10,004 research outputs found
Analysis of a communication satellite for lunar far-side exploration
Analysis of communication satellite for lunar far-side exploration relaying color television, voice, high-bit-rate telemetry data, and ranging code from command and service, and lunar module
Capturing, using, and managing quality assurance knowledge for shuttle post-MECO flight design
Ascent initialization values used by the Shuttle's onboard computer for nominal and abort mission scenarios are verified by a six degrees of freedom computer simulation. The procedure that the Ascent Post Main Engine Cutoff (Post-MECO) group uses to perform quality assurance (QA) of the simulation is time consuming. Also, the QA data, checklists and associated rationale, though known by the group members, is not sufficiently documented, hindering transfer of knowledge and problem resolution. A new QA procedure which retains the current high level of integrity while reducing the time required to perform QA is needed to support the increasing Shuttle flight rate. Documenting the knowledge is also needed to increase its availability for training and problem resolution. To meet these needs, a knowledge capture process, embedded into the group activities, was initiated to verify the existing QA checks, define new ones, and document all rationale. The resulting checks were automated in a conventional software program to achieve the desired standardization, integrity, and time reduction. A prototype electronic knowledge base was developed with Macintosh's HyperCard to serve as a knowledge capture tool and data storage
Formulation for the static permittivity of water and steam at temperatures from 238 K to 873 K at pressures up to 1200 MPa, including derivatives and Debye- Hückel coefficients
Journal ArticleA new formulation is presented of the static relative permittivity or dielectric constant of water and steam, including supercooled and supercritical states. The range is from 238 K to 873 K, at pressures up to 1200 MPa. The formulation is based on the ITS-90 temperature scale. It correlates a selected set of data from a recently published collection of all experimental data. The set includes new data in the liquid water and the steam regions that have not been part of earlier correlations. The physical basis for the formulation is the so-called #-factor in the form proposed by Harris and Alder. An empirical 12-parameter form for the g-factor as a function of the independent variables temperature and density is used. For the conversion of experimental pressures to densities, the newest formulation of the equation of state of water on the ITS-90, prepared by Wagner and Pruss, has been used. All experimental data are compared with the formulation. The reliability of the new formulation is assessed in all subregions. Comparisons with previous formulations are presented. Auxiliary dielectric-constant formulations as functions of temperature are included for the saturated vapor and liquid states. The pressure and temperature derivatives of the dielectric constant and the Debye-Hiickel limiting-law slopes are calculated, their reliability is estimated, and they are compared with experimentally derived values and with previous correlations. All equations are given in this paper, along with short tables. An implementation of this formulation for the dielectric constant is available on disk [A. H. Harvey, A. P. Peskin, and S. A. Klein, NIST/ASME Steam Properties, NIST Standard Reference Database 10, Version 2.1, Standard Reference Data Program, NIST, Gaithershurg, MD (1997)]
Local DC electricity generated by photovoltaics (PV): Transforming the electricity infrastructure of the 21st Century
United States aging electricity infrastructure of generation, transmission and distribution facilities was built over the course of a century and is dominated by alternating current (AC). Most of the loads around us are direct current (DC) load. Commercial buildings have more than 80% DC loads. DC has many advantages over AC. Due to the advancements in power electronics today, DC infrastructure can be implemented with all the advantages of saving energy and improved reliability of the grid. By doing measurements of cell phones we will demonstrate the advantages of DC source over AC. We expect energy saving of about 25-30% by using DC in place of AC. At Edison\u27s time there was no local source of DC electricity. Today solar panels are available and the installed PV system cost is as low as $1.50 per peak watt. Due to growth of electric vehicles and grid storage, battery cost is also decreasing every day. Tesla (an electric car manufacturer) is going to build a Giga watt battery manufacturing plant in US. The combination of PV and battery storage will transform the electricity infrastructure of the 21st century
A comparison of different ways of including baseline counts in negative binomial models for data from falls prevention trials
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Wiley-VCH Verlag via the DOI in this record.A common design for a falls prevention trial is to assess falling at baseline, randomize participants into
an intervention or control group, and ask them to record the number of falls they experience during a
follow-up period of time. This paper addresses how best to include the baseline count in the analysis of
the follow-up count of falls in Negative Binomial (NB) regression. We examine the performance of
various approaches in simulated datasets where both counts are generated from a mixed Poisson
distribution with shared random subject effect. Including the baseline count after log-transformation as a
regressor in NB regression (NB-logged) or as an offset (NB-offset) resulted in greater power than
including the untransformed baseline count (NB-unlogged). Cook and Wei's Conditional Negative
Binomial (CNB) model replicates the underlying process generating the data. In our motivating dataset, a
statistically significant intervention effect resulted from the NB-logged, NB-offset and CNB models, but
not from NB-unlogged, and large, outlying baseline counts were overly influential in NB-unlogged but
not in NB-logged. We conclude that there is little to lose by including the log-transformed baseline count
in standard NB regression compared to CNB for moderate to larger sized datasets.Funding Information: National Institute for Health Research, Grant no. RDA/02/06/41; Care South West Peninsul
Hybrid Local-Order Mechanism for Inversion Symmetry Breaking
Using classical Monte Carlo simulations, we study a simple statistical
mechanical model of relevance to the emergence of polarisation from local
displacements on the square and cubic lattices. Our model contains two key
ingredients: a Kitaev-like orientation-dependent interaction between nearest
neighbours, and a steric term that acts between next-nearest neighbours. Taken
by themselves, each of these two ingredients is incapable of driving long-range
symmetry breaking, despite the presence of a broad feature in the corresponding
heat capacity functions. Instead each component results in a "hidden"
transition on cooling to a manifold of degenerate states, the two manifolds are
different in the sense that they reflect distinct types of local order.
Remarkably, their intersection---\emph{i.e.} the ground state when both
interaction terms are included in the Hamiltonian---supports a spontaneous
polarisation. In this way, our study demonstrates how local ordering mechanisms
might be combined to break global inversion symmetry in a manner conceptually
similar to that operating in the "hybrid" improper ferroelectrics. We discuss
the relevance of our analysis to the emergence of spontaneous polarisation in
well-studied ferroelectrics such as BaTiO and KNbO.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figure
Open questions in the study of population III star formation
The first stars were key drivers of early cosmic evolution. We review the
main physical elements of the current consensus view, positing that the first
stars were predominantly very massive. We continue with a discussion of
important open questions that confront the standard model. Among them are
uncertainties in the atomic and molecular physics of the hydrogen and helium
gas, the multiplicity of stars that form in minihalos, and the possible
existence of two separate modes of metal-free star formation.Comment: 15 pages, 2 figures. To appear in the conference proceedings for IAU
Symposium 255: Low-Metallicity Star Formation: From the First Stars to Dwarf
Galaxie
The effect of the dynamical state of clusters on gas expulsion and infant mortality
The star formation efficiency (SFE) of a star cluster is thought to be the
critical factor in determining if the cluster can survive for a significant
(>50 Myr) time. There is an often quoted critical SFE of ~30 per cent for a
cluster to survive gas expulsion. I reiterate that the SFE is not the critical
factor, rather it is the dynamical state of the stars (as measured by their
virial ratio) immediately before gas expulsion that is the critical factor. If
the stars in a star cluster are born in an even slightly cold dynamical state
then the survivability of a cluster can be greatly increased.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures. Review talk given at the meeting on "Young
massive star clusters - Initial conditions and environments", E. Perez, R. de
Grijs, R. M. Gonzalez Delgado, eds., Granada (Spain), September 2007,
Springer: Dordrecht. Replacement to correct mistake in a referenc
The orbit structure of Dynkin curves
Let G be a simple algebraic group over an algebraically closed field k;
assume that Char k is zero or good for G. Let \cB be the variety of Borel
subgroups of G and let e in Lie G be nilpotent. There is a natural action of
the centralizer C_G(e) of e in G on the Springer fibre \cB_e = {B' in \cB | e
in Lie B'} associated to e. In this paper we consider the case, where e lies in
the subregular nilpotent orbit; in this case \cB_e is a Dynkin curve. We give a
complete description of the C_G(e)-orbits in \cB_e. In particular, we classify
the irreducible components of \cB_e on which C_G(e) acts with finitely many
orbits. In an application we obtain a classification of all subregular orbital
varieties admitting a finite number of B-orbits for B a fixed Borel subgroup of
G.Comment: 12 pages, to appear in Math
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