5,491 research outputs found

    Zinc-oxygen primary cell yields high energy density

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    Zinc-oxygen primary cell yields high energy density for battery used as an auxiliary power source in space vehicle systems. Maximum reliability and minimum battery weight is achieved by using a stacking configuration of 23 series-connected modules with 6 parallel-connected cells per module

    Performance prediction of point-based three-dimensional volumetric measurement systems

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    Point-based three-dimensional volumetric measurement systems are defined as multi-view vision systems which reconstruct a three-dimensional scene by first identifying key points on the views and then performing the reconstruction. Examples of these are defocusing digital particle image velocimetry (DDPIV) (Pereira et al 2000 Exp. Fluids 29 S78–84) and 3D particle tracking velocimetry (3DPTV) (Papantoniou and Maas 1990 5th Int. Symp. on the Application of Laser Techniques in Fluid Mechanics) which reconstruct clouds of flow tracers in order to estimate flow velocities. The reconstruction algorithms in these systems are variations of an epipolar line search. This paper presents a generalized error analysis of such methods, both in reconstruction precision (error in the reconstructed scene) and reconstruction quality (number of ambiguities or 'ghosts' produced)

    Compressible Flows in Fluidic Oscillators

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    We present qualitative observations on the internal flow characteristics of fluidic oscillator geometries commonly referred to as sweeping jets in active flow control applications. This is part of the fluid dynamics videos.Comment: Videos include

    GRID PRICING: VALUING CATTLE QUALITY INFORMATION

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    Grid pricing is increasingly prominent in cattle markets. This study compares selling 11,703 head of fed cattle using grid, live, and dressed weight pricing. Cattle sold on a grid had price variability twice that of live or dressed. Average pricing inefficiency by not selling cattle on a grid exceeded $30/head.Demand and Price Analysis, Livestock Production/Industries,

    Apollo 17 EVA-1 and EVA-2 Task Decomposition: Planning for Artemis and Future Mars Missions

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    A decomposition of the Apollo 17 mission extravehicular activities (EVA) tasks can be used to prepare for Artemis and future Mars missions. A categorized minute by minute breakdown of the astronauts activites could be used to plan future EVAs and determine which scientific tasks or equipment may be prioritized. This is especially relevant in this critical stage for the upcoming Atemis missions and science activity planning. The infographics generated from the decomposition provide a higher level view of actual EVAs and could aid in making future EVAs more efficient and successful

    Simulating a White Dwarf-dominated Galactic Halo

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    Observational evidence has suggested the possibility of a Galactic halo which is dominated by white dwarfs (WDs). While debate continues concerning the interpretation of this evidence, it is clear that an initial mass function (IMF) biased heavily toward WD precursors (1 < m/Msol < 8), at least in the early Universe, would be necessary in generating such a halo. Within the framework of homogeneous, closed-box models of Galaxy formation, such biased IMFs lead to an unavoidable overproduction of carbon and nitrogen relative to oxygen (as measured against the abundance patterns in the oldest stars of the Milky Way). Using a three-dimensional Tree N-body smoothed particle hydrodynamics code, we study the dynamics and chemical evolution of a galaxy with different IMFs. Both invariant and metallicity-dependent IMFs are considered. Our variable IMF model invokes a WD-precursor-dominated IMF for metallicities less than 5% solar (primarily the Galactic halo), and the canonical Salpeter IMF otherwise (primarily the disk). Halo WD density distributions and C,N/O abundance patterns are presented. While Galactic haloes comprised of ~5% (by mass) of WDs are not supported by our simulations, mass fractions of ~1-2% cannot be ruled out. This conclusion is consistent with the present-day observational constraints.Comment: accepted for publication in MNRA

    Analysis of a Hubble Space Telescope Search for Red Dwarfs: Limits on Baryonic Matter in the Galactic Halo

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    We re-examine a deep {\it Hubble Space Telescope} pencil-beam search for red dwarfs, stars just massive enough to burn Hydrogen. The authors of this search (Bahcall, Flynn, Gould \& Kirhakos 1994) found that red dwarfs make up less than 6\% of the galactic halo. First, we extrapolate this result to include brown dwarfs, stars not quite massive enough to burn hydrogen; we assume a 1/M1/{\cal M} mass function. Then the total mass of red dwarfs and brown dwarfs is ≀\leq18\% of the halo. This result is consistent with microlensing results assuming a popular halo model. However, using new stellar models and parallax observations of low mass, low metallicity stars, we obtain much tighter bounds on low mass stars. We find the halo red dwarf density to be <1%<1\% of the halo, while our best estimate of this value is 0.14-0.37\%. Thus our estimate of the halo mass density of red dwarfs drops to 16-40 times less than the reported result of Bahcall et al (1994). For a 1/M1/{\cal M} mass function, this suggests a total density of red dwarfs and brown dwarfs of ∌\sim0.25-0.67\% of the halo, \ie , (0.9-2.5)\times 10^9\msun out to 50 kpc. Such a low result would conflict with microlensing estimates by the \macho\ group (Alcock \etal 1995a,b).Comment: 13 pages, 2 figures. Figure one only available via fax or snail-mail To be published in ApJL. fig. 2 now available in postscript. Some minor changes in dealing with disk forground. Some cosmetic changes. Updated reference

    Magnitude bias of microlensed sources towards the Large Magellanic Cloud

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    There are lines of evidence suggesting that some of the observed microlensing events in the direction of the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) are caused by ordinary star lenses as opposed to dark Machos in the Galactic halo. Efficient lensing by ordinary stars generally requires the presence of one or more additional concentrations of stars along the line of sight to the LMC disk. If such a population behind the LMC disk exists, then the source stars (for lensing by LMC disk objects) will be drawn preferentially from the background population and will show systematic differences from LMC field stars. One such difference is that the (lensed) source stars will be farther away than the average LMC field stars, and this should be reflected in their apparent baseline magnitudes. We focus on red clump stars: these should appear in the color-magnitude diagram at a few tenths of a magnitude fainter than the field red clump. Suggestively, one of the two near-clump confirmed events, MACHO-LMC-1, is a few tenths of magnitude fainter than the clump.Comment: To appear in ApJ Letters. Shortened to match the accepted version, 8 pages plus 1 ps figur

    Chemical Abundance Constraints on White Dwarfs as Halo Dark Matter

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    We examine the chemical abundance constraints on a population of white dwarfs in the Halo of our Galaxy. We are motivated by microlensing evidence for massive compact halo objects (Machos) in the Galactic Halo, but our work constrains white dwarfs in the Halo regardless of what the Machos are. We focus on the composition of the material that would be ejected as the white dwarfs are formed; abundance patterns in the ejecta strongly constrain white dwarf production scenarios. Using both analytical and numerical chemical evolution models, we confirm that very strong constraints come from Galactic Pop II and extragalactic carbon abundances. We also point out that depending on the stellar model, significant nitrogen is produced rather than carbon. The combined constraints from C and N give ΩWDh<2×10−4\Omega_{WD} h < 2 \times 10^{-4} from comparison with the low C and N abundances in the Lyα\alpha forest. We note, however, that these results are subject to uncertainties regarding the nucleosynthesis of low-metallicity stars. We thus investigate additional constraints from D and 4^4He, finding that these light elements can be kept within observational limits only for \Omega_{WD} \la 0.003 and for a white dwarf progenitor initial mass function sharply peaked at low mass (2M⊙M_\odot). Finally, we consider a Galactic wind, which is required to remove the ejecta accompanying white dwarf production from the galaxy. We show that such a wind can be driven by Type Ia supernovae arising from the white dwarfs themselves, but these supernovae also lead to unacceptably large abundances of iron. We conclude that abundance constraints exclude white dwarfs as Machos. (abridged)Comment: Written in AASTeX, 26 pages plus 4 ps figure

    Direct Detection of Giant Close-In Planets Around the Source Stars of Caustic-Crossing Microlensing Events

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    We propose a direct method to detect close-in giant planets orbiting stars in the Galactic bulge. This method uses caustic-crossing binary microlensing events discovered by survey teams monitoring the bulge to measure light from a planet orbiting the source star. When the planet crosses the caustic, it is more magnified than the source star; its light is magnified by two orders of magnitude for Jupiter size planets. If the planet is a giant close to the star, it may be bright enough to make a significant deviation in the light curve of the star. Detection of this deviation requires intensive monitoring of the microlensing light curve using a 10-meter class telescope for a few hours after the caustic. This is the only method yet proposed to directly detect close-in planets around stars outside the solar neighborhood.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures. Submitted to ApJ Letter
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