25,451 research outputs found

    Turbulence characteristics of an axisymmetric reacting flow

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    Turbulent sudden expansion flows are of significant theoretical and practical importance. Such flows have been the subject of extensive analytical and experimental study for decades, but many issues are still unresolved. Detailed information on reacting sudden expansion flows is very limited, since suitable measurement techniques have only been available in recent years. The present study of reacting flow in an axisymmetric sudden expansion was initiated under NASA support in December 1983. It is an extension of a reacting flow program which has been carried out with Air Force support under Contract F33615-81-K-2003. Since the present effort has just begun, results are not yet available. Therefore a brief overview of results from the Air Force program will be presented to indicate the basis for the work to be carried out

    Application of remote sensing for fishery resource assessment and monitoring

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    There are no author-identified significant results in this report

    A semi-implicit numerical method for treating the time transient gas lubrication equation

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    Numerical method for treating time transient gas lubrication equatio

    Nonequilibrium electron rings for synchrotron radiation production

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    Electron storage rings used for the production of synchrotron radiation (SR) have an output photon brightness that is limited by the equilibrium beam emittance. By using interleaved injection and ejection of bunches from a source with repetition rate greater than 1 kHz, we show that it is practicable to overcome this limit in rings of energy ~1 GeV. Sufficiently short kicker pulse lengths enable effective currents of many milliamperes, which can deliver a significant flux of diffraction-limited soft X-ray photons. Thus, either existing SR facilities may be adapted for non-equilibrium operation, or the technique applied to construct SR rings smaller than their storage ring equivalent.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures; accepted for publication in Physical Review Letter

    Evolution of Ohmically Heated Hot Jupiters

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    We present calculations of thermal evolution of Hot Jupiters with various masses and effective temperatures under Ohmic dissipation. The resulting evolutionary sequences show a clear tendency towards inflated radii for effective temperatures that give rise to significant ionization of alkali metals in the atmosphere, compatible with the trend of the data. The degree of inflation shows that Ohmic dissipation, along with the likely variability in heavy element content can account for all of the currently detected radius anomalies. Furthermore, we find that in absence of a massive core, low-mass hot Jupiters can over-flow their Roche-lobes and evaporate on Gyr time-scales, possibly leaving behind small rocky cores.Comment: Accepted to The Astrophysical Journal (2011) 735-2, 9 pages, 8 figures, updated figures 2-

    Pathologies in the sticky limit of hard-sphere-Yukawa models for colloidal fluids. A possible correction

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    A known `sticky-hard-sphere' model, defined starting from a hard-sphere-Yukawa potential and taking the limit of infinite amplitude and vanishing range with their product remaining constant, is shown to be ill-defined. This is because its Hamiltonian (which we call SHS2) leads to an {\it exact}second virial coefficient which {\it diverges}, unlike that of Baxter's original model (SHS1). This deficiency has never been observed so far, since the linearization implicit in the `mean spherical approximation' (MSA), within which the model is analytically solvable, partly {\it masks} such a pathology. To overcome this drawback and retain some useful features of SHS2, we propose both a new model (SHS3) and a new closure (`modified MSA'), whose combination yields an analytic solution formally identical with the SHS2-MSA one. This mapping allows to recover many results derived from SHS2, after a re-interpretation within a correct framework. Possible developments are finally indicated.Comment: 21 pages, 1 figure, accepted in Molecular Physics (2003

    Adaptive Spectral Galerkin Methods with Dynamic Marking

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    The convergence and optimality theory of adaptive Galerkin methods is almost exclusively based on the D\"orfler marking. This entails a fixed parameter and leads to a contraction constant bounded below away from zero. For spectral Galerkin methods this is a severe limitation which affects performance. We present a dynamic marking strategy that allows for a super-linear relation between consecutive discretization errors, and show exponential convergence with linear computational complexity whenever the solution belongs to a Gevrey approximation class.Comment: 20 page

    Geographic profiling in Nazi Berlin: fact and fiction

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    Geographic profiling uses the locations of connected crime sites to make inferences about the probable location of the offender’s ‘anchor point’ (usually a home, but sometimes a workplace). We show how the basic ideas of the method were used in a Gestapo investigation that formed the basis of a classic German novel about domestic resistance to the Nazis during the Second World War. We use modern techniques to re-analyse this case, and show that these successfully locate the Berlin home address of Otto and Elise Hampel, who had distributed hundreds of anti-Nazi postcards, after analysing just 34 of the 214 incidents that took place before their arrest. Our study provides the first empirical evidence to support the suggestion that analysis of minor terrorism-related acts such as graffiti and theft could be used to help locate terrorist bases before more serious incidents occur
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