19,398 research outputs found
Study of information transfer optimization for communication satellites
The results are presented of a study of source coding, modulation/channel coding, and systems techniques for application to teleconferencing over high data rate digital communication satellite links. Simultaneous transmission of video, voice, data, and/or graphics is possible in various teleconferencing modes and one-way, two-way, and broadcast modes are considered. A satellite channel model including filters, limiter, a TWT, detectors, and an optimized equalizer is treated in detail. A complete analysis is presented for one set of system assumptions which exclude nonlinear gain and phase distortion in the TWT. Modulation, demodulation, and channel coding are considered, based on an additive white Gaussian noise channel model which is an idealization of an equalized channel. Source coding with emphasis on video data compression is reviewed, and the experimental facility utilized to test promising techniques is fully described
Shock enhancement and control of hypersonic mixing and combustion
The possibility that shock enhanced mixing can
substantially increase the rate of mixing between
coflowing streams of hydrogen and air has been
studied in experimental and computational investigations.
Early numerical computations indicated that
the steady interaction between a weak shock in air
with a coflowing hydrogen jet can be well approximated
by the two-dimensional time-dependent interaction
between a weak shock and an initially circular
region filled with hydrogen imbedded in air. An experimental
investigation of the latter process has been
carned out in the Caltech 17 Inch Shock Tube in experiments
in which the laser induced fluorescence of
byacetyl dye is used as a tracer for the motion of the
helium gas after shock waves have passed across the
helium cylinder. The flow field has also been studied
using an Euler code computation of the flow field.
Both investigations show that the shock impinging
process causes the light gas cylinder to split into two
parts. One of these mixes rapidly with air and the
other forms a stably stratified vortex pair which mixes
more slowly; about 60% of the light gas mixes rapidly
with the ambient fluid. The geometry of the flow field
and the mixing process and scaling parameters are
discussed here. The success of this program encouraged
the exploration of a low drag injection system in
which the basic concept of shock generated streamwise
vorticity could be incorporated in an injector for
a Scramjet combustor at Mach numbers between 5
and 8. The results of a substantial computational
program and a description of the wind tunnel model and preliminary experimental results obtained in the
High Reynolds Number Mach 6 Tunnel at NASA Langley
Research Center are given here
Local structure of In_(0.5)Ga_(0.5)As from joint high-resolution and differential pair distribution function analysis
High resolution total and indium differential atomic pair distribution
functions (PDFs) for In_(0.5)Ga_(0.5)As alloys have been obtained by high
energy and anomalous x-ray diffraction experiments, respectively. The first
peak in the total PDF is resolved as a doublet due to the presence of two
distinct bond lengths, In-As and Ga-As. The In differential PDF, which involves
only atomic pairs containing In, yields chemical specific information and helps
ease the structure data interpretation. Both PDFs have been fit with structure
models and the way in that the underlying cubic zinc-blende lattice of
In_(0.5)Ga_(0.5)As semiconductor alloy distorts locally to accommodate the
distinct In-As and Ga-As bond lengths present has been quantified.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figur
Memory in nanomagnetic systems: Superparamagnetism versus Spinglass behavior
The slow dynamics and concomitant memory (aging) effects seen in nanomagnetic
systems are analyzed on the basis of two separate paradigms : superparamagnets
and spinglasses. It is argued that in a large class of aging phenomena it
suffices to invoke superparamagnetic relaxation of individual single domain
particles but with a distribution of their sizes. Cases in which interactions
and randomness are important in view of distinctive experimental signatures,
are also discussed.Comment: 11 pages and 19 figure
Floppy modes and the free energy: Rigidity and connectivity percolation on Bethe Lattices
We show that negative of the number of floppy modes behaves as a free energy
for both connectivity and rigidity percolation, and we illustrate this result
using Bethe lattices. The rigidity transition on Bethe lattices is found to be
first order at a bond concentration close to that predicted by Maxwell
constraint counting. We calculate the probability of a bond being on the
infinite cluster and also on the overconstrained part of the infinite cluster,
and show how a specific heat can be defined as the second derivative of the
free energy. We demonstrate that the Bethe lattice solution is equivalent to
that of the random bond model, where points are joined randomly (with equal
probability at all length scales) to have a given coordination, and then
subsequently bonds are randomly removed.Comment: RevTeX 11 pages + epsfig embedded figures. Submitted to Phys. Rev.
Occurrence and Detection of Killer Yeasts on Chenin Blanc Grapes and Grape Skins
Two hundred and thirty killer yeast strains were selectively isolated from Chenin blanc grapes and grape skins collected from six wineries. The killer yeasts were divided into nine groups based on their colony morphology and colour on modified Wallerstein laboratory nutrient agar. All strains fermented Chenin blanc grape must (pH 3,5; 40 mg/ I free SO, and 5% (v/v) ethanol) at l4°C. Existing techniques in which methylene blue are used were evaluated to detect killer yeasts, to determine interactions between different killer phenotypes, and to determine the sensitivity of commercial strains to the killer toxins
Shock tunnel studies of scramjet phenomena
Commissioning of the new T4 shock tunnel at the University of Queensland implied that it was no longer necessary to focus the work of the research group about an annual test series conducted in the T3 shock tunnel in Canberra. Therefore, it has been possible to organize a group for work to proceed along lines such that particular personnel are associated with particular project areas. The format of this report consists of a series of reports on specific project areas, with a brief general introduction commenting on each report. The introduction is structured by project areas, with the title of the relevant report stated under the project area heading. The reports themselves follow in the order of the project area headings
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