5,938 research outputs found
Omnidirectional acceleration device Patent
Omnidirectional liquid filled accelerometer design with liquid and housing temperature compensatio
Hydrodynamic Simulations of Oscillating Shock Waves in a Sub-Keplerian Accretion Flow Around Black Holes
We study the accretion processes on a black hole by numerical simulation. We
use a grid based finite difference code for this purpose. We scan the parameter
space spanned by the specific energy and the angular momentum and compare the
time-dependent solutions with those obtained from theoretical considerations.
We found several important results (a) The time dependent flow behaves close to
a constant height model flow in the pre-shock region and a flow with vertical
equilibrium in the post-shock region. (c) The infall time scale in the
post-shock region is several times higher than the free-fall time scale. (b)
There are two discontinuities in the flow, one being just outside of the inner
sonic point. Turbulence plays a major role in determining the locations of
these discontinuities. (d) The two discontinuities oscillate with two different
frequencies and behave as a coupled harmonic oscillator. A Fourier analysis of
the variation of the outer shock location indicates higher power at the lower
frequency and lower power at the higher frequency. The opposite is true when
the analysis of the inner shock is made. These behaviours will have
implications in the spectral and timing properties of black hole candidates.Comment: 19 pages, 13 figures, 1 Table MNRAS (In press
Saturation of Magnetorotational Instability through Magnetic Field Generation
The saturation mechanism of Magneto-Rotational Instability (MRI) is examined
through analytical quasilinear theory and through nonlinear computation of a
single mode in a rotating disk. We find that large-scale magnetic field is
generated through the alpha effect (the correlated product of velocity and
magnetic field fluctuations) and causes the MRI mode to saturate. If the
large-scale plasma flow is allowed to evolve, the mode can also saturate
through its flow relaxation. In astrophysical plasmas, for which the flow
cannot relax because of gravitational constraints, the mode saturates through
field generation only.Comment: 9 pages, 10 figures to appear in ApJ, Jun 2009, 10 v69
Medical education on fitness to drive : a survey of all UK medical schools
Aim: To identify the extent to which medical aspects of fitness to drive (FTD) are taught within UK medical schools.
Methods: A survey of all 32 UK medical schools. In-depth interviews with a range of staff at two medical schools; telephone survey of 30 schools.
Results: Two thirds of schools reported specific teaching on medical aspects of FTD but few covered it in any depth or in relation to specific medical conditions. Only one school taught FTD in relation to elderly medicine. FTD was an examination topic at only 12 schools.
Conclusion: Teaching on FTD is inconsistent across UK medical schools. Many new doctors will graduate with limited knowledge of medical aspects of FTD
Magnetically Driven Accretion in the Kerr Metric III: Unbound Outflows
We have carried out fully relativistic numerical simulations of accretion
disks in the Kerr metric. In this paper we focus on the unbound outflows that
emerge self-consistently from the accretion flow. These outflows are found in
the axial funnel region and consist of two components: a hot, fast, tenuous
outflow in the axial funnel proper, and a colder, slower, denser jet along the
funnel wall. Although a rotating black hole is not required to produce these
unbound outflows, their strength is enhanced by black hole spin. The
funnel-wall jet is excluded from the axial funnel due to elevated angular
momentum, and is also pressure-confined by a magnetized corona. The tenuous
funnel outflow accounts for a significant fraction of the energy transported to
large distances in the higher-spin simulations. We compare the outflows
observed in our simulations with those seen in other simulations.Comment: 33 pages, 8 figures, ApJ submitte
Passive broadband full Stokes polarimeter using a Fresnel cone
Light's polarisation contains information about its source and interactions,
from distant stars to biological samples. Polarimeters can recover this
information, but reliance on birefringent or rotating optical elements limits
their wavelength range and stability. Here we present a static, single-shot
polarimeter based on a Fresnel cone - the direct spatial analogue to the
popular rotating quarter-wave plate approach. We measure the average angular
accuracy to be 2.9 (3.6) degrees for elliptical(linear) polarisation states
across the visible spectrum, with the degree of polarisation determined to
within 0.12(0.08). Our broadband full Stokes polarimeter is robust,
cost-effective, and could find applications in hyper-spectral polarimetry and
scanning microscopy.Comment: 6 Pages, 4 Figure
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