2,230 research outputs found
Wide band frequency tracker performance and design of an all angle laser Doppler optical homodyne receiver, ground wind and wind tunnel measurements program, volume 2 Final report
Analysis and measurement of characteristics of wide band frequency trackers and design and fabrication of all angle laser Doppler velocimete
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Explicit decay heat calculation in the nodal diffusion code DYN3D
The residual radioactive decay heat plays an important role in some accident scenarios and, therefore, needs to be accurately calculated when performing accident analyses. The current reactor simulation codes used for accident analysis account for the residual decay heat by means of simplified models. Typically, these models rely on semi-empirical correlations which are defined over a limited range of burnup and fuel types. Therefore, the applicability of such correlations is limited and any deviation from the definition range may lead to high uncertainties, which is detrimental in evaluating safety margins.
Reactor dynamic code DYN3D was originally developed for transient and accident analysis of LWRs. In DYN3D, the residual radioactive decay heat calculation is based on the German national standard DIN Norm 25463 model. The applicability of this model is limited to a low enriched uranium dioxide fuel for light water reactors.
This paper describes a new general decay heat calculation model implemented in DYN3D. The radioactive decay rate of each nuclide in each spatial node is calculated by recently implemented depletion module and the cumulative released heat is used to obtain the spatial distribution of the decay power for every time step. Such explicit approach is based on first principles and is free from approximations and, thus, can be applied to any reactor system (e.g. thermal and fast) and fuel type. The proposed method is verified through code-to-code comparison with the Serpent 2 Monte Carlo code results
Dynamic stabilization of non-spherical bodies against unlimited collapse
We solve equations, describing in a simplified way the newtonian dynamics of
a selfgravitating nonrotating spheroidal body after loss of stability. We find
that contraction to a singularity happens only in a pure spherical collapse,
and deviations from the spherical symmetry stop the contraction by the
stabilising action of nonlinear nonspherical oscillations. A real collapse
happens after damping of the oscillations due to energy losses, shock wave
formation or viscosity. Detailed analysis of the nonlinear oscillations is
performed using a Poincar\'{e} map construction. Regions of regular and chaotic
oscillations are localized on this map.Comment: MNRAS, accepted, 7 pages, 9 figure
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Hybrid microscopic depletion model in nodal code DYN3D
The paper presents a general hybrid method that combines the micro-depletion technique with correction of micro- and macro- diffusion parameters to account for the spectral history effects. The fuel in a core is subjected to time- and space-dependent operational conditions (e.g. coolant density), which cannot be predicted in advance. However, lattice codes assume some average conditions to generate cross sections (XS) for nodal diffusion codes such as DYN3D. Deviation of local operational history from average conditions leads to accumulation of errors in XS, which is referred as spectral history effects. Various methods to account for the spectral history effects, such as spectral index, burnup-averaged operational parameters and micro-depletion, were implemented in some nodal codes. Recently, an alternative method, which characterizes fuel depletion state by burnup and ²³⁹Pu concentration (denoted as Pu-correction) was proposed, implemented in nodal code DYN3D and verified for a wide range of history effects. The method is computationally efficient, however, it has applicability limitations.
The current study seeks to improve the accuracy and applicability range of Pu-correction method. The proposed hybrid method combines the micro-depletion method with a XS characterization technique similar to the Pu-correction method.
The method was implemented in DYN3D and verified on multiple test cases. The results obtained with DYN3D were compared to those obtained with Monte Carlo code Serpent, which was also used to generate the XS. The observed differences are within the statistical uncertainties.This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.anucene.2016.02.01
Regional cerebral metabolic patterns demonstrate the role of anterior forebrain mesocircuit dysfunction in the severely injured brain
peer reviewedAlthough disorders of consciousness (DOCs) demonstrate widely varying clinical presentations and patterns of structural injury, global down-regulation and bilateral reductions in metabolism of the thalamus and frontoparietal network are consistent findings. We test the hypothesis that global reductions of background synaptic activity in DOCs will associate with changes in the pattern of metabolic activity in the central thalamus and globus pallidus. We compared 32 [18F]fluorodeoxyglucose PETs obtained from severely brain-injured patients (BIs) and 10 normal volunteers (NVs). We defined components of the anterior forebrain mesocircuit on high-resolution T1-MRI (ventral, associative, and sensorimotor striatum; globus pallidus; central thalamus and noncentral thalamus). Metabolic profiles for BI and NV demonstrated distinct changes in the pattern of uptake: ventral and association striatum (but not sensorimotor) were significantly reduced relative to global mean uptake after BI; a relative increase in globus pallidus metabolism was evident in BI subjects who also showed a relative reduction of metabolism in the central thalamus. The reversal of globus pallidus and central thalamus profiles across BIs and NVs supports the mesocircuit hypothesis that broad functional (or anatomic) deafferentation may combine to reduce central thalamus activity and release globus pallidus activity in DOCs. In addition, BI subjects showed broad frontoparietal metabolic down-regulation consistent with prior studies supporting the link between central thalamic/pallidal metabolism and down-regulation of the frontoparietal network. Recovery of left hemisphere frontoparietal metabolic activity was further associated with command following
Demonstration of images with negative group velocities
We report the experimental demonstration of the superluminal propagation of
multi-spatial-mode images via four-wave mixing in hot atomic vapor, in which
all spatial sub-regions propagate with negative group velocities. We
investigate the spatial mode properties and temporal reshaping of the fast
light images, and show large relative pulse peak advancements of up to 64% of
the input pulse width. The degree of temporal reshaping is quantified and
increases as the relative pulse peak advancement increases. When optimized for
image quality or pulse advancement, negative group velocities of up to
and , respectively, are
demonstrated when integrating temporally over the entire image. The present
results are applicable to temporal cloaking devices that require strong
manipulation of the dispersion relation, where one can envision temporally
cloaking various spatial regions of an image for different durations.
Additionally, the modes involved in a four-wave mixing process similar to the
present experiment have been shown to exhibit quantum correlations and
entanglement. The results presented here provide insight into how to tailor
experimental tests of the behavior of these quantum correlations and
entanglement in the superluminal regime.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure
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