59,615 research outputs found
Overview of environmental test plans for Space Station Freedom work package 4
The generation and distribution of electric power for Space Station Freedom (SSF) is critical to the station's success. Work Package 4 (WP-04) has the responsibility for the design, development, test, and delivery of the Electric Power System (EPS) for the SSF. During launch, assembly, and operation, the EPS will be subjected to various environments. A test and verification approach has been developed to assure that the EPS will function in these environments. An overview of that test program is presented with emphasis on environmental testing of hardware. Two key areas of the test program are highlighted in the overview. One area is the verification of the Solar Power Module (SPM) and associated cargo element hardware. This area includes detailing the plans for development and qualification testing of the SPM hardware. One series of tests, including modal and acoustic, has been completed on a development cargo element. Another area highlighted is the acceptance testing of high-power Orbital Replacement Units (ORU). The environmental test equipment plans are presented and reviewed in light of an aggressive production rate, which delivers ORU's to the WP-04 and other Space Station Work Packages. Through implementing the test program as outlined, the EPS hardware will be certified for flight and operation on the Space Station Freedom
The modal account of luck revisited
According to the canonical formulation of the modal account of luck [e.g. Pritchard (2005)], an event is lucky just when that event occurs in the actual world but not in a wide class of the nearest possible worlds where the relevant conditions for that event are the same as in the actual world. This paper argues, with reference to a novel variety of counterexample, that it is a mistake to focus, when assessing a given event for luckiness, on events distributed over just the nearest possible worlds. More specifically, our objection to the canonical formulation of the modal account of luck reveals that whether an event is lucky depends crucially on events distributed over all possible worlds–viz., across the modal universe. It is shown that an amended modal account of luck which respects this point has the additional virtue of avoiding a notable kind of counterexample to modal accounts of luck proposed by Lackey (2008)
Conformally invariant powers of the Laplacian, Q-curvature, and tractor calculus
We describe an elementary algorithm for expressing, as explicit formulae in
tractor calculus, the conformally invariant GJMS operators due to C.R. Graham
et alia. These differential operators have leading part a power of the
Laplacian. Conformal tractor calculus is the natural induced bundle calculus
associated to the conformal Cartan connection. Applications discussed include
standard formulae for these operators in terms of the Levi-Civita connection
and its curvature and a direct definition and formula for T. Branson's
so-called Q-curvature (which integrates to a global conformal invariant) as
well as generalisations of the operators and the Q-curvature. Among examples,
the operators of order 4, 6, and 8 and the related Q-curvatures are treated
explicitly. The algorithm exploits the ambient metric construction of Fefferman
and Graham and includes a procedure for converting the ambient curvature and
its covariant derivatives into tractor calculus expressions. This is partly
based on "Standard tractors and the conformal ambient metric construction" (A.
Cap and A.R. Gover, math.DG/0207016), where the relationship of the normal
standard tractor bundle to the ambient construction is described.Comment: 42 pages. No figures. Record of changes: V1, 15 January 2002:
Original posting. V2, 17 January 2002: Changing comment fields. Leaving
abstract and text of article unchanged. V3, 1 February 2003: Minor changes
and typographical corrections throughout articl
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