12,921 research outputs found

    Radiation pressure: A possible cause for the superrotation of the Venusian atmosphere

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    The superrotation of the venusian atmosphere relative to the planet's surface has long been known. Yet the process by which this vigorous circulation is maintained is poorly understood. The purpose of this report is to show that a mechanism by which the solar radiation interacts with the cloudy atmosphere of Venus could be the principle cause of the superrotation. It has been long known that Venus has a high albedo due to the scattering (similar to the reflection process) of solar radiation by the cloud droplets in its atmosphere. The radiation not scattered, but intercepted by the planet and its atmosphere, is mainly absorbed within the cloud layers. Therefore, momentum (equal, more or less, to that of the solar radiation intercepted) is continually transferred to the venusian atmosphere. The atmospheric system presents a symmetrical surface (same radiation-matter interaction) toward the solar radiation at its morning and evening limbs. If the cross-sectional areas at both limbs were equal, the momentum transfer at the morning limb would decelerate the atmosphere's rotation while at the evening limb the same transfer would accelerate the rotation an equal amount. The net result of this is that the overall rate of rotation would be unchanged. Such a symmetrical configuration is not likely since the atmosphere must be warmed as it rotates across the planet's day hemisphere and cooled as it rotates across the planet's night hemisphere. This warming and cooling must result in a formation of an asymmetrical configuration. It is apparent that the momentum transfer at the evening limb must be greater than that at the morning limb because the atmosphere's greater cross section at the evening limb intercepts a greater amount of solar radiation. It should be noted that very little of the solar radiation is transmitted through the cloud layers, especially at or near the limbs where the atmospheric path length of the radiation is long. This net momentum transfer must be continually added to the angular momentum of the atmospheric system at the same time angular momentum is continually removed from the atmosphere by the frictional drag imposed on the atmosphere by the slowly rotating planet's surface. This completes the description of this mechanism

    High-pressure gas facilitates calibration of turbine flowmeters for liquid hydrogen

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    Nitrogen gas at a pressure of 60 atmospheres and ambient temperature facilitates the calibration of turbine flowmeters used for monitoring the flow of liquid hydrogen in cryogenic systems. Full-scale calibration factors can be obtained to an accuracy of 0.4 percent

    Flow direction measurement with fixed probes

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    Fixed-position probes for determination of flow direction in one and two planes are tested over a wide range of Reynolds numbers and Mach numbers. The work is limited to tests of a single probe design for two dimensional flow and a single design for three dimensional flow

    Acceleration of cosmic rays and gamma-ray emission from supernova remnant/molecular cloud associations

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    The gamma-ray observations of molecular clouds associated with supernova remnants are considered one of the most promising ways to search for a solution of the problem of cosmic ray origin. Here we briefly review the status of the field, with particular emphasis on the theoretical and phenomenological aspects of the problem.Comment: Invited talk at SUGAR201

    Total-pressure measurement in pulsating flows

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    Pneumatic-type probe was used as comparison instrument with total pressure tubes to determine true average pressure and, thus, to determine if nonlinear averaging effects were significant. Since pneumatic probe is more complicated to use than a total-pressure tube, it is used only as a comparison instrument to determine extent of averaging effects

    An engineering feasibility study of an orbiting scanning radiometer

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    Engineering feasibility study of lunar orbiting optical scanning radiometer

    The atom-molecule reaction D plus H2 yields HD plus H studied by molecular beams

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    Collisions between deuterium atoms and hydrogen molecules were studied in a modulated crossed beam experiment. The relative signal intensity and the signal phase for the product HD from reactive collisions permitted determination of both the angular distribution and HD mean velocity as a function of angle. From these a relative differential reactive scattering cross section in center-of-mass coordinates was deduced. The experiment indicates that reactively formed HD which has little or no internal excitation departs from the collision anisotropically, with maximum amplitude 180 deg from the direction of the incident D beam in center-of-mass coordinates, which shows that the D-H-H reacting configuration is short-lived compared to its rotation time. Non reactive scattering of D by H2 was used to assign absolute values to the differential reactive scattering cross sections

    Excitation of Na D-line radiation in collisions of sodium atoms with internally excited H2, D2, and N2

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    Excitation of D-line radiation in collisions of Na atoms with vibrationally excited N2, H2 and D2 was studied in two modulated crossed beam experiments. In both experiments, the vibrational excitation of the molecules was provided by heating the molecular beam source to temperatures in the range of 2000 to 3000 K, which was assumed to give populations according to the Boltzmann expression. In the first experiment, a total rate coefficient was measured as a function of molecular beam temperature, with absolute calibration of the photon detector being made using the black body radiation from the heated molecular beam source. Since heating affects both the internal energy and the collisional kinetic energy, the first experiment could not determine the relative contributions of internal energy transfer versus collisional excitation. The second experiment achieved partial separation of internal versus kinetic energy transfer effects by using a velocity-selected molecular beam. Using two simple models for the kinetic energy dependence of the transfer cross section for a given change in vibrational quantum number, the data from both experiments were used to determine parameters in the models

    Transfer of excitation energy from nitrogen molecules to sodium atoms

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    Transfer of excitation energy from nitrogen molecules to sodium atom

    Leading SU(3)-breaking corrections to the baryon magnetic moments in Chiral Perturbation Theory

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    We calculate the baryon magnetic moments using covariant Chiral Perturbation Theory (χ\chiPT) within the Extended-on-mass-shell (EOMS) renormalization scheme. By fitting the two available low-energy constants (LECs), we improve the Coleman-Glashow description of the data when we include the leading SU(3) breaking effects coming from the lowest-order loops. This success is in dramatic contrast with previous attempts at the same order using Heavy Baryon (HB) χ\chiPT and covariant Infrared (IR) χ\chiPT. We also analyze the source of this improvement with particular attention on the comparison between the covariant results.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in PR
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