31,290 research outputs found

    Wind tunnel wall interference (January 1980 - May 1988): A selected, annotated bibliography

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    This selected bibliography lists 423 entries on the subject of wall interference during testing in wind tunnels. It is the third in a series of bibliographies on the subject. The first, NASA TM-87639, August 1986, is concerned with the reduction of wall interference by the use of adaptive walls. The second, NASA TP-89066, December 1986, is on wall interference in V/STOL and high lift testing. This, the third in the series, covers the wall interference literature published during the period January 1980 through May 1988, generally excluding those topics covered in the first two parts

    Support data for NASA Convair 990 meteorological flight 3, 5 June - 21 June 1968

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    Support documentation for NASA Convair 990 meteorological flight number

    Wind tunnel evaluation of YF-12 inlet response to internal airflow disturbances with and without control

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    The response of terminal-shock position and static pressures in the subsonic duct of a YF-12 aircraft flight-hardware inlet to perturbations in simulated engine corrected airflow were obtained with and without inlet control. Frequency response data, obtained with inlet controls inactive, indicated the general nature of the inherent inlet dynamics, assisted in the design of controls, and provided a baseline reference for responses with active controls. All the control laws were implemented by means of a digital computer that could be programmed to behave like the flight inlet's existing analog control. The experimental controls were designed using an analytical optimization technique. The capabilities of the controls were limited primarily by the actuation hardware. The experimental controls provided somewhat better attenuation of terminal shock excursions than did the YF-13 inlet control. Controls using both the forward and aft bypass systems also provided somewhat better attenuation than those using just the forward bypass. The main advantage of using both bypasses is in the greater control flexibility that is achieved

    Optimisation of DSF and SOA based phase conjugators by incorporating noise-suppressing fibre gratings

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    We compare the performance of dispersion-shifted-fibre (DSF) and semiconductor-optical-amplifier (SOA) based phase conjugators for a 10 Gb/s non-return-to-zero system with respect to conversion efficiency, noise figure and distortion. Fibre gratings are used for signal extraction and amplified spontaneous emission (ASE) suppression, allowing closer wavelength spacing and reducing the conjugation noise figure by up to 12 dB. Despite the higher SOA conversion efficiency, both conjugators give similar noise figures with ASE suppression. However, the DSF based conjugator has the advantage of distortion tolerance at higher input power. Introduction: Optical phase conjugation has attracted much recent research attention due to its potential application for group-velocity-dispersion and self-phase-modulation compensation in mid-point spectral inversion (MPSI) systems, and also for coherent wavelength conversion in optical switching and routing. The two most promising optical phase conjugation techniques are four-wave mixing (FWM) in either dispersion-shifted fibre (DSF), or semiconductor optical amplifiers (SOA). A DSF based conjugator requires phase matching close to its zero dispersion wavelength for efficient four-wave mixing. This restricts its wavelength flexibility compared to an SOA based conjugator which offers a much wider conversion bandwidth. Furthermore, the low FWM conversion efficiency in passive DSF seems to make the SOA a preferred phase conjugating medium. However, in a practical communication system, conjugation optical signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) is more important than conversion efficiency. The noise at the conjugate wavelength is usually dominated by the amplified spontaneous emission (ASE) noise from the pump and signal. The reduction of this noise has been demonstrated in an SOA based conjugator (i) by bandpass filtering of the pump and/or signal waves before mixing, and (ii) by the insertion of a notch filter at the conjugate wavelength before the conjugator. In this letter, SOA and DSF based conjugators are compared by investigating the conversion efficiency, noise and eye opening in a 10 Gb/s non-return-to-zero (NRZ) externally-modulated system, using an identical filtering network. We report for the first time the use of fibre gratings for efficient ASE noise filtering and conjugate signal extraction. The performance enhancement using these noise-suppressing gratings is also investigated

    Scheme for direct measurement of a general two-qubit Hamiltonian

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    The construction of two-qubit gates appropriate for universal quantum computation is of enormous importance to quantum information processing. Building such gates is dependent on accurate knowledge of the interaction dynamics between two qubit systems. This letter will present a systematic method for reconstructing the full two-qubit interaction Hamiltonian through experimental measures of concurrence. This not only gives a convenient method for constructing two qubit quantum gates, but can also be used to experimentally determine various Hamiltonian parameters in physical systems. We show explicitly how this method can be employed to determine the first and second order spin-orbit corrections to the exchange coupling in quantum dots.Comment: 4 Pages, 1 Figur

    Sensing of Fluctuating Nanoscale Magnetic Fields Using NV Centres in Diamond

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    New magnetometry techniques based on Nitrogen-Vacancy (NV) defects in diamond allow for the imaging of static (DC) and oscillatory (AC) nanoscopic magnetic systems. However, these techniques require accurate knowledge and control of the sample dynamics, and are thus limited in their ability to image fields arising from rapidly fluctuating (FC) environments. We show here that FC fields place restrictions on the DC field sensitivity of an NV qubit magnetometer, and that by probing the dephasing rate of the qubit in a magnetic FC environment, we are able to measure fluctuation rates and RMS field strengths that would be otherwise inaccessible with the use of DC and AC magnetometry techniques. FC sensitivities are shown to be comparable to those of AC fields, whilst requiring no additional experimental overheads or control over the sample.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure

    Terminal shock position and restart control of a Mach 2.7, two-dimensional, twin duct mixed compression inlet

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    Experimental results of terminal shock and restart control system tests of a two-dimensional, twin-duct mixed compression inlet are presented. High-response (110-Hz bandwidth) overboard bypass doors were used, both as the variable to control shock position and as the means of disturbing the inlet airflow. An inherent instability in inlet shock position resulted in noisy feedback signals and thus restricted the terminal shock position control performance that was achieved. Proportional-plus-integral type controllers using either throat exit static pressure or shock position sensor feedback gave adequate low-frequency control. The inlet restart control system kept the terminal shock control loop closed throughout the unstart-restart transient. The capability to restart the inlet was non limited by the inlet instability

    Mathematical models for radiation transfer

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    A radiation transfer model was modified to include semitransparent and opaque layers as well as molecular constituents. An example of the use of the program and an analysis of the mathematical model are included

    Wind tunnel wall interference in V/STOL and high lift testing: A selected, annotated bibliography

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    This bibliography, with abstracts, consists of 260 citations of interest to persons involved in correcting aerodynamic data, from high lift or V/STOL type configurations, for the interference arising from the wind tunnel test section walls. It provides references which may be useful in correcting high lift data from wind tunnel to free air conditions. References are included which deal with the simulation of ground effect, since it could be viewed as having interference from three tunnel walls. The references could be used to design tests from the standpoint of model size and ground effect simulation, or to determine the available testing envelope with consideration of the problem of flow breakdown. The arrangement of the citations is chronological by date of publication in the case of reports or books, and by date of presentation in the case of papers. Included are some documents of historical interest in the development of high lift testing techniques and wall interference correction methods. Subject, corporate source, and author indices, by citation numbers, have been provided to assist the users. The appendix includes citations of some books and documents which may not deal directly with high lift or V/STOL wall interference, but include additional information which may be helpful
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