6,223 research outputs found
Experimental study of boundary layer transition on a heated flat plate
A detailed investigation to the document momentum and thermal development of boundary layers undergoing natural transition on a heated flat plate was performed. Experimental results of both overall and conditionally sampled characteristics of laminar, transitional, and low Reynolds number turbulent boundary layers are presented. Measurements were done in a low-speed, closed-loop wind tunnel with a freestream velocity of 100 ft/s and zero pressure gradient over a range of freestream turbulence intensities from 0.4 to 6 percent. The distributions of skin friction, heat transfer rate, and Reynolds shear stress were all consistent with previously published data. Reynolds analogy factors for momentum thickness Reynolds number, Re(sub theta) less than 2300 were found to be well predicted by laminar and turbulent correlations which accounted for an unheated starting length and uniform heat flux. A small dependence of turbulence results on the freestream turbulence intensity was observed
Turbulent heat flux measurements in a transitional boundary layer
During an experimental investigation of the transitional boundary layer over a heated flat plate, an unexpected result was encountered for the turbulent heat flux (bar-v't'). This quantity, representing the correlation between the fluctuating normal velocity and the temperature, was measured to be negative near the wall under certain conditions. The result was unexpected as it implied a counter-gradient heat transfer by the turbulent fluctuations. Possible reasons for this anomalous result were further investigated. The possible causes considered for this negative bar-v't' were: (1) plausible measurement error and peculiarity of the flow facility, (2) large probe size effect, (3) 'streaky structure' in the near wall boundary layer, and (4) contributions from other terms usually assumed negligible in the energy equation including the Reynolds heat flux in the streamwise direction (bar-u't'). Even though the energy balance has remained inconclusive, none of the items (1) to (3) appear to be contributing directly to the anomaly
Significance of low energy impact damage on modal parameters of composite beams by design of experiments
This paper presents an experimental study on the effects of multi-site damage on the vibration response of composite beams damaged by low energy impacts around the barely visible impact damage limit (BVID). The variation of the modal parameters with different levels of impact energy and density of damage is studied. Vibration tests have been carried out with both burst random and classical sine dwell excitations in order to compare that which of the methods among Polymax and Half Bandwidth Method is more suitable for damping estimation in the presence of damage. Design of experiments (DOE) performed on the experimental data show that natural frequency is a more sensitive parameter for damage detection than the damping ratio. It also highlighted energy of impact as the factor having a more significant effect on the modal parameters. Half Bandwidth Method is found to be unsuitable for damping estimation in the presence of damage
Giant Shapiro Resonances in a Flux Driven Josephson Junction Necklace
We present a detailed study of the dynamic response of a ring of equally
spaced Josephson junctions to a time-periodic external flux, including
screening current effects. The dynamics are described by the resistively
shunted Josephson junction model, appropriate for proximity effect junctions,
and we include Faraday's law for the flux. We find that the time-averaged
characteristics show novel {\em subharmonic giant Shapiro voltage resonances},
which strongly depend on having phase slips or not, on , on the inductance
and on the external drive frequency. We include an estimate of the possible
experimental parameters needed to observe these quantized voltage spikes.Comment: 8 pages RevTeX, 3 figures available upon reques
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Gentrification and Displacement in the San Francisco Bay Area: A Comparison of Measurement Approaches.
Gentrification may play an important role in influencing health outcomes, but few studies have examined these associations. One major barrier to producing empirical evidence to establish this link is that there is little consensus on how to measure gentrification. To address this barrier, we compared three gentrification classification methodologies in relation to their ability to identify neighborhood gentrification in nine San Francisco Bay Area counties: the Freeman method, the Landis method, and the Urban Displacement Project (UDP) Regional Early Warning System. In the 1580 census tracts, 43% of the population had a bachelor's degree or higher. The average median household income was $79,671 in 2013. A comparison of gentrification methodologies revealed that the Landis and Freeman methodologies characterized the vast majority of census tracts as stable, and only 5.2% and 6.1% of tracts as gentrifying. UDP characterized 46.7% of tracts at risk, undergoing, or experiencing advanced stages of gentrification and displacement. There was substantial variation in the geographic location of tracts identified as gentrifying across methods. Given the variation in characterizations of gentrification across measures, studies evaluating associations between gentrification and health should consider using multiple measures of gentrification to examine the robustness of the study findings across measures
Chemically encoded self-organized quantum chain supracrystals with exceptional charge and ion transport properties
Artificially grown superstructures from small building blocks is an intriguing subject in ‘bottom-up’ molecular science and nanotechnology. Although discrete nanoparticles with different morphologies and physicochemical properties are readily produced, assembly them into higher-order structure amenable to practical applications is still a considerable challenge. This report introduces a stepwise heterogeneous approach for coupling colloidal quantum dots (QDs) synthesis with self-organization to directly generate quantum chains (QCs). By using vulcanized sulfur precursors, QDs are interdigitated into microscale chainlike supracrystals associated with oleylamine and oleic acid as structure directing agents. The cooperative nature of the QD growth and assembly have been extended to fabricate binary (PbS) and ternary metal chalcogenides (CuInS2) QC superstructures over a range of length scales. In addition, enhanced ion and charge transfer performance have been demonstrated which are determined to originate from the minimum interparticle distance and nearly bare nanocrystal surface. The process reported here is general and can be readily extended to the production of many other metal chalcogenide QD superstructures for energy storage applications
Impact of different definitions of clear-sky flux on the determination of longwave cloud radiative forcing: NICAM simulation results
Using one month of the cloud-resolving Nonhydrostatic Icosahedral
Atmospheric Model (NICAM) simulations, we examined the impact of different
definitions of clear-sky flux on the determination of longwave cloud
radiative forcing (CRF). Because the satellite-like cloud-free composite
preferentially samples drier conditions relative to the all-sky mean state,
the conventional clear-sky flux calculation using the all-sky mean state in
the model may represent a more humid atmospheric state in comparison to the
cloud-free state. The drier bias is evident for the cloud-free composite in
the NICAM simulations, causing an overestimation of the longwave CRF by
about 10% compared to the NICAM simulated longwave CRF. Overall, water
vapor contributions of up to 10% of the total longwave CRF should be
taken account for making model-generated cloud forcing comparable to the
satellite measurements
Raman Scattered He II 6545 Line in the Symbiotic Star V1016 Cygni
We present a spectrum of the symbiotic star V1016 Cyg observed with the 3.6 m
Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope, in order to illustrate a method to measure the
covering factor of the neutral scattering region around the giant component
with respect to the hot emission region around the white dwarf component. In
the spectrum, we find broad wings around H and a broad emission feature
around 6545 that is blended with the [N II] 6548 line.
These two features are proposed to be formed by Raman scattering by atomic
hydrogen, where the incident radiation is proposed to be UV continuum radiation
around Ly in the former case and He II 1025 emission line
arising from transitions for the latter feature. We remove the
H wings by a template Raman scattering wing profile and subtract the [N
II] 6548 line using the 3 times stronger [N II] 6583
feature in order to isolate the He II Raman scattered 6545 \AA line. We obtain
the flux ratio of the He II 6560 emission
line and the 6545 \AA feature for V1016 Cyg. Under the assumption that the He
II emission from this object is isotropic, this ratio is converted to the ratio
of the number of the incident photons and that
of the scattered photons. This implies that the scattering region with H I
column density covers 17 per cent of the
emission region. By combining the presumed binary period yrs of this
system we infer that a significant fraction of the slow stellar wind from the
Mira component is ionized and that the scattering region around the Mira
extends a few tens of AU, which is closely associated with the mass loss
process of the Mira component.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
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