3,613 research outputs found
Cobalt base superalloy has outstanding properties up to 1478 K (2200 F)
Alloy VM-103 is especially promising for use in applications requiring short time exposure to very high temperatures. Its properties over broad range of temperatures are superior to those of comparable commercial wrought cobalt-base superalloys, L-605 and HS-188
Conditions and Limitations in Deeds and Wills
Presented for the Degree of Bachelor of Laws
Burst avalanches in solvable models of fibrous materials
We review limiting models for fracture in bundles of fibers, with
statistically distributed thresholds for breakdown of individual fibers. During
the breakdown process, avalanches consisting of simultaneous rupture of several
fibers occur, and the distribution of the magnitude of
such avalanches is the central characteristics in our analysis. For a bundle of
parallel fibers two limiting models of load sharing are studied and contrasted:
the global model in which the load carried by a bursting fiber is equally
distributed among the surviving members, and the local model in which the
nearest surviving neighbors take up the load. For the global model we
investigate in particular the conditions on the threshold distribution which
would lead to anomalous behavior, i.e. deviations from the asymptotics
, known to be the generic behavior. For the local
model no universal power-law asymptotics exists, but we show for a particular
threshold distribution how the avalanche distribution can nevertheless be
explicitly calculated in the large-bundle limit.Comment: 28 pages, RevTeX, 3 Postscript figure
A new method for monitoring global volcanic activity
The ERTS Data Collection System makes it feasible for the first time to monitor the level of activity at widely separated volcanoes and to relay these data rapidly to one central office for analysis. While prediction of specific eruptions is still an evasive goal, early warning of a reawakening of quiescent volcanoes is now a distinct possibility. A prototypical global volcano surveillance system was established under the ERTS program. Instruments were installed in cooperation with local scientists on 15 volcanoes in Alaska, Hawaii, Washington, California, Iceland, Guatemala, El Salvador and Nicaragua. The sensors include 19 seismic event counters that count four different sizes of earthquakes and six biaxial borehole tiltmeters that measure ground tilt with a resolution of 1 microradian. Only seismic and tilt data are collected because these have been shown in the past to indicate most reliably the level of volcano activity at many different volcanoes. Furthermore, these parameters can be measured relatively easily with new instrumentation
Editor\u27s Commentary: Control of salinity in an estuary by a transition
In 1900, Martin Knudson (Knudson 1900; Burchard et al. 2018) considered the salt and volume fluxes for a steady-state estuary. He arrived at very useful relationships between the flux of fresh water coming in from upstream compared to the output salinity and volume flux. While these relations are fundamental and extremely useful, they do not close the problem. Rather, there is always one more piece of information needed; for example, to know the flux of brackish water onto the shelf, you still have to know the outflow salinity..
Development and evaluation of a prototype global volcano surveillance system utilizing the ERTS-1 satellite data collection system
There are no author-identified significant results in this report
Traveling Wave Fronts and Localized Traveling Wave Convection in Binary Fluid Mixtures
Nonlinear fronts between spatially extended traveling wave convection (TW)
and quiescent fluid and spatially localized traveling waves (LTWs) are
investigated in quantitative detail in the bistable regime of binary fluid
mixtures heated from below. A finite-difference method is used to solve the
full hydrodynamic field equations in a vertical cross section of the layer
perpendicular to the convection roll axes. Results are presented for
ethanol-water parameters with several strongly negative separation ratios where
TW solutions bifurcate subcritically. Fronts and LTWs are compared with each
other and similarities and differences are elucidated. Phase propagation out of
the quiescent fluid into the convective structure entails a unique selection of
the latter while fronts and interfaces where the phase moves into the quiescent
state behave differently. Interpretations of various experimental observations
are suggested.Comment: 46 pages, 11 figures. Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Bounds for the time to failure of hierarchical systems of fracture
For years limited Monte Carlo simulations have led to the suspicion that the
time to failure of hierarchically organized load-transfer models of fracture is
non-zero for sets of infinite size. This fact could have a profound
significance in engineering practice and also in geophysics. Here, we develop
an exact algebraic iterative method to compute the successive time intervals
for individual breaking in systems of height in terms of the information
calculated in the previous height . As a byproduct of this method,
rigorous lower and higher bounds for the time to failure of very large systems
are easily obtained. The asymptotic behavior of the resulting lower bound leads
to the evidence that the above mentioned suspicion is actually true.Comment: Final version. To appear in Phys. Rev. E, Feb 199
Biases in Expansion Distances of Novae Arising from the Prolate Geometry of Nova Shells
(abridged) Expansion distances (or expansion parallaxes) for classical novae
are based on comparing a measurement of the shell expansion velocity,
multiplied by the time since outburst, with some measure of the angular size of
the shell. We review and formalize this method in the case of prolate
spheroidal shells. We present expressions for the maximum line-of-sight
velocity from a complete, expanding shell and for its projected major and minor
axes, in terms of the intrinsic axis ratio and the inclination of the polar
axis to the line of sight. For six distinct definitions of ``angular size'', we
tabulate the error in distance that is introduced under the assumption of
spherical symmetry (i.e., without correcting for inclination and axis ratio).
The errors can be significant and systematic, affecting studies of novae
whether considered individually or statistically. Each of the six estimators
overpredicts the distance when the polar axis is close to the line of sight,
and most underpredict the distance when the polar axis is close to the plane of
the sky. The straight mean of the projected semimajor and semiminor axes gives
the least distance bias for an ensemble of randomly oriented prolate shells.
The best individual expansion distances, however, result from a full
spatio-kinematic modeling of the nova shell. We discuss several practical
complications that affect expansion distance measurements of real nova shells.
Nova shell expansion distances be based on velocity and angular size
measurements made contemporaneously if possible, and the same ions and
transitions should be used for the imaging and velocity measurements. We
emphasize the need for complete and explicit reporting of measurement
procedures and results, regardless of the specific method used.Comment: 21 pages, LaTeX, uses aasms4.sty, to be published in Publ. Astron.
Soc. of the Pacific, May 200
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