6,043 research outputs found

    Mobility of Dislocations in Aluminum

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    The velocities of individual dislocations of edge and mixed types in pure aluminum single crystals were determined as a function of applied‐resolved shear stress and temperature. The dislocation velocities were determined from measurements of the displacements of individual dislocations produced by stress pulses of known duration. The Berg‐Barrett x‐ray technique was employed to observe the dislocations, and stress pulses of 15 to 108 ÎŒsec duration were applied by propagating torsional waves along the axes of [111]‐oriented cylindrical crystals. Resolved shear stresses up to 16×10^6 dynes∕cm^2 were applied at temperatures ranging from −150° to +70°C, and dislocation velocities were found to vary from 10 to 2800 cm∕sec over these ranges of stress and temperature. The experimental conditions were such that the dislocation velocities were not significantly influenced by impurities, dislocation curvature, dislocation‐dislocation interactions, or long‐range internal stress fields in the crystals. The velocity of dislocations is found to be linearly proportional to the applied‐resolved shear stress, and to decrease with increasing temperature. Qualitative comparison of these results with existing theories leads to the conclusion that the mobility of individual dislocations in pure aluminum is governed by dislocation‐phonon interactions. The phonon‐viscosity theory of dislocation mobility can be brought into agreement with the experimental results by reasonable choices of the values of certain constants appearing in the theory

    The design and implementation of the Technical Facilities Controller (TFC) for the Goldstone deep space communications complex

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    The Technical Facilities Controller is a microprocessor-based energy management system that is to be implemented in the Deep Space Network facilities. This system is used in conjunction with facilities equipment at each of the complexes in the operation and maintenance of air-conditioning equipment, power generation equipment, power distribution equipment, and other primary facilities equipment. The implementation of the Technical Facilities Controller was completed at the Goldstone Deep Space Communications Complex and is now operational. The installation completed at the Goldstone Complex is described and the utilization of the Technical Facilities Controller is evaluated. The findings will be used in the decision to implement a similar system at the overseas complexes at Canberra, Australia, and Madrid, Spain

    Detection of bearing failure in mechanical devices using neural networks

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    We present a novel time-domain method for the detection of faulty bearings that has direct applicability to monitoring the health of the turbo pumps on the Space Shuttle Main Engine. A feed-forward neural network was trained to detect modelled roller bearing faults on the basis of the periodicity of impact pulse trains. The network's performance was dependent upon the number of pulses in the network's input window and the signal-to-noise ratio of the input signal. To test the model's validity, we fit the model's parameters to an actual vibration signal generated by a faulty roller element bearing and applied the network trained on this model to detect faults in actual vibration data. When this network was tested on the actual vibration data, it correctly identified the vibration signal as a fault condition 76 percent of the time

    Generalizations of Nil Clean to Ideals

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    The notion of a clean ring has many variations that have been widely studied, including the sub-class of nil clean rings. We develop new variations of this concept and discuss the interactions between these new properties and those in the established canon. The first property we define is an ideal-theoretic generalization of the element-wise defined property nil clean, the condition that an element of a ring is the sum of a nilpotent and an idempotent. We establish a few characterizations for certain families of rings with this property, called ideally nil clean. In particular, a commutative ring is ideally nil clean if and only if it is strongly pi-regular. We show that the class of ideally nil clean rings also includes artinian rings, and von Neumann regular rings. Among other results, we demonstrate that ideally nil clean rings behave well under some ring extensions such as direct products and matrix rings. We also expand this generalization to the ideally nil clean property for one-sided ideals, and discuss the interaction between these different generalizations. We explore the interplay between nil clean rings and ideally nil clean rings

    Effects of electrostatic interaction on clustering and collision of bidispersed inertial particles in homogeneous and isotropic turbulence

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    In sandstorms and thunderclouds, turbulence-induced collisions between solid particles and ice crystals lead to inevitable triboelectrification. The charge segregation is usually size-dependent, with small particles charged negatively and large particles charged positively. In this work, we perform numerical simulations to study the influence of charge segregation on the dynamics of bidispersed inertial particles in turbulence. Direct numerical simulations of homogeneous isotropic turbulence are performed with the Taylor Reynolds number Reλ=147.5\mathrm{Re}_{\lambda}=147.5, while particles are subjected to both electrostatic interactions and fluid drag, with Stokes number of 1 and 10 for small and large particles, respectively. Coulomb repulsion/attraction are shown to effectively inhibit/enhance particle clustering within a short range. Besides, the mean relative velocity between same-size particles is found to rise as the particle charge increases because of the exclusion of low-velocity pairs, while the relative velocity between different-size particles is almost unaffected, emphasizing the dominant roles of differential inertia. The mean Coulomb-turbulence parameter, Ct0\mathrm{Ct}_0, is then defined to characterize the competition between the Coulomb potential energy and the mean relative kinetic energy. In addition, a model is proposed to quantify the rate at which charged particles approach each other and captures the transition of the particle relative motion from the turbulence-dominated regime to the electrostatic-dominated regime. Finally, the probability distribution function of the approaching rate between particle pairs are examined, and its dependence on the Coulomb force is further discussed using the extended Coulomb-turbulence parameter.Comment: 23 pages, 8 figure
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