94,317 research outputs found
Interaction of a neutral cloud moving through a magnetized plasma
Current collection by outgassing probes in motion relative to a magnetized plasma may be significantly affected by plasma processes that cause electron heating and cross field transport. Simulations of a neutral gas cloud moving across a static magnetic field are discussed. The authors treat a low-Beta plasma and use a 2-1/2 D electrostatic code linked with the authors' Plasma and Neutral Interaction Code (PANIC). This study emphasizes the understanding of the interface between the neutral gas cloud and the surrounding plasma where electrons are heated and can diffuse across field lines. When ionization or charge exchange collisions occur a sheath-like structure is formed at the surface of the neutral gas. In that region the crossfield component of the electric field causes the electron to E times B drift with a velocity of the order of the neutral gas velocity times the square root of the ion to electron mass ratio. In addition a diamagnetic drift of the electron occurs due to the number density and temperature inhomogeneity in the front. These drift currents excite the lower-hybrid waves with the wave k-vectors almost perpendicular to the neutral flow and magnetic field again resulting in electron heating. The thermal electron current is significantly enhanced due to this heating
Manual of phosphoric acid fuel cell power plant optimization model and computer program
An optimized cost and performance model for a phosphoric acid fuel cell power plant system was derived and developed into a modular FORTRAN computer code. Cost, energy, mass, and electrochemical analyses were combined to develop a mathematical model for optimizing the steam to methane ratio in the reformer, hydrogen utilization in the PAFC plates per stack. The nonlinear programming code, COMPUTE, was used to solve this model, in which the method of mixed penalty function combined with Hooke and Jeeves pattern search was chosen to evaluate this specific optimization problem
Phosphoric acid fuel cell power plant system performance model and computer program
A FORTRAN computer program was developed for analyzing the performance of phosphoric acid fuel cell power plant systems. Energy mass and electrochemical analysis in the reformer, the shaft converters, the heat exchangers, and the fuel cell stack were combined to develop a mathematical model for the power plant for both atmospheric and pressurized conditions, and for several commercial fuels
Manual of phosphoric acid fuel cell power plant cost model and computer program
Cost analysis of phosphoric acid fuel cell power plant includes two parts: a method for estimation of system capital costs, and an economic analysis which determines the levelized annual cost of operating the system used in the capital cost estimation. A FORTRAN computer has been developed for this cost analysis
A fibre optic sensor for the measurement of surface roughness and displacement using artificial neural networks
This paper presents a fiber optic sensor system, artificial neural networks (fast back-propagation) are employed for the data processing. The use of the neural networks makes it possible for the sensor to be used both for surface roughness and displacement measurement at the same time. The results indicate 100% correct surface classification for ten different surfaces (different materials, different manufacturing methods, and different surface roughnesses) and displacement errors less then ±5 μm. The actual accuracy was restricted by the calibration machine. A measuring range of ±0.8 mm for the displacement measurement was achieved
Higher-spin Realisations of the Bosonic String
It has been shown that certain algebras can be linearised by the
inclusion of a spin--1 current. This provides a way of obtaining new
realisations of the algebras. Recently such new realisations of were
used in order to embed the bosonic string in the critical and non-critical
strings. In this paper, we consider similar embeddings in and
strings. The linearisation of is already known, and can be
achieved for all values of central charge. We use this to embed the bosonic
string in critical and non-critical strings. We then derive the
linearisation of using a spin--1 current, which turns out to be
possible only at central charge . We use this to embed the bosonic
string in a non-critical string.Comment: 8 pages. CTP TAMU-10/95
Manual of phosphoric acid fuel cell stack three-dimensional model and computer program
A detailed distributed mathematical model of phosphoric acid fuel cell stack have been developed, with the FORTRAN computer program, for analyzing the temperature distribution in the stack and the associated current density distribution on the cell plates. Energy, mass, and electrochemical analyses in the stack were combined to develop the model. Several reasonable assumptions were made to solve this mathematical model by means of the finite differences numerical method
Liouville and Toda Solitons in M-theory
We study the general form of the equations for isotropic single-scalar,
multi-scalar and dyonic -branes in superstring theory and M-theory, and show
that they can be cast into the form of Liouville, Toda (or Toda-like)
equations. The general solutions describe non-extremal isotropic -branes,
reducing to the previously-known extremal solutions in limiting cases. In the
non-extremal case, the dilatonic scalar fields are finite at the outer event
horizon.Comment: Latex, 10 pages. Minor corrections to text and titl
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Studies on Temperature and Strain Sensitivities of a Few-mode Critical Wavelength Fiber Optic Sensor
This paper studied the relationship between the temperature/strain wavelength sensitivity of a fiber optic in-line Mach-Zehnder Interferometer (MZI) sensor and the wavelength separation of the measured wavelength to the critical wavelength (CWL) in a CWL-existed interference spectrum formed by interference between LP01 and LP02 modes. The in-line MZI fiber optic sensor has been constructed by splicing a section of specially designed few-mode fiber (FMF), which support LP01 and LP02 modes propagating in the fiber, between two pieces of single mode fiber. The propagation constant difference, Δβ, between the LP01 and LP02 modes, changes non-monotonously with wavelength and reaches a maximum at the CWL. As a result, in sensor operation, peaks on the different sides of the CWL then shift in opposite directions, and the associated temperature/strain sensitivities increase significantly when the measured wavelength points become close to the CWL, from both sides of the CWL. A theoretical analysis carried out has predicted that with this specified FMF sensor approach, the temperature/strain wavelength sensitivities are governed by the wavelength difference between the measured wavelength and the CWL. This conclusion was seen to agree well with the experimental results obtained. Combining the wavelength shifts of the peaks and the CWL in the transmission spectrum of the SFS structure, this study has shown that this approach forms the basis of effective designs of high sensitivity sensors for multi-parameter detection and offering a large measurement range to satisfy the requirements needed for better industrial measurements
Black Holes in Higher-Derivative Gravity
Extensions of Einstein gravity with higher-order derivative terms arise in
string theory and other effective theories, as well as being of interest in
their own right. In this paper we study static black-hole solutions in the
example of Einstein gravity with additional quadratic curvature terms. A
Lichnerowicz-type theorem simplifies the analysis by establishing that they
must have vanishing Ricci scalar curvature. By numerical methods we then
demonstrate the existence of further black-hole solutions over and above the
Schwarzschild solution. We discuss some of their thermodynamic properties, and
show that they obey the first law of thermodynamics.Comment: Typos corrected, discussion added, figure changed. 4 pages, 6 figure
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