4,955 research outputs found
Heat-transfer tests on the Rockwell International space shuttle orbiter with and without simulated protuberances
Aerothermodynamic tests on the forward half of the Rockwell International Space Shuttle Orbiter Configuration 140C were conducted at Mach number 8. The phase-change paint and thin-skin thermocouple techniques were used to determine the aerodynamic heating rates on the Orbiter models during simulated atmospheric reentry. Smooth 0.04-scale models and models with scaled protuberances and indentations which simulated the windshields, cargo bay door hinges, vents, and thruster nozzles were tested over an angle-of-attack range from 20 to 45 deg at yaw angles from -5 to 5 deg and at Reynolds numbers, based on the total Orbiter scaled length, from 2.15 to 15.9 million. Comparisons of the model heat-transfer rates obtained with a smooth surface and with scaled protuberances are presented
Segregation by membrane rigidity in flowing binary suspensions of elastic capsules
Spatial segregation in the wall normal direction is investigated in
suspensions containing a binary mixture of Neo-Hookean capsules subjected to
pressure driven flow in a planar slit. The two components of the binary mixture
have unequal membrane rigidities. The problem is studied numerically using an
accelerated implementation of the boundary integral method. The effect of a
variety of parameters was investigated, including the capillary number,
rigidity ratio between the two species, volume fraction, confinement ratio, and
the number fraction of the more floppy particle in the mixture. It was
observed that in suspensions of pure species, the mean wall normal positions of
the stiff and the floppy particles are comparable. In mixtures, however, the
stiff particles were found to be increasingly displaced towards the walls with
increasing , while the floppy particles were found to increasingly
accumulate near the centerline with decreasing . The origins of this
segregation is traced to the effect of the number fraction on the
localization of the stiff and the floppy particles in the near wall region --
the probability of escape of a stiff particle from the near wall region to the
interior is greatly reduced with increasing , while the exact opposite
trend is observed for a floppy particle with decreasing . Simple model
studies on heterogeneous pair collisions involving a stiff and a floppy
particle mechanistically explain this observation. The key result in these
studies is that the stiff particle experiences much larger cross-stream
displacement in heterogeneous collisions than the floppy particle. A unified
mechanism incorporating the wall-induced migration of deformable particles and
the particle fluxes associated with heterogeneous and homogeneous pair
collisions is presented.Comment: 19 Pages, 16 Figure
Interaction induced Dirac fermions from quadratic band touching in bilayer graphene
We revisit the effect of local interactions on the quadratic band touching
(QBT) of Bernal stacked bilayer graphene models using renormalization group
(RG) arguments and quantum Monte Carlo simulations of the Hubbard model. We
present an RG argument which predicts, contrary to previous studies, that weak
interactions do not flow to strong coupling even if the free dispersion has a
QBT. Instead they generate a linear term in the dispersion, which causes the
interactions to flow back to weak coupling. Consistent with this RG scenario,
in unbiased quantum Monte Carlo simulations of the Hubbard model we find
compelling evidence that antiferromagnetism turns on at a finite , despite
the hopping problem having a QBT. The onset of antiferromagnetism takes
place at a continuous transition which is consistent with a dynamical critical
exponent as expected for 2+1 d Gross-Neveu criticality. We conclude that
generically in models of bilayer graphene, even if the free dispersion has a
QBT, small local interactions generate a Dirac phase with no symmetry breaking
and that there is a finite-coupling transition out of this phase to a
symmetry-broken state
Strongly Inhomogeneous Phases and Non-Fermi Liquid Behavior in Randomly Depleted Kondo Lattices
We investigate the low-temperature behavior of Kondo lattices upon random
depletion of the local -moments, by using strong-coupling arguments and
solving SU() saddle-point equations on large lattices. For a large range of
intermediate doping levels, between the coherent Fermi liquid of the dense
lattice and the single-impurity Fermi liquid of the dilute limit, we find
strongly inhomogeneous states that exhibit distinct non-Fermi liquid
characteristics. In particular, the interplay of dopant disorder and strong
interactions leads to rare weakly screened moments which dominate the bulk
susceptibility. Our results are relevant to compounds like Ce_{x}La_{1-x}CoIn_5
and Ce_{x}La_{1-x}Pb_3Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Barkhausen-type noise in the resistance of antiferromagnetic Cr thin films
We present an experimental study of the changes generated on the electrical
resistance of epitaxial Cr thin films by the transformation of quantized
spin density wave domains as the temperature is changed. A characteristic
resistance noise appears only within the same temperature region where a
cooling-warming cycle in displays hysteretic behavior. We propose an
analysis based on an analogy with the Barkhausen noise seen in ferromagnets.
There fluctuations in the magnetization occur when the magnetic field
is swept. By mapping and , where
corresponds to the order parameter of the spin density wave, we
generalize the Preisach model in terms of a random distribution of {\it
resistive hysterons} to explain our results. These hysterons are related to
distributions of quantized spin density wave domains with different sizes,
local energies and number of nodes.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. To be published in Europhysics Letter
Addressing nonlinear combustion instabilities in highly dilute spark ignition engine operation
Dilute operation is a promising approach for increasing spark-ignition engine efficiency, in the form of either lean burn (air dilution) or EGR (inert dilution). High levels of charge dilution, however, lead to cyclic variability that is largely deterministic in nature. The determinism and nonlinear nature of the system indicate that it should be possible to reduce the cycle-to-cycle variations by implementing an electronic controller. Several needs arise when considering the development of such a controller. Three topics of interest are covered herein. First, a method of analysis for nonlinear dynamical systems is applied to engine data in order to estimate the effect that a controller could have by removing the cycles that contribute to repeated, deterministic sequences...Second, the sensitivity of the engine to variations in control input is evaluated by examining a FFT of heat release data when the injected fuel mass is perturbed in a periodic manner...Finally, a combined thermodynamic and turbulent mass entrainment model was developed to predict energy release for many consecutive engine cycles --Abstract, page iii
A numerical simulation of the NFAC (National Full-scale Aerodynamics Complex) open-return wind tunnel inlet flow
The flow into an open return wind tunnel inlet was simulated using Euler equations. An explicit predictor-corrector method was employed to solve the system. The calculation is time-accurate and was performed to achieve a steady-state solution. The predictions are in reasonable agreement with the experimental data. Wall pressures are accurately predicted except in a region of recirculating flow. Flow-field surveys agree qualitatively with laser velocimeter measurements. The method can be used in the design process for open return wind tunnels
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