46,088 research outputs found
Particle image velocimetry measurements of the interaction of synthetic jets with a zero-pressure gradient laminar boundary layer
Copyright @ 2010 American Institute of PhysicsAn experimental investigation of the interaction between a synthetic jet actuator and a zero-pressure gradient laminar boundary layer is reported. The aim of this study is to quantify the impact of synthetic jet vortical structures; namely, hairpin vortices, stretched vortex rings and tilted vortex rings on a boundary layer, and to assess their relative potential for flow separation control. Streamwise particle image velocimetry was employed in a water flume (free stream boundary layer thickness Reynolds number of 500 and boundary layer thickness-to-jet orifice diameter ratio of 4) to obtain phase- and time-averaged boundary layer profile information of the impact of synthetic jets near the wall. The potential for flow control was assessed by analyzing near wall fluid mixing, realized by the measure of increase in wall shear stress produced by a passing vortex. Hairpin vortices (produced at a jet-to-free stream velocity ratio, VR=0.32 and dimensionless stroke length, L=1.6) and stretched vortex rings (VR=0.27; L=2.7) exhibit characteristics akin to a streamwise vortex pair with a common upwash. Conversely, tilted vortex rings (VR=0.54; L=2.7) induce a streamwise vortex pair in the near wall region with a common downwash. Wall shear stress measurements show that synthetic jets composed of stretched vortex rings offer the best combination of near wall fluid mixing, persistency, and low rms fluctuations for potential applications of flow separation control.Financial support from the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC Grant No. AF566NEZ) was used for this work
The near wall effect of synthetic jets in a boundary layer
Copyright @ 2007 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.An experimental investigation to analyse the qualitative near wall effect of synthetic jets in a laminar boundary layer has been undertaken for the purpose of identifying the types of vortical structures likely to have delayed separation on a 2D circular cylinder model described in this paper. In the first instance, dye visualisation of the synthetic jet was facilitated in conjunction with a stereoscopic imaging system to provide a unique quasi three-dimensional identification of the vortical structures. Secondly, the impact of synthetic jet structures along the wall was analysed using a thermochromic liquid crystal-based convective heat transfer sensing system in which, liquid crystals change colour in response to the thermal footprints of a passing flow structure. Of the different vortical structures produced as a result of varying actuator operating and freestream conditions, the footprints of hairpin vortices and stretched vortex rings revealed a marked similarity with the oil flow pattern of a vortex pair interacting with the separation line on the cylinder hence suggesting that either of these structures was responsible in delaying separation. Conditions were established for the formation of the different synthetic jet structures in non-dimensional parameter space
A Deep Reinforcement Learning-Based Framework for Content Caching
Content caching at the edge nodes is a promising technique to reduce the data
traffic in next-generation wireless networks. Inspired by the success of Deep
Reinforcement Learning (DRL) in solving complicated control problems, this work
presents a DRL-based framework with Wolpertinger architecture for content
caching at the base station. The proposed framework is aimed at maximizing the
long-term cache hit rate, and it requires no knowledge of the content
popularity distribution. To evaluate the proposed framework, we compare the
performance with other caching algorithms, including Least Recently Used (LRU),
Least Frequently Used (LFU), and First-In First-Out (FIFO) caching strategies.
Meanwhile, since the Wolpertinger architecture can effectively limit the action
space size, we also compare the performance with Deep Q-Network to identify the
impact of dropping a portion of the actions. Our results show that the proposed
framework can achieve improved short-term cache hit rate and improved and
stable long-term cache hit rate in comparison with LRU, LFU, and FIFO schemes.
Additionally, the performance is shown to be competitive in comparison to Deep
Q-learning, while the proposed framework can provide significant savings in
runtime.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
The reaction at low energies in a chiral quark model
A chiral quark-model approach is extended to the study of the
scattering at low energies. The process of at
MeV/c (i.e. the center mass energy GeV) is
investigated. This approach is successful in describing the differential cross
sections and total cross section with the roles of the low-lying
resonances in shells clarified. The dominates the
reactions over the energy region considered here. Around MeV/c,
the is responsible for a strong resonant peak in the
cross section. The has obvious contributions around
MeV/c, while the contribution of is less
important in this energy region. The non-resonant background contributions,
i.e. -channel and -channel, also play important roles in the explanation
of the angular distributions due to amplitude interferences.Comment: 18 pages and 7 figure
Collective Neutrino Oscillations
We review the rich phenomena associated with neutrino flavor transformation
in the presence of neutrino self-coupling. Our exposition centers on three
collective neutrino oscillation scenarios: a simple bipolar neutrino system
that initially consists of mono-energetic electron neutrinos and antineutrinos;
a homogeneous and isotropic neutrino gas with multiple neutrino/antineutrino
species and continuous energy spectra; and a generic neutrino gas in an
anisotropic environment. We use each of these scenarios to illustrate key
facets of collective neutrino oscillations. We discuss the implications of
collective neutrino flavor oscillations for core collapse supernova physics and
for the prospects of obtaining fundamental neutrino properties, e.g., the
neutrino mass hierarchy and from a future observed supernova
neutrino signal.Comment: Submitted to Annual Review of Nuclear and Particle Scienc
Simple Picture for Neutrino Flavor Transformation in Supernovae
We can understand many recently-discovered features of flavor evolution in
dense, self-coupled supernova neutrino and antineutrino systems with a simple,
physical scheme consisting of two quasi-static solutions. One solution closely
resembles the conventional, adiabatic single neutrino
Mikheyev-Smirnov-Wolfenstein (MSW) mechanism, in that neutrinos and
antineutrinos remain in mass eigenstates as they evolve in flavor space. The
other solution is analogous to the regular precession of a gyroscopic pendulum
in flavor space, and has been discussed extensively in recent works. Results of
recent numerical studies are best explained with combinations of these
solutions in the following general scenario: (1) Near the neutrino sphere, the
MSW-like many-body solution obtains. (2) Depending on neutrino vacuum mixing
parameters, luminosities, energy spectra, and the matter density profile,
collective flavor transformation in the nutation mode develops and drives
neutrinos away from the MSW-like evolution and toward regular precession. (3)
Neutrino and antineutrino flavors roughly evolve according to the regular
precession solution until neutrino densities are low. In the late stage of the
precession solution, a stepwise swapping develops in the energy spectra of
and . We also discuss some subtle points regards
adiabaticity in flavor transformation in dense neutrino systems.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figure, retex4 format. Split fig.1 into two figures.
Minor corrections. Version accepted by PR
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