102 research outputs found
Multi-Node Modeling of Cryogenic Tank Pressurization System using Generalized Fluid System Simulation Program
This paper presents a multi-node model of autogenous pressurization of cryogenic propellant in a flight tank using the Generalized Fluid System Simulation Program (GFSSP), a general purpose flow network code developed at NASA/Marshall Space Flight Center. Tests were conducted to measure the pressure and temperatures at the various axial locations of the stratified ullage at 75% and 45% fill level. Liquid nitrogen was pressurized by gaseous nitrogen from a supply tank while the drain valve from the tank remained closed during the pressurization process. The ullage was discretized into 25 uniformly distributed nodes: 5 in the radial direction and 5 in the axial direction assuming the flow to be axisymmetric. Heat and mass transfer between the liquid and vapor has been modeled at the liquid vapor interface. Heat transfer between wall and vapor at the ullage has been accounted for by assuming heat transfer occurs by natural convection. The model also accounts for heat leak to the tank through the insulation and metal wall by heat conduction. The predicted pressures and temperatures are compared with the measured data
Multi-Node Modeling of Cryogenic Tank Pressurization System Using Generalized Fluid System Simulation Program
Cryogenic Tanks are pressurized by inert gas such as Helium or Nitrogen to maintain the required pressure of the propellant delivered to the turbo-pump of a liquid rocket engine. Thermo-fluid system simulation tools are used to analyze the pressurization process of a cryogenic tank. Most system level codes (GFSSP and ROCETS) use single node1 to represent ullage which is the gaseous space in the tank. Ullage space in a cryogenic tank is highly stratified because the entering inert gas is at ambient temperature whereas the liquid propellant is at a cryogenic temperature. A single node model does not account for the effect of temperature gradient in the ullage. High fidelity Navier-Stokes based CFD model of Tank Pressurization is not practical for running a long duration transient model with thousands and millions of nodes. A possible recourse is to construct a multi-node model with system level code that can account for ullage stratification
Oscillation Effects On Neutrinos From The Early Phase Of a Nearby Supernova
Neutrinos emitted during stellar core collapse leading to a supernova are
primarily of the electron neutrino type at source which may undergo oscillation
between flavor eigenstates during propagation to an earth-bound detector.
Although the number of neutrinos emitted during the pre-bounce collapse phase
is much smaller than that emitted in the post-bounce phase (in which all
flavors of neutrinos are emitted), a nearby supernova event may nevertheless
register a substantial number of detections from the pre-bounce phase at
SuperKamiokande (SK) and the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory (SNO). The
calorimetric measurement of the supernova neutrino fluence from this stage via
the charge current and neutral current detection channels in SNO and the
corresponding distortion of detected spectrum in SK over the no-oscillation
spectrum, can probe information about neutrino mass difference and mixing which
are illustrated here in terms of two- and three-flavor oscillation models
Discussion on a possible neutrino detector located in India
We have identified some important and worthwhile physics opportunitites with
a possible neutrino detector located in India. Particular emphasis is placed on
the geographical advantage with a stress on the complimentary aspects with
respect to other neutrino detectors already in operation.Comment: 9 pages; arXiv copy of published proceedings contributio
Multi-Node Modeling of Cryogenic Tank Pressurization System using Generalized Fluid System Simulation Program
No abstract availabl
Type IIP Supernova SN 2004et: A Multi-Wavelength Study in X-Ray, Optical and Radio
We present X-ray, broad band optical and low frequency radio observations of
the bright type IIP supernova SN 2004et. The \cxo observed the supernova at
three epochs, and the optical coverage spans a period of 470 days since
explosion. The X-ray emission softens with time, and we characterise the X-ray
luminosity evolution as \Lx \propto t^{-0.4}. We use the observed X-ray
luminosity to estimate a mass-loss rate for the progenitor star of \sim
\ee{2}{-6} M_\odot \mathrm{yr}^{-1}. The optical light curve shows a
pronounced plateau lasting for about 110 days. Temporal evolution of
photospheric radius and color temperature during the plateau phase is
determined by making black body fits. We estimate the ejected mass of Ni
to be 0.06 0.03 M. Using the expressions of Litvinova &
Nad\"{e}zhin (1985) we estimate an explosion energy of (0.98 0.25)
erg. We also present a single epoch radio observation of SN
2004et. We compare this with the predictions of the model proposed by Chevalier
et al. (2006). These multi-wavelength studies suggest a main sequence
progenitor mass of 20 M for SN 2004et.Comment: 13 Figures, Accepted for Publication in MNRA
Results from an extensive simultaneous broadband campaign on the underluminous active nucleus M81*: further evidence for mass-scaling accretion in black holes
We present the results of a broadband simultaneous campaign on the nearby
low-luminosity active galactic nucleus M81*. From February through August 2005,
we observed M81* five times using the Chandra X-ray Observatory with the
High-Energy Transmission Grating Spectrometer, complemented by ground-based
observations with the Giant Meterwave Radio Telescope, the Very Large Array and
Very Large Baseline Array, the Plateau de Bure Interferometer at IRAM, the
Submillimeter Array and Lick Observatory. We discuss how the resulting spectra
vary over short and longer timescales compared to previous results, especially
in the X-rays where this is the first ever longer-term campaign at spatial
resolution high enough to nearly isolate the nucleus (17pc). We compare the
spectrum to our Galactic center weakly active nucleus Sgr A*, which has
undergone similar campaigns, as well as to weakly accreting X-ray binaries in
the context of outflow-dominated models. In agreement with recent results
suggesting that the physics of weakly-accreting black holes scales predictably
with mass, we find that the exact same model which successfully describes hard
state X-ray binaries applies to M81*, with very similar physical parameters.Comment: 58 pages (preprint version), 22 figures, accepted for publication in
the Astrophysical Journa
Exploring the logic of mobile search
After more than a decade of development work and hopes, the usage of mobile Internet has finally taken off. Now, we are witnessing the first signs of evidence of what might become the explosion of mobile content and applications that will be shaping the (mobile) Internet of the future. Similar to the wired Internet, search will become very relevant for the usage of mobile Internet. Current research on mobile search has applied a limited set of methodologies and has also generated a narrow outcome of meaningful results. This article covers new ground, exploring the use and visions of mobile search with a users' interview-based qualitative study. Its main conclusion builds upon the hypothesis that mobile search is sensitive to a mobile logic different than today's one. First, (advanced) users ask for accessing with their mobile devices the entire Internet, rather than subsections of it. Second, success is based on new added-value applications that exploit unique mobile functionalities. The authors interpret that such mobile logic involves fundamentally the use of personalised and context-based services
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