44 research outputs found
Microgravity Segregation in Collisional Granular Shearing Flows
This article concerns granular shearing flows in microgravity where segregation of grains by size or mass is driven by spatial gradients in the fluctuation energy of the grains. Experiments were conducted on NASA’s microgravity aircraft with a shear cell shaped like a race track and containing a mixture of two types of spherical grains. A gradient of fluctuation energy was produced betwe n the inner, energetic moving boundary driving collisions among the grains and the outer, more dissipative boundary at the periphery of the cell. The energetics were achieved by covering the two boundaries with bumps of appropriate size and spacing and by setting the distance between the flat side walls through which the flow was observed. The grain segregation and the corresponding velocity statistics were captured by a high-speed video camera and analyzed using computer vision software. The resulting profiles of particle mean and fluctuation velocities were compared with computer simulations of the entire experimental apparatus. 1
Response to Merritts et al. (2023): The Anthropocene is complex. Defining it is not
Merritts et al. (2023) misrepresent Paul Crutzen's Anthropocene concept as encompassing all significant anthropogenic impacts, extending back many millennia. Crutzen's definition reflects massively enhanced, much more recent human impacts that transformed the Earth System away from the stability of Holocene conditions. His concept of an epoch (hence the ‘cene’ suffix) is more consistent with the strikingly distinct sedimentary record accumulated since the mid-20th century. Waters et al. (2022) highlighted a Great Acceleration Event Array (GAEA) of stratigraphic event markers that are indeed diverse and complex but also tightly clustered around 1950 CE, allowing ultra-high resolution characterization and correlation of a clearly recognisable Anthropocene chronostratigraphic base. The ‘Anthropocene event’ offered by Merritts et al., following Gibbard et al. (2021, 2022), is a highly nuanced concept that obfuscates the transformative human impact of the chronostratigraphic Anthropocene. Waters et al. (2022) restricted the meaning of the term ‘event’ in geology to conform with usual Quaternary practice and improve its utility. They simultaneously recognized an evidence-based Anthropogenic Modification Episode that is more explicitly defined than the highly interpretive interdisciplinary ‘Anthropocene event’ of Gibbard et al. (2021, 2022). The advance of science is best served through clearly developed concepts supported by tightly circumscribed terminology; indeed, improvements to stratigraphy over recent decades have been achieved through increasingly precise definitions, especially for chronostratigraphic units, and not by retaining vague terminology
Design workshops of the world : the production and integration of industrial design expertise into the product development and manufacturing process in Norway and the United Kingdom
To gain competitive advantage an increasing proportion of companies incorporate design into the product development process; it has become a critical determinant of competitive success. Design expertise is either provided internally or externally. Thus, in common with management consultancy, independent firms are increasingly providing design expertise to clients. Over the last ten years the British and Norwegian governments have emphasised the contribution made by industrial design to national competitiveness. This takes two forms: the export of design services, and the added value that comes from the incorporation of design into products and services. This paper explores the role of design services in the production process and undertakes a preliminary analysis of the structure and geography of the design industry in the UK
Solar-wind sputtering of the martian atmosphere
In the sputtering process an incident particle beam loses part of its energy to recoil motion of target atoms, some of which may escape through a nearby surface. The sputtering yield, S, is defined as the number of atoms ejected per incident particle. In the Solar System, sputtering will occur whenever the solar wind, consisting mainly of 1 keV AMU hydrogen and helium ions, strikes a material body.
Many years ago, Wehner et al. suggested that solar wind-induced sputtering of the lunar surface should be an important cause of erosion; recently, analyses of returned lunar material have been interpreted quantitatively in
terms of such solar-wind sputtering. Mars provides another
example of the interaction of the solar wind with a planetary body. However, in contrast to the lunar surface, the martian surface is largely protected from direct solar wind bombardment by its atmosphere. The primarily CO_2 atmosphere is thin by terrestrial standards but still opaque to the solar wind. We discuss here whether solar-wind sputtering of the martian atmosphere is a mechanism leading to significant mass loss