78,080 research outputs found
DSN Ground Communications Facility
A functional description of the Ground Communications Facility (GCF) and its relationships with other elements of the Deep Space Network and the NASA Communications Network is presented together with development objectives and goals and comments on implementation activities in support of flight projects. The voice, teletype, high speed data, wideband data, monitor and control, data records, network log processor, and network communications equipment subsystems are individually examined
Flocking Regimes in a Simple Lattice Model
We study a one-dimensional lattice flocking model incorporating all three of
the flocking criteria proposed by Reynolds [Computer Graphics vol.21 4 (1987)]:
alignment, centring and separation. The model generalises that introduced by O.
J. O' Loan and M. R. Evans [J. Phys. A. vol. 32 L99 (1999)]. We motivate the
dynamical rules by microscopic sampling considerations. The model exhibits
various flocking regimes: the alternating flock, the homogeneous flock and
dipole structures. We investigate these regimes numerically and within a
continuum mean-field theory.Comment: 24 pages 7 figure
Electronic visualization of gas bearing behavior
Visualization technique produces a visual simulation of gas bearing operation by electronically combining the outputs from the clearance probes used to monitor bearing component motion. Computerized recordings of the probes output are processed, displayed on an oscilloscope screen and recorded with a high-speed motion picture camera
Lightweight orthotic braces
Leg brace is constructed of fiber-reinforced polymer material. Composite material is stiffer, stronger, and lighter than most metals
Equivalence of two approaches for the inhomogeneous density in the canonical ensemble
In this article we show that the inhomogeneous density obtained from a
density-functional theory of classical fluids in the canonical ensemble (CE),
recently presented by White et al [Phys. Rev. Lett. 84 (2000) 1220], is
equivalent to first order to the result of the series expansion of the CE
inhomogeneous density introduced by Gonzalez et al [Phys. Rev. Lett. 79 (1997)
2466].Comment: 6 pages, RevTe
AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS PROGRAMS AT 1890 INSTITUTIONS: CURRENT STATUS AND FUTURE DIRECTIONS
Teaching/Communication/Extension/Profession,
Pair-factorized steady states on arbitrary graphs
Stochastic mass transport models are usually described by specifying hopping
rates of particles between sites of a given lattice, and the goal is to predict
the existence and properties of the steady state. Here we ask the reverse
question: given a stationary state that factorizes over links (pairs of sites)
of an arbitrary connected graph, what are possible hopping rates that converge
to this state? We define a class of hopping functions which lead to the same
steady state and guarantee current conservation but may differ by the induced
current strength. For the special case of anisotropic hopping in two dimensions
we discuss some aspects of the phase structure. We also show how this case can
be traced back to an effective zero-range process in one dimension which is
solvable for a large class of hopping functions.Comment: IOP style, 9 pages, 1 figur
Boundary layer integral matrix procedure code modifications and verifications
A summary of modifications to Aerotherm's Boundary Layer Integral Matrix Procedure (BLIMP) code is presented. These modifications represent a preliminary effort to make BLIMP compatible with other JANNAF codes and to adjust the code for specific application to rocket nozzle flows. Results of the initial verification of the code for prediction of rocket nozzle type flows are discussed. For those cases in which measured free stream flow conditions were used as input to the code, the boundary layer predictions and measurements are in excellent agreement. In two cases, with free stream flow conditions calculated by another JANNAF code (TDK) for use as input to BLIMP, the predictions and the data were in fair agreement for one case and in poor agreement for the other case. The poor agreement is believed to result from failure of the turbulent model in BLIMP to account for laminarization of a turbulent flow. Recommendations for further code modifications and improvements are also presented
Interim user's manual for boundary layer integral matrix procedure, version J
A computer program for analyzing two dimensional and axisymmetric nozzle performance with a variety of wall boundary conditions is described. The program has been developed for application to rocket nozzle problems. Several aids to usage of the program and two auxiliary subroutines are provided. Some features of the output are described and three sample cases are included
Lensing Properties of Cored Galaxy Models
A method is developed to evaluate the magnifications of the images of
galaxies with lensing potentials stratified on similar concentric ellipses. A
simple contour integral is provided which enables the sums of the
magnifications of even parity or odd parity or the central image to be easily
calculated. The sums for pairs of images vary considerably with source
position, while the signed sums can be remarkably uniform inside the tangential
caustic in the absence of naked cusps. For a family of models in which the
potential is a power-law of the elliptic radius, the number of visible images
is found as a function of flattening, external shear and core radius. The
magnification of the central image depends on the core radius and the slope of
the potential. For typical source and lens redshifts, the missing central image
leads to strong constraints; the mass distribution in the lensing galaxy must
be nearly cusped, and the cusp must be isothermal or stronger. This is in
accord with the cuspy cores seen in high resolution photometry of nearby,
massive, early-type galaxies, which typically have the surface density falling
like distance^{-1.3} outside a break radius of a few hundred parsecs. Cuspy
cores by themselves can provide an explanation of the missing central images.
Dark matter at large radii may alter the slope of the projected density;
provided the slope remains isothermal or steeper and the break radius remains
small, then the central image remains unobservable. The sensitivity of the
radio maps must be increased fifty-fold to find the central images in
abundance.Comment: 42 pages, 11 figures, ApJ in pres
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