15,401 research outputs found
Development of a mercury electromagnetic centrifugal pump for the SNAP-8 refractory boiler development program
An electromagnetic pump, in which pressure is developed in mercury because of the interaction of the magnetic field and current which flows as a result of the voltage induced in the mercury contained in the pump duct, was developed for the SNAP-8 refractory boiler test facility. Pump performance results are presented for ten duct configurations and two stator sizes. These test results were used to design and fabricate a pump which met the SNAP-8 criteria of 530 psi developed pressure at 12,500 lb/hr. The pump operated continuously for over 13,000 hours without failure or performance degradation. Included in this report are descriptions of the experimental equipment, measurement techniques, all experimental data, and an analysis of the electrical losses in the pump
Deer reduce habitat quality for a woodland songbird: evidence from settlement patterns, demographic parameters, and body condition.
Understanding avian responses to ungulate-induced habitat modification is important because deer populations are increasing across much of temperate Europe and North America. Our experimental study examined whether habitat quality for Blackcaps (Sylvia atricapilla) in young woodland in eastern England was affected by deer, by comparing Blackcap behavior, abundance, and condition between paired plots (half of each pair protected from deer). The vegetation in each pair of plots was the same age. The Blackcap is an ideal model species for testing effects of deer on avian habitat quality because it is dependent on dense understory vegetation and is abundant throughout much of Europe. We compared timing of settlement, abundance, age structure (second-year vs. after-second-year), and phenotypic quality (measured as a body condition index, body mass divided by tarsus length) between experimental and control plots. We used point counts to examine Blackcap distribution, and standardized mist netting to collect demographic and biometric data. Incidence of singing Blackcaps was higher in nonbrowsed than in browsed plots, and singing males were recorded in nonbrowsed plots earlier in the season, indicating earlier and preferential territory establishment. Most Blackcaps, both males and females, were captured in vegetation prior to canopy closure (2–4 years of regrowth). Body condition was superior for male Blackcaps captured in nonbrowsed plots; for second-year males this was most marked in vegetation prior to canopy closure. We conclude that deer browsing in young woodland can alter habitat quality for understory-dependent species, with potential consequences for individual fitness and population productivity beyond the more obvious effects on population density
SNAP 8 refractory boiler development program - Shell side hydraulic characteristics of a full scale SNAP 8 multiple tube model boiler Topical report no. 5
Shell side hydraulic characteristics of full-scale SNAP 8 multiple-tube model boiler over turbulent Reynolds number from 18,000 to 38,00
Physical and chemical differentiation of the luminous star-forming region W49A - Results from the JCMT Spectral Legacy Survey
The massive and luminous star-forming region W49A is a well known Galactic
candidate to probe the physical conditions and chemistry similar to those
expected in external starburst galaxies. We aim to probe the physical and
chemical structure of W49A on a spatial scale of ~0.8 pc based on the JCMT
Spectral Legacy Survey, which covers the frequency range between 330 and 373
GHz. The wide 2x2 arcminutes field and the high spectral resolution of the HARP
instrument on JCMT provides information on the spatial structure and kinematics
of the cloud. For species where multiple transitions are available, we estimate
excitation temperatures and column densities. We detected 255 transitions
corresponding to 60 species in the 330-373 GHz range at the center position of
W49A. Excitation conditions can be probed for 16 molecules. The chemical
composition suggests the importance of shock-, PDR-, and hot core chemistry.
Many molecular lines show a significant spatial extent across the maps
including high density tracers (e.g. HCN, HNC, CS, HCO+) and tracers of
UV-irradiation (e.g. CN and C2H). Large variations are seen between the
sub-regions with mostly blue-shifted emission toward the Eastern tail, mostly
red-shifted emission toward the Northern clump, and emission peaking around the
expected source velocity toward the South-west clump. A comparison of column
density ratios of characteristic species observed toward W49A to Galactic PDRs
suggests that while the chemistry toward the W49A center is driven by a
combination of UV-irradiation and shocks, UV-irradiation dominates for the
Northern Clump, Eastern tail, and South-west clump regions. A comparison to a
starburst galaxy and an AGN suggests similar C2H, CN, and H2CO abundances (with
respect to the dense gas tracer 34CS) between the ~0.8 pc scale probed for W49A
and the >1 kpc regions in external galaxies with global star-formation.Comment: Proposed for acceptance in A&A, abstract abridge
The art of being human : a project for general philosophy of science
Throughout the medieval and modern periods, in various sacred and secular guises, the unification of all forms of knowledge under the rubric of ‘science’ has been taken as the prerogative of humanity as a species. However, as our sense of species privilege has been called increasingly into question, so too has the very salience of ‘humanity’ and ‘science’ as general categories, let alone ones that might bear some essential relationship to each other. After showing how the ascendant Stanford School in the philosophy of science has contributed to this joint demystification of ‘humanity’ and ‘science’, I proceed on a more positive note to a conceptual framework for making sense of science as the art of being human. My understanding of ‘science’ is indebted to the red thread that runs from Christian theology through the Scientific Revolution and Enlightenment to the Humboldtian revival of the university as the site for the synthesis of knowledge as the culmination of self-development. Especially salient to this idea is science‘s epistemic capacity to manage modality (i.e. to determine the conditions under which possibilities can be actualised) and its political capacity to organize humanity into projects of universal concern. However, the challenge facing such an ideal in the twentyfirst century is that the predicate ‘human’ may be projected in three quite distinct ways, governed by what I call ‘ecological’, ‘biomedical’ and ‘cybernetic’ interests. Which one of these future humanities would claim today’s humans as proper ancestors and could these futures co-habit the same world thus become two important questions that general philosophy of science will need to address in the coming years
The Masers Towards IRAS 20126+4104
We present MERLIN observations of OH, water and methanol masers towards the
young high mass stellar object IRAS 20126+4104. Emission from the 1665-MHz OH,
22-GHz H_2O and 6.7-GHz CH_3OH masers is detected and all originates very close
to the central source. The OH and methanol masers appear to trace part of the
circumstellar disk around the central source. The positions and velocities of
the OH and methanol masers are consistent with Keplerian rotation around a
central mass of ~ 5 Msun. The water masers are offset from the OH and methanol
masers and have significantly changed since they were last observed, but still
appear to be associated to the outflow from the source. All the OH masers
components are circularly polarised, in some cases reaching 100 percent while
some OH components also have linear polarisation. We identify one Zeeman pair
of OH masers and the splitting of this pair indicates a magnetic field of
strength ~ 11 mG within ~ 0.5" (850 AU) of the central source. The OH and
methanol maser emission suggest that the disk material is dense, n > 10^6
cm^-3, and warm, T > 125 K and the high abundance of methanol required by the
maser emission is consistent with the evaporation of the mantles on dust grains
in the disk as a result of heating or shocking of the disk materialComment: 9 pages, 7 figures and 6 table
Semicrossed Products of Operator Algebras by Semigroups
We examine the semicrossed products of a semigroup action by
-endomorphisms on a C*-algebra, or more generally of an action on an
arbitrary operator algebra by completely contractive endomorphisms. The choice
of allowable representations affects the corresponding universal algebra. We
seek quite general conditions which will allow us to show that the C*-envelope
of the semicrossed product is (a full corner of) a crossed product of an
auxiliary C*-algebra by a group action.
Our analysis concerns a case-by-case dilation theory on covariant pairs. In
the process we determine the C*-envelope for various semicrossed products of
(possibly nonselfadjoint) operator algebras by spanning cones and
lattice-ordered abelian semigroups.
In particular, we show that the C*-envelope of the semicrossed product of
C*-dynamical systems by doubly commuting representations of
(by generally non-injective endomorphisms) is the full corner of a C*-crossed
product. In consequence we connect the ideal structure of C*-covers to
properties of the actions. In particular, when the system is classical, we show
that the C*-envelope is simple if and only if the action is injective and
minimal.
The dilation methods that we use may be applied to non-abelian semigroups. We
identify the C*-envelope for actions of the free semigroup by
automorphisms in a concrete way, and for injective systems in a more abstract
manner. We also deal with C*-dynamical systems over Ore semigroups when the
appropriate covariance relation is considered.Comment: 100 pages; comments and references update
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