of the samples. These measurements confirmed that pre-elongation of samples resulted in the release of oil within the latex films, hence plasticizing the surrounding polymeric network and partly restoring the mechanical properties of the pre-elongated films
Oxygen and nitrogen abundances of HII regions in six spiral galaxies
Spectroscopic observations of 63 HII regions in six spiral galaxies (NGC 628,
NGC 783, NGC 2336, NGC 6217, NGC 7331, and NGC 7678) were carried out with the
6-meter telescope (BTA) of Russian Special Astrophysical Observatory with the
Spectral Camera attached to the focal reducer SCORPIO in the multislit mode
with a dispersion of 2.1A/pixel and a spectral resolution of 10A. These
observations were used to estimate the oxygen and nitrogen abundances and the
electron temperatures in HII regions through the recent variant of the strong
line method (NS calibration). The parameters of the radial distribution (the
extrapolated central intercept value and the gradient) of the oxygen and
nitrogen abundances in the disks of spiral galaxies NGC 628, NGC 783, NGC 2336,
NGC 7331, and NGC 7678 have been determined. The abundances in the NGC 783, NGC
2336, NGC 6217, and NGC 7678 are measured for the first time. Galaxies from our
sample follow well the general trend in the luminosity - central metallicity
diagram for spiral and irregular galaxies.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, 6 tables. Accepted for publication in MNRA
Gas-Phase Oxygen Gradients in Strongly Interacting Galaxies: I. Early-Stage Interactions
A consensus is emerging that interacting galaxies show depressed nuclear gas
metallicities compared to isolated star-forming galaxies. Simulations suggest
that this nuclear underabundance is caused by interaction-induced inflow of
metal-poor gas, and that this inflow concurrently flattens the radial
metallicity gradients in strongly interacting galaxies. We present
metallicities of over 300 HII regions in a sample of 16 spirals that are
members of strongly interacting galaxy pairs with mass ratio near unity. The
deprojected radial gradients in these galaxies are about half of those in a
control sample of isolated, late-type spirals. Detailed comparison of the
gradients with simulations show remarkable agreement in gradient distributions,
the relationship between gradients and nuclear underabundances, and the shape
of profile deviations from a straight line. Taken together, this evidence
conclusively demonstrates that strongly interacting galaxies at the present day
undergo nuclear metal dilution due to gas inflow, as well as significant
flattening of their gas-phase metallicity gradients, and that current
simulations can robustly reproduce this behavior at a statistical level.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
Properties of the giant HII regions and bar in the nearby spiral galaxy NGC5430
In order to better understand the impact of the bar on the evolution of
spiral galaxies, we measure the properties of giant HII regions and the bar in
the SB(s)b galaxy NGC5430. We use two complementary data sets, both obtained at
the Observatoire du Mont-M\'egantic: a hyperspectral data cube from the imaging
Fourier transform spectrograph SpIOMM, and high-resolution spectra across the
bar from a long-slit spectrograph. We flux-calibrate SpIOMM spectra for the
first time, and produce H{\alpha} and [NII]{\lambda}6584\r{A} intensity maps
from which we identify 51 giant HII regions in the spiral arms and bar. We
evaluate the type of activity, the oxygen abundance and the age of the young
populations contained in these giant HII regions and in the bar. Thus, we
confirm that NGC5430 does not harbour a strong AGN, and that its Wolf-Rayet
knot shows a pure HII region nature. We find no variation in abundance or age
between the bar and spiral arms, nor as a function of galactocentric radius.
These results are consistent with the hypothesis that a chemical mixing
mechanism is at work in the galaxy's disc to flatten the oxygen abundance
gradient. Using the starburst99 model, we estimate the ages of the young
populations, and again find no variations in age between the bar and the arms
or as a function of radius. Instead, we find evidence for two galaxy-wide waves
of star formation, about 7.1 Myr and 10.5 Myr ago. While the bar in NGC5430 is
an obvious candidate to trigger these two episodes, it is not clear how the bar
could induce widespread star formation on such a short time-scale.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures, 3 tables, accepted for publication in MNRA
Evidence for Intrinsic Redshifts in Normal Spiral Galaxies
The Tully-Fisher Relationship (TFR) is utilized to identify anomalous
redshifts in normal spiral galaxies. Three redshift anomalies are identified in
this analysis: (1) Several clusters of galaxies are examined in which late type
spirals have significant excess redshifts relative to early type spirals in the
same clusters, (2) Galaxies of morphology similar to ScI galaxies are found to
have a systematic excess redshift relative to the redshifts expected if the
Hubble Constant is 72 km s-1 Mpc-1, (3) individual galaxies, pairs, and groups
are identified which strongly deviate from the predictions of a smooth Hubble
flow. These redshift deviations are significantly larger than can be explained
by peculiar motions and TFR errors. It is concluded that the redshift anomalies
identified in this analysis are consistent with previous claims for large
non-cosmological (intrinsic) redshifts.Comment: Accepted for publication at Astrophysics&Space Science. 36 pages
including 8 tables and 7 figure
Massive stars exploding in a He-rich circumstellar medium. I. Type Ibn (SN 2006jc-like) events
We present new spectroscopic and photometric data of the type Ibn supernovae
2006jc, 2000er and 2002ao. We discuss the general properties of this recently
proposed supernova family, which also includes SN 1999cq. The early-time
monitoring of SN 2000er traces the evolution of this class of objects during
the first few days after the shock breakout. An overall similarity in the
photometric and spectroscopic evolution is found among the members of this
group, which would be unexpected if the energy in these core-collapse events
was dominated by the interaction between supernova ejecta and circumstellar
medium. Type Ibn supernovae appear to be rather normal type Ib/c supernova
explosions which occur within a He-rich circumstellar environment. SNe Ibn are
therefore likely produced by the explosion of Wolf-Rayet progenitors still
embedded in the He-rich material lost by the star in recent mass-loss episodes,
which resemble known luminous blue variable eruptions. The evolved Wolf-Rayet
star could either result from the evolution of a very massive star or be the
more evolved member of a massive binary system. We also suggest that there are
a number of arguments in favour of a type Ibn classification for the historical
SN 1885A (S-Andromedae), previously considered as an anomalous type Ia event
with some resemblance to SN 1991bg.Comment: 17 pages including 12 figures and 4 tables. Slightly revised version,
conclusions unchanged, 1 figure added. Accepted for publication in MNRA
- …