112,656 research outputs found
Using Intelligent Simulation to Enhance Human Performance in Aircraft Maintenance
Human factors research and development investigates the capabilities and limitations of the human within a system. Of the many variables affecting human performance in the aviation maintenance system, training is among the most important. The advent of advanced technology hardware and software has created intelligent training simulations. This paper describes one advanced technology training system under development for the Federal Aviation Administration
A preliminary systems study of interface equipment for digitally programmed flight simulators
Design study of digitally programmed supersonic transport flight simulato
Nova Aquilae 1918 (V603 Aql) Faded by 0.44 mag/century from 1938-2013
We present the light curve of the old nova V603 Aql (Nova Aql 1918) from
1898-1918 and 1934-2013 using 22,721 archival magnitudes. All of our magnitudes
are either in, or accurately transformed into, the Johnson and
magnitude systems. This is vital because offsets in old sequences and the
visual-to- transformation make for errors from 0.1-1.0 magnitude if not
corrected. Our V603 Aql light curve is the first time that this has been done
for any nova. Our goal was to see the evolution of the mass accretion rate on
the century time scale, and to test the long-standing prediction of the
Hibernation model that old novae should be fading significantly in the century
after their eruption is long over. The 1918 nova eruption was completely
finished by 1938 when the nova decline stopped, and when the star had faded to
fainter than its pre-nova brightness of mag. We find that
the nova light from 1938-2013 was significantly fading, with this being seen
consistently in three independent data sets (the Sonneberg plates in , the
AAVSO light curve, and the non-AAVSO light curve). We find that V603
Aql is declining in brightness at an average rate of mag per
century since 1938. This work provides remarkable confirmation of an important
prediction of the Hibernation model.Comment: 13 pages, 1 figure, 2 electronic online data tables, Accepted for
publication ApJLet
Solid-state interdiffusion reactions in Ni/Ti and Ni/Zr multilayered thin films
We have performed a comparative transmission electron microscopy study of solid-state interdiffusion reactions in multilayered Ni/Zr and Ni/Ti thin films. The Ni-Zr reaction product was amorphous while the Ni-Ti reaction product was a simple intermetallic compound. Because thermodynamic and chemical properties of these two alloy systems are similar, we suggest kinetic origins for this difference in reaction product
DIRBE Minus 2MASS: Confirming the CIRB in 40 New Regions at 2.2 and 3.5 Microns
With the release of the 2MASS All-Sky Point Source Catalog, stellar fluxes
from 2MASS are used to remove the contribution due to Galactic stars from the
intensity measured by DIRBE in 40 new regions in the North and South Galactic
polar caps. After subtracting the interplanetary and Galactic foregrounds, a
consistent residual intensity of 14.69 +/- 4.49 kJy/sr at 2.2 microns is found.
Allowing for a constant calibration factor between the DIRBE 3.5 microns and
the 2MASS 2.2 microns fluxes, a similar analysis leaves a residual intensity of
15.62 +/- 3.34 kJy/sr at 3.5 microns. The intercepts of the DIRBE minus 2MASS
correlation at 1.25 microns show more scatter and are a smaller fraction of the
foreground, leading to a still weak limit on the CIRB of 8.88 +/- 6.26 kJy/sr
(1 sigma).Comment: 25 pages LaTeX, 10 figures, 5 tables; Version accepted by the ApJ.
Includes minor changes to the text including further discussion of zodiacal
light issues and the allowance for variable stars in computing uncertainties
in the stellar contribution to the DIRBE intensitie
Modeling pN2 through Geological Time: Implications for Planetary Climates and Atmospheric Biosignatures
Nitrogen is a major nutrient for all life on Earth and could plausibly play a
similar role in extraterrestrial biospheres. The major reservoir of nitrogen at
Earth's surface is atmospheric N2, but recent studies have proposed that the
size of this reservoir may have fluctuated significantly over the course of
Earth's history with particularly low levels in the Neoarchean - presumably as
a result of biological activity. We used a biogeochemical box model to test
which conditions are necessary to cause large swings in atmospheric N2
pressure. Parameters for our model are constrained by observations of modern
Earth and reconstructions of biomass burial and oxidative weathering in deep
time. A 1-D climate model was used to model potential effects on atmospheric
climate. In a second set of tests, we perturbed our box model to investigate
which parameters have the greatest impact on the evolution of atmospheric pN2
and consider possible implications for nitrogen cycling on other planets. Our
results suggest that (a) a high rate of biomass burial would have been needed
in the Archean to draw down atmospheric pN2 to less than half modern levels,
(b) the resulting effect on temperature could probably have been compensated by
increasing solar luminosity and a mild increase in pCO2, and (c) atmospheric
oxygenation could have initiated a stepwise pN2 rebound through oxidative
weathering. In general, life appears to be necessary for significant
atmospheric pN2 swings on Earth-like planets. Our results further support the
idea that an exoplanetary atmosphere rich in both N2 and O2 is a signature of
an oxygen-producing biosphere.Comment: 33 pages, 11 figures, 2 tables (includes appendix), published in
Astrobiolog
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