37,547 research outputs found
Temperature reducing coating for metals subject to flame exposure Patent
Anodizing method for providing metal surfaces with temperature reducing coatings against flame
Yet Another Model of Soft Gamma Repeaters
We develop a model of SGR in which a supernova leaves planets orbiting a
neutron star in intersecting eccentric orbits. These planets will collide in
years if their orbits are coplanar. Some fragments of debris lose
their angular momentum in the collision and fall onto the neutron star,
producing a SGR. The initial accretion of matter left by the collision with
essentially no angular momentum may produce a superburst like that of March 5,
1979, while debris fragments which later lose their angular momentum produce an
irregular pattern of smaller bursts.Comment: 16pp, Tex, WU-JIK-94-
Cosmological Simulations with TreeSPH
We describe numerical methods for incorporating gas dynamics into
cosmological simulations and present illustrative applications to the cold dark
matter (CDM) scenario. Our evolution code, a version of TreeSPH (Hernquist \&
Katz 1989) generalized to handle comoving coordinates and periodic boundary
conditions, combines smoothed--particle hydrodynamics (SPH) with the
hierarchical tree method for computing gravitational forces. The Lagrangian
hydrodynamics approach and individual time steps for gas particles give the
algorithm a large dynamic range, which is essential for studies of galaxy
formation in a cosmological context. The code incorporates radiative cooling
for an optically thin, primordial composition gas in ionization equilibrium
with a user-specified ultraviolet background. We adopt a phenomenological
prescription for star formation that gradually turns cold, dense,
Jeans-unstable gas into collisionless stars, returning supernova feedback
energy to the surrounding medium. In CDM simulations, some of the baryons that
fall into dark matter potential wells dissipate their acquired thermal energy
and condense into clumps with roughly galactic masses. The resulting galaxy
population is insensitive to assumptions about star formation; we obtain
similar baryonic mass functions and galaxy correlation functions from
simulations with star formation and from simulations without star formation in
which we identify galaxies directly from the cold, dense gas.Comment: compressed postscript, 38 pages including 6 out of 7 embedded
figures. Submitted to ApJ Supplements. Version with all 7 figures available
from ftp://bessel.mps.ohio-state.edu/pub/dhw/Preprint
Photoionization, Numerical Resolution, and Galaxy Formation
Using cosmological simulations that incorporate gas dynamics and
gravitational forces, we investigate the influence of photoionization by a UV
radiation background on the formation of galaxies. In our highest resolution
simulations, we find that photoionization has essentially no effect on the
baryonic mass function of galaxies at , down to our resolution limit of
5e9 M_\sun. We do, however, find a strong interplay between the mass
resolution of a simulation and the microphysics included in the computation of
heating and cooling rates. At low resolution, a photoionizing background can
appear to suppress the formation of even relatively massive galaxies. However,
when the same initial conditions are evolved with a factor of eight better mass
resolution, this effect disappears. Our results demonstrate the need for care
in interpreting the results of cosmological simulations that incorporate
hydrodynamics and radiation physics. For example, we conclude that a simulation
with limited resolution may yield more realistic results if it ignores some
relevant physical processes, such as photoionization. At higher resolution, the
simulated population of massive galaxies is insensitive to the treatment of
photoionization and star formation, but it does depend significantly on the
amplitude of the initial density fluctuations. By , an cold
dark matter model normalized to produce the observed masses of present-day
clusters has already formed galaxies with baryon masses exceeding 1e11
M_\sun.Comment: 25 pages, w/ embedded figures. Submitted to ApJ. Also available at
http://www-astronomy.mps.ohio-state.edu/~dhw/Docs/preprints.htm
Simulating Cosmic Structure Formation
We describe cosmological simulation techniques and their application to
studies of cosmic structure formation, with particular attention to recent
hydrodynamic simulations of structure in the high redshift universe.
Collisionless N-body simulations with Gaussian initial conditions produce a
pattern of sheets, filaments, tunnels, and voids that resembles the observed
large scale galaxy distribution. Simulations that incorporate gas dynamics and
dissipation form dense clumps of cold gas with sizes and masses similar to the
luminous parts of galaxies. Models based on inflation and cold dark matter
predict a healthy population of high redshift galaxies, including systems with
star formation rates of 20 M_{\sun}/year at z=6. At z~3, most of the baryons in
these models reside in the low density intergalactic medium, which produces
fluctuating Lyman-alpha absorption in the spectra of background quasars. The
physical description of this ``Lyman-alpha forest'' is particularly simple if
the absorption spectrum is viewed as a 1-dimensional map of a continuous medium
instead of a collection of lines. The combination of superb observational data
and robust numerical predictions makes the Lyman-alpha forest a promising tool
for testing cosmological models.Comment: Latex w/ paspconf.sty, 25 pages, 8 ps figs. To appear in Origins,
eds. J. M. Shull, C. E. Woodward, & H. Thronson (ASP Conference Series
Interfacing a high performance disk array file server to a Gigabit LAN
Our previous prototype, RAID-1, identified several bottlenecks in typical file server architectures. The most important bottleneck was the lack of a high-bandwidth path between disk, memory, and the network. Workstation servers, such as the Sun-4/280, have very slow access to peripherals on busses far from the CPU. For the RAID-2 system, we addressed this problem by designing a crossbar interconnect, Xbus board, that provides a 40MB/s path between disk, memory, and the network interfaces. However, this interconnect does not provide the system CPU with low latency access to control the various interfaces. To provide a high data rate to clients on the network, we were forced to carefully and efficiently design the network software. A block diagram of the system hardware architecture is given. In the following subsections, we describe pieces of the RAID-2 file server hardware that had a significant impact on the design of the network interface
The use of x-ray scattering to study the anomalous elastic properties of fe-ni alloys
X-ray scattering technique for study of elastic properties of nickel-iron allo
Can Inter-Industry Wage Differentials Justify Strategic Trade Policy?
This paper examines the relationship between labor market imperfections and trade policies. The available evidence suggests that pervasive industry wage differentials of up to 20 percent remain even after controlling for differences in observed measures of workers' skill and the effects of unions. Theoretical analysis indicates that given non-competitive wage differentials of this magnitude policies directed at encouraging employment in high-wage sectors could significantly enhance allocative efficiency. For the United States and other developed countries, such policies are more likely to involve export promotion than import substitution. Increased international trade flows (at least through 1984) have been associated with increased employment in high-wage U.S. manufacturing industries relative to low-wage U.S. manufacturing industries.
- …