1,135 research outputs found

    Three-dimensional viscous flow computations of a circular jet in subsonic and supersonic cross flow

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    Three-dimensional viscous flow computations are presented for 90 deg injection angle jets in subsonic and supersonic cross flow. Comparisons with experimental data include jet centerline and vortex trajectories for the subsonic cross flow, and surface pressure measurement for the supersonic crossflow case. The vortices induced in the jet/freestream interaction are computed and illustrated. The vortices persist in subsonic flow and die out quickly in supersonic flow. The structure of the shocks in the unconfined supersonic flow is illustrated

    Trash to Supply Gas (TtSG) Project Overview

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    Technologies that reduce logistical needs are a key to long term space missions. Currently, trash and waste generated during a mission is carried during the entire roundtrip mission or stored inside a logistic module which is de-orbited into Earth's atmosphere for destruction. The goal of the Trash to Supply Gas (TtSG) project is to develop space technology alternatives for converting trash and other waste materials from human spaceflight into high-value products that might include propellants or power system fuels in addition to life support oxygen and water. In addition to producing a useful product from waste, TtSG will decrease the volume needed to store waste on long term space missions. This paper presents an overview of the TtSG technologies and future plans for the project

    Sequence and Entropy-Based Control of Complex Coacervates

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    Biomacromolecules rely on the precise placement of monomers to encode information for structure, function, and physiology. Efforts to emulate this complexity via the synthetic control of chemical sequence in polymers are finding success; however, there is little understanding of how to translate monomer sequence to physical material properties. Here we establish design rules for implementing this sequence-control in materials known as complex coacervates. These materials are formed by the associative phase separation of oppositely charged polyelectrolytes into polyelectrolyte dense (coacervate) and polyelectrolyte dilute (supernatant) phases. We demonstrate that patterns of charges can profoundly affect the charge–charge associations that drive this process. Furthermore, we establish the physical origin of this pattern-dependent interaction: there is a nuanced combination of structural changes in the dense coacervate phase and a 1D confinement of counterions due to patterns along polymers in the supernatant phase

    Non-exposed Bisphosphonate-related Osteonecrosis of the Jaw: A Critical Assessment of Current Definition, Staging, and Treatment Guidelines

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    Non-exposed bisphosphonate-related osteonecrosis of the jaw (BRONJ) is a newly reported complication arising from bisphosphonate therapy that presents with atypical symptoms and no apparent mucosal fenestration or exposure of necrotic bone. The clinical observation of the presence of necrotic bone underneath normal epithelial coverage was not conclusive for the diagnosis of BRONJ based on current guidelines established by the American Association of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons (AAOMS) and the American Society for Bone and Mineral Research (ASBMR), which specify the presence of clinically exposed necrotic bone for more than 8weeks. Hence, the purpose of this review is to critically assess the current guidelines for diagnosis and management of BRONJ and propose a modified staging system and treatment guidelines to properly address the non-exposed variant of BRONJ lesions. © 2012 John Wiley & Sons A/S

    Determination of the quark condensate from heavy-light current-current correlators in full lattice QCD

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    14 pages, 4 figuresWe derive the Operator Product Expansion whose vacuum expectation value gives the time-moments of the pseudoscalar heavy-light current-current correlator up to and including terms in αs2\alpha_s^2 multiplying ⟨ψ‾ψ⟩/M3\langle\overline{\psi}\psi\rangle/M^3 and terms in αs\alpha_s multiplying ⟨αsG2⟩/M4\langle \alpha_s G^2 \rangle/M^4, where MM is the heavy-quark mass. Using lattice QCD results for heavy-strange correlators obtained for a variety of heavy quark masses on gluon field configurations including uu, dd and ss quarks in the sea at three values of the lattice spacing, we are able to show that the contribution of the strange-quark condensate to the time-moments is very substantial. We use our lattice QCD time-moments and the OPE to determine a value for the condensate, fitting the 4th, 6th, 8th and 10th time-moments simultaneously. Our result, ⟨s‾s⟩MS‾(2GeV)=−(296(11) MeV)3\langle \overline{s}s \rangle^{\overline{\text{MS}}}(2 \text{GeV}) = -(296(11) \,\mathrm{MeV})^3, agrees well with HPQCD's earlier, more direct, lattice QCD determination~\cite{McNeile:2012xh}. As well as confirming that the ss quark condensate is close in value to the light quark condensate, this demonstrates clearly the consistency of the Operator Product Expansion for fully nonperturbative calculations of matrix elements of short-distance operators in lattice QCD

    A set-based approach for coordination of multi-level collaborative design studies

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    Presented in this paper is a framework for design coordination of hierarchical (multi-level) design studies. The proposed framework utilizes margin management and set-based design principles for handling the challenges associated with vertical and horizontal design coordination. The former is based on flexible constraints/margins, while the latter is handled by intersecting feasible design spaces across different teams. The framework is demonstrated with an industrial test-case from the UK ATI APPROCONE (Advanced PROduct CONcept analysis Environment) project

    The response of perennial and temporary headwater stream invertebrate communities to hydrological extremes

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    The headwaters of karst rivers experience considerable hydrological variability, including spates and streambed drying. Extreme summer flooding on the River Lathkill (Derbyshire, UK) provided the opportunity to examine the invertebrate community response to unseasonal spate flows, flow recession and, at temporary sites, streambed drying. Invertebrates were sampled at sites with differing flow permanence regimes during and after the spates. Following streambed drying at temporary sites, dewatered surface sediments were investigated as a refugium for aquatic invertebrates. Experimental rehydration of these dewatered sediments was conducted to promote development of desiccation-tolerant life stages. At perennial sites, spate flows reduced invertebrate abundance and diversity, whilst at temporary sites, flow reactivation facilitated rapid colonisation of the surface channel by a limited number of invertebrate taxa. Following streambed drying, 38 taxa were recorded from the dewatered and rehydrated sediments, with Oligochaeta being the most abundant taxon and Chironomidae (Diptera) the most diverse. Experimental rehydration of dewatered sediments revealed the presence of additional taxa, including Stenophylax sp. (Trichoptera: Limnephilidae) and Nemoura sp. (Plecoptera: Nemouridae). The influence of flow permanence on invertebrate community composition was apparent despite the aseasonal high-magnitude flood events
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