18,614 research outputs found
Test results and description of a 1-kW free-piston Stirling engine with a dashpot load
A 1 kW (1.33 hp) single cylinder free piston Stirling engine was installed in the test facilities at the Lewis laboratory. The engine was designed specifically for research of the dynamics of its operation. A more complete description of the engine and its instrumentation is provided in a prior NASA paper TM-82999 by J. G. Schreiber. Initial tests at Lewis showed the power level and efficiency of the engine to be below design level. Tests were performed to help determine the specific problems in the engine causing the below design level performance. Modifications to engine hardware and to the facility where performed in an effort to bring the power output and efficiency to their design values. As finally configured the engine generated more than 1250 watts of output power at an engine efficiency greater than 32 percent. This report presents the tests performed to help determine the specific problems, the results if the problem was eliminated, the fix performed to the hardware, and the test results after the engine was tested. In cases where the fix did not cause the anticipated effects, a possible explanation is given
M-theory from the superpoint
The âbrane scanâ classifies consistent GreenâSchwarz strings and membranes in terms of the invariant cocycles on super Minkowski spacetimes. The âbrane bouquetâ generalizes this by consecutively forming the invariant higher central extensions induced by these cocycles, which yields the complete fundamental brane content of string/M-theory, including the D-branes and the M5-brane, as well as the various duality relations between these. This raises the question whether the super Minkowski spacetimes themselves arise as maximal invariant central extensions. Here, we prove that they do. Starting from the simplest possible super Minkowski spacetime, the superpoint, which has no Lorentz structure and no spinorial structure, we give a systematic process of consecutive âmaximal invariant central extensionsâ and show that it discovers the super Minkowski spacetimes that contain superstrings, culminating in the 10- and 11-dimensional super Minkowski spacetimes of string/M-theory and leading directly to the brane bouquet
RE-1000 free-piston Stirling engine update
A free piston Stirling engine was tested. The tests performed over the past several years on the single cylinder engine were designed to investigate the dynamics of a free piston Stirling engine. The data are intended to be used primarily for computer code validation. The tests designed to investigate the sensitivity of the engine performance to variations in working space pressure, heater and cooler temperatures, regenerator porosity, power piston mass and displacer dynamics were completed. In addition, some data were recorded with alternate working fluids. A novel resonant balance system for the engine was also tested. Some preliminary test results of the tests performed are presented along with an outline of future tests to be run with the engine coupled to a hydraulic output unit. A description of the hydraulic output unit is given
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Robust permanence for ecological equations with internal and external feedbacks.
Species experience both internal feedbacks with endogenous factors such as trait evolution and external feedbacks with exogenous factors such as weather. These feedbacks can play an important role in determining whether populations persist or communities of species coexist. To provide a general mathematical framework for studying these effects, we develop a theorem for coexistence for ecological models accounting for internal and external feedbacks. Specifically, we use average Lyapunov functions and Morse decompositions to develop sufficient and necessary conditions for robust permanence, a form of coexistence robust to large perturbations of the population densities and small structural perturbations of the models. We illustrate how our results can be applied to verify permanence in non-autonomous models, structured population models, including those with frequency-dependent feedbacks, and models of eco-evolutionary dynamics. In these applications, we discuss how our results relate to previous results for models with particular types of feedbacks
Robust permanence for interacting structured populations
The dynamics of interacting structured populations can be modeled by
where , , and
are matrices with non-negative off-diagonal entries. These models are
permanent if there exists a positive global attractor and are robustly
permanent if they remain permanent following perturbations of .
Necessary and sufficient conditions for robust permanence are derived using
dominant Lyapunov exponents of the with respect to
invariant measures . The necessary condition requires for all ergodic measures with support in the boundary of the
non-negative cone. The sufficient condition requires that the boundary admits a
Morse decomposition such that for all invariant
measures supported by a component of the Morse decomposition. When the
Morse components are Axiom A, uniquely ergodic, or support all but one
population, the necessary and sufficient conditions are equivalent.
Applications to spatial ecology, epidemiology, and gene networks are given
SIMDET - Version 4 A Parametric Monte Carlo for a TESLA Detector
A new release of the parametric detector Monte Carlo program \verb+SIMDET+
(version 4.01) is now available. We describe the principles of operation and
the usage of this program to simulate the response of a detector for the TESLA
linear collider. The detector components are implemented according to the TESLA
Technical Design Report. All detector component responses are treated in a
realistic way using a parametrisation of results from the {\em ab initio} Monte
Carlo program \verb+BRAHMS+. Pattern recognition is emulated using a complete
cross reference between generated particles and detector response. Also, for
charged particles, the covariance matrix and information are made
available. An idealised energy flow algorithm defines the output of the
program, consisting of particles generically classified as electrons, photons,
muons, charged and neutral hadrons as well as unresolved clusters. The program
parameters adjustable by the user are described in detail. User hooks inside
the program and the output data structure are documented.Comment: 30 pages, 7 figure
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