34,060 research outputs found
Separated flow over bodies of revolution using an unsteady discrete-vorticity cross wake. Part 1: Theory and application
A method is developed to determine the flow field of a body of revolution in separated flow. The technique employed is the use of the computer to integrate various solutions and solution properties of the sub-flow fields which made up the entire flow field without resorting to a finite difference solution to the complete Navier-Stokes equations. The technique entails the use of the unsteady cross flow analogy and a new solution to the required two-dimensional unsteady separated flow problem based upon an unsteady, discrete-vorticity wake. Data for the forces and moments on aerodynamic bodies at low speeds and high angle of attack (outside the range of linear inviscid theories) such that the flow is substantially separated are produced which compare well with experimental data. In addition, three dimensional steady separation regions and wake vortex patterns are determined
Separated flow over bodies of revolution using an unsteady discrete-vorticity cross wake. Part 2: Computer program description
A method is developed to determine the flow field of a body of revolution in separated flow. The computer was used to integrate various solutions and solution properties of the sub-flow fields which made up the entire flow field without resorting to a finite difference solution to the complete Navier-Stokes equations. The technique entails the use of the unsteady cross flow analogy and a new solution to the two-dimensional unsteady separated flow problem based upon an unsteady, discrete-vorticity wake. Data for the forces and moments on aerodynamic bodies at low speeds and high angle of attack (outside the range of linear inviscid theories) such that the flow is substantially separated are produced which compare well with experimental data. In addition, three dimensional steady separated regions and wake vortex patterns are determined. The computer program developed to perform the numerical calculations is described
The Supersymmetric Leptophilic Higgs Model
In the leptophilic model, one Higgs doublet couples to quarks and another
couples to leptons. We study the supersymmetric version of this model,
concentrating on the tightly constrained Higgs sector, which has four doublets.
Constraints from perturbativity, unitarity, and LEP bounds are considered. It
is found that the lightest Higgs, h, can have a mass well below 114 GeV, and
for masses below 100 GeV will have a substantially enhanced branching ratio
into tau pairs. For this region of parameter space, traditional production
mechanisms (Higgs-strahlung, W fusion and gluon fusion) are suppressed, but it
may be produced in the decay of heavier particles. The second lightest Higgs
has a mass of approximately 110 GeV for virtually all of parameter space, with
Standard Model couplings, and thus an increase of a few GeV in the current
lower bound on the Standard Model Higgs mass would rule out the model. The two
heavier Higgs are both gauge-phobic, one decays almost entirely into b pairs
and can be produced via gluon fusion while the other decays almost entirely
into tau pairs but can't be easily produced.Comment: 21 pages, 6 figure
Spatial characterization of acid rain stress in Canadian Shield Lakes
The lake acidification in Northern Ontario was investigated using LANDSAT TM to sense lake volume reflectance and also to provide important vegetation and terrain characteristics. The purpose of this project was to determine the ability of LANDSAT to assess water quality characteristics associated with lake acidification. Results demonstrate that a remote sensor can discriminate lake clarity based upon reflection. The basic hypothesis is that seasonal and multi-year changes in lake optical transparency are indicative of sensitivity to acidic deposition. In many acid-sensitive lakes optical transparency is controlled by the amount of dissolved organic carbon present. Seasonal changes in the optical transparency of lakes can potentially provide an indication of the stress due to acid deposition and loading
A Supersymmetric Model with Dirac Neutrino Masses
New models have recently been proposed in which a second Higgs doublet
couples only to the lepton doublets and right-handed neutrinos, yielding Dirac
neutrino masses. The vacuum value of this second "nu-Higgs" doublet is made
very small by means of a very softly-broken or U(1) symmetry. The latter
is technically natural and avoids fine-tuning and very light scalars. We
consider a supersymmetric version of this model, in which two additional
doublets are added to the MSSM. If kinematically allowed, the decay of the
heavy MSSM scalar into charged nu-Higgs scalars will yield dilepton events
which can be separated from the W-pair background. In addition, the
nu-Higgsinos can lead to very dramatic tetralepton, pentalepton and hexalepton
events which have negligible background and can be detected at the LHC and the
Tevatron.Comment: 18 pages, 3 figures, 6 tables; PRD versio
An X-ray survey of variable radio bright quasars
A sample consisting primarily of radio bright quasars was observed in X-rays with the Einstein Observatory for times ranging from 1500 to 5000 seconds. Detected sources had luminosities ranging from 0.2 to 41.0 x 10 to the 45th power ergs/sec in the 0.5 to 4.5 keV band. Three of the fourteen objects which were reobserved showed flux increases greater than a factor of two on a time scale greater than six months. No variability was detected during the individual observations. The optical and X-ray luminosities are correlated, which suggests a common origin. However, the relationship (L sub x is approximately L sub op to the (.89 + or - .15)) found for historic radio variables may be significantly different than that reported for other radio bright sources. Some of the observed X-ray fluxes were substantially below the predicted self-Compton flux, assuming incoherent synchrotron emission and using VLBI results to constrain the size of the emission region, which suggests relativistic expansion in these sources. Normal CIV emission in two of the sources with an overpredicted Compton component suggests that although they, like BL Lac objects, have highly relativistic material apparently moving at small angle to the line of sight, they have a smaller fraction of the continuum component in the beam
A survey of the problem and research needs in the coastal zone
Coastal zone oceanography emphasizing pollution and geological processes - bibliograph
Gait Analysis of Horses for Lameness Detection with Radar Sensors
This paper presents the preliminary investigation of the use of
radar signatures to detect and assess lameness of horses and its
severity. Radar sensors in this context can provide attractive
contactless sensing capabilities, as a complementary or
alternative technology to the current techniques for lameness
assessment using video-graphics and inertial sensors attached to the horses' body. The paper presents several examples of experimental data collected at the Weipers Centre Equine
Hospital at the University of Glasgow, showing the micro-
Doppler signatures of horses and preliminary results of their
analysis
Electrochemical carbon dioxide concentrator: Math model
A steady state computer simulation model of an Electrochemical Depolarized Carbon Dioxide Concentrator (EDC) has been developed. The mathematical model combines EDC heat and mass balance equations with empirical correlations derived from experimental data to describe EDC performance as a function of the operating parameters involved. The model is capable of accurately predicting performance over EDC operating ranges. Model simulation results agree with the experimental data obtained over the prediction range
Evolutionary growth for Space Station Freedom electrical power system
Over an operational lifetime of at least 30 yr, Space Station Freedom will encounter increased space station user requirements and advancing technologies. The space station electrical power system is designed with the flexibility to accommodate these emerging technologies and expert systems and is being designed with the necessary software hooks and hardware scars to accommodate increased growth demand. The electrical power system is planned to grow from the initial 75 kW up to 300 kW. The Phase 1 station will utilize photovoltaic arrays to produce the electrical power; however, for growth to 300 kW, solar dynamic power modules will be utilized. Pairs of 25 kW solar dynamic power modules will be added to the station to reach the power growth level. The addition of solar dynamic power in the growth phase places constraints in the initial space station systems such as guidance navigation and control, external thermal, truss structural stiffness, computational capabilities and storage which must be planned-in in order to facilitate the addition of the solar dynamic modules
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