3,381 research outputs found
Full Issue 10.3
Hannibal and St. Joseph Railroad Co.The original of this document is in the Stevens Family Papers, #1210, at the Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections, Cornell University Library, Ithaca, New York 14853
A comparison of plastic collapse and limit loads for single mitred pipe bends under in-plane bending
This paper presents a comparison of the plastic collapse loads from experimental in-plane bending tests on three 90 degree single un-reinforced mitred pipe bends, with the results from various 3D solid finite element models. The bending load applied reduced the bend angle and in turn, the resulting cross-sectional ovalisation led to a recognised weakening mechanism, which is only observable by testing or by including large displacement effects in the plastic finite element solution. A small displacement limit solution with an elastic-perfectly-plastic material model overestimated the collapse load by 40%. The plastic collapse finite element solution produced excellent agreement with experiment
Using limb darkening to measure fundamental parameters of stars
Context. Limb darkening is an important tool for understanding stellar
atmospheres, but most observations measuring limb darkening assume various
parameterizations that yield no significant information about the structure of
stellar atmospheres. Aims. We use a specific limb-darkening relation to study
how the best-fit coefficients relate to fundamental stellar parameters from
spherically symmetric model stellar atmospheres. Methods. Using a grid of
spherically symmetric Atlas model atmospheres, we compute limb-darkening
coefficients, and develop a novel method to predict fundamental stellar
parameters. Results. We find our proposed method predicts the mass of stellar
atmosphere models given only the radius and limb-darkening coefficients,
suggesting that microlensing, interferometric, transit and eclipse observations
can constrain stellar masses. Conclusions. This novel method demonstrates that
limb-darkening parameterizations contain important information about the
structure of stellar atmospheres, with the potential to be a valuable tool for
measuring stellar masses.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, 2 tables, A&A accepte
Modelling cell movement and chemotaxis pseudopod based feedback
A computational framework is presented for the simulation of eukaryotic cell migration and chemotaxis. An empirical pattern formation model, based on a system of non-linear reaction-diffusion equations, is approximated on an evolving cell boundary using an Arbitrary Lagrangian Eulerian surface finite element method (ALE-SFEM). The solution state is used to drive a mechanical model of the protrusive and retractive forces exerted on the cell boundary. Movement of the cell is achieved using a level set method. Results are presented for cell migration with and without chemotaxis. The simulated behaviour is compared with experimental results of migrating Dictyostelium discoideum cells
The Cepheid mass discrepancy and pulsation-driven mass loss
Context. A longstanding challenge for understanding classical Cepheids is the
Cepheid mass discrepancy, where theoretical mass estimates using stellar
evolution and stellar pulsation calculations have been found to differ by
approximately 10 - 20%. Aims. We study the role of pulsation-driven mass loss
during the Cepheid stage of evolution as a possible solution to this mass
discrepancy. Methods. We computed stellar evolution models with a Cepheid
mass-loss prescription and various amounts of convective core overshooting. The
contribution of mass loss towards the mass discrepancy is determined using
these models, Results. Pulsation-driven mass loss is found to trap Cepheid
evolution on the instability strip, allowing them to lose about 5 - 10% of
their total mass when moderate convective core overshooting, an amount
consistent with observations of other stars, is included in the stellar models.
Conclusions. We find that the combination of moderate convective core
overshooting and pulsation-driven mass loss can solve the Cepheid mass
discrepancy.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures and 2 tables. Accepted for publication A&A Letter
SAtlas: Spherical Versions of the Atlas Stellar Atmosphere Program
Context: The current stellar atmosphere programs still cannot match some
fundamental observations of the brightest stars, and with new techniques, such
as optical interferometry, providing new data for these stars, additional
development of stellar atmosphere codes is required. Aims: To modify the
open-source model atmosphere program Atlas to treat spherical geometry,
creating a test-bed stellar atmosphere code for stars with extended
atmospheres. Methods: The plane-parallel Atlas has been changed by introducing
the necessary spherical modifications in the pressure structure, in the
radiative transfer and in the temperature correction. Results: Several test
models show that the spherical program matches the plane-parallel models in the
high surface gravity regime, and matches spherical models computed by Phoenix
and by MARCS in the low gravity case.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figures, Accepted for publication in A&
Cepheid limb darkening, angular diameter corrections, and projection factor from static spherical model stellar atmospheres
Context. One challenge for measuring the Hubble constant using Classical
Cepheids is the calibration of the Leavitt Law or period-luminosity
relationship. The Baade-Wesselink method for distance determination to Cepheids
relies on the ratio of the measured radial velocity and pulsation velocity, the
so-called projection factor and the ability to measure the stellar angular
diameters. Aims. We use spherically-symmetric model stellar atmospheres to
explore the dependence of the p-factor and angular diameter corrections as a
function of pulsation period. Methods. Intensity profiles are computed from a
grid of plane-parallel and spherically-symmetric model stellar atmospheres
using the SAtlas code. Projection factors and angular diameter corrections are
determined from these intensity profiles and compared to previous results.
Results. Our predicted geometric period-projection factor relation including
previously published state-of-the-art hydrodynamical predictions is not with
recent observational constraints. We suggest a number of potential resolutions
to this discrepancy. The model atmosphere geometry also affects predictions for
angular diameter corrections used to interpret interferometric observations,
suggesting corrections used in the past underestimated Cepheid angular
diameters by 3 - 5%. Conclusions. While spherically-symmetric hydrostatic model
atmospheres cannot resolve differences between projection factors from theory
and observations, they do help constrain underlying physics that must be
included, including chromospheres and mass loss. The models also predict more
physically-based limb-darkening corrections for interferometric observations.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, 2 tables, accepted for publication in A&
Permeability evolution across carbonate hosted normal fault zones
Acknowledgements: The authors would like to thank Total E&P and BG Group for project funding and support, and the Industry Technology Facilitator for facilitating the collaborative development (grant number 3322PSD). The authors would also like to express their gratitude to the Aberdeen Formation Evaluation Society and the College of Physical Sciences at the University of Aberdeen for partial financial support. Raymi Castilla (Total E&P), Fabrizio Agosta and Cathy Hollis are also thanked for their constructive comments and suggestions to improve the standard of this manuscript as are John Still and Colin Taylor (University of Aberdeen) for technical assistance in the laboratory. Piero Gianolla is thanked for his editorial handling of the manuscript.Peer reviewedPostprin
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