21,891 research outputs found
A viscous-inviscid interactive compressor calculations
A viscous-inviscid interactive procedure for subsonic flow is developed and applied to an axial compressor stage. Calculations are carried out on a two-dimensional blade-to-blade region of constant radius assumed to occupy a mid-span location. Hub and tip effects are neglected. The Euler equations are solved by MacCormack's method, a viscous marching procedure is used in the boundary layers and wake, and an iterative interaction scheme is constructed that matches them in a way that incorporates information related to momentum and enthalpy thicknesses as well as the displacement thickness. The calculations are quasi-three-dimensional in the sense that the boundary layer and wake solutions allow for the presence of spanwise (radial) velocities
Recommended from our members
Macroeconomic Shocks, Job Security and Health: Evidence from the Mining Industry
How do exogenous changes in the macroeconomic environment affect workers’ perceived job security, and consequently, their mental and physical health? To answer this question, we exploit variation in world commodity prices over the period 2001-17 and analyse panel data that includes detailed classifications of mining workers. We find that commodity price increases cause increases in perceived job security, which in turn, significantly and substantively improve the mental health of workers. In contrast, we find no effects on physical health. Our results imply that the estimated welfare costs of recessions are much larger when the effects of job insecurity, and not only unemployment, are considered
High-resolution single-pulse studies of the Vela Pulsar
We present high-resolution multi-frequency single-pulse observations of the
Vela pulsar, PSR B0833-45, aimed at studying micro-structure, phase-resolved
intensity fluctuations and energy distributions at 1.41 and 2.30 GHz. We show
that the micro-pulse width in pulsars has a period dependence. Like individual
pulses, Vela's micro-pulses are highly elliptically polarized. There is a
strong correlation between Stokes parameters V and I in the micro-structure. We
show that the V/I distribution is Gaussian with a narrow width and that this
width appears to be constant as a function of pulse phase. The phase-resolved
intensity distributions of I are best fitted with log-normal statistics. Extra
emission components, i.e.``bump'' and ``giant micro-pulses'', discovered by
Johnston et al.(2001) are also present at 2.3 GHz. The bump component seems to
be an extra component superposed on the main pulse profile but does not appear
periodically. The giant micro-pulses are time-resolved and have significant
jitter in their arrival times. Their flux density distribution is best fitted
by a power-law, indicating a link between these features and ``classical''
giant pulses as observed for the Crab pulsar, (PSR B0531+21), PSR B1937+21 and
PSR B1821-24. We find that Vela contains a mixture of emission properties
representing both ``classical'' properties of radio pulsars (e.g.
micro-structure, high degree of polarization, S-like position angle swing,
orthogonal modes) and features which are most likely related to high-energy
emission (e.g. extra profile components, giant micro-pulses). It hence
represents an ideal test case to study the relationship between radio and
high-energy emission in significant detail.Comment: accepted for publication in MNRAS (11 pages, 10 figures
A deep search for pulsar wind nebulae using pulsar gating
Using the Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA) we have imaged the fields
around five promising pulsar candidates to search for radio pulsar wind nebulae
(PWNe). We have used the ATCA in its pulsar gating mode; this enables an image
to be formed containing only off-pulse visibilities, thereby dramatically
improving the sensitivity to any underlying PWN. Data from the Molonglo
Observatory Synthesis Telescope were also used to provide sensitivity on larger
spatial scales. This survey found a faint new PWN around PSR B0906-49; here we
report on non-detections of PWNe towards PSRs B1046-58, B1055-52, B1610-50 and
J1105-6107. Our radio observations of the field around PSR B1055-52 argue
against previous claims of an extended X-ray and radio PWNe associated with the
pulsar. If these pulsars power unseen, compact radio PWN, upper limits on the
radio flux indicate that less than 1e-6 of their spin-down energy is used to
power this emission. Alternatively PSR B1046-58 and PSR B1610-50 may have
relativistic winds similar to other young pulsars and the unseen PWN is
resolved and fainter than our surface brightness sensitivity threshold. We can
then determine upper limits on the local ISM density of 2.2e-3 cm^-3 and 1e-2
cm^-3, respectively. Furthermore we constrain the spatial velocities of these
pulsars to be less than ~450 km/s and thus rule out the association of PSR
B1610-50 with SNR G332.4+00.1 (Kes 32). Strong limits on the ratio of unpulsed
to pulsed emission are also determined for three pulsars.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, MNRAS in pres
Turbulent boundary layer heat transfer experiments: Convex curvature effects, including introduction and recovery
Heat transfer rates were measured through turbulent and transitional boundary layers on an isothermal, convexly curved wall and downstream flat plate. The effect of convex curvature on the fully turbulent boundary layer was a reduction of the local Stanton numbers 20-50% below those predicted for a flat wall under the same circumstances. The recovery of the heat transfer rates on the downstream flat wall was extremely slow. After 60 cm of recovery length, the Stanton number was still typically 15-20% below the flat wall predicted value. Various effects important in the modeling of curved flows were studied separately. These are: (1) the effect of initial boundary layer thickness; (2) the effect of freestream velocity; (3) the effect of freestream acceleration; (4) the effect of unheated starting length; and (5) the effect of the maturity of the boundary layer. Regardless of the initial state, curvature eventually forced the boundary layer into an asymptotic curved condition. The slope, minus one, is believed to be significant
Color Analysis of Dental Modifying Porcelains
Sintered samples of modifying porcelains of various colors and manufacturers were analyzed using reflectance spectrophotometry. Color designations are reported according to practices of the Commission Internationale de l'Eclairage (International Commission for Illumination), and color names were assigned based on a method developed through a joint effort of the Inter-Society Color Council and the United States National Bureau of Standards (ISCC.NBS). Within samples labeled by the same color, differences among manufacturers were found in the color designations and names. These differences were noted in part by plots of the chromaticity coordinates of the samples. The ISCC-NBS method of designating colors is proposed as a uniform and descriptive color-naming method for modifier porcelain. Consistent color naming is a step in improving communication over the use of modifying porcelains.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/68247/2/10.1177_00220345820610030801.pd
Examples of mathematical modeling tales from the crypt
Mathematical modeling is being increasingly recognized within the biomedical sciences as an important tool that can aid the understanding of biological systems. The heavily regulated cell renewal cycle in the colonic crypt provides a good example of how modeling can be used to find out key features of the system kinetics, and help to explain both the breakdown of homeostasis and the initiation of tumorigenesis. We use the cell population model by Johnston et al. (2007) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 104, 4008-4013, to illustrate the power of mathematical modeling by considering two key questions about the cell population dynamics in the colonic crypt. We ask: how can a model describe both homeostasis and unregulated growth in tumorigenesis; and to which parameters in the system is the model most sensitive? In order to address these questions, we discuss what type of modeling approach is most appropriate in the crypt. We use the model to argue why tumorigenesis is observed to occur in stages with long lag phases between periods of rapid growth, and we identify the key parameters
- …