35 research outputs found
Combustion at reduced gravitational conditions
The theoretical structures needed for the predictive analyses and interpretations for flame propagation and extinction for clouds of porous particulates are presented. Related combustion theories of significance to reduced gravitational studies of combustible media are presented. Nonadiabatic boundaries are required for both autoignition theory and for extinction theory. Processes that were considered include, pyrolysis and vaporization of particulates, heterogeneous and homogeneous chemical kinetics, molecular transport of heat and mass, radiative coupling of the medium to its environment, and radiative coupling among particles and volume elements of the combustible medium
A thermal equation for flame quenching
An approximate thermal equation was derived for quenching distance based on a previously proposed diffusional treatment. The quenching distance was expressed in terms of the thermal conductivity, the fuel mole fraction, the heat capacity, the rate of the rate-controlling chemical reaction, a constant that depends on the geometry of the quenching surface, and one empirical constant. The effect of pressure on quenching distance was shown to be inversely proportional to the pressure dependence of the flame reaction, with small correction necessitated by the effect of pressure on flame temperature. The equation was used with the Semenov equation for burning velocity to show that the quenching distance was inversely proportional to burning velocity and pressure at any given initial temperature and equivalence ratio
Pion and Sigma Polarizabilities and Radiative Transitions
Fermilab E781 plans measurements of gamma-Sigma and -pion
interactions using a 600 GeV beam of Sigmas and pions, and a virtual photon
target. Pion polarizabilities and radiative transitions will be measured in
this experiment. The former can test a precise prediction of chiral symmetry;
the latter for a_1(1260) ----> pi + gamma is important for understanding the
polarizability. The experiment also measures polarizabilities and radiative
transitions for Sigma hyperons. The polarizabilities can test predictions of
baryon chiral perturbation theory. The radiative transitions to the
Sigma*(1385) provide a measure of the magnetic moment of the s-quark. Previous
experimental and theoretical results for gamma-pi and gamma-Sigma interactions
are given. The E781 experiment is described.Comment: 13 pages text (tex), Tel Aviv U. Preprint TAUP 2204-94, uses
Springer-Verlag TEX macro package lecproc.cmm (appended at end of tex file,
following \byebye), which requires extracting lecproc.cmm and putting this
file in your directory in addition to the tex file (mmcd.tex) before tex
processing. lecproc.cmm should be used following instructions and guidelines
available from Springer-Verlag. Submitted to the Proceedings of Workshop on
Chiral Dynamics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, July 1994, Eds. A.
Bernstein, B. Holstein. Replaced Oct. 4 to add TAUP preprint number. Replaced
Oct. 12 to correct Pb target thickness from 1.3% interaction to 0.3
Atmospheric Muon Flux at Sea Level, Underground, and Underwater
The vertical sea-level muon spectrum at energies above 1 GeV and the
underground/underwater muon intensities at depths up to 18 km w.e. are
calculated. The results are particularly collated with a great body of the
ground-level, underground, and underwater muon data. In the hadron-cascade
calculations, the growth with energy of inelastic cross sections and pion,
kaon, and nucleon generation in pion-nucleus collisions are taken into account.
For evaluating the prompt muon contribution to the muon flux, we apply two
phenomenological approaches to the charm production problem: the recombination
quark-parton model and the quark-gluon string model. To solve the muon
transport equation at large depths of homogeneous medium, a semi-analytical
method is used. The simple fitting formulas describing our numerical results
are given. Our analysis shows that, at depths up to 6-7 km w. e., essentially
all underground data on the muon intensity correlate with each other and with
predicted depth-intensity relation for conventional muons to within 10%.
However, the high-energy sea-level data as well as the data at large depths are
contradictory and cannot be quantitatively decribed by a single nuclear-cascade
model.Comment: 47 pages, REVTeX, 15 EPS figures included; recent experimental data
and references added, typos correcte
Radiative Decay Width Measurements of Neutral Kaon Excitations Using the Primakoff Effect
We produce a sample consisting of 147 candidate events, with minimal
backgrounds, of the mixed axial vector pair K1(1270)-K1(1400) by exciting Kl's
in the Coulomb field of lead and report the first measurements of the radiative
widths Gamma_r(K1(1400)) = 280.8+-23.2(stat)+-40.4(syst) keV and
Gamma_r(K1(1270)) = 73.2+- 6.1(stat)+-28.3(syst) keV. We also place 90% CL
upper limits Gamma_r(K*(1410)) < 52.9 keV for the vector state and
Gamma_r(K2*(1430)) < 5.4 keV for the tensor state. These measurements allow for
significant tests of quark-model predictions of radiative widths for the
low-lying vector mesons.Comment: PRL-size article, 4 figure
Self-prioritization and perceptual matching: The effects of temporal construal.
Recent research has revealed that self-referential processing enhances perceptual judgments - the so-called self-prioritization effect. The extent and origin of this effect remains unknown, however. Noting the multifaceted nature of the self, here we hypothesized that temporal influences on self-construal (i.e., past/future-self continuity) may serve as an important determinant of stimulus prioritization. Specifically, as representations of the self increase in abstraction as a function of temporal distance (i.e., distance from now), self-prioritization may only emerge when stimuli are associated with the current self. The results of three experiments supported this prediction. Self-relevance only enhanced performance in a standard perceptual-matching task when stimuli (i.e., geometric shapes) were connected with the current self; representations of the self in the future (Expts. 1 & 2) and past (Expt. 3) failed to facilitate decision making. To identify the processes underlying task performance, data were interrogated using a hierarchical drift diffusion model (HDDM) approach. Results of these analyses revealed that self-prioritization was underpinned by a stimulus bias (i.e., rate of information uptake). Collectively, these findings elucidate when and how self-relevance influences decisional processing